http://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/drawing-the-line-why-doctrine-matters/
Drawing the
Line: Why Doctrine Matters
Imagine
Mike. He’s an unusual mechanic. Where other mechanics find natural laws (such
as gravity) unavoidable and even useful, he suspects them to be arbitrary,
invoked in order to stifle his creativity. We can imagine how the story ends.
Cars brought for repair are returned in worse shape than before. Mike goes out
of business. Whatever Mike might think, the laws of physics are built into the
nature of creation.
So it is
with doctrine in the Christian faith and life. Throughout Christian history,
folks have proposed to do without Christian doctrine, the good and necessary
inferences drawn from the implicit or explicit teaching of Scripture. Like
Mike, some Christians have suspected that doctrine is just an invention, a way
to control people. Such a position is just as false as Mike the mechanic’s.
Doctrine is inescapable because it is revealed in Scripture and necessary to
Christian faith and life.
Doctrine
is Biblical
Our
English word doctrine is derived from a Latin word, doctrina,
which means, “that which is taught.” In Christian usage, it refers to Christian
teaching about Scripture, God, man, Christ, salvation, church, and the end of
all things. It is fitting that the English word doctrine was first used
in the 1382 Wycliffe Bible translation (from Latin to English), because in the
old Latin Bible, the word doctrine occurs more than one hundred times.
The King James Version (1611) used the word about half as often, and
contemporary translations use it more sparingly. Nevertheless, the idea is
present throughout Scripture.
One of the
root ideas in the word doctrine is instruction. Moses received
instruction from the Lord on the mountain (Ex. 24:12), which occurred after the Israelites
had sworn a blood oath (v. 7) to do all that the Lord had spoken. That
instruction included truths about who God is, what He had done for His people,
and what He expected of them. That pattern is repeated throughout the Old
Testament.
In the New
Testament, Titus, a young pastor on the island of Crete, was exhorted to “hold
firm to the trustworthy word as taught” so as to be able to “give instruction
in sound doctrine” (Titus 1:9). There are
several such passages in the New Testament, some of which we will survey below.
Clearly, the teaching and preservation of divinely revealed doctrine is basic
to the office of the minister and to the function of Christ’s church.
Doctrine
is Evangelical
The
universal church and her greatest teachers have always taught and confessed
certain basic doctrines. The early church focused on the Bible’s doctrine of
God and Christ. After considerable Bible study and debate, the church concluded
that God’s Word teaches that God is one in essence and three in person, and
that Jesus, God the Son incarnate, is one person with two natures (divine and
human).
The
medieval church preserved these basic doctrines but became quite confused about
the Christian doctrine of salvation. This confusion contributed to widespread
moral corruption in the church. The Reformation was largely a struggle to
recover the certain biblical doctrine of justification (acceptance of sinners
by God) by unmerited divine favor alone, through faith (resting in or trusting)
alone, on the basis of Christ’s righteousness imputed alone. The Protestant
churches wanted to ground the Christian life in the recovery of these great
truths. The Roman communion wanted to ground the Christian life in a doctrine
of justification that said God accepts those who are holy and righteous in themselves
by grace and cooperation with grace. Under Protestant lights, the Roman
doctrine denies Paul’s teaching that “if it is by grace, it is no longer on the
basis of works” (Rom. 11:6). The Roman
doctrine is bad news for sinners because we can never cooperate sufficiently to
become truly righteous before God.
Beginning
about one hundred and fifty years after the Reformation, the Protestants faced
another great doctrinal crisis. A great philosophical upheaval began to turn
the Western intellectual world on its head. Instead of beginning with God and
His Word, intellectuals increasingly began their thinking with human experience
and reason apart from God’s self-revelation. That movement, known as the
Enlightenment, laid siege to the reliability of Scripture as God’s Word and to
the Christian faith and life.
The
ecclesiastical version of this movement became known as liberalism. The
liberals derided doctrine as impractical and dry speculation. “Deeds not
creeds” was their slogan. Of course, they only pretended to deny doctrine. They
were teaching the “doctrines” of the universal fatherhood of God, the universal
brotherhood of man, and human goodness (denying the fall). Under the cover of
denying doctrine, the liberals had made their own religion.
Doctrine
is Unavoidable
Non-doctrinal Christianity is impossible. The
teaching of non-doctrinal Christianity is doctrine. It is bad doctrine, but it
is doctrine nonetheless. Some argue that “doctrine divides,” and, therefore,
that we should avoid it. True, doctrine sometimes divides, but that is what the
Lord intended. In Luke 12:51–53, our Lord
expressly taught that He came not to bring “peace on earth” but rather to bring
“division,” even among family members. We cannot hereby justify schismatic
behavior in the church, which Scripture condemns repeatedly, but we cannot
accept the notion that division is inherently evil.
The real
question is not whether Christians will have doctrine but which
doctrine or whose doctrine? Our Lord and Savior Himself advocated a host
of doctrines. The Gospels are replete with His doctrinal teaching. He taught
about the nature of God (John 4:24), humanity (Matt. 10:28), creation (Mark 10:6), sin (John 8:34), redemption (John 3), the church
(Matt. 16), and the end of all things (Matt. 24). He taught doctrines about the
history of salvation and how it should be understood (Luke 24). Anyone who
advocates non-doctrinal Christianity must do so without Jesus.
Doctrine
is Practical
The
history of salvation and of the church is, in part, the history of the struggle
between true and false doctrine and the moral consequences of error. Satan came
teaching false doctrine about God, man, sin, and judgment. His doctrine led to
death. Moreover, those who mocked Noah and those who called for Barabbas
believed false doctrines, and they acted upon them.
In
Scripture, there is no divorce between doctrine and practice. In Proverbs 8:10, instruction is a synonym
for knowledge, and both come in the context of getting wisdom, that is, an
understanding of how to live in God’s world according to the patterns He has
established. Nothing is more practical than wisdom, and doctrine is built into
wisdom. It is impossible to be wise, in the biblical sense, without doctrine.
The
Apostle Paul warned the Roman congregation (Rom. 16:7) about those who divide the
congregation, who seek their own gain, and who contradict Apostolic doctrine.
The noun doctrine occurs in a similar context in Ephesians 4:12. Paul contrasts crafty,
self-aggrandizing liars who are immature and who may cause believers to be
tossed about “by every wind of doctrine,” that is, every passing fad, like a
small boat in a big storm. Here, bad doctrine and moral corruption are
intertwined.
True
doctrine is never mere theory. This connection is explicit in 1 Timothy 1:8, where Paul lists a series of gross
sins and categorizes them as “contrary to sound doctrine.” To deny biblical
doctrine is immoral, and morality is based upon fundamental Christian teaching.
There is
another consequence of denying Christian doctrine: chaos. Dorothy Sayers, in
the 1940s, predicted this outcome in her book Creed or Chaos? Today,
partly as a result of the misguided search for non-doctrinal Christianity,
there is virtually no consensus as to what constitutes evangelical
Christianity. The first step back from the abyss and toward order is to recover
the biblical and Reformed conviction of the necessity of “good and necessary”
consequences (WCF 1.6) drawn from the careful reading of Scripture.
Nevertheless,
for all its virtues, good doctrine is not magic. It is possible for someone to
profess right doctrine and yet remain an unbeliever. That is called hypocrisy.
It is also possible for one to live well and yet confess bad doctrine. That is
blessed inconsistency. Neither Scripture nor history commends either option. We
should rather think that good doctrine is salutary— healthy and helpful in the
same way that sunshine, clean air, and rain are salutary for living beings.
The
biblical pattern confessed by the church is to live well by living in light of
the truth, which is formulated in Christian doctrine. We do so, however,
chastened by the knowledge of our past failures, that we have not always lived
in accordance with what we teach, and by the certainty that we will fail again.
Our
hypocrisy, however, is no ground for giving up on doctrine. Non-doctrinal
Christianity is more than oxymoronic: it is a myth. Christians can no more
escape doctrine than Mike the mechanic can escape the laws of physics.
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Here endeth Dr. Clark's readable, wise and compelling article. We'd add this postscript, to wit, if you don't want doctrine, you are an ass without the inspiration of Balaam's ass (Numbers 22-24):
This is a great article. Christianity is all about what one believes.
ReplyDeleteThe OT word Torah, is best rendered by the Greek didache. The LXX rendered it nomos, but I've read that during the period of the LXX "nomos" had the same meaning as didache did in the 1st Century.
Yes, Scott offered a simple, readable, and irresistable argument.
ReplyDeleteBut, the loons like ignorant car mechanics...and that shows too.