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In one of his famous epics, Homer
describes the clever device the Greeks employed to conquer the
city of Troy during the Trojan war.
To enable the Greeks to enter the
legendary city by stealth, the master carpenter, Epeius, built a
huge hollow wooden horse. According to Homer, 100,000 soldiers
besieged Troy. The ten-year siege ended when the Greeks
concealed some soldiers in the horse and then left it behind as
they pretended to withdraw.
Despite the warning of Laocoon,
Sinon persuaded the Trojans to move the horse inside the city
walls. At night the Greek army returned and the soldiers who had
hidden inside the horse opened the city gates to their comrades.
In this way, Troy was invaded successfully and destroyed.
Although the war between the Greeks
and the city of Troy is generally considered a historical fact,
the episode dealing with the Trojan horse has been considered a
mythological tale. Nonetheless, from this epic we can derive
some timely illustrations that are applicable to the situation
our church finds itself in today.
For many years, the Seventh-day
Adventist Church succeeded in bravely and tenaciously resisting
the fearful assaults of the enemy. The walls of the "holy city"
remained impregnable. But, in his determination to conquer and
destroy God’s church, the prince of this world has undertaken to
employ clever and deadly secret weapons.
"There is nothing that the great
deceiver fears so much," wrote Ellen G. White, "as that we shall
become acquainted with his devices." (Great Controversy, 516).
After many attempts to conquer the
"city of God" by applying the same kind of deceitful action
employed by the Greeks, the great adversary has been able to
obtain his ends by surreptitiously introducing the Trojan horse
of liberalism within the walls of Zion.
Now that liberalism has become
operative within our church, we perceive how vulnerable we can
be to the assaults of Satan. As a church we have been inclined
to believe that our greatest danger of being defeated by the
powers of evil would come from without. While we may be able to
perceive clearly, from the walls of Zion, what Satan is doing to
conquer and destroy the church, we do not seem able to do much
about standing firmly against the evils that are developing
insidiously within our midst. Ellen White warns: "We have more
to fear from within than from without." (1 Selected Messages,
122).
LIBERALS ARE NOT BAD PEOPLE
Those who are promoting liberalism
in our ranks are not "bad" people. They are committed believers.
Many of them exhibit the beauty of Christian virtues in their
lives. Most of them love the church. They would like to share
the faith and certainties of our forefathers; but, in the
honesty of their hearts, they do not have them. They are unable
to see the uniqueness of our message, the distinctiveness of our
identity, the eschatological dimension of our hope, or the
urgency of our message. Representing a wide spectrum of
religious thought, they attempt to reinterpret traditional
theological Seventh-day Adventist thinking by dressing some of
our old doctrines in what appear to them to be new and
attractive semantic garments.
Why are these people advocating
liberal views among us? Why are they so enthusiastically playing
the role of apostles of change in our theological system?
First of all, it seems to me, they
are eager to discard the "cult" label that has been used so
widely to characterize Seventh-day Adventism. They long to see
our religious movement become a part of what they consider
mainstream Christianity. In their endeavor to attain religious
"respectability," they suggest the reinterpretation of some
historical views of our theology that they believe are
Biblically indefensible.
Although accepting some aspects of
our distinctiveness, such as the Sabbath and our health
principles, they believe that the time has come for a revision
in our theological system. In fostering such a revision, some
feel uncomfortable with the "remnant" concept as understood by
the founder of our message. They believe that all "sectarian
mentality" should be rejected as presumptuous and arrogant.
Other liberals, in their endeavor
to make our theology more "relevant," question the integrity of
the sanctuary doctrine and unite their voices with those of our
opponents in this matter. They explain the two-phase ministry of
Christ in the heavenly sanctuary as a face-saving device created
by Edson, Crosier, and others to bail our pioneers out of the
Millerite failure.
There are those who are alarmed
about what seems to them to be excessive borrowing by Ellen
White of material from a variety of sources. Misguided by
distorted ideas about the way inspiration works, they are
willing to challenge the validity of her claims, rejecting her
prophetic authority.
Some liberals define our
eschatology as a by-product of the nineteenth-century North
American culture and, as such, as deserving of substantial
reformulation. They insist that, after 145 years of
proclamation, we can no longer preserve the fervent expectation
that permeated the church in its formative years.
Liberal scientists in the church
insist that the creation doctrine should be re-evaluated in the
context of current scientific information and hypotheses.
According to the February 5, 1990,
issue of Christianity Today, the obsession for change in
Seventh-day Adventist ranks had its beginnings in the 1950s and
1960s, when our students, in much larger numbers than before,
began to attend non-Adventist seminaries and universities
seeking advanced degrees. Some of these students, in spite of
unfavorable circumstances, were able to preserve their religious
experience and came forth strengthened in their convictions.
Others, influenced by modern Biblical criticism and liberal
theology, reshaped their beliefs.
WHAT IS BEING GAINED BY THESE
ATTEMPTS AT CHANGE?
What are we gaining from the
liberal attempts to make our message more "palatable" to the
world? When so many seeds of doubt, uncertainty, and strife are
sown, what else can be expected? Liberalism is reaping what it
has sown. It sowed unbelief, and it is harvesting apostasies.
During the early 1980s, an
unprecedented number of ministers and lay people left the church
in Australia and New Zealand. During the 1970s, our church in
those two countries lost one believer for every three who came
in. In 1981, after a particularly notable attempt to effect a
liberal change, the percentage of loss rose to 46 percent. It
peaked at 63 percent—a loss of one member for every two
believers (See Australasian Record, October 28, 1989).
We must not remain indifferent to
such staggering losses. We must not minimize the tragic
consequences of our internal confrontations caused by new
theologies. The casualties are thousands of perplexed souls who,
spiritually confused, are departing from us, throwing away their
confidence in the validity of our message. They have lost the
landmarks of our faith and no longer have a clear understanding
of what we stand for.
The following set of North American
Division statistics reflect the consequences of ongoing
theological and other attempts to change our beliefs in the
United States and Canada:
Years Annual Growth Rates
1931-1940 4.4%
1941-1950 3.1%
1951-1960 2.9%
1961-1970 2.8%
1971-1980 3.2%
1981-1988 2.3%
What is the message in these
numbers? Oscar Wilde, famous dramatist of the past century, with
inimitable irony affirmed that "there are three kinds of lies in
the world: common lies, small lies, and statistics." Thus Wilde
underlined the fact that statistics may deceive and lead us to
wrong conclusions. But even though statistics are susceptible of
incorrect interpretation, we dare not minimize their importance
in an analysis of the crisis that we face. They can help us
understand the gravity of our problems.
It is true that we can be deceived
by numbers and conclude that, in spite of what seems apparent,
the North American Division is still growing. But it is not
growing. According to reliable sources, 30 to 35 percent of our
believers no longer attend church. With this decrease in
attendance has come a decrease in offerings. Sharp cutbacks in
church budgets have been approved. Enrollment in our schools is
declining. Institutions have been closed. We are in the process
of trimming down our church’s operations and reducing our task
forces. The market for our books is shrinking. Denominational
periodicals have been merged and yet their circulation has still
dropped. We have come to a time of financial restraints, with
most conferences cutting back on their ministerial forces. These
are inevitable consequences of what has happened in theological
areas.
After so many seeds of doubt and
uncertainty have been sown within the church by those who are
obsessed with the desire to reinterpret our theology, after so
many years of theological disputation, what else should we
expect? We are witnessing the inevitable harvest of liberalism.
When unbelief is sown, the harvest is bound to be apostasy.
After its insidious penetration
within the walls of God’s city, liberalism in its various shapes
and forms has succeeded in opening the gates of the church to
the invasion of such other evils as pluralism, secularism,
humanism, materialism, futurism, and preterism.
PLURALISM
To diffuse the polarization we are
facing, some articulate scholars suggest the official adoption
of theological pluralism, the acceptance of peaceful coexistence
of conflicting, even opposing, views among us.
"On fundamental beliefs, unity on
non-essentials and liberty in everything, love" is the popular
dictum that inspires pluralistic scholars in their appeal for
flexibility and openness. But who is going to determine what is
essential and what is negotiable? Individuals, independent
ministries, theological societies, the annual council, or the
church as a whole under the guidance of the Holy Spirit? Would
we be able to retain our self-understanding as God’s last
prophetic movement, if we were to fragment our beliefs by
including in them divergent schools of thought?
We need theological unity in our
preaching and in our publications, but above all, we need unity
in the theological departments of our colleges and universities.
I submit that no school of theology, under pluralistic
influences, shaken by the confrontation of ideas, is able to
produce preachers with strong convictions. Without preachers
having certainty, there is no power in their preaching.
The successful spread of the gospel
over the Mediterranean world in the days of the apostles
threatened Christian unity. People of widely divergent
backgrounds were baptized, bringing into the church some of the
popular religious concepts of the age. Thus, there was a real
danger that the teachings of the church would be affected by
syncretism. Aware of this danger, Paul exhorted the Ephesians to
maintain unity (see Ephesians 4:4-6).
Addressing "the churches of
Galatia," the apostle expressed his regret for the way the
Galatians, under pluralistic influences, changed their minds and
turned away from the grace of Christ to a "different" gospel (Galatians
1:6). Was Paul being narrow-minded in his appeal for unity?
After all, those Jewish-Christians certainly preached salvation
through Christ. They never denied, as far as we know, that it
was necessary to believe in Jesus as Messiah and Saviour. Why
then was Paul so vehement in his opposition to this
Jewish-Christian preaching? Because the Judaizers insidiously
distorted the gospel of Christ, throwing the believers into a
state of mental and spiritual confusion. At the real risk of
being labeled intransigent, Paul exhorted the Galatians to pay
no attention to those messengers who, claiming ecclesiastical
authority, were disrupting the peace and unity that had existed
among the saints.
LET’S LEARN FROM THE
METHODISTS’ EXPERIENCE
Methodism in our day is known for
its wide latitude of beliefs. Its clergy have freedom to
subscribe to different schools of Bible interpretation. Attempts
to define basic Methodist doctrine have met much opposition, and
Methodist theology has become surprisingly divorced from its own
tradition. Persons who want to be accepted as church members are
no longer required to endorse any specific creed. To the
question, "What do Methodists believe?" ministers and laity
respond by saying that they believe in Jesus.
Today the Methodist Church is in a
steep numerical decline. "In the 1965-1975 period, the United
Methodist Church lost over one million members," says C. Peter
Wagner, Leading Your Church to Growth, 32. And who is
responsible for this sharp defection? The exodus that the
Methodists are facing is not to be blamed on outside forces. The
real blame lies within their church. If the Methodist Church
were attacked by enemies from the outside, if it were suffering
persecution as a result of its endeavors to evangelize the
world, there would be hope. But the world does not persecute a
church that seems to stand for nothing. The Methodist Church is
declining as a result of its failure to preserve its own
religious heritage.
Can we learn some profitable
lessons from its perplexing experience?
PRETERISM, HISTORICAL
CRITICISM, AND FUTURISM
A segment of the Seventh-day
Adventist scholarly community no longer accepts the principles
of prophetic interpretation that made our church what it is.
In the books of Daniel and
Revelation, our pioneers found our time and our mission.
Applying the historicist method of prophetic interpretation,
which had been used by the majority of Christians over the
centuries and which earned the subsequent endorsement of Ellen
G. White, our forefathers were able to unfold the history of the
long conflict between Christ and Satan. They were able to look
upon themselves as an integral part of the cosmic program.
Today, however, we sense a gradual
rejection of the historicist approach and a growing acceptance
of the Counter-Reformation schools of prophetic interpretation.
Furthermore, historical criticism does not allow for true
long-range prediction. As a result, in some quarters our message
has been changed and has lost its distinctiveness and power.
Moving the fulfillment of the
long-term prophecies to the end of the age (the futuristic
view), relegating their significance to the distant past (the
preterist view), or denying true long-term prophecy (the
historical critical view) makes the prophecies of Daniel and
Revelation irrelevant and transforms the Adventist movement into
just another denomination without power and special prophetic
message.
SECULARISM
Another intruder that is expanding
its presence within the walls of God’s city is the trend known
as "secularism," often defined as the organization of life as if
God did not exist. Its growing influence is producing a decline
in attendance, reduced commitment to Christian ideals, and an
increasing tendency to view the church—any church—as obsolete
and irrelevant. Professional growth and prestige, business and
profits, economic status, and academic attainments are
overestimated while Christian virtues are neglected or relegated
to second place.
According to Norman Blaike,
American Christians today can be divided into two groups, the
"supernatualists" and the "secularists." The "supernatualists,"
Blaike observes, are generally to the right theologically while
the "secularists" are to the left. The "supernatualists," he
states, prize Christian virtues such as devotion, piety, and
church commitments while the "secularists" admire tolerance,
success, efficiency, and academic achievements (see N.W.H.
Blaike, "Altruism in the Professions: The Case of the Clergy,"
Australia and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 10 [1974]:87).
The process of secularization is
affecting not only believers but also institutions. According to
George Marsden, Duke University historian, the religious
character of many erstwhile Christian institutions has been
eclipsed with "nobody noticing and nobody seeming to mind." (see
Time, May 22, 1989).
In the past two decades, we have
seen Seventh-day Adventist institutions affected by substantial
changes that have not all been on the plus side.
Surreptitiously, secularism makes inroads that tend to eclipse
the religious character of these institutions. Religious
services are still held in their chapels, but they are more a
form than a spiritual force.
Theological liberalism makes an
immense contribution to this insidious secularism of believers
and institutions by its rejection of an authoritative church, an
authoritative Bible, and an authoritative body of truth. It is
more than willing to accommodate religion to the spirit of the
times.
OTHER EVILS
Other evils, such as exaggerated
academic freedom, the historical approach to Scripture, and
theistic evolution (with its very long chronology) are making
their contribution to the undermining of confidence in basic
beliefs and leading congregations to spiritual disaster.
It is impossible to prevent the
teaching of aberrant views within the church, when the concept
of academic freedom without sound confessional responsibility is
accepted. Defenders of academic freedom in our midst state that
we are not a creedal denomination and so every believer should
be free to endorse different theological views. But we
understand that if an individual is to be a Seventh-day
Adventist, he or she should subscribe to our fundamental beliefs
in their entirety. Otherwise, he or she ceases to be a
Seventh-day Adventist.
I still remember the strong
opposition manifested by some Adventist scholars when the
historical critical methodology was condemned officially by the
General Conference on the basis that this method, by definition,
excludes our belief in the transcendence of the Scriptures.
I believe, however, that the church
has the unquestionable right to decide which approach should be
used by our scholars and preachers. This is our only safeguard
to protect our religious heritage, which subscribes to the
Reformation principle that the Bible is the infallible Word of
God and its own interpreter.
Theistic evolution (or progressive
creationism) is a concept accepted by a growing number of
scientists in our ranks. It involves the subordination and
accommodation of the Scriptures to the Darwinian view of gradual
evolution. Those who endorse this school of thought no longer
regard key portions of the Bible as reliable sources of
historical information. In taking this position, they place
scientific hypotheses above Scripture, making science a judge of
the Word of God.
THE FIFTH COLUMN
The Spanish Civil War (1936-1939)
left a million dead. When the conflict seemed to be reaching its
climax, General Emilio Mola commanded four columns moving toward
the capital of the country. But, in addition to his four
columns, he was counting on a fifth column, one that had entered
Madrid behind its defenses, to deliver the city to him when the
decisive moment arrived.
Among the lessons that history
teaches us, we find the fall of empires and institutions that
succumbed to eternal forces. The historian (Gibbon (1737-1796)
ascribes the fall of Rome to internal, not external, causes. He
mentions the fourteenth-century Italian poet, Petrarch, who
described the fall of Rome as follows: "Behold the remains of
Rome, the shadow of its early greatness! Neither time nor the
barbarians can glory in having brought about this stupendous
destruction: It was accomplished by its own citizens, the most
illustrious of her children."
Many civilizations have been
defeated by the internal sabotage of fifth columnists. History
warns us what can take place in the church. External opposition
is not our worst enemy. Instead, the insidious deteriorating
influences introduced by Satan, our great adversary, do the most
harm.
What has been the greatest defeat
suffered by the Christian church? Was it the loss of life as a
result of violence, martyrdom, and torture? No. The church’s
greatest defeat took place when it accepted the favor of the
Roman Empire and lost its purity and fervor. When the church
left the catacombs, it adjusted to the splendor of the world.
Satan’s fifth columnists—his Trojan horse—weakened the church
internally, paving the way for dilution of faith and
establishment of pseudo-Christianity.
CONCLUSION
The picture I have presented of the
Seventh-day Adventist Church can be considered bleak and dark.
But, in my closing remarks, I would like to present a brighter
side. In spite of the problems we face today, we have many
reasons to believe in the triumph of our message as long as we
stay faithful to the Bible. A revival will come, and our eyes
will see powerful miracles of evangelism.
Our message and movement deserve to
be characterized by a triumphant spirit. They are not based on
"cunningly devised fables" but on the unshakable foundation of
"the sure word of prophecy."
"The church may appear as about to
fall, but it does not fall. It remains while the sinners in Zion
will be sifted out—the chaff separated from the precious wheat."
(2 Selected Messages, 380).
The conviction that God guides this
movement allows us to declare, without a shadow of doubt that
the fire on Seventh-day Adventist altars will never go out. The
determination to win the world to Christ will motivate us in our
united evangelistic program. The world will be lighted with the
glory of our proclamation of the Advent hope. |