A New Fundamentalism?
San Diego Presbytery issues "guidelines" for
examining candidates
by Gene TeSelle, Witherspoon Society Issues
Analyst
[6-25-03]
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On June 17 the Presbytery of San Diego adopted a document
entitled
Essential Tenets and Reformed Distinctives. It describes itself as
"guidelines for preparing and evaluating candidates through the Committee on
Preparation for Ministry, directing [sic!] incoming ministers through the
Committee on Ministry and the Presbytery of San Diego, and educating and
training." Within a few days it was posted on Presbyweb and attracted
attention throughout the church.
(The document is 31 pages long, and is
available on
the Presbytery website, in PDF format.)
Any reflective reader of the document is likely to raise
several questions: Why did you do it at all? Why did you pick out these
themes? Why do you phrase these as you do? And why do you frame it primarily
in terms of exclusions?
The document came out of the presbytery's committees on
Ministry and Preparation for Ministry; apparently the chief drafters were
the Rev. Kirk Bottomly of Fallbrook and the Rev. Mark Slomka of La Jolla,
both pastors of "confessing" congregations. According to the introduction it
grew out of a number of actual situations in which these committees did not
want to disappoint a candidate for ministry or a congregation that had just
called a pastor, even though there were misgivings about the person's views.
These committees are characterized as "the primary credentialing committees
of our presbytery," delegated by the presbytery to perform a "gatekeeping
function." They felt a need, therefore, for a summary of "essentials" or
"theological non-negotiables," not only for making judgments at the point of
examining candidates but in giving helpful advice to potential elders about
what it means to be Presbyterian. Thus it is described as a "tool for
instructing our congregations," as a "reference for training our prospective
church officers," and as "guidelines" for preparing and evaluating
candidates.
There is a broader context, of course. The document picks
up the recent slogan that "theology matters," repeats the judgment "we are
in the midst of a theological crisis," and declares that the church is
ordaining people who "do not know or believe the essential tenets expressed
in our confessions." Both the framework and the content indicate that it
comes down on one side of a current controversy, in the course of which we
have already seen witch hunts being conducted, individuals being targeted,
and judgments being made on the basis of overly simple stereotypes. Paul
Rolf Jensen, having filed charges against nearly two dozen Presbyterians
over issues of sexuality, has now broadened his strategy to filing
accusations of heresy that would prevent a minister's transfer to another
presbytery.
The drafters were aware of treading on contested ground.
While anyone being ordained must "sincerely receive and adopt the essential
tenets of the Reformed faith," the Presbyterian church has resolutely
refused to specify what those "essential tenets" are. The drafters knew that
they could not insist upon anything more than what is contained in the Book
of Confessions and the Book of Order (this was made clear when the General
Assembly in 1927 adopted the Swearingen Report that resolved the last
fundamentalist controversy). They knew about the Adopting Act of 1729, which
permitted candidates to state their "scruples" about the Westminster
standards and gave presbyteries the responsibility to judge whether these
were within legitimate bounds. They knew that they might be accused of
insisting on strict "subscription" to their statement, and they deny any
such intent; the document declares that it is not intended to be a "strict
formulation" and "has no authority in itself" but only offers "guidelines"
which a committee may use "at its discretion" in assessing a candidate.
Since the principal purpose of the document is to be "helpful" in training,
educating, and guiding, they acknowledge that it could be misused as a
"blunt and inappropriate instrument" in situations that require sensitivity
and compassion rather than harsh judgment.
Yet they also quote a statement in the classic principles
of church order (G-1.0302), adding their own interpretation of it: "Every
Christian church, or union or association of particular churches [such
as the Presbytery of San Diego] [emphasis in the original], is entitled
to declare the terms of admission into its communion, and the qualifications
of its ministers and members." Here the Presbytery of San Diego appears to
be claiming for itself the powers assigned to the constitution of the PC(USA).
The body of the document has three parts: six "essential
tenets," seven "Reformed distinctives" (the use of this word as a noun seems
to be a "distinctive" of the evangelical subculture), and "questions for
examination," inviting candidates to "look over them so that we may have a
conversation about them."
"Essential Tenets"
The "essential tenets" include the authority of Scripture,
God, humanity's original righteousness and fall into sin, Jesus Christ as
the incarnation of the eternal Word, Jesus Christ's atoning work, and
salvation by grace through faith. Under each heading there is a summary
statement, backed up with citations of Scripture and the confessions, and
then a declaration (often appropriating the stirring language of the Barmen
Declaration) of "what is not affirmed." This, of course, is the basis on
which positions will be judged to be off base.
Frequently a doctrinal perspective is phrased in such
pejorative language that it seems to condemn itself, when in fact it may not
be a "position" so much as an open question that deserves, in the declared
spirit of this document, serious consideration and careful formulation. That
kind of wording makes it all too easy to "pin" a candidate as holding a
doctrine that "attempts to subordinate biblical authority to any human
authority, cultural norm, or ideology," "distorts the gospel message or
holds it captive to culture," or "elevates sociology, psychology, education
or any other discipline above the clear witness of Scripture."
Statements like these seem to ignore the confessions' own
awareness of the need to interpret Scripture, to say nothing of
doctrine. Even the 16th-century Second Helvetic says we must consider the
language used, the circumstances, and the need to interpret everything with
the "rule of faith and love" (C-5,010). The Scots Confession similarly says,
"We dare not receive or admit any interpretation which is contrary to any
principal point of our faith, or to any other plain text of Scripture, or to
the rule of love" (C-3.18). The Confession of 1967 is even more explicit
about the influence of "views of life, history, and the cosmos which were
then current" (C-9.29).
One would hope that these perspectives of the confessions
are not being dismissed as distorting the message of the Bible. In some
circles, that seems to be exactly how they are viewed. A recent article by
John H. Adams (The Layman Online, February 24, 2003) opposed any
notion that Scripture is "culturally biased" or that its interpretation can
be "culturally shaped." He objected, furthermore, that our Book of
Confessions offers Presbyterians a "multiple choice" approach to major
issues, and he contrasts it unfavorably with the Westminster Confession.
This is the same tune that was sung in 1965 when the Lay Committee was
formed in order to fight C-67 and the whole Book of Confessions. Contempt is
still being poured on the confessions of the PC(USA) and the fullness of
their teachings.
The positions condemned in the San Diego document include
these: that the Scriptures "contain the Word of God but are not in
themselves the Word of God" (compare C-9.27, which says that the Spirit
"bears unique and authoritative witness through the Holy
Scriptures, which are received and obeyed as the Word of God
written"); identification of God as a "goddess" (we know where this comes
from, but is the implication that God is a "male god"?); the notion "that
sin is part of [God's] original plan to educate and improve humankind"
(compare C-6.014-021, which was worded quite intentionally by the
Westminster Assembly to permit supralapsarianism -- a position advocated
more recently by Reformed theologians as varied as Schleiermacher and Barth,
who hold that God condemns for the sake of saving).
There is repeated insistence that biblical narratives,
especially of the miracles, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus, are
"historically true" and also that these events are "supernatural." The
meaning of the latter term shifts considerably, moving well beyond either
the literal meaning of sentences or empirical confirmation of those
sentences, for the document itself speaks of the "supernatural reality and
power of the kingdom of God," suggests that Christians "experience a
supernatural dimension to their life," and asserts that the sacraments
involve "a supernatural presence" and "supernaturally perform what they
signify," though it denies that the sacraments "confer grace whether or not
they are received in faith."
There is much concern that "atonement, substitutionary
sacrifice, expiation for sins on the basis of Christ's death," might be
rejected as "obsolete, unworthy, unessential, or irrelevant," or that
language about his "substitutionary death" in taking on the "curse" for sin
might be considered "primitive, barbaric, violent, and unworthy of God."
Such language seems to foreclose reflection on a complex topic. It is in
fact moderated by a passage very similar to one in the Confession of 1967
(C-9.09), though it is not cited, to the effect that salvation is described
using various kinds of language.
Finally, there is repeated insistence that Jesus Christ is
the sole mediator and source of salvation, without acknowledgment of many
questions, raised by the confessions themselves, concerning the scope of
salvation and how it is mediated to those outside the sphere of Christian
proclamation (C-3.04, C-5.086-092, C-6.066, 6.192C-9.31).
"Reformed Distinctives"
The "Reformed distinctives" offer some relief from this
dogmatic atmosphere, probably because they are framed in language that is
proclamatory and pastoral, practical rather than theoretical, and in this
sense more in the spirit of Calvin and Barth, to name only two principal
(though "subordinate") authorities in the Reformed tradition. The seven
distinctives are election for salvation and service, covenant and covenant
life, the sacraments, sanctification and the work of the Holy Spirit, the
priesthood of all believers, the mission of the church, and stewardship.
Several aspects of the Book of Confessions, however, seem
to be missing, even in this proclamatory and practical context.
The classic confessions had a section on "the civil
magistrate" (C-3.24, C-5.252-260, C-6.127-130), though they were written in
an age quite different from our own, raising as many questions as they
answer. The Confession of 1967 has much to say about "reconciliation in
society" (C-9.43-47), and the Brief Statement, citing Scripture and the
earlier confessions, mentions Jesus' relationships with the powers of his
time (C-10.2), condemns the way we "accept lies as truth, exploit neighbor
and nature, and threaten death to the planet entrusted to our care"
(C-10.3), and calls on us "to unmask idolatries in Church and culture, to
hear the voices of peoples long silenced, and to work with others for
justice, freedom, and peace" (C-10.4).
The Confession of 1967, following in the spirit of earlier
confessions (especially the Barmen Declaration!) warns against religion,
including Christian religion, as perhaps the chief instance of human pride,
corrected repeatedly by the reconciling word of the gospel and often
benefiting from the insights of non-Christians (C-9.41-42; cf. also
C-9.12-13).
The same confession, building on an older Reformation
tradition about the way the gospel is to be proclaimed, warns against the
church's inclination to over-identify the gospel with any nation, any way of
life, any class, any finite reality. It makes four strong points in the
section on "Reconciliation in Society" (I use the inclusive language
version):