Ethos Statement on Fundamentalism & Evangelicalism

Republished with permission (and unedited) from Central Baptist Theological Seminary. (The document posted at Central’s website within the last couple of weeks.)

Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism

To be an evangelical is to be centered upon the gospel. To be a Fundamentalist is, first, to believe that fundamental doctrines are definitive for Christian fellowship, second, to refuse Christian fellowship with all who deny fundamental doctrines (e.g., doctrines that are essential to the gospel), and third, to reject the leadership of Christians who form bonds of cooperation and fellowship with those who deny essential doctrines. We are both evangelicals and Fundamentalists according to these definitions. We all believe that, as ecclesial movements, both evangelicalism and Fundamentalism have drifted badly from their core commitments. In the case of evangelicalism, the drift began when self-identified neo-evangelicals began to extend Christian fellowship to those who clearly rejected fundamental doctrines. This extension of fellowship represented a dethroning of the gospel as the boundary of Christian fellowship. It was a grievous error, and it has led to the rapid erosion of evangelical theology within the evangelical movement. At the present moment, some versions of professing evangelicalism actually harbor denials of the gospel such as Open Theism or the New Perspective on Paul. We deny that the advocates of such positions can rightly be called evangelical.

On the other hand, we also believe that some Fundamentalists have attempted to add requirements to the canons of Christian fellowship. Sometimes these requirements have involved institutional or personal loyalties, resulting in abusive patterns of leadership. Other times they have involved organizational agendas. They have sometimes involved the elevation of relatively minor doctrines to a position of major importance. In some instances, they have involved the creation of doctrines nowhere taught in Scripture, such as the doctrine that salvation could not be secured until Jesus presented His material blood in the heavenly tabernacle. During recent years, the most notorious manifestation of this aberrant version of Fundamentalism is embodied in a movement that insists that only the King James version of the Bible (or, in some cases, its underlying Greek or Hebrew texts) ought be recognized as the perfectly preserved Word of God.

We regard both of these extremes as equally dangerous. The evangelicalism of the far Left removes the gospel as the boundary of Christian fellowship. The Fundamentalism of the far Right adds to the gospel as the boundary of Christian fellowship. Neither extreme is acceptable to us, but because we encounter the far Right more frequently, and because it claims the name of Fundamentalism, we regard it as a more immediate and insidious threat.

Another version of Fundamentalism that we repudiate is revivalistic and decisionistic. It typically rejects expository preaching in favor of manipulative exhortation. It bases spirituality upon crisis decisions rather than steady, incremental growth in grace. By design, its worship is shallow or non-existent. Its philosophy of leadership is highly authoritarian and its theology is vitriolic in its opposition to Calvinism. While this version of Fundamentalism has always been a significant aspect of the movement, we nevertheless see it as a threat to biblical Christianity.

We also reject the “new-image Fundamentalism” that absorbs the current culture, producing a worldly worship and a pragmatic ministry. These self-professed fundamentalists often follow the latest trends in ministry, disparage theological labels such as Baptist, and aggressively criticize any version of Fundamentalism not following their ministry style.

We oppose anti-separatist evangelicalism, hyper-fundamentalism, revivalism, and new-image Fundamentalism. We wish to reclaim authentic Fundamentalism, to rebuild it, and to strengthen it. For us that reclamation involves not only working against the philosophy of broad evangelicalism (which assaults us from outside), but also working against those versions of Fundamentalism that subvert the Christian faith.

On the other hand, these positions do not exhaust the evangelical options. Conservative evangelicals have reacted against the current erosion of evangelicalism by refocusing attention upon the gospel, including its importance as a boundary for Christian fellowship. These conservative evangelicals have become important spokespersons against current denials of the gospel, and they have also spoken out against trends that remove the gospel from its place of power in transforming lives (e.g., the church growth and church marketing movements).

Certain differences do still exist between historic Fundamentalists and conservative evangelicals. Fundamentalists, in contrast to Conservative evangelicals, tend to align more with dispensationalism and cessationism. Fundamentalists tend to react against contemporary popular culture, while many conservative evangelicals embrace it. Perhaps most importantly, Fundamentalists make a clean break with the leadership of anti-separatist evangelicals, while conservative evangelicals continue to accommodate (or at least refuse to challenge) their leadership.

Because of these differences, we do not believe that complete cooperation with conservative evangelicalism is desirable. Nevertheless, we find that we have much more in common with conservative evangelicals (who are slightly to our Left) than we do with hyper-Fundamentalists (who are considerably to our Right), or even with revivalistic Fundamentalists (who are often in our back yard). In conservative evangelicals we find allies who are willing to challenge not only the compromise of the gospel on the Left, but also the pragmatic approach to Christianity that typifies so many evangelicals and Fundamentalists. For this reason, we believe that careful, limited forms of fellowship are possible.

We wish to be used to restate, refine, and strengthen biblical Fundamentalism. The process of restatement includes not only defining what a thing is, but also saying what it is not. We find that we must point to many versions of professing Fundamentalism and say, “That is not biblical Christianity.” We do not believe that the process of refinement and definition can occur without such denials. The only way to strengthen Fundamentalism is to speak out against some self-identified Fundamentalists.

We also see a need to speak out against the abandonment of the gospel by the evangelical Left, the reducing of the gospel’s importance by the heirs of the New Evangelicalism, and the huckstering of the gospel by pragmatists, whether evangelicals or Fundamentalists. On the other hand, while we may express disagreement with aspects of conservative evangelicalism (just as we may express disagreement with one another), we wish to affirm and to strengthen the activity of conservative evangelicals in restoring the gospel to its rightful place.

The marks of a strong Fundamentalism will include the following:

  1. A recommitment to the primacy and proclamation of the gospel.
  2. An understanding that the fundamentals of the gospel are the boundary of Christian fellowship.
  3. A focus on the importance of preaching as biblical exposition.
  4. An emphasis upon progressive sanctification understood as incremental spiritual growth.
  5. An elevation of the importance of ordinate Christian affections, expressed partly by sober worship that is concerned with the exaltation and magnification of God.
  6. An understanding of Christian leadership primarily as teaching and serving.
  7. A commitment to teaching and transmitting the whole system of faith and practice.
  8. An exaltation of the centrality of the local congregation in God’s work.

These are features of an authentic Fundamentalism that we all feel is worth saving. These features describe the kind of Fundamentalism that we wish to build. Their absence in either Fundamentalism or other branches of evangelicalism constitutes a debasing of Christianity that we intend to oppose.

Discussion

Gentlemen.

If one claims faith in something that is apart from any reason or rational thought but by faith they become an existential believer such as Soren Kierkegaard. Some today call the old existentialism post modernism. To accept something by faith indicates an object of faith since faith is not an entity in and of itself. To accept a writing by faith as perfect indicates necessary rational thought about the object such as its subject matter, manner of presentation, and definitions of words used. We cannot postulate that language and communication is possible without rational thought being possible. Humans have language based upon the ability to function rationally as created in God’s likeness and image. Faith cannot exist as emanating from man toward an object of faith without the exercise of rationalism. What we have a problem with is not the existence of rational thought by man but “rationalism” or “modernism” that excludes that which is contrary to their over extended rationalistic worldview. Several years ago Pat Boone (a Charismatic stated we must leave our Brains behind to have true faith. Sound somewhat familiar?

There is no faith without rational acceptance of reality. The object our faith in Christianity does not come apart from rationalism. Jesus was historical and real. We read of Him in writings of rational communication using words of human language, and we know of those writings through the human process of finding, determining legitimacy, reading and gathering like documents and classifying. The very few manuscripts behind the later labelled TR were admittedly gathered by rationalism. They were admittedly evaluated as sources and then put into the English language by reasoned thought that included following the kings instructions. We have such terrible mis translations such as church, Bishop, Deacon, and Baptize because they rationalistically followed the Kings instruction of not violating the Bishops Bible. Without simple clear ability to think rationally there could be no translation.

The KJV can be no legitimate object of faith without distinction of it as being different from other versions. Such a recognition is the excersize of normal human thought which is rational. To then accept one versions and reject others does not become a thought or action that suddenly jumps to faith apart from rational thinking. It is faith in an object considered as valid and used by reading which are normal simple rational processes that humans can do but animals cannot.

If a person claims to be able to act apart from reason or rationalistic thought they are claiming to be able to be human without having the image and likeness of God. Such a claim is so ridiculous and apart from both reason and faith. They cannot have faith as they cannot have an object of faith.

Many KJVO advocates may deny any form of re inspiration but they cannot deny miracle that sets apart the KJV from all other versions. The only discussion remaining is whether the miracle or miracles must have characteristics that are similar to or the same as that inspiration that occurred with the original authors. If one properly defines the phenomena of inspiration as that which guaranteed inerrancy yet without dictatorship, except for Revelation, than the miracle or miracles that, hypothetically gives and English version that in and of itself is inerrant in contrast to errant other translations, has had post Apostolic inspiration and authority without the presence of the Apostles. If they deny miracle and see preservation as a protected process that produces an outcome of inerrancy by human process, then they see providence as continuing divine intervention that has the constant similarities of inspiration. Thus it is constant inspiration.

All theories set forth by KJVO advocates must involve 16th and 17th century inspiration regardless of their many denials. Anytime a KJVO advocate advances arguments based on faith against all rationalism they are either extremely ignorant of truth, or unable to think normally, or using constructed pseudo intellectual arguments that appear to indicate their willingness to deceive in order to maintain their doctrine.

The KJVO doctrine usually involves pride and actions of arrogance based on a desire to get a handle on a position whereby they can demean the position of many others thus giving their ministry unique authority in contrast to the alleged faithlessness of others. Thus the accusations of other translations being new age or influenced by those unfaithful, and others who differ being in the grip of rationalism or post modernism.

I am in the Antelope Valley of So. CA. where WCBC, Paul Chappell, and Lancaster Baptist are. I have regular encounters with the KJVO and various arguments set forth. Believe me, they all have the essential same position no matter the various claims. Scholars who have written on this have all come to the same conclusions. SI needs to be better at recognizing the implications involved in the various KJVO arguments and the application of their ban from SI.

The arguments set forth on this thread by a KJVO advocate are of such a nature as to not warrant direct reply. If Fundamentalism means anything that is different from broader Evangelicalism, then it must recognize major errors that are a danger and warrant separation.

This thread has gone so long partly because of one KJVO advocate and his obviously ridiculous arguments. On this thread and on other previous threads he has set forth the KJVO position with obvious implications of re-inpiration. He then denies re-inspiration based on arguments that are not definitive and merely cloud the issues. They also do not make any real sense. They are words without meaning. His intolerance is not tolerance. His persistence is not passion but rather obsession that is schismatic.

[Greg Linscott]
[Don Johnson] I could decide to boycott some corporations for various reasons (as some boycott Disney) but that takes us entirely out of the realm of ecclesiastical separation.
But to follow your reasoning, an author gets similar royalties when his book is included in Bible study software as he does when it is published in book form.
Perhaps, but I don’t buy books I don’t like there either… so??

Maranatha!
Don Johnson
Jer 33.3

[RPittman] Chip, what can I say? You evidently don’t know what I’m saying. I never “admit[ed] [I had] no idea what inspiration was.”
Actually, that is exactly what you said. Now, maybe you meant something else, but here are your words:
[RPittman] I don’t even know how God superintended the Apostles and other writers of Scripture except that the Holy Spirit lifted them up above their human failings.


You continue to talk in circles throughout this discussion. We are accused of having no proof for our position, but you promote your position by blind faith.

To quote you, “Either you cannot or will not understand my position. Then, there’s no point in our continued conversation.” (I keep thinking I am done arguing in circles, but then another outlandish statement sucks me back in)

Why is it that my voice always seems to be loudest when I am saying the dumbest things?

OK. I’m done with this one. Thanks everyone. Have fun.

Mike Durning

Perhaps, but I don’t buy books I don’t like there either… so??
Correct me if I’m wrong, but don’t most packages these days ship with automatically bundled selections? I looked at the list with the various Logos inclusions, which include an offering from John MacArthur, the ESV (which has many prominent evangelicals associated with it), and even the Roman Catholic and Lutheran lectionaries…

As far as the other scenario you did not address- I am assuming, as a Baptist, you would strongly encourage believers to follow the Lord in baptism, while discouraging sprinkling of infants. Yet from what I can see here, you would support a Fundamentalist Presbyterian with a book purchase in a way you would not a conservative Evangelical Baptist. I’m not sure why the points of intersection might not be somewhat comparable, at least when it comes to purchasing books. If an Evangelical Baptist author produces, say, a helpful resource on Baptism, what would prevent you from purchasing and benefiting from it in a way you might similarly purchase and benefit from a commentary by Michael Barrett? There are things about each man you would neither endorse or agree with- your fellowship would be limited. I just don’t see how supporting BJUP or Ambassador Emerald or SermonAudio.com wouldn’t diminish or negate a Biblical stand on Baptism while purchasing a book by an Evangelical author pains your conscience.

Greg Linscott
Marshall, MN

[RPittman] The problem is that Aaron has almost totally misconstrued my most basic argument. He doesn’t seem knowledgeable of the Post-Modern arguments underlying much of my criticism of Modernism.
Actually I’m quite aware of several of them. They simply have nothing to do with the questions at hand, since nobody here is employing any Modernism.

Reason is not an invention of Modernism. It’s been around since folks first learned to come in out of the rain. Modernism involves the idea that we can reason our way to all that is true and that only what we can reason our way to is true. Usually it includes a commitment to materialism (matter is all that is real) and naturalism (there is no causation outside of the natural world) before even beginning the work of reasoning.

On the other hand, Christian thought has always held that the invisible God is the most real thing there is and that what we can observe is just a tiny corner of what is real. What we can reason our way to is more expansive but still woefully inadequate. So we rely heavily on the invisible God to reveal truth to us.

With those convictions as a starting point, miracles are not illogical or irrational in the least. In fact, it’s irrational not to believe in them.

With God’s revelation in our hands in the form of Scripture, we use reason to understand it and draw conclusions from it. Using it (Scripture) as a standard, we use reason to evaluate ideas and reject them if they are not supportable. This has never been and never will be “rationalistic” or “modernistic.”

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

[Greg Linscott]
Perhaps, but I don’t buy books I don’t like there either… so??
Correct me if I’m wrong, but don’t most packages these days ship with automatically bundled selections? I looked at the list with the various Logos inclusions, which include an offering from John MacArthur, the ESV (which has many prominent evangelicals associated with it), and even the Roman Catholic and Lutheran lectionaries…
Well, any decisions about this are somewhat of a judgement call. I am not sure what all the Logos packages support, but I can’t imagine the basic packages include all that much royalties for the original publishers. And do royalties still apply to things like lectionaries? Don’t know. I’m not overly concerned with it.

But I have to say, I still think you are missing my basic point that started this line of discussion. I wasn’t talking about separation from evangelicals or worse when it came to ‘book buying’, but separation from professed fundamentalists who are committing significant errors that demand breaking contact with them.
[Greg Linscott] As far as the other scenario you did not address- I am assuming, as a Baptist, you would strongly encourage believers to follow the Lord in baptism, while discouraging sprinkling of infants. Yet from what I can see here, you would support a Fundamentalist Presbyterian with a book purchase in a way you would not a conservative Evangelical Baptist. I’m not sure why the points of intersection might not be somewhat comparable, at least when it comes to purchasing books. If an Evangelical Baptist author produces, say, a helpful resource on Baptism, what would prevent you from purchasing and benefiting from it in a way you might similarly purchase and benefit from a commentary by Michael Barrett? There are things about each man you would neither endorse or agree with- your fellowship would be limited. I just don’t see how supporting BJUP or Ambassador Emerald or SermonAudio.com wouldn’t diminish or negate a Biblical stand on Baptism while purchasing a book by an Evangelical author pains your conscience.
Yeah, but Barrett is a personal friend, so that trumps everything.

Well, again, I don’t think you are getting what I am trying to say. I already admitted earlier that book buying (of the items on my list, way back on the thread) is probably not the best example or most crucial area of keeping one’s distance. There are some guys I have decided to just not support at all if I can help it. I think there errors are so egregious, I won’t support them. That is my individual decision, it isn’t that I condemn someone else who chooses to purchase their materials. (But I am suspicious of those who are so devoted to certain authors that their copies of these guys books are more dog-eared than their Bibles.)

Maranatha!
Don Johnson
Jer 33.3

If your position is:
My position is that our understanding of God’s Word is through faith and reason guided by the Holy Spirit. Reason alone is inadequate.
Then what exactly DO you believe? That God re-inspired one translation? That God re-inspired through one text family? You seem to be arguing for a direct re-inspiration, and I don’t think you believe that.

"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells

The question of whether reason alone is sufficient isn’t really all that relevant unless one makes the Holy Spirit factor something unexplainable and mystical. What I mean is, since language functions through reason, even minds aided by the Spirit will be aided in the use of reason not aided in some way that transcends or bypasses reason. If the latter occurs, there is no longer any real relationship with the text. Some kind of direct revelation is going on. So any meaningful claim to be basing a conclusion on Scripture is one that a person can demonstrate by explaining to others how he has reasoned.

There is no other way to use language.

You asked what my “paradigm” is. It would be the one I already described in my last post:
[Aaron B.] With God’s revelation in our hands in the form of Scripture, we use reason to understand it and draw conclusions from it. Using it (Scripture) as a standard, we use reason to evaluate ideas and reject them if they are not supportable. This has never been and never will be “rationalistic” or “modernistic.”
Later you asked…
[RPittman] Well, please explain how the orthodox theologians at Princeton differed in their methods from the Modernists. How do your methods of scholarship and reasoning differ from secular scholars.
Already explained this also. There are not multiple kinds of reason. When a child reasons that a barking animal is probably a dog he is doing the same thing that an orthodox theologian does when he reasons from Scripture and the same thing Jesus does when He reasons from common sense (about the folly of building on sand rather than building on a rock, for example). The difference between the “methods” of orthodox theologians and Modernists are the things I mentioned in my previous post—things like prior commitments to materialism and naturalism. They do not reason differently, they reason from different premises and within different constraints.

Reason is reason no matter whether you’re Solomon or Descartes or the toddler next door.

The rest of your post… what can I say to all that? In some cases, you’re questioning the meaning of statements I simply do not know how to make more clear. In other cases, you are going in directions that might be interesting talk about some time but aren’t especially relevant to the discussion.

It all boils down to the question “Is a biblical position one that we can supported by reasoning from Scripture or not?”

I submit that any use of Scripture that involves the Spirit allegedly bypassing or contradicting valid reasoning from Scripture is not a use of Scripture at all. The Scriptures are nothing more than some kind of point of departure in that scenario.

No, words mean things, and the Spirit does not take them and give them meaning in a way that reverses the very nature of words. There would be no point in giving us words in the first place if their meaning is not derived according to the ordinary reasoning of language.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

I appreciated the overall tone of the statement that was posted, but I have a question. In the statement it was said about “New Image Fundamentalism”

“We also reject the “new-image Fundamentalism” that absorbs the current culture, producing a worldly worship and a pragmatic ministry. These self-professed fundamentalists often follow the latest trends in ministry, disparage theological labels such as Baptist, and aggressively criticize any version of Fundamentalism not following their ministry style.”

And about conservative evangelicals it said,

“On the other hand, these positions do not exhaust the evangelical options. Conservative evangelicals have reacted against the current erosion of evangelicalism by refocusing attention upon the gospel, including its importance as a boundary for Christian fellowship. These conservative evangelicals have become important spokespersons against current denials of the gospel, and they have also spoken out against trends that remove the gospel from its place of power in transforming lives (e.g., the church growth and church marketing movements).”

Contasting these two statements, it seems that there is friendlier attitude toward conservative evangelicals than to what are called “new image fundamentalists.” To tell the truth, I am new to this website. (I have lived and worked overseas as a missionary most of my adult life, and some of these terms are a bit new to me.) I have always found myself most comfortable either among the most conservative evangelicals or the most (if I may use the oxymoron) “liberal” fundamentalists. But I was curious as to why your attitude toward one seems friendlier than to the other, since technically I guess the conservative evangelicals would be further to the left of your position?

Thank you,

Doug

DA… there’s a post somewhere where Kevin explained more specifically who these folks are. Trying to find it. I think it’s earlier in this thread.

Edit: OK, here it is… (#68)

http://sharperiron.org/comment/17539#comment-17539

And several posts earlier, Bob Haydon posted several links to some writing by Jeff Straub on the subject (Dr Straub is also Central faculty)

http://sharperiron.org/comment/17498#comment-17498

(comment #53)

But I’m not sure Straub’s discussion is using the term in the same way.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.