Theology Thursday - Carnell on the "Perils" of Fundamentalism (Part 2)

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Edward Carnell continues his infamous broadside against fundamentalism, from his 1959 work The Case for Orthodox Theology. ​Many fundamentalists may not agree with his characterizations. Others may still see relevance for Carnell’s criticisms. No matter what you think of his writing here, it is a fascinating look at an evangelical’s view of the fundametnalist movement in the late 1950s.1

J. Gresham Machen

The mentality of fundamentalism sometimes crops up where one would least expect it; and there Is no better Illustration of this than the inimitable New Testament scholar, J. Gresham Machen.

Machen was an outspoken critic of the fundamentalist movement. He argued with great force that Christianity is a system, not a list of fundamentals. The fundamentals include the virgin birth, Christ’s deity and miracles, the atonement, the resurrection, and the inspiration of the Bible. But this list does not even take in the specific issues of the Protestant Reformation. Roman Catholicism easily falls within the limits of fundamentalism.

While Machen was a foe of the fundamentalist movement, he was a friend of the fundamentalist mentality, for he took an absolute stand on a relative issue, and the wrong at that.

Machen gained prominence through his litigations with the Presbyterian Church U.S.A. He contended that when the church has modernists in its agencies and among its officially supported missionaries, a Christian has no other course than to withdraw support. So Machen promptly set up “The Independent Board for Presbyterian Foreign Missions,” and with equal promptness the General Assembly ordered the Board dissolved. Machen disobeyed the order on the conviction that he could appeal from the General Assembly to the Constitution of the church. But this conviction traced to ideological thinking, for if a federal system is to succeed, supreme judicial power must be vested in one court. This Is federalism’s answer to the threat of anarchy. Wrong decisions by a court are not irremediable; but until due process of law effects a reversal, a citizen must obey or be prosecuted.

Machen became so fixed on the evil of modernism that he did not see the evil of anarchy. This prompted him to follow a course that eventually offended the older and wiser Presbyterians. These men knew that nothing constructive would be gained by defying the courts of the church. Perhaps the General Assembly had made a mistake; but until the action was reversed by due process of law, obedience was required. No Individual Presbyterian can appeal from the General Assembly to the Constitution, and to think that he can is cultic.

Ideological thinking prevented Machen from seeing that the issue under trial was the nature of the church, not the doctrinal incompatibility of orthodoxy and modernism. Does the church become apostate when it has modernists in its agencies and among its officially supported missionaries? The older Presbyterians knew enough about Reformed ecclesiology to answer this in the negative. Unfaithful ministers do not render the church apostate.

“Dreadful are those descriptions in which Isaiah, Jeremiah, Joel, Habakkuk, and others, deplore the disorders of the church of Jerusalem. There was such general and extreme corruption in the people, in the magistrates and in the priests, that Isaiah does not hesitate to compare Jerusalem to Sodom and Gomorrah. Religion was partly despised, partly corrupted. Their manners were generally disgraced by thefts, robberies, treacheries, murders, and similar crimes.

Nevertheless, the prophets on this account neither raised themselves new churches, nor built new altars for the oblation of separate sacrifices; but whatever were the characters of the people, yet because they considered that God had deposited his word among that nation, and instituted the ceremonies in which he was there worshiped, they lifted up pure hands to him even in the congregation of the impious.

If they had thought that they contracted any contagion from these services, surely they would have suffered a hundred deaths rather than have permitted themselves to be dragged to them. There was nothing therefore to prevent their departure from them, but the desire of preserving the unity of the church.

But if the holy prophets were restrained by a sense of duty from forsaking the church on account of the numerous and enormous crimes which were practiced, not by a few individuals, but almost by the whole nation, it is extreme arrogance in us, if we presume immediately to withdraw from the communion of a church where the conduct of all members is not compatible either with our judgment, or even with the Christian profession.”

Machen thought it would be easy to purify the church. All one had to do was to withdraw from modernists; the expedient was as simple as that. “On Thursday, June 11, 1936,” said Machen to his loyal remnant, “the hopes of many long years were realized. We became members, at last, of a true Presbyterian church.”

It was not long, however, before Machen’s true church was locked in the convulsions of internal strife. The prophecy of the older Presbyterians was fulfilled. Since Machen had shaken off the sins of modernists, but not the sins of those who were proud they were not modernists, the separatists fondly imagined themselves more perfectly delivered from heresy than the facts justified. This illusion spawned fresh resources of pride and pretense.

The criteria of Christian fellowship gradually became more exacting than Scripture, and before long Machen himself was placed under suspicion. He had not taken his reformation far enough; the church not yet true. This time the issue was not modernism; the issue, ostensibly, was Christian liberty. And before this quarrel ended, a second true church was founded.

Still, no classical effort was made to define the nature of the church. This is how the mentality of fundamentalism operates. Status by negation, not precise theological inquiry, is the first order of business. When there are no modernists from which to withdraw, fundamentalists compensate by withdrawing from one another.

Machen tried to blend the classical view of the covenant with a separatist view of the covenant people. He honored Reformed doctrine, but not the Reformed doctrine of the church. This inconsistency had at least two effects: first, it encouraged Machen’s disciples to think the conditions of Christian fellowship could be decided by subjective criteria; secondly, it planted the of anarchy.

If Reformed theology could not define the nature of the church, how could it define the nature of anything else? The result was a subtle reversion to the age of the Judges: each man did what was right in his own eyes. Rebellion against the courts of the church converted to rebellion against the wisdom of the ages and the counsel of the brethren.

The Negative Ethic

When the fundamentalist develops his ethical code, he is somewhat prompted by a quest for status in the cult. Consequently, he defines the good life as the separated life separated, that is, from prevailing social mores. Whereas Christ was virtuous because he loved God with all his heart and his neighbor as himself, the fundamentalist is virtuous because he does not smoke, dance, or play cards.

By raising a scrupulous demur over social mores, the fundamentalist can divert attention from grosser sins anger, jealousy, hatred, gossip, lust, idleness, malice, backbiting, schism, guile, injustice, and every shade of illicit pride. This strategy places fundamentalism in the general tradition of the Donatists.

Since the Donatists had not handed the Scriptures over to the Diocletian inquisitors (they were not among the traditores), they supposed they were virtuous. By accenting the sins that they did not have, they took an easy attitude toward the sins that they did have.

An anxiety for negative status betrays fundamentalism into glaring hypocrisy. For example, a fundamentalist is very certain that smoking is sinful, for smoking harms the body and it is habit-forming. Yet, reasonably equivalent objections can be raised against excessive coffee drinking. The nerves may be upset or a stomach ulcer induced, and the practice is habit-forming. But the fundamentalist conveniently ignores this parallel. An attack on smoking ensures status in the cult, while an attack on coffee drinking does not. Moreover, the fundamentalist enjoys his coffee, and plenty of It. Since medical tranquillizers soothe his nerves, he does not need to smoke.

The fundamentalist is also very certain that movie attendance is sinful, for the movie industry is a tool of Satan. But when the fundamentalist judges films on television, he uses a radically different criterion. There is a cultic reason for this shift in standards. Fundamentalists, it so happens, are afraid of one another. If a fundamentalist is seen entering a theater, he may be tattled on by a fellow fundamentalist. In this event the guilty party would “lose his testimony,” i.e., his status in the cult would be threatened.

But when he watches movies on television, this threat does not exist. Drawn shades keep prying eyes out. One of the unexpected blessings of television is that It lets the fundamentalist catch up on all the movies he missed on religious principles. Fundamentalists defend the gospel, to be sure, but they sometimes act as if the gospel read, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, don’t smoke, don’t go to movies, and above all don’t use the Revised Standard Version and you will be saved.” Whenever fundamentalism encourages this sort of legalism, it falls within the general tradition of the Galatian Judaizers.

Paul says we are to “avoid quarreling, to be gentle, and to show perfect courtesy toward all men” (Titus 3:3). But the fundamentalist is often so Intent on negative status that he confuses courtesy with compromise. As a result, he drives cultured people from the church. For example, if a fundamentalist receives a letter from a modernist, he may go right ahead and publish it without the writer’s permission. Overly anxious to attack modernism, he neglects his own duties as a Christian gentleman. He has perfect vision to see heresy in others, but not in himself.

While we must be solicitous about doctrine, Scripture says that our primary business is love. But the fundamentalist finds the first task much more inviting than the second. Despite the severest apostolic warnings, schism in the church is often interpreted as a sign of Christian virtue. Separation promotes status in the cult; unity through love does not.

… to be continued.

Notes

1 Edward J. Carnell, The Case for Orthodox Theology (Philadelphia, PA: Westminster, 1959), 114-117, 120-121.

Discussion

I’ve been in an evangelical church where the pastor, while not endorsing Game of Thrones (it was 20 years too early), did part ways with fundagelical tradition enough to pretty much endorse watching R rated movies. One woman wrote a response in the church newsletter which pointed out that none of us would invite people to watch our marital beds, or respond positively to such an invitation. So I would guess that some subset of evangelicals would be amenable to watching GOT, though I’m not quite sure how many.

There are, to be sure, some very real issues within evangelicalism. In many churches, there are indeed places of seriously mushy theology, or (seeker sensitive) pushing real theology out altogether, and the results are tragic.

Aspiring to be a stick in the mud.

I’m somewhat confused by the ethical rubrics for respondents to this thread. Whenever Carnell’s mental illness is mentioned, or thought to have been mentioned, the immediate rejoinder is to criticize it as having no bearing whatever on his thinking or assertions made in the Case book. It even demonstrates a serious character flaw of the respondent. Yet when someone mentions a “personal habit” possibly related to his insomnia as a contributing factor to his negative evaluation of J. Gresham Machen, no one is heard from. The Westminister Seminary community responded to Carnell with an incredulous “Machen, a ‘peril’ to orthodoxy???” response. At least it was obvious that Carnell also took Machen over the side along with the Fundamentalists on the separation issue. Yet today’s Fundamentalists are supposed to learn, or to have leaned, from Carnell’s criticisms of separatism, but apparently not so for the Orthodox Presbyterians and their spinoffs. Was not the OP guilty of any of the Fundamentalist’s alleged sins? I personally see that Carnell’s set of criteria on separatism is so convoluted and inconsistent as to be incomprehensible and thus unworkable and ultimately meaningless.

Rolland McCune

Carnell’s criticism of separation seems to be that once you begin to separate from error you can’t stop. And as a fundamentalist I say, “Uh. Yup.” Clearly Larry Oats was correct in The Church of the Fundamentalists that new evangelicals prioritized unity over purity and fundamentalists pursued purity in ecclesiology.

I’ve never seen a better discussion of separation than Dr. Oats’ charts from his “Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism” course. That, and MacLachlan’s infamous “if there is no ‘thus saith the Lord,’ you must not separate” comment from his book Reclaiming Authentic Fundamentalism.

I need to re-read my course notes from Dr. Oats’ class soon! :) I’ll never forget going to Seminary at Maranatha and finding out there was actually a deep, intellectual component to Christianity and ​to fundamentalism. I’d been starved for too long. I remember feeling guilty because I was reading books in class that didn’t use the KJV. So long ago …

I’ll always be profoundly grateful to (1) the poor faculty who endured me in class and (2) my pastor who steered me there, because he realized how intellectually bankrupt far-right fundamentalism was - and he’d know, because he’s a graduate from one of those fine “institutions” …

Tyler is a pastor in Olympia, WA and works in State government.

When I pointed out problems with that argument, I’m simply pointing out that it’s a mere personal attack and doesn’t mean anything. Nothing, zero, zip, nada, no matter who’s making the ad hominem. I’m also the same person that suggested that the passage about cigarettes suggests that Carnell may have been a smoker who was catching flack for the habit, but I didn’t try to connect that with his criticism of Machen.

Which is fortunate, since Machen apparently enjoyed a cigar or two as well. So to suggest that Carnell’s (possible) smoking led him to savagely criticize another smoker would have been a great occasion for hilarity.

Come to think of it, just for fun, let’s assume that I did say it and have a good laugh.

Regarding Jim’s point on GOT, somewhat agreed, but at a certain point it sometimes seems to be a bludgeon to persuade people to stay in fundamentalism—see how bad evangelicals are? Would you ever want to be in that camp?

Aspiring to be a stick in the mud.

FWIW
I know some fundamentalists (more than one) who share GOT stuff on Facebook…In other words, it is not simply an evangelical problem. The problem of sin and lust is not simply the problem of evangelicalism, or even fundamentalism. The problem is humanity itself. Hence our need for the weekly recitation of the gospel.

I have never ceased to be amazed at the amount of people who enjoy or defend GOT in either the Fundamentalist or Evangelical camps. It boggles the mind.

As for Machen, I think there is a difference between SI linking to an article that attacks Machen by someone we disagree with and having a fellow member of SI attack someone in a discussion thread. We can’t change or censure Carnell’s behavior. We can, and should, address the bad behavior of a current member, including revoking their privileges to use SI if the site admins felt that was appropriate. I don’t think it rises to that level, when a couple of people called it out already in that same thread.

"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

Bert,

Thanks for the response. I note that I conflated paragraph 3 (social issues) with 1 and 2 (Machen), for which I apologize. Going a bit further, my note actually pointed out Carnell’s insomnia issue which you asserted “might” have been related to his negative reaction to Fundamentalist social mores. I did not bring up the possibility of what his “personal habit” actually was, which was a factoid I had never heard before. And I have had occasion to talk to some of those who were in his classes at Fuller. My point was concerning the apparent duplicity of censoring anyone who appealed to his mental disorders as a factor in his intemperate outbursts in the Case book, and nothing being said about mentioning a “personal habit,” much less forthrightly identifying it in a later blog.

Sorry if all this ruins an enjoyable moment of laughter in circles of historical merriment. But I do agree that there is some truth in the consigning of these anecdotal reports about Carnell’s health and habits to the “zilch, nada, zero” bin of basic worthlessness since they are only personal opinions.

Rolland McCune

My point on the depression/insomnia is that early in the threads on Carnell, it was alleged that the circumstances of his death made Carnell a non-entity in toto. Pure personal attack, no opinion involved about it. The “personal habit” was simply a guess on my part—admitted as a guess—from his vehemence on the topic of smoking. (and Mayo says that nicotine is involved in insomnia as well)

Just to be clear and all. I don’t object to wondering if the apparent polemic nature of Carnell’s writing might derive from what was going on mentally. I simply object to discounting his ideas and observations in toto because of the way he died, and furthermore to assume that was necessarily a sin issue.

Aspiring to be a stick in the mud.