Careful. Dis my home state too much and I may have to make a call to my cousin Joey.
See, @rlvaughn this is banter.
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Careful. Dis my home state too much and I may have to make a call to my cousin Joey.
Careful. Dis my home state too much and I may have to make a call to my cousin Joey.
To deny the existence of dissenters prior to Luther is simply ignorance of ecclesiastical history. And his initial thesis is pejorative as nobody familiar with ecclesiastical history believes "the Church" was in the Alps sealed in a jar.Oddly enough, R. Scott Clark just wrote a piece that addressed something that came up in this thread. It's too late in the game to discuss it here, but you may be interested. It hits on a comment that you make and Tom took issue with.
There are far too few thinkers in the Church. Clark is a thinker, so in spite of his flaws:
Where Were The Church And The Truth Between The Fathers And The Reformation?
the importance of extra-biblical truth in theology
Which is PRECISELY what Hodge and the original Reformers espoused, 'Reformed'. The most influential Bible teacher in my life was Arthur Crawford, who also was by far and away the most intellectual man I've ever met, whose monthly Bible classes in my hometown I faithfully attended for years some forty years ago, who gave the most important advise I've ever received concerning approaching the scriptures and which profoundly transformed my Biblical understanding. His instruction to his students was simply:
'Strip away everything that you think you know about the Bible and approach it as a child that knows nothing, praying as David, "Let me behold wondrous things out of thy law". Begin on page one and read through as quickly as possible in order to get the idea of it'.
Took me a little less than 3 months (I was steeped in my career at the time) but it provided a foundation which no commentary, theological text book, confession, religious dogma, etc. could ever provide.
The biblical point, as the scriptures do not allow for any additional revelation, nor inspired apostles/prophets, after death of John!Your personal preference - not a standard of "truth" for others
Even if we have trouble agreeing with the definitions, most of us might be able to agree that there we know people like all four -- may even be one of them. While I don't agree with everything Frame says, he obviously sees the need to keep the line drawn taut on both ends, lest we run into the rock on one side or the other. I want to kind of juxtapose below what he says "on both ends," so to speak.Other's may define biblicism differently, but I like Frame's definitions.
John Frame said:(1) someone who has no appreciation for the importance of extra-biblical truth in theology, who denies the value of general or natural revelation,
John Frame said:I also want to indicate how difficult it is to draw the line between these biblicisms and an authentic Reformation doctrine of sola Scriptura..." because "Scripture, and only Scripture, has the final word on everything, all our doctrine, and all our life. Thus it has the final word even on our interpretation of Scripture, even in our theological method.
John Frame said:(2) those suspected of believing that Scripture is a “textbook” of science, or philosophy, politics, ethics, economics, aesthetics, church government, etc.,
John Frame said:In apologetics and Christian philosophy it has continued Van Til’s emphasis that Scripture has the right to rule every area of human thought and life.
John Frame said:(3) those who have no respect for confessions, creeds, and past theologians, who insist on ignoring these and going back to the Bible to build up their doctrinal formulations from scratch,
John Frame said:...the Reformers...were not biblicists in sense (3). But they came close to it.
John Frame said:(4) those who employ a “proof texting” method, rather than trying to see Scripture texts in their historical, cultural, logical, and literary contexts.
I particularly like this observation. I think we all have a tendency on a medium like this to jaw on about what we think of this or that, without ever making any reference to the scriptural thought behind it.John Frame said:So a theology worth its salt must always be prepared to show specifically where in Scripture its ideas come from. And showing that always boils down in the final analysis to citations of particular texts. This is why, for all that can be said about the abuses of proof-texting, proof texts have played a large role in the history of Protestant thought. And there is something very right about that.
But can we really expect balance from someone from the "United Reformed Churches in North America?"
(1) emphasizing Confessions and traditions as if they were equal to Scripture in authority,
(2) equating sola Scriptura with acceptance of confessional traditions,
(3) automatic suspicion of any ideas which come from sources outside the tradition,
(4) focusing on historical polemics rather than the dangers of the present day,
(5) emphasizing differences with other confessional traditions to the virtual exclusion of recognizing commonalities,
(6) failing to encourage self-criticism within our particular denominational, theological, and confessional communities."
I know some people I think qualify. One is a "tradition" (but possibly not in the way that Frame defines it) of the Two-Wine Theory. It is a tradition that can hardly be assailed with Scripture, because it is a theory that "sits above" Scripture and a grid that Scripture must be run through to get the right answer (I see the idea of Conditional Time Salvation much the same.)"(1) emphasizing Confessions and traditions as if they were equal to Scripture in authority," I can only speak from my experience, but I don't think this is an actual problem.
Out of this six, this one speaks the least to my experience. I expect Frame thinks he has run across such folks, or he wouldn't have mentioned."(2) equating sola Scriptura with acceptance of confessional traditions," Again, who does this?
Here is another of those keeping-it-in-the-middle things, imo. Conservatism is always suspicious of something new, and rightly should be. But if we're never open to consider any "new ideas" we are solidly set in the fix of being the only ones who are right.I disagree with Frame here (but read more before getting too upset). New ideas, and/or ideas outside of out tradition should be treated suspiciously. That does not mean they are to be automatically rejected, but it means that they should be treated with caution.
I agree, even though I am apparently a little tense toward one side and you toward another.The truth lies in a tension of two apparent contradictory ideas.
I know some people I think qualify. One is a "tradition" (but possibly not in the way that Frame defines it) of the Two-Wine Theory. It is a tradition that can hardly be assailed with Scripture, because it is a theory that "sits above" Scripture and a grid that Scripture must be run through to get the right answer (I see the idea of Conditional Time Salvation much the same.)
I once knew a man who was so thoroughly committed to the 18th Article of the New Hampshire Confession that he couldn't or wouldn't fellowship with any premillennialists whatsoever. Now I think he actually rooted his own belief in Scripture, but very often he argued with other Baptists from the supremacy of the 18th Article (almost like it was something God handed down out of heaven).
I agree, even though I am apparently a little tense toward one side and you toward another.