Moulders of Modernism

By C. G. “Golly” Caldwell, III

“Modernism” has been variously defined or described depending upon the context of the discussion in which the word is used. Classical “modernism” is the radical, theological liberalism of the past two centuries centering in what is called “higher Biblical criticism.” IL is basically philosophical and results in moving the adherent away from belief in the existence of a personal God, acceptance of the Bible as a direct revelation of the mind of that personal God to mankind, the concept of religion’s resulting from revealed truth, faith in the supernatural character of Biblical events (such as the virgin birth, miracles, and bodily resurrection of Jesus), etc.

Modernism exalts humanism, seeking answers in the mind of man rather than in the revelation and power of Almighty God. It finds the source of religion in man’s social fears and needs. It looks upon the Bible as the product of man’s reasoning and literary effort. It denies all aspects of faith which cannot be understood through natural science and philosophy.

The Central Figure: Immanuel Kant

The so-called “watershed” of classical modernism is the influence of Immanuel Kant (1724-1804). There were two primary philosophical streams flowing in Kant’s day. The first was “Idealism.” It came out of the rationalistic thinking of men like Descartes, Spinoza, Leibnitz, etc., and resulted in a revival of the Platonic romanticism and in mysticism. The second was “Empiricism.” It was the thinking of Locke, Berkeley, Hume, and the Deists. This kind of scepticism resulted in a kind of Aristotelian realism. David Hume (1711-1776) is probably the most important of all these men to our study. Hume was a Scottish skeptic who reacted against the idealistic rationalism of the day. His significance in relation to the development of modernism is seen both in his denial that the design of the universe necessarily implies a personal Designer and in his attack upon miracles on the ground that the evidence rests upon human testimony. Hume said that it is always more reasonable to reject testimony concerning the extraordinary than to believe it. Hume espoused his views in A Treatise of Human Nature (1739) and in an essay entitled “Miracles” (1748).

Immanuel Kant faced the problem of harmonizing the rationalism in the idealistic stream and the empiricism of the Enlightenment. The formulation of his synthesis is found in his Critique of Pure Reason. “Reason” is the principle function in the acquisition of knowledge, Kant said. Moral action is determined by the sense of duty in man and nothing is moral in and of itself apart from this necessity. The logical conclusion is that all knowledge arises from sense experience and, therefore, God cannot be known from any rational proof. Kant argued that God may only be known through practical reason of moral law which forces us to accept the highest good in life. Religion, therefore, results not from revelation of the mind of God either through direct confrontation or inspired writings. God is unknowable and, therefore, religion results from man. The life of Christ upon the earth was also virtually meaningless to Kant because religion is attained through man’s reason, not through revelation of God’s nature in the incarnate Word (Son). These views were also expressed in Kant’s Religion Within The Limits of Mere Reason (1793).

Kant, of course, did not resolve forever the great philosophical questions of the centuries, but he did leave his mark on the three major directions of religious study usually identified with classical modernism. These three streams flowing out of the “watershed” were Idealism, Subjectivism, and Materialism.

Idealism

Idealism did not die with Kant. Especially influenced by the Romantic movement, it appeared again in Fichte and Hegel. George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) turned away from both subjectivism (that truth is produced in the individual’s mind) and realistic materialism (that truth exists independent of the mind). Hegel was a German idealist who saw religion as a way in which man pictures truth. Truth to Hegel is knowledge of ultimate reality and God is simply the process of world history unfolding itself. Hegel considered the state to be a spiritual organism which he identified as the “World Spirit.” Each particular generation produces a people, he said, who reflect a more advanced stage of reason and thus more clearly reflect the “World Spirit.” Although Hegel was not strictly a nationalist, his ideas produced a type of thinking (the dialectical process of reasoning) which was later adapted to Marxist philosophy. His emphasis upon “pure reason” reflects the influence of Kant.

A prime example of the influence of Gegel on the destructive Biblical criticism of the New Testament is found in the person of David Friedrich Strauss (18081874). In Life of Jesus, Critically Examined, this German theologian applied the concept that there truly was a historical Jesus but that the gospel writers had so interspersed the record with myths about Christ that the miracles and fulfilled prophetic statements were not dependable. Actually Strauss went further saying that these portions were merely what the people had believed on the basis of preconceived ideas and preconditioning rather than the result of actual fact. Christianity, he said, in its most pure form is the true “World Spirit” or absolute spirit about which Hegel had written. Strauss wrote another book entitled Christliche Glaubenslehre in which he affirmed that Biblical teaching cannot be harmonized with modern scientific and philosophic knowledge. He later produced a second volume on the life of Jesus which again denied the miracles and supernatural nature of the Lord. He proposed a religion of man based on the study of the philosophies of Plato and Hegel rather than a basically Biblical religion.

Another New Testament critic was Albrecht Benjamin Ritschl (1822-1889). Ritschl claimed that the deity of Christ was not substantiated by fact but by the faith of the early Christians. Ritschl made a great distinction between judgments of fact based on verifiable history and judgments of value based on “Christian experience.” He denied that mysteries included in the religion of God can be resolved by metaphysical, philosophical, or scientific means. The mysteries were unknowable and that was that. The existence of Christ, he believed, was a historical fact and it is known that Christ was the founder of the community of believers. Christ came to establish the kingdom of God. Man is to live morally and to serve the kingdom of God. Ritschl saw Christ’s death not as an effort to be a propitiation for man’s sins but as a moral effort to do his job which was to establish the kingdom. Religion, therefore, is social and Christ’s work was social. Our salvation is in being connected with the kingdom of God on earth in the community of believers. Roots of the social gospel concepts are always apparent in the study of modernism.

Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965) wrote a history of the search for the true Jesus by men like Strauss and Ritschl. In his The Quest For The Historical Jesus (1906), Schweitzer drew his own conclusion that the historical Jesus was so different from the one revealed in the New Testament by the men who loved him that it is most difficult to really know him. He said that Jesus tried to force the coming of the kingdom of God by his radical activities in Jerusalem and ultimately by giving his own life as the result of the fact that he had been rejected. Schweitzer saw Jesus’ radical ethical demands in terms of the fact that there was to be only a short time to live before the coming of the glorious earthly kingdom. Paul’s teachings on morals are also to be explained that way. Schweitzer believed in a system of ethics as a necessary aspect of life but not the radical “interim ethic” of Jesus’ personal teachings. That type of thinking is seen in such books as Joseph Fletcher’s damnable Situation Ethics (1966).

The influence of Hegelian philosophy may also be seen in the emregence of the “literary-historical school” of critical study of the Old Testament. Although Julius Wellhausen (JEDP theory of Old Testament Pentateuch interpretation), the earlier writings of Abraham Kuenen(1828-1891) stated all the themes later developed by K. H. Graf and Wellhausen. Kuenen wrote The Hexateuch (1886) and The Religion of Israel (1873).

Subjectivism

To return to Kant again, the emphasis upon man’s “sense of ought” or moral duty led to the religious philosophy which centers in subjective feeling. The flow we will examine is from Kant’s “ought” . . . to Schliermacher’s “feeling” . . . to Kierkegaard’s “leap of faith” . . . to Tillich and Bultmann’s existentialism . . . to Bruner and Barth’s “neo-orthodoxy.”

Friedrich Schleiermaeher (1768-1834) sought to find another alternative to what he considered to be the fallacy of revealed truth and the.fallacy of natural theology. He claimed in The Christian Faith (1821) that religion is based on true religious experience. Religion is not founded upon knowledge nor upon activity. It is based on one’s awareness of God or his feeling of dependency upon God. Sin is the effort of man to become independent of God. The problem to Schleiermacher was that man must be conscious of his need. My problem with Schleiermacher is that man’s dependence upon God is neither based on rational evidence nor written revelation informing him of the will of God. Religion is totally subjective in Schleiermacher’s view; the spiritual life is dependent upon one’s own inner consciousness.

Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855) was a Danish philosopher whose early writings were centered around explanations of life from a very melancholy point of view [cf. Fear and Trembling (1843) and The Concept of Dread(1844)]. After 1845, he wrote attacking formalized “Christianity” in the following works: Works of Love (1847), Christian Discourses (1848), and Training in Christianity (1850). To Kierkegaard, man and his world are altogether other than the realm of God and his operation. He also separated historical knowledge of Christ from faith and suggested that man cannot really know eternal things apart from a separate act of faith without evidences. His work served as a basic philosophy for existentialism but he was more concerned with the transcendence of God than with the existence of man. He attacked Hegel’s claims concerning the role of God in man’s affairs because they depersonalized God and because they involved God in this sphere. Kierkegaard rejected all the traditional arguments for the existence of God affirming instead the existence of God solely from the believer’s need and his subjective faith. The “leap of faith” concept is associated with these affirmations.

In existentialism man is asked to search for the origins and purposes of his existence. He makes his own existence by creating his own values. There is no personal, external, authoritative guide. Rudolph Bultmann (born in 1884) represents this movement in Die Geschichte Der Synoptischen Tradition with his appeal for the demythologizing of the New Testament. Paul Tillich (1886-1965) was a German forced by circumstances to come to America. He taught at Union Theological Seminary, Columbia University, Harvard, and the University of Chicago. He tied Eastern thought to Kant arguing for the relationship between philosophy and theology. God, he said, is the “Ground of Being” and man is the “ultimate concern.” Tillich’s philosophy synthesized with some of the materialism we will discuss is the basis of the “God is dead” movement enunciated by Thomas J. J. Altizer and William Hamilton (although Nietzsche apparently coined the phrase before the turn of the century).

At this point we must examine the misnamed “neoorthodoxy,” which I am going to call with others the “new liberalism.” Its two leading lights are Emil Brunner (18891966) who stressed the priority of revelation over human experience or natural reason in The Mediator (1927), theDivine Imperative (1932), and Revelation and Reason(1941), and Karl Barth (1886-1968). Barth proclaimed in Church Dogmatics a religion centered around Christ as the Word of God, Scripture as the revelation of that Word and evangelism as the effort to promote a Biblical statement of belief.

Be careful, however, before having read all that ungodly liberalism you fall into the trap of this supposed return to Scripture. Some of our young “scholars” have done just that. Barth was a Swiss theologian who studied under the great liberals of his day. He broke with “liberalism,” however, and became the leader of the Dialectical Theology (a system which sought to recover the reformation teachings). The “Dialectic” is that the religion of Christ contains a “No” (man cannot by human effort attain righteousness) and a “Yes” (God will provide a way of righteousness) and that the “No” is overcome by the “Yes” (God’s grace). Barth stressed the hiddenness of God, however, as Calvin and the reformers had not. He pressed the idea that God revealed Himself only in the person of Christ.

Barth reacted violently to the forms of natural theology which attempted to find God by means other than through the revelation of God through the person of Christ. To Barth, man was brought into partnership with God and sin is the attempt to break free from the grace God has given to him. Sin is not the violation of abstract law. To Barth, Christ was both the sinner and the redeemer for all men and, therefore, Barth almost took the universalist position. Barth expresses his positions in his commentary on Romans (1919).

Neo-orthodoxy is probably more dangerous to our brethren than any of the other systems we have discussed because of its supposed scripturalness. It is riddled with many of the liberal presuppositions, however, concerning the nature of God and the nature of man, and it is totally saturated with the reformation presuppositions of Calvin and others. It is filled with Biblical terminology but the Biblical words have been redefined.

Materialism

Philosophical thought swings back and forth from idealism to realism. Ludwig Feuerbach (1804-1872) reacting to Hegel’s idealism brought modernism into a materialistic stance for many leading theologians. Feuerbach published his Essence of Christianity in 1831. He argued that when we speak of religious truth, we are speaking of qualities possessed by man when he is measuring up to his ideals. Rationalism says that idealistic man is the originator of spiritual concepts including the concept of God’s existence itself. Whereas Hegel had his geist (World Spirit) which served as the ideal toward which man is reaching, Feuerbach inverted the process asserting that man simply projects God as he would have his god to be. In reality man does not need God. Once robbed of the necessity of God, reality suggests that we acknowledge that he does not exist.

Auguste Comte (1798-1857), author of Positive Philosophy (1830) and Subjective Synthesis (1856), working from Feuerbach’s lead established his scientific religion (positivism). Comte sought to deify humanity by asserting that the perfect society results from the exaltation of the human intellect. The higher power within us is self-love and exalted emotion. God does not exist, he said, apart from our ability to sense him and that is purely emotional.

Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) formed a psychological religion (psychologism). Freud was an Austrian Jew who thought of religion as a social phenomenon which proceeded from the psychological needs of the people. Fears and guilts led to the need for God, Freud said in Totem and Taboo. Karl Marx (1818-1883) who collaborated with Friedrich Engels to produce the Communist Manifesto brought these concepts to a kind of economic religion (socialism).

In theology proper, the brazen voice of Feuerbach’s influence was Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900). Nietzsche viewed man as possessing a kind of “super-nature” which resides within man but which must be achieved through self mastery. Man’s superiority does not come about as the result of his being made in the image of God but in his survival arid achievement. Nietzsche’s Antichrist was published in 1895. With Nietzsche, as with Comte, Freud, and Marx, “God is dead” because he never really existed except in the mind of man and because man now understands that, he does not need the “idea” of God any longer.

Obviously, a survey such as this leaves much which needs to be said. It is understood that what is said is obviously subjectively selected. The reader is directed to the works cited in the article or to critical studies on the men and their ideas if he is particularly interested in pursuing this history. We are not, however, recommending that you get all that interested except as you are confronted by specific problems which need concentrated attack. Philosophy has been a dead-end street through the ages because it seeks answers in the mind of men that only God can answer in his revealed word if they are to be answered at all. The general reader would better spend his time with his Bible.

Truth Magazine XXII: 40, pp. 643-646
October 12, 1978

Being an Encouragement to Others

By Doug Seaton

Barnabas was a faithful, enthusiastic, dedicated, Christian. He was a “good man, and full of the Holy Ghost, and of faith” (Acts 11:24). Shortly after Barnabas became a Christian he sold some land he owned and gave the money to the apostles for the aid of those in need (Acts 4:37). Barnabas had an active religion. There are many good things about Barnabas that we could emulate. We could emulate his giving, his courage to suffer, his faith, or even his dedication to friends. The trait of Barnabas that seems to stand out above all others was his ability to encourage others.

Barnabas encouraged many people. H-a encouraged Paul when the disciples in Jerusalem were afraid of him (Acts 9:27). Barnabas stood by and encouraged Mark when Paul did not want him to go on the second journey (Acts 15:37-38). Barnabas was sent by the church in Jerusalem to encourage the brethren at Antioch. When Barnabas arrived in Antioch he “was glad, and exhorted them all, that with purpose of heart they would cleave unto the Lord” (Acts 11:23b).

The church needs men and women today that will encourage others. The church needs men that will encourage others by teaching sound doctrine, by living pure moral lives, and by their enthusiasm in doing the will of God. The church needs women who enjoy helping others, and women that enjoy teaching their children about God. The church also needs older Christians to teach the younger by word and example how important and gratifying it is to be a child of God. The church needs younger Christians that are unafraid to stand against immorality and ungodliness in the world today. Paul told Titus many of these same things 2,000 years ago. See Titus 2.

There are too many Christians walking around looking like they just lost their best friend. We need Christians to build us up and encourage us on the journey from earth to heaven. Are you an encouragement to others? If not, why not?

Truth Magazine XXII: 39, p. 636
October 5, 1978

“Because Thou Hast Rejected Knowledge”

By Mike Willis

Each of us owns a copy of a book which is known as the “Holy Bible.” Some of us have spent a considerable chunk of money in order to purchase a copy of the Bible. But, what for? Have we merely purchased a decorative book to lay on a coffee table? Have we purchased a color-coordinated piece to take to worship services with us? Or, have we a copy of the Bible for the express purpose of learning God’s revelation to man?

One wonders just which is the reason that people have a Bible when he- sees manifestations of the ignorance of the Bible among those purporting to be Christians. Large numbers of us could not name the books of the Old Testament. Others could not pick out the non-biblical book from the following list: Zechariah, Hezekiah, Zephaniah, Haggai and Malachi. Because of the vast amount of spiritual ignorance among us, the number of ashdodic phrases which we hear at worship services continues to grow. Someone says, “I am a Church of Christer” or “He is a Church of Christ preacher.” Such expressions manifest the influence of denominational expressions upon our own thought patterns.

The Privilege of Having A Bible

We need to consider the blessed privilege we have in being able to own and use a Bible. Many ages in the past were such that the average man could not afford to own a Bible; other ages made it a capital offense to own such a book. But we live in such an age that owning a Bible is something available to all of us. Yet, man takes this privilege for granted.

God has given us a revelation, not to benefit God, but to benefit man. God is not made better by giving to man a revelation. The entire purpose of God revealing Himself to man was to direct man in this life and to make it possible for him to live forever in heaven after death. “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path” (Psa. 119:105). We need to meditate on the fact that our Bibles are given to us by God to meet our needs. Consequently, we need to treat the Bible with respect due to the fact that it is from God. We need to crave any knowledge which we can gain thereby. Like David, we should say, “O how love I thy law! It is my meditation all the day” (Psa. 119:97). We need to personally learn God’s word and to labor to impart knowledge of God to others.

Our Moral Responsibility to Know God’s Word

Inasmuch as God has given a special revelation to man, He expects man not only to treat that revelation with respect but to know it. Man has made a moral decision when he decides not to study God’s word. The book of Hosea shows God’s attitude toward us when we allow ourselves to reject or neglect God’s law. The fourth chapter opens with God bringing a legal charge against Israel: “Hear the word of the Lord, ye children of Israel: for the Lord hath a controversy (RIB: case at law; lawsuit) with the inhabitants of the land, because there is no truth, nor mercy, nor knowledge of God in the land” (4:1). There was no reason for Israel to lack knowledge of God; God had given a revelation to them. Yet, they had no appreciation for God’s law: “I have written to him the great things of my law, but they were counted as a strange thing” (8:12).

Instead of being disciples of the word of the Lord, the Israelites chased after the idols and committed spiritual adultery against the Lord. “They will not frame their doings to turn unto their God: for the spirit of whoredoms is in the midst of them, and they have not known the Lord” (5:4). Chasing after the idols and pursuing immorality, Israel had no use for God’s revealed word. Hence, the knowledge of the Lord passed out of the land. Consequently, the judgment of the Lord came upon Israel: “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge: because thou hast rejected knowledge, I will also reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest to me: seeing thou hast forgotten the law of thy God, I will also forget thy children” (4:6).

Seeing the attitude of God toward Israel for their allowing the revelation of God to be neglected and rejected, we should have no trouble understanding our need to constantly study God’s revealed word. God’s inspired revelation which was once given only to the Jews has now been directed to all men; we are possessors of divine revelation designed to give us all things that pertain to life and godliness (2 Tim. 3:16, 17; 2 Pet. 1:3-4). We stand in exactly the same position in this respect as Israel of old stood.

Lessons Taken From This Text

Understanding the fact that we possess a revelation just as Israel did and have a moral responsibility for learning and obeying that revelation just as Israel did, let us draw some lessons from this text:

My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge: because thou hast rejected knowledge, I will also reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest to me: seeing thou has forgotten the law of thy God, I will also forget thy children (4:6).

Consider the following thoughts based on these facts and this text:

1. True religion is based on knowledge of God’s word. Idolatry, superstition and modern denominationalism all thrive when people do not know the revealed word of God. Divine religion is based on the knowledge of God’s word; it cannot exist where men are ignorant of God’s word. Man must know the truth to be free from sin (Jn. 8:32). Saving faith comes through the hearing of the word of God (Rom. 10:17). Hence, the Christian religion is a taught religion (Jn. 6:44-45) and cannot exist where men are ignorant of God’s word.

Furthermore, a religion which is based on emotionalism is not divine religion. I have witnessed people shouting “Ilove you, Jesus” at the top of their voices who could not find John 3:16 in their Bibles to save their lives. Emotionalism which is void of the knowledge of the word of God is not the Christian religion. Divine religion exists and thrives in direct proportion to man’s knowledge of the word of God.

2. The rejection of God’s revelation is a moral decision. If a man does not know the word of God today, he does not know it because he does not want to know it. The word of God is known to man and easily assessible; a man can purchase a Bible for a little over a dollar at many local markets. The man who does not know the word of God does not want to know the word of God. Notice the text: “because thou hast rejected knowledge:” Man does not know the word of God today because he has rejected and neglected God’s divine word. He has chosen to worship materialism, entertainment, society, etc. and has rejected the word of God (cf. 2 Thess. 2:10).

3. Spiritual ignorance is God-offending. One cannot read Hosea 4:6 without noticing how offended God was that Israel had allowed themselves to become ignorant of God’s holy revelation. The same principle is true today. Jesus said, “He that is of God heareth God’s word: ye therefore hear them not, because ye are not of God” (Jn. 8:47). Again, He said, “He that receiveth you received me, and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me” (Mt. 10:40). Hence, the man who does not have enough interest to receive the evangelist and the gospel has rejected God. He has offended God!

4. Spiritual ignorance is destructive. Hosea said, “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge” (4:6). Spiritual ignorance destroys the souls of men. Those who do not have the love of truth in their hearts will perish (2 Thess. 2:10). When men do not know the proper way to worship God, the conditions which they must meet to obtain God’s grace in salvation, and the nature, work, and organization of the New Testament church, New Testament Christianity cannot exist. In a similar fashion, a group which has historically known these truths can depart from these truths and cease to be God’s people when spiritual ignorance exists. Inevitably, in such cases, an apostasy will come which destroys the church. Consider the lesson from history drawn from the Christian Church. The Christian Church formerly stood identified with New Testament Christianity. After the departure from the revelation of God in introducing instrumental music into the worship of the church, the way to digression was quickly traversed. Today the Christian Church people have no concept of New Testament Christianity, the New Testament church (its nature, mission, worship, organization, etc.), and other aspects of the Lord’s church. Some among them no longer respect the Scriptures as God’s inspired and infallible revelation. Spiritual ignorance has destroyed this people and will destroy any other group of people who neglect or reject the study of God’s word.

5. Spiritual ignorance affects others. This same text in Hosea says, “seeing thou hast forgotten the law of thy God, I will also forget thy children” (4:6). Sometimes men seem to think that spiritual ignorance only affects the man who is willingly refusing to obey God’s word. That is not so. Consider how it affects the children. I have seen cases where some Christian fell away from grace. I knew that they knew enough about God’s word that should they ever decide to straighten up their lives that they would return to Bible worship. In the meantime, however, their children grew up without the knowledge of the Lord being planted in their minds. These children cannot recognize the difference in the worship of God as revealed in the New Testament and that which is devised by men. Consequently, they likely never will study God’s word and learn the truth.

Jesus said it like this: “Every plant, which my heavenly Father hath not planted, shall be rooted up. Let them alone: they be blind leaders of the blind. And if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch” (Mt. 15:13-14). Yes, spiritual ignorance does affect others. It affects our children, friends, and whoever else might follow us down the road to spiritual damnation.

There are some among us who apparently do not believe that spiritual ignorance affects others. For example, when I talk to some brethren, they think that these preachers in the Christian Church and liberal churches are going to be lost because of their participation in instrumental music, church sponsored recreation, the sponsoring church arrangement, etc. However, they do not believe the members of those congregations will be doomed because they are ignorant of this being sinful. Somehow, the grace of God is imagined to extend to cover those who are ignorant of the sins which they are committing. Yet, the word of God teaches otherwise. The Bible teaches that spiritual ignorance affects those around us as they are led into following our wrong example into spiritual damnation.

Conclusion

Seeing the grievous problems which come upon us when we ignore and neglect God’s revelation, let us resolve to work to learn the word of God and to teach others what God expects of us. Let us “buy the truth and sell it not” (Prov. 23:23). Let us go into all the world with the message of the saving gospel of Jesus Christ. Let us do our part to spread the word of God that “the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea” (Hab. 2:14).

Truth Magazine XXII: 39, pp. 627-629
October 5, 1978

Modernism: Jehoiakim’s Penknife

By Mike Willis

During the work of Jeremiah, God commanded Jeremiah to write his words on a scroll and send them to Jehoiakim. The message was to be read to the people upon the fasting day. When the message was heard, some of the people were terrified. Finally, the book was taken to Jehoiakim. “And it came to pass, that when Jehudi had read three or four leaves, he cut it with the penknife, and cast it into the fire that was on the hearth, until all the roll was consumed in the fire that was on the hearth” (Jer. 36:23). Jehoiakim was somewhat more brazen than many in eliminating from the word of God those parts with which he disagreed but, in principle, very similar to not a few religionists today.

Modernists follow the example of Jehoiakim. With the penknife of higher criticism, they go through the pages of God’s divine word and eliminate the things which they do not want to believe. The record of creation, a universal flood, Jonah and the whale, Daniel in the lion’s den, the miracles performed by Elijah, Joshua’s long day, etc. are all “cut out” of the Old Testament, being treated as Jewish folklore or myth. Form critics of the New Testament eliminate the miracles from its pages in the same way. In their quest for the historical Jesus, they completely eliminate anything supernatural or divine from Him.

The miracles are not the only thing removed by the penknife of modernists. Prophecy is re-interpreted and eliminated. Where re-interpretation is not possible, authors who lived after the prophesied event are imagined so that one has five or six men responsible for the writing of a book such as Isaiah. The result of all of this is an edited Bible-edited in the same fashion as Jehoiakim edited it. Modernists have simply chosen to eliminate everything in the Bible which they do not believe. They undermine the authority of God’s word by making it appear to be self-contradictory.

Modernism has generally been somewhat removed from the churches of Christ. Yet, in recent years, more and more modernists are raising their ugly heads among us. We can no longer pretend that modernism is not a threat to the church. Hence, we have planned and produced this special series on modernism. I think that you will want to lay these special issues aside and keep them for future reference. The material is excellent. But, you do not need me to tell you that; it speaks for itself.

Two Conflicting Religions

The religion of modernism and the religion of Christ are two conflicting religions. The God of Christianity is One who has revealed Himself to man through Jesus Christ and through the Bible. The God of modernism is either dead (cf. the God-Is-Dead Movement of Altizer) or silent, in that He does not reveal Himself. The Christ of Christianity is God manifest in the flesh who died for our sins. The Christ of modernism is a mere man with whom they disagree and correct on a number of occasions and who suffered a death on a cross but not for the sins of mankind. The Bible of Christianity is the revelation of God’s mind to man. The Bible of modernism is the human record of man’s religious experiences. We could continue to contrast the salvation, church, etc. of Christianity with that of modernism but enough has been written to show that modernism and New Testament Christianity are two conflicting religions.

These two religions cannot peaceably co-exist. “In the intellectual battle of the present day there can be no `peace without victory’; one side or the other must win” (J. Gresham Machen, Christianity and Liberalism, p. 6). So, let the battle rage. Let the presuppositions, the doctrinal assertions, the moral consequences, etc. of the two systems come into conflict and let truth come forth victorious.

About These Issues

The materials presented in these special issues on “An Assault On Modernism” are somewhat more detailed and scholarly than our usual articles are. They become collector’s items and valuable for that very reason. Sometimes the materials presented in subscription papers such as Truth Magazine are excessively top-water. Hence, every so often I request that we give some more detailed study to some special topics of interest pertaining to problems surrounding us. Though these materials will not be of equal interest to all of our readers, we feel that the extensive study in these articles makes them extremely valuable to those more interested in coming to grips with some of the problems in dealing with religious infidels. With this in mind, we commend this material to you and thank our writers for their labors in putting it together.

Truth Magazine XXII: 40, p. 642
October 12, 1978