Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Anti-intellectualism in the Church of God


 


Way back in the early days of the implosion of the church several websites were chronicling the demise of the church with the hundreds of self-appointed saviors that split off with their own "true" churches. In addition to Gavin Rumneys Ambassador Watch, Gary Scott's Commentary, analysis, and memories of the
XCG community
 and culture was an amazing blog detailing the craziness happening in the church, particularly when it came to Dave Pack. If you think our current exposĂ©s on Dave are a recent thing, it is not so. Dave has been exposed since the day he left the Living Church of God.



Real Christians Don't Wear Tweed · 25 January 03

In a recent journal entry, I wrote the following after having listened to a David Pack sermon:

I listen to this and I find myself thinking, “Do you try to be this stupid?” and last night, I realized that in a sense, he does indeed try to be that stupid. In avoiding formal education (other than the “education” at Ambassador) and not reading anything that in any way remotely challenges anything he thinks, Pack tries to be, at the very least, uneducated.

Armstrongism has always, by necessity, had an anti-education bias. As Mike Feazell wrote in The Liberation of the Worldwide Church of God, “Herbert Armstrong and scholarship did not mix well” (24), and this is clear from the glaring historical glosses, misunderstandings, and slipshod exegesis that permeate Armstrong’s writings. His linguistic proofs fall apart when anyone checks up on him in the Oxford English Dictionary, and his logical proofs are so shot full of assumptions that they’re closer to being cartoons than syllogisms.

But to know this, a bit of education is necessary. A minimal amount, granted, but education nonetheless. And so to keep people from straying and asking too many difficult questions, Armstrong simply declared “Satanic” all the disciplines that called his methods into question and there was no more problem.

Those who cling to Armstrong’s teachings also have to continue to promote his anti-education bias. David Pack, leader of the Restored Church of God, is no exception, and devoted an entire sermon to the topic: “A Leaven of Grave Danger” in which he explains a type of “leaven you have almost certainly never looked for.” According to Pack, this deadly “leaven,” which he calls “spiritual Ebola” (63:09) [1], is “intellectualism,” but in reality is simply higher education.

A significant portion of the sermon is dedicated to mockery of the image of an intellectual that Pack creates for his followers. “It’s almost funny when you look at them,” Pack says, continuing, “They’re so impressed with themselves, and yet they’re slaves to what intellectuals are supposed to be” (33:10). Pack here is referring to the stereotype of a university professor, with unkempt hair, tweed jacket, goatee, and pipe, who looks off into the distances when talking and talks in a lofty style that’s virtually inaccessible to non-intellectuals [2]. He points out that Einstein is a perfect example of this, making particular reference to his wild hair, which, according to Pack, is something of a standard for intellectuals now. He claims that this is a conscious stylistic choice, failing to realize that the reason Einstein (to continue his particular example) looked the way he did probably had much less to do with a conscious fashion decision than with the simple fact that he just had more important things on his mind than what his hair looked like. (It is said he also forgot to eat from time to time, realizing this only when his stomach pains were too strong to ignore.) Strangely, Pack admits that this a stereotype, but maintains the validity of the image.

Another characteristic of intellectuals, according to Pack, is the language they use. Intellectuals, he says, “speak what I call, and I didn’t think this up . . . the language of scholarship. The furthest thing from Plain Truth-style writing. Mr. Armstrong hated it, and every time it crept into the church, he hit it with the biggest hammer he could find” (33:29) [3]. Admittedly, a great deal of scholarly writing is somewhat obtuse, but it need not be pointed out that this in no way invalidates the subject matter.

The criticism that Pack makes of intellectualism that is most seriously erroneous, and most dangerous to Armstrongism, is his ridicule of using the works of other writers and thinkers to provide authority for one’s arguments. God, Jesus (listed separately as they are in fact two entities in the Armstrongian pantheon), and Mr. Armstrong didn’t do this, Pack reasons, and for good cause: they had sufficient authority and didn’t need backing from anyone else. On the other hand, those who have no authority must buttress their arguments with quotes from others, which Pack equates with the scribes of the New Testament and labels “name-dropping” and says is “having confidence in the flesh,” as described in Philippians 3.3.

He begins by quoting Matthew 7.28, 29 [4], explaining that the scribes “didn’t have authority, they had to quote an authority” (48:40). Rabbis had authority, and after listing several first-century writers, imagines a scribe, in making his argument, to say to himself, “If I drop Hillel, who’s going to disagree?” (49:40).

Later, he points out that God doesn’t do this either. Unfortunately, he’s being serious:

We serve a frank God. He doesn’t posture things in the language of scholarship, and then quote some other god, or several other gods. “Well, you know I’m God, but Buddha said this too, and Confucius, and you know if you study Taoism you’ll find he said some things similar to me. So look into them and you’ll see, you’ll realize that it validates me.” Can you imagine God if he was that way? Can you imagine? Can you imagine if God said, “Now, you know, remember the Sabbath and keep it holy. And you think I’m alone in this, check what Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu, the Hindu gods said.” I mean it’s ridiculous. God just says do things (54:34).

This bit of nonsense if humorous for a number of reasons. First, it’s a completely anthropomorphic image of God, in keeping with the Armstrongian tradition that states, among other things, that God has a “spiritual body” (whatever that might be) [5]. Secondly, to equate the Armstrongian God with the God of Christian orthodoxy is ridiculous enough, but to bring eastern religions into the mix only further shows his ignorance of the basic tenants of these religions. The scenario he creates is silly, but certainly not for the reasons he provides.

What he fails to realize is why scholars quote outside sources. It is, to some degree, a question of authority. It is intended to show that a given idea is plausible and conforms to already-accepted notions. Additionally, a quote is often applicable to a particular argument, and providing the name of the idea’s originator, far from being name-dropping, is a requirement to avoid plagiarism. These are basic, even obvious ideas to most, but Pack seems completely oblivious to these principles (except for the plagiarism issue, which is a constant thorn for him as he paraphrases Armstrong’s entire library).

Armstrong would never have quoted sources (except for Strong’s and a few commentaries) for three reasons. First, much if not most of his heresy was simply plagiarized, and providing sources would not have helped him hide the fact. Second, most outside sources contradicted what he taught. Indeed, the few times he might have quoted outside sources, he did so with derision, essentially saying, “Even these deceived idiots get it right from time to time.” The final reason, related to the first, is that Armstrong supposedly received all his ideas directly from the mouth (which, in an Armstrongian sense, can be a literal orifice) of God. Who needs more authority than that?

Asking questions in a Church of God has never really been encouraged, to say the least. While the WCG under Armstrong never had a catechism, as such, there were certain types of questions implicitly understood to be appropriate and others understood as unacceptable. It is not surprising, then, when Pack condemns the asking of questions in general, subsuming it under the notion of it being pagan, “classical Greek thinking.”

The “questioning syndrome” he calls it (39:07), and the problem is endemic in our society, according to Pack.

A lot of people like to ask questions. I see it on talk shows all the time. All these intellectuals. Now nobody has the answers, and frankly, when you listen to some of them, they haven’t even figured out the questions, but they love to ask them. And then ask the experts the answers. And of course nobody wants to know what God thinks (39:36).

The question of the intellectual integrity of any sort of “questioning” one might find on a talk show aside, this clearly shows Pack’s attitude toward curiosity. Lest there be any doubt about its evil, Pack traces the Fall back to questioning.

Like Armstrong, he finds the source of all our problems back in the Garden, with its mythical two trees and the fact that Adam and Eve ate of the Tree of Knowledge instead of the Tree of Life. Pointing out that the tree of both good and evil knowledge, Pack says that God’s forbiddance was equivocal to God saying, “don’t even touch a mixture” of good and bad (78:40).

Yet how did the Serpent trick Eve into tasting the fruit? It “started asking questions” (79:34). “Clear cut directions became confusing” due to this (80:35). So, in short, the root of all evil is questioning — after all, if the devil hadn’t begun questioning, then Adam and Eve might not have fallen, according to this line of thinking.

It’s not the posturing, the tweed, and the quoting of authorities that comprise Packian intellectualism — it’s simply learning too much. Pack, around sixty minutes into his ninety-minute sermon, makes this switch with relative ease.

Referring to Ecclesiastes 1.18, which reads “For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow,” Pack reasons that one can learn too much of the wrong thing and it increases sorrow (56:07). Pack then provides a verse that “proves with the increase of a tremendous amount of man’s knowledge, physical, carnal knowledge, there is sorrow” (56:28). Reading Daniel 12.4 [6] and pointing out the exponential rate of increase in today’s knowledge, Pack says that “a humanity that has never had more knowledge has never been more miserable” (57:32). This is an oft-used idea in Armstrongism, and is usually used in reference to humanity’s ability, through nuclear arms, to destroy itself completely. “Solomon’s wisdom was validated by Daniel’s prophecy” (57:39), he confidently reasons.

Certainly Pack has a point to a degree. These are anxious times, and a lot of it is due to the knowledge explosion and the resulting technologies of warfare. At the same time, the other advances are equally astounding: heart transplants, the eradication of certain diseases, the relatively high literacy rate in the Western world (compared to ages past), the movement toward more tolerant, humane treatment of prisoners — a few things that come to mind as I sit here typing that show our age is, in many respects, better than any previous period (at least in the developed world).

This is simply to point out that knowledge, like many things in the world, is a neutral thing, neither good or bad.

Yet Pack in the sermon is supposed to be talking about intellectualism, not about knowledge, which comes through education. Or perhaps they’re the same thing? Indeed, that is exactly what Pack has done at this point in the sermon (approximately two-thirds through): he has exchanged the stereotype, tweed-wearing, posturing intellectual for general knowledge. All the condemnation of the supposed hollowness intellectualism can now be heaped upon knowledge in general. Too much knowledge, Pack would be quick to point out, and knowledge about “the wrong things” (i.e., the wrong kind of knowledge, whatever that might be) — but knowledge, nonetheless.

From an outsider’s perspective, it’s clear what might comprise “wrong knowledge,” what might increase sorrow. The “wrong thing” would clearly be anything that shows Armstrongism for what it is — a farce. Sociology, psychology, and even history, studied “objectively” (and by that term I mean studied without the Armstrongian presumption that anything found in any given Introduction to Psychology would be wrong) would highlight the methods and means by which Armstrong induced people to join his sect and then kept them in. The sorrow that knowledge supposedly increases then becomes disillusionment — the feeling of being duped, that so many exiters of the WCG felt (and continue to feel).

More evidence that Pack is ridiculing education comes a bit earlier when Pack discusses the fact that Armstrong wasn’t perfect.

Sometimes Mr. Armstrong did things that were not absolutely grammatically correct. You have to trust me on that one. He didn’t care. His job was to communicate with people, and when you read it, it played and read well. It was tight. Very direct (46:37).

It’s interesting, to begin with, that Pack assumes his sheep are so uneducated that they have never noticed Armstrong’s poor grammar. They probably haven’t, because most members of the Restored Church of God are so enamored with Armstrong that they probably view him through smoked lenses — nothing the man did was wrong. It’s also worth pointing out that, in Pack’s mind, something can be “tight” and “very direct” and yet grammatically incorrect. Even though Armstrong’s “job was to communicate with people,” he didn’t care about grammar, nor should he have, according to Pack.

In making this grammar comment, though, Pack is making a much more dangerous claim. He’s essentially saying that even basic knowledge of grammar relatively unimportant. If something as relatively basic as grammar can be deemed unimportant for someone whose job it is to communicate, think how much more unimportant — even dangerous — higher education is for those whose job is not to communicate but simply to follow.

When assessing the danger intellectualism (read: a broad education) presents to members of the Restored Church of God, Pack is surprisingly accurate regarding the potential consequences:

I have almost never seen anyone catch the virus of intellectualism recover. I liken it to spiritual Ebola. it just eats them up. They never make it back. They become impressed with themselves. [. . . ] I have watched mind after mind that I knew and loved simply corrupt right in front of me. It’s an incredible, it’s a terrible thing to see (63:09, 83:23).

This is the real danger: members who are infected with “intellectualism” can’t recover because they realize recovery means a return to a certain kind of closed-minded, uneducated thinking. Once you read all the proof that the world is round, it’s difficult to pretend otherwise, no matter how much you might want to. Education is the Toto of Armstrongism, showing us the social, economic, and (most importantly) psychological mechanisms that make membership in such a sect not only plausible but also, from a member’s point of view, inevitable.

What can we do about this, though? Pack’s answer is the same as has been offered through the centuries by leaders of cognitive minorities: build a ghetto, complete with walls and heavy locks. “All of us should lock ourselves in a spiritual safe, which is God’s word,” (14:42) Pack says, and for once, its difficult to disagree with him. When you believe differently than most everyone else around you, it’s difficult to maintain plausibility of those conflicting beliefs. Minimizing contact with anything anti-Armstrongian, then, is the only answer, and this would exclude certain disciplines that encourage critical thinking or show Armstrongism for what it is.

This notion is so important that Pack both began and ended the sermon with it:

There is a spirit of intellectualism. It is linked to the cancer and leaven of heresy and doctrine, so says Christ. And if it enters you, brethren, it will sweep through you and destroy you. You cannot stop it any more than you can stop it in a loaf in your oven.

On the other hand, there is simplicity in the truth of God. There is simplicity in Christ. Fight losing it. Fight losing it, and thereby remain unleavened (85:03).

Since “doctrinal leaven spreads” (47:23), it’s best not even to touch it if you want to remain an Armstrongite.

As could be expected, we learn quite a bit about Pack himself, apart from his beliefs, from this sermon. It is perhaps the ultimate irony that throughout this sermon attacking education, Pack consistently shows his own lack of education.

For example, Pack seems unaware of the basic principle that the meaning and social status of words change through time. In this vein, he doesn’t consider the fact that words in the King James Version often had different meaning four centuries ago. Language change is a rudimentary observation, and one which Pack certainly would not disagree with, for in following the Armstrongian tradition, he often “modernizes” passages as he reads them aloud (for example, reading “you” where in fact “thee” is written). Yet he seem to forget this when reading Philippians 3.8.

The King James reads, “Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ.” Pack, picking up on the word “dung” and making a case that God and Christianity is essentially “frank,” basically says that the Bible is so “frank” that it even uses profanity when necessary. Obviously he is equating “dung” with the word “shit,” and this would require that the word “dung” mean the same thing in 1611 as it does now. If it did, then perhaps other, contemporary versions would also translate this as “dung.”

Here’s how it’s presented in the New International Version: “What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ”

The New Revised Standard version reads, “More than that, I regard everything as loss because of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things, and I regard them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ.”

The KJV’s “dung” here is translated the more socially acceptable “rubbish.” Pack doesn’t acknowledge that it’s not always translated “dung,” though, because that undermines his point. My point, on the other hand, is that he doesn’t even have a point because he fails to realize how the English language has changed, and what is socially ungraceful now was not necessarily so in 1611.

At another point in the sermon, Pack makes reference to the fact that the word “piss” is in the Bible. He doesn’t provide scriptural backing for this, but a quick search reveals the following citations: 1 Samuel 25.22, 34; 1 Kings 14.10, 11, 21; 2 Kings 9.8, 18.27; and, Isaiah 36.12. An interesting study would be to look at what the word “piss” meant in 1611 and compare it to today’s vulgar meaning. (Given my lack of research material, I cannot do this. However, given the fact that the word appears in Shakespeare’s plays, a rough contemporary of the Authorized Version, and the fact that the relative, modern freedom of speech did not exist in Elizabethan England, it seems reasonable to assume that “piss” hardly had the crude connotations it does now.)

As a final example, Pack shows that he doesn’t know the basic problems with the creation account presented in Genesis.

Most people, if I may use the vernacular, blow off the story of Adam and Eve in the garden. “It’s too simple. It’s not intellectual enough. There’s no scholarship in it. There was just eight verses about a snake and a couple of folks and a couple of trees.” Very basic. Very simple. Very short. Absolutely a synopsis (82:30).

Scholarly criticism of the creation account (as a historical, factual explanation for the origins of the universe) does not fall back on silly accusations like, “It’s not intellectual enough.” Instead, it compares the account with the geological evidence and finds it wanting. Or it points out logical inconsistencies (i.e., light is created before light sources). But it doesn’t make such shallow pronouncements as Pack accused it of.

I am not suggesting that Pack is an idiot. Indeed, a dolt couldn’t manipulate and control people as he does. Also, I am not saying that Pack is completely uneducated. He is, after all, a college graduate, and he has a very high level of quite specialized knowledge. However, the knowledge he possess and the education he acquired is considered, by and large, to be bogus by the rest of the world, and as such, he is comparatively uneducated.

As in most of his sermons, Pack shows us in “A Leaven of Grave Danger” his abusive, controlling leadership style. As pointed out earlier, he speaks approvingly of Armstrong hitting things with “the biggest hammer he could find.”

More disturbingly, however, he shows his tendency to dehumanize those under him. Regarding Philippians 3.2 [7] he says,

So many today who want to be considered Christian, and focus on love [8], don’t ever want to hear language that sharp, that blunt. You know, one of the hallmarks of Mr. Armstrong was that he said things exactly as they were in the Bible. If I walked up to you and I said, “Do you know, there are some people who want into this church, and they’re dogs.” I, I know a couple of ministers I’ve had to disfellowship, I said that, and I said to you, “You know what? They’re dogs.” Would you not be offended? And yet, that’s exactly what the Bible says (16:30).

Any minister who calls individuals “dogs” with such obvious glee is hardly worthy of being called a minister. Yet Pack’s tendency to dehumanize people even extends toward his followers, whom he continually call sheep. As he is the shepherd, this makes him the only one in the analogy who’s human.

Pack also likes to remind listeners, both through connotation and denotation, that he’s in charge — he’s the leader, and they’re the followers. He makes the rules: “If I have one rule that fits you and one for the rest of the church, you now KNOW I will NOT give my life for you” (18:21). He decides what people need to hear: “The moment I tell you what you want to hear, you ought to never follow me again” (17:42). And again, there’s his disturbing obsession (for he makes the analogy in every sermon I’ve heard) with the shepherd and sheep.

In “A Leaven of Grave Danger,” Pack offers outsiders little hope that things might ever change in his particular Church of God. Following his commands, Pack’s followers are building ever higher walls around them and inoculating themselves to the true nature of Armstrongism and their particular leader.

Notes

1) Time references are to the Real Media version downloaded for the Restored Church of God’s web site and are usually approximate. 
 
2) It’s interesting to note that the image Pack creates of an intellectual is a male image — pipe, tweed jacket, messy hair — illustrating the inherent sexism of the Armstrongian culture. This is heightened by the fact that throughout the sermon, the examples he gives always involve males. 
 
3) This also serves as an illustration of the Armstrongian/COG dictatorial, abusive leadership style. 
 
4) And it came to pass, when Jesus had ended these sayings, the people were astonished at his doctrine: For he taught them as one having authority, and not as the scribes. 
 
5) In another sermon, called “Asleep in the End Times,” Pack actually goes so far as speculate that it’s possible that God might sleep from time to time — not from necessity, mind you, but simply from the pleasure of sleeping. I was disappointed, though, that Pack didn’t continue and speculate about what God might dream. 
 
6} But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book, even to the time of the end: many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased. 
 
7) Beware of dogs, beware of evil workers, beware of the concision. 
 
8) The derision in Pack’s voice at this point is more than a little disturbing.

Posted by Gary Scott

Filed under RCG



Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Sabbath Theories

 

CGI’s Vance Stinson’s Three Sabbath Theories

Lonnie Hendrix

This past Sabbath, Pastor Vance Stinson of the Church of God International delivered a sermon titled “Sabbath Theories.” The message began with a defense of the notion that Torah commandments can be divided into a number of categories (e.g., moral, judicial/civil, ceremonial). Mr. Stinson also asserted the preeminence of the Decalogue (Ten Commandments) within Torah and asserted that it constituted the “heart of the Old Covenant.” Believing himself to have established the principle that the Law can and should be divided into these categories, the pastor then proceeded to identify three theories (Transference, Replacement, and New Covenant Theology) used by traditional Christians to justify ignoring the Sabbath and worshipping on Sunday. Mr. Stinson went on to associate the Transference Theory with The Westminster Confession of Faith. Likewise, he associated the Replacement Theory with the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Indeed, he found much in those documents with which he could agree. Although he rejected all three theories, of course, he reserved much of his fire for what he referred to as “New Covenant Theology” (might that be because he thinks it most closely explains the view represented by my posts?).

First, it is important to begin where Mr. Stinson began – Should we regard the Law as a whole or a collection of categories which are severable from each other? While I have repeatedly acknowledged the value of dividing the Law into various categories to aid us in understanding it, Scripture ALWAYS regards the Law as a WHOLE (in both the Old and New Testaments). In the fourth chapter of the book of Deuteronomy, we read: “And now, O Israel, listen to the statutes and the rules that I am teaching you, and do them, that you may live, and go in and take possession of the land that the Lord, the God of your fathers, is giving you. You shall not add to the word that I command you, nor take from it, that you may keep the commandments of the Lord your God that I command you.” (Verses 1-2, ESV here and throughout, unless otherwise specified) A few verses on, in the same chapter, we read: “See, I have taught you statutes and rules, as the Lord my God commanded me, that you should do them in the land that you are entering to take possession of it.” (Verse 5) “And what great nation is there, that has statutes and rules so righteous as all this law that I set before you today?” (Verse 8) Moreover, to reinforce the notion that the Torah was to be viewed as a whole, we read near the conclusion of the chapter: “This is the law that Moses set before the people of Israel. These are the testimonies, the statutes, and the rules, which Moses spoke to the people of Israel when they came out of Egypt” (verses 44-45). Indeed, in the twelfth chapter, we read “Be careful to obey all these words that I command you.” And, at the very end of that twelfth chapter of the same book (Deuteronomy), we read: “Everything that I command you, you shall be careful to do. You shall not add to it or take from it.”

Likewise, in the New Testament, the writers constantly refer to THE LAW and the Prophets. Indeed, Jesus said that he came to this earth to fulfill both (Matthew 5:17). When Christ was asked about the greatest of the commandments in Torah, he answered that the commands to love God and our neighbors were the greatest (Matthew 22:34-39). Then, he concluded with “On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.” (Verse 40) Indeed, we hear the echo of Christ’s teaching in Paul’s epistle to the saints at Rome – he wrote: “Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.” (Romans 13:10) In other words, the WHOLE Law is fulfilled by love. Likewise, in his epistle to the saints of Galatia, Paul wrote: “For the whole law is fulfilled in one word: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’” Earlier, in that same letter to the Romans, Paul had talked about the Law as a whole and mentions the “letter of the Law.” He wrote: “For by works of the law no human being will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of sin.” (3:20) Also, in that letter to the Galatians, Paul wrote: “I testify again to every man who accepts circumcision that he is obligated to keep the whole law.” (5:3) In the epistle of James, we read: “If you really fulfill the royal law according to the Scripture, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself,’ you are doing well. But if you show partiality, you are committing sin and are convicted by the law as transgressors. For whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one point has become guilty of all of it. For he who said, ‘Do not commit adultery,’ also said, ‘Do not murder.’ If you do not commit adultery but do murder, you have become a transgressor of the law.” (2:8-11) So, again, we see that in both the Old and New Testaments, the Law is treated as a WHOLE.

In fact, Mr. Stinson admits in his sermon that Scripture does NOT use the terms which he uses to describe different categories of laws. Even so, Mr. Stinson went on to suggest that the seventh chapter of Paul’s first epistle to the saints at Corinth demonstrated his contention that there are different categories of law. He said that Paul’s distinction between circumcision and the other commandments suggests/implies different categories of law (I Corinthians 7:19). Of course, if Paul is suggesting such a thing here, he clearly contradicts himself in his letters to the Romans and Galatians. Paul, however, was NOT contradicting himself in this instance. The context suggests that both those who were circumcised (Jews), and those who were not circumcised (Gentiles) should NOT concern themselves with this physical sign of the Old Covenant. Think about it, is Mr. Stinson suggesting that the command to circumcise males isn’t a component of Torah or the Old Covenant? Of course, NOT! The pastor knows that this is an integral part of the whole. Paul was NOT suggesting that the command to circumcise was somehow inferior to the other commandments. You see, Mr. Stinson’s theology DEMANDS dividing the Law into categories. It is the ONLY way that he can justify obligating Christians to obey some of Torah’s provisions while ignoring others! He can say that Christ abrogated the “judicial/civil” and “ceremonial” categories but enjoined his followers to observe the “moral” part of the Law. Again, it’s the only way CGI’s cherry-picking of Torah works!

I do agree with Mr. Stinson that the Decalogue (Ten Commandments) is the preeminent expression of Torah Law – written by the very finger of God. That is Scriptural. I also agree with him that the Ten Commandments are the “heart of the Old Covenant,” and that they cannot be separated from the rest. However, it seems to me like these facts are more supportive of my thesis (the Law as a WHOLE), than his (the Law divided into different categories). After all, just as the Decalogue summarized, encompassed, and represented the terms of the Old Covenant, Christ said that his two commandments summarized and fulfilled ALL of the Torah/Law!

After leaving the subject of the Law, Mr. Stinson began reading excerpts from The Westminster Confession of Faith. The pastor especially liked what it had to say about the Law (because it closely aligns with his own view of the Law). After a discussion of the Decalogue, we read there: “Besides this law, commonly called moral, God was pleased to give to the people of Israel, as a church under age, ceremonial laws, containing several typical ordinances, partly of worship, prefiguring Christ, His graces, actions, sufferings, and benefits; and partly holding forth divers instructions of moral duties. All which ceremonial laws are now abrogated under the New Testament. To them also, as a body politic, He gave sundry judicial laws, which expired together with the state of that people, not obliging any other, now, further than the general equity thereof may require. The moral law doth forever bind all, as well justified persons as others, to the obedience thereof; and that not only in regard of the matter contained in it, but also in respect of the authority of God the Creator who gave it. Neither doth Christ in the gospel any way dissolve, but much strengthen, this obligation.” Indeed, Mr. Stinson commented several times that he liked this stuff – that it was biblically sound (although, as we have pointed out, it is NOT).

However, Mr. Stinson did part company with the Westminster Confession when it came to the question of the Sabbath. Although he liked much of what they had to say about the Sabbath, he deserted them when he read: “As it is of the law of nature, that, in general, a due proportion of time be set apart for the worship of God; so, in His Word, by a positive, moral, and perpetual commandment, binding all men in all ages, he hath particularly appointed one day in seven for a Sabbath, to be kept holy unto Him: which, from the beginning of the world to the resurrection of Christ, was the last day of the week; and, from the resurrection of Christ, was changed into the first day of the week, which in Scripture is called the Lord’s Day, and is to be continued to the end of the world as the Christian Sabbath.” Mr. Stinson characterized this as the “Transference Theory” of the Sabbath (that the obligation to observe the Sabbath had been transferred to Sunday). Now, although I have no problem with the folks who accept this Confession of Faith, I must agree with Mr. Stinson that this does NOT constitute a sound biblical justification for Sunday observance. From a Scriptural perspective, I believe that Christ renders the observance of ALL of the individual commandments of Torah unnecessary.

From there, Mr. Stinson went to the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Once again, the pastor liked many of the things that they had to say about the Law and the Sabbath; but he did NOT like their stance on observance of the Sabbath. Now, although I think that Mr. Stinson’s characterization of The Westminster Confession was fair, I think that his characterization of the Catholic Catechism missed some of the nuance contained in that document with regard to the Law. For example, the document talks about a “Moral Law,” but it is clearly distinguished from Torah. We read there: “There are different expression of the moral law, all of them interrelated: eternal law – the source, in God, of all law; natural law; revealed law; comprising the Old Law and the New Law, or Law of the Gospel; finally, civil and ecclesiastical laws. The moral law finds it fullness and its unity in Christ. Jesus Christ is in person the way of perfection. He is the end of the law, for only he teaches and bestows the justice of God: ‘For Christ is the end of the law, that everyone who has faith may be justified.” Later, in speaking about Torah, we read: “The Old Law is a preparation for the Gospel. ‘The Law is a pedagogy and prophecy of things to come.’ It prophesies and presages the work of liberation from sin which will be fulfilled in Christ: it provides the New Testament with images, ‘types,’ and symbols for expressing the life according to the Spirit.” This is consistent with Paul’s statement in his letter to the saints at Colossae that food, drink, festivals, and the Sabbath were “shadows” of what was to come, but that the reality is found in Jesus Christ (2:16-17).

Nevertheless, once again, Mr. Stinson parted company with the Catholics over the issue of Sabbath observance. Although he liked this statement: “The Council of Trent teaches that the Ten Commandments are obligatory for Christians and that the justified man is still bound to keep them; the Second Vatican Council confirms: ‘The bishops, successors of the apostles, receive from the Lord…the mission of teaching all peoples, and of preaching the Gospel to every creature, so that all men may attain salvation through faith, Baptism and the observance of the Commandments.” I would point out that Christ commissioned his disciples to teach “them to observe all that I have commanded you” (Matthew 28:20). Mr. Stinson, however, does not share their belief that Sunday worship fulfills the “moral” commandment to “remember the Sabbath day.” The pastor labels this the “Replacement Theory.” Now, in so far as I believe that just like the other commandments, the Sabbath commandment pointed to Christ and was fulfilled by him, I would say that replacing Saturday with Sunday to “fulfill” the commandment is unnecessary and redundant.

Finally, Mr. Stinson labels what I have advocated “New Covenant Theology.” Now, if he means by that that we subscribe to the notion that the Old Covenant has been replaced by a New Covenant, he is absolutely correct. We read in the anonymous epistle to the Hebrews: “Christ has obtained a ministry that is as much more excellent than the old as the covenant he mediates is better, since it is enacted on better promises. For if that first covenant had been faultless, there would have been no occasion to look for a second. For he finds fault with them when he says: ‘Behold, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will establish a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah, not like the covenant that I made with their fathers on the day when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt. For they did not continue in my covenant, and so I showed no concern for them, declares the Lord. For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the Lord: I will put my laws into their minds, and write them on their hearts, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And they shall not teach, each one his neighbor and each one his brother, saying, ‘Know the Lord,’ for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest. For I will be merciful toward their iniquities, and I will remember their sins no more.’ In speaking of a new covenant, he makes the first one obsolete. And what is becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to vanish away.” (8:6-13)

Pastor Stinson proceeded to “correct” New Covenant Theology’s mischaracterization of the fourth chapter of this same epistle to the Hebrews. He claims that this passage is NOT speaking of the Sabbath in the present sense, but in the future – eschatological sense. First, we should note that the thought actually begins in the third chapter of that book. We learn there that the Israelites were unable to enter God’s rest because of their unbelief. Then, in chapter four, we read: “Therefore, since the promise of entering his rest still stands, let us be careful that none of you be found to have fallen short of it. For we also have had the good news proclaimed to us, just as they did; but the message they heard was of no value to them, because they did not share the faith of those who obeyed. Now we who have believed enter that rest…” (verses 1-3, NIV) Now, Mr. Stinson made much of something that was said a little later in the fourth chapter. We read there: “There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who enters God’s rest also rests from their works, just as God did from his. Let us, therefore, make every effort to enter that rest, so that no one will perish by following their example of disobedience.” (Verses 9-11) He said that this could not refer to the present Christian Age, because our works cannot be said to currently equate with God’s works. The passage, however, does not suggest that our works are the equivalent of God’s works. On the contrary, it specifically draws attention to the fact that we would cease working just as God had ceased working. In other words, the nature of the works themselves is unimportant, and they would obviously be different!

Mr. Stinson went on to characterize this position as “Jesus is my Sabbath, so I don’t need a day to worship.” Nothing could be further from the truth. This same epistle establishes the need for regular fellowship and worship with like-minded people (Hebrews 10:25).

No, Mr. Stinson, the Old Covenant is NOT the same as the New Covenant. It’s provisions were NOT transferred to, and made a part of, the New Covenant. The Law of Christ is NOT the same as the Torah/Mosaic Law. The two commandments, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind, and You shall love your neighbor as yourself,” do comprehend and summarize Torah, including those “moral” laws, “natural” laws, Ten Commandments, etc. Nevertheless, unlike the individual commandments which the Israelites were required to keep as part of their covenant with God, the New Covenant Christian must apply these principles to every situation and circumstance he/she will face in this life. It isn’t that Torah was abrogated or “done away with.” Rather, it is that Christ fulfilled it for us – rendering our attempts to obey those individual commandments redundant/unnecessary. Christ fulfilled it ALL. Everything in Torah pointed to him. Torah was the shadow – Christ is the reality. We don’t need the written code, the letter, anymore. The two commandments go to the intent of the Law – love. They make its internalization and spiritualization possible. Christ said that “not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the Law until all is accomplished.” (Matthew 5:18) He accomplished ALL of it – It is finished! And that, my friend, is why God will accept the worship of those who have accepted Christ on Saturday, Sunday, or any other day of the week! “For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them.” (Matthew 18:20)

Monday, July 17, 2023

LCG Members Who Refuse To Be Teachable Will NOT Be Gods And Reign With Christ

It's time again for the weekly smackdown of LCG members. This item they are not being as teachable as they should be. Some of them do not allow the most amazing ministers the church has ever seen to teach them. After all, the LCG ministry knows best and has the answer to everything. If they are not up to it then Bwana Bob Mzungu will step up and educate them.


Are You Teachable? The Scriptures reveal that one of the important qualities that God is looking for in Christians and future leaders in His Kingdom is teachability, the desire and willingness to listen and learn. Abraham was teachable and responsive to God’s instructions (Genesis 12:1–4). Moses was a very capable leader, yet he was also humble and teachable (Numbers 12:3). David’s attitude comes through in Psalm 119:33 when he wrote, “Teach me, O Lord, the way of Your statutes.” Solomon recognized his human inadequacies when he asked God for wisdom and an “understanding heart” so he could learn to rule God’s people wisely (1 Kings 3:9). When Jesus said the meek and the poor in spirit will be blessed, He was emphasizing their teachability and willingness to learn and grow (Matthew 5:3–5). The Scriptures make it plain that when we harden our hearts to God’s instruction, we will reap serious consequences (Proverbs 28:14). We have been called to reign with Jesus Christ in the Kingdom of God and being teachable is one of the keys to attaining that reward. Let’s continue to strive to develop that most important quality.
Have a profitable Sabbath,
Douglas S. Winnail