Pastor and People

Knowing God with Our Minds, Enjoying God with Our Hearts

The Folly of Perfectionism

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In reading Concise Reformed Dogmatics I was struck by a section on the idea of perfectionism. It is really amazing how many believers ascribe to the idea of living the perfect life apart from any sin. Genderen and Velma list a number of biblical arguments against perfectionism. All the arguments reflect in one way or another, the fact that perfectionism abandons faith in Christ who is our sanctification in favor of the perspective of doing good works to honor Christ and express our gratitude to him. It abandons the sola fide perspective of our works in favor of works of our own, admittedly enabled through grace.

Biblical Arguments Against Perfectionism:

  1. Perfectionism shortchanges Christ because our sanctification, from beginning to end, is and remains both his gift to us and his work in us.
  2. Perfectionism plays down the continuing need for forgiveness for everything that we do. This is precisely what Scripture teaches us to pray for (see 1 Kings 8:46-51; Ps. 130:3; Prov. 20:9; James 3:2; see also the fourth petition in the Lord’s prayer). Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Doctrine, The Christian Life, Theology

Sinclair Ferguson Discusses Imputation, the Gospel, and Union with Christ

Sinclair Ferguson: Imputed Righteousness

Gospel Indicatives and Imperatives

Union with Christ

Filed under: Doctrine, Sinclair Ferguson

Spiritual Gifts in the Life of the Church: 4 Views

Paul gives us an exposition and description of the spiritual gifts in 1 Corinthians 12:27-31. Yet in reading these passages it brings up the question: do all the spiritual gifts serve an ongoing life in the church? Are all the spiritual gifts that began in the New Testament church present in the life of the church today? There are four prominent views that answer these questions.

The first view is called the cessationist view. This view explains that some gifts that were present in the era of the Apostles have truly ceased in today’s church. Now there are two sides to this view, the reformed side and the dispensalationist side. For the reformed person the basis of all the spiritual gifts is Sola Scriptura. The dispensalationist view says God has spoken through the people and though these gifts for that particular time in redemptive history. So no matter what side or position one takes the main premise is that some of the gifts have ceased with the ending of the apostolic era. It is necessary to remember that all the gifts were given for the edification and building up of the church. For example the gift of prophecy is simply people delivering a message from God; “thus sayeth the Lord.” The gift of the tongues is the equivalent of prophecy, speaking in languages that they do not know as a word of prophecy. According to the cessationist view God gave these gifts because there was no New Testament. God moves upon His people for revelation – this is the foundation. For example, something may be right and not be prophecy. These gifts were for the authentication of those performing them and the revelation of God to the people of the early church during the apostolic era. We have the full revelation of God now in the Scripture and have no need of prophecy, tongues, etc… These gifts are revelatory gifts and now we have the full revelation of God in the Bible. This is the view I hold.

The second view is the Pentecostal view which began in the early 20th century. Such notable beginnings were at Asuzu Street and in the Assembly of God movement. In this view one is baptized into the Holy Spirit sometime after conversion and this is evidenced by speaking in tongues. The main emphasis is on speaking in tongues as evidence that you have been “baptized” in the Holy Spirit. In other words, tongues are a sign of the baptism of the Spirit. Their scriptural basis for this thought is found in Acts 19:1-6.

Charismatic is the next view. Now many different types of churches can be charismatic. There is a gift of speaking in tongues which may continue to be in the life of the church. In other words, all the gifts are always given to the church. This is actually more biblical than the Pentecostal view.

Finally we have what is called the third wave movement. This movement began in the 1970’s with Fuller Seminary and says that miraculous gifts confirm the gospel is true. You evangelize through these gifts. The gifts are used in missionary settings or other extreme circumstance in order to share or relay the gospel message confirming what you are saying is really truth.

In one final word and in response to a person who is trying to experience the “fullness” of the gospel by praying in tongues I would say it is only in a knowledge and understanding of the scripture that you will have a fullness of the gospel. The gospel is revealed by the Holy Spirit in the scripture. One does not need a special gift such as tongues to understand the gospel. Do you even understand what you are saying? You need the written word, something you can trust, and something that is the true revelation of God.

Filed under: Doctrine, Prayer, Spiritual Gifts, The Christian Life, The Church

The Reformation of the Church, pt. 2

I am pleased this week, while on vacation, to have Jeff Cavanaugh as a guest blogger on Pastor and People. Jeff is someone I have grown to appreciate not only as a theologian, thinker, and writer but also as a dear friend. I trust you will enjoy his posts and be encouraged by his words.

The Reformation of the Church, pt. 2 by Jeff Cavanaugh

The Reformation also resulted in a more biblical understanding of the pastor and his role in the church. In the Roman Catholic Church, the priest was believed to have important supernatural or magical powers, and he was a crucial part of mediating the grace of God to laymen. In the Eucharist, it was held, the priest re-sacrificed Christ by transubstantiating the elements of bread and wine into Christ’s actual body and blood. The priest was also supposed to have the power to grant absolution after hearing confession and assigning penance.

In the Reformation, the role of the priest shifted from performing the Eucharist to the preaching of God’s Word. Since Protestants no longer believed that the sacraments had salvific power, they understood that the priest couldn’t forgive sin or directly administer the grace of God the way Catholics believed he could. Rather, they understood that since salvation comes through faith alone and that faith comes by hearing the Word of God, the priest’s-now the pastor’s-most important duty was preaching the life-giving Word to the people.

This new focus on preaching meant that the standards for being a clergyman in a Reformed church were far different than those for being a priest in the Catholic Church. Though Rome may have had stricter official requirements, many Catholic priests were scarcely literate, since the mere recitation of the liturgy required little education and virtually no knowledge of the Scriptures. In contrast, to be ordained as a minister of the Word of God required thorough knowledge of the Bible and true theology, and substantial training in preaching and exegesis. Pastors were also expected to be examples of personal holiness and devotion to God, which was a stark contrast from the extreme moral degradation of the medieval Catholic clergy.

Finally, the Reformation had important implications for Protestants’ understanding of the nature of the sacraments. Whereas Rome had seven sacraments (baptism, confirmation, communion, confession, marriage, holy orders, and last rites), the Reformers rejected all but baptism and the Lord’s Supper, as these were the only ones instituted by Jesus in the New Testament. Though faithful administration of these were considered to be a mark of a true church, they were no longer considered essential for salvation. God’s grace in Christ’s atonement, they understood, was applied to the believer solely through faith, not by performance of any works.

The Protestant view of the Lord’s Supper differed from the Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist primarily in their rejection of transubstantiation, though Protestant views varied. Luther continued to believe in the real physical presence of Christ’s body in the elements of the supper, though he understood this to be brought about by the faith of the communicant and not by the magical powers of a priest. Calvin and Zwingli denied Christ’s physical presence in the supper, understanding that Jesus’ physical body was at the right hand of God the Father in Heaven and instead teaching that Christ was spiritually present in the Supper and that the believing communicant fed on Christ in his heart.

The Reformers also rejected Rome’s belief that baptism regenerated the individual (usually an infant) to whom it was given. Though the Anabaptists in the Radical Reformation adopted believers’ baptism immediately, they were marginalized and persecuted throughout most of Protestant Europe. The Magisterial Reformers retained belief in infant baptism and articulated a new doctrine of covenant theology that understood baptism to be the sign of covenant membership and parallel to circumcision in the Old Testament. In the seventeenth century some Reformed Protestants began to embrace believers’ baptism, and Baptists eventually became one of the three major Reformed factions in England, with the Presbyterians and episcopalian Anglicans.

These three areas-the church, the role of pastors, and the sacraments-were perhaps the most notable of the doctrinal changes of the Reformation. They were tremendously important for the way the new Protestant churches developed and how they came to understand the Christian faith. They are perfect examples of the significance of the Reformers’ recovery of the gospel of justification by faith alone, and they are a wonderful picture of how Christ works to reform and perfect His Church.

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Jeff Cavanaugh is pursuing a Master of Divinity at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Originally from central Ohio, he graduated from Patrick Henry College with a degree in Government. Before moving to Louisville, he spent some time in Washington, D.C. where he interned at Capitol Hill Baptist Church and worked for the White House handling presidential correspondence. He is a member at Third Avenue Baptist Church and hopes to pursue pastoral ministry after finishing seminary. He is married to a wonderful wife, Andrea.

Filed under: Church History, Doctrine, Guest Blogger, John Calvin, Martin Luther, Reformation, Reformed

The Reformation of the Church, pt. 1

I am pleased this week, while on vacation, to have Jeff Cavanaugh as a guest blogger on Pastor and People. Jeff is someone I have grown to appreciate not only as a theologian, thinker, and writer but also as a dear friend. I trust you will enjoy his posts and be encouraged by his words.

The Reformation of the Church, pt. 1 by Jeff Cavanaugh

The Protestant Reformation was a world-shaking event. It changed the structure of society wherever its doctrines took root, and the recovery of the Gospel which was its central focus brought millions of people out of spiritual darkness and into the light of Christ. The doctrine of justification by faith alone, which Luther called “the article by which the Church stands or falls”, was at the center of the radically different Protestant understanding of what it meant to be a Christian. Three important areas of thought were particularly affected by sola fide: the understanding of the church, the pastor and his role, and the sacraments.

First, the Reformation turned upside down the doctrine of the church. In medieval Roman Catholicism (and in the Roman church to this day), the church was understood to be the visible structure of priests, bishops, cardinals, monks, nuns, and other ordained officials who all owed allegiance to the Pope, the Bishop of Rome and the Vicar of Christ. The Nicean attributes of the church-one, holy, catholic, and apostolic-were abused by Catholic theologians foundational to the claim that Rome’s visible structure was the only true church and that salvation could only be found in obedience to Rome and her dispensation of the sacraments.

The Reformation changed all this. The Reformers came to understand that ultimately, the bride of Christ is made up not of bishops and cardinals, but of those who truly repent of their sins and believe in Jesus Christ. Their understanding that the Roman church was corrupt and fundamentally apostate from the Gospel was revolutionary, for it showed them that a true church was distinguished by faithfulness to the Gospel, not allegiance to the Pope.

The Reformation also began to change how the church understood its relation to the world. The Roman Catholic Church had proclaimed its sovereignty over all merely human governments, and for much of the Middle Ages it did indeed control the political life of much of Europe. After the reformation, however, the Augustinian understanding of the distinction between spiritual, heavenly power and earthly power came to be understood once more. In England and elsewhere, the situation was in fact reversed and the secular monarch was considered to be the head of the national church as well. It would be some time later that congregationalism would lead to the disestablishment of religion and the modern understanding of a separate church and state.

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Jeff Cavanaugh is pursuing a Master of Divinity at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Originally from central Ohio, he graduated from Patrick Henry College with a degree in Government. Before moving to Louisville, he spent some time in Washington, D.C. where he interned at Capitol Hill Baptist Church and worked for the White House handling presidential correspondence. He is a member at Third Avenue Baptist Church and hopes to pursue pastoral ministry after finishing seminary. He is married to a wonderful wife, Andrea.

Filed under: Church History, Doctrine, Guest Blogger, John Calvin, Martin Luther, Reformation, Reformed, The Church

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My name is Dustin Benge. I am the pastor-teacher of First Baptist Church of Jackson, Kentucky, a reader, writer, blogger, Master's student at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, and above all, lover of the Lord Jesus Christ. To find out more please visit the About page.

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