I had
broadly planned my last blog post before the welcome weekend for new cadets. As
it turned out, on the Sunday at WBC London, the UK Territorial Commander
himself spoke of exactly what it means to be a Messenger of the Gospel. He too
made clear that that should include all of us. Much of what he said stole any
thunder from my forthcoming piece, which left me running the risk of looking
like I was trying to steal his! Such is life.
TC
Clive Adams was as direct and to the point as I have ever heard him. Perhaps as
direct and to the point as I have ever heard anyone in a major SA gathering. He summarised the gospel message, highlighting the
gravity of the problem of sin (however much we don’t like using the word), the
crippling, universal inability that sin means for us, the awful reality of
hell, and the centrality and uniqueness of the cross-work of Jesus in atoning for our sin and
opening the path to life. He was serious and he was sober and he was visibly moved. When he had
finished there was a strong response in the hall, with extra chairs being needed to enlarge the mercy seat.
My own
reaction throughout his sermon was tears of relief and happiness to just hear the
gospel. Here was the truth, presented with care and passion. It was thematic rather
than expository, the themes unfolded with deliberate precision, firmness and
love. The night before, I had actually said to Sarah that I was considering
leaving the Army for lack of gospel clarity and hope; here was the very message to steady and encourage me. I wept with joy that anyone in a big SA gathering
would publicly and strongly affirm the points he made.
And it
is that sense of surprise and relief that makes me write this postscript. With
one arguable exception, at no point did he go a single doctrinal step beyond
what every soldier and officer says they believe when they make their
commitment and covenant. He proclaimed to cadets of the Salvation Army doctrines that they themselves will publicly affirm at their commissioning in two years, truths to which every soldier
and officer in attendance has subscribed. And yet, what was striking was how
out of the ordinary it was. And the fact that, alongside the widespread reactions of glad receptivity and personal commitment following from what he said,
there was also a palpable undercurrent of shock and some negativity.
In the Salvation Army we have multiple belief streams. We have diverse approaches to truth coexisting,
sometimes happily, sometimes with tensions, occasionally clashing severely. That diversity is perhaps more visible on Facebook
than it usually is in major formal gatherings, but it is there nonetheless,
and can surface. I’ve written before about the need to recognise that
diversity, and to work out how to talk to one another within it. But for me,
Saturday’s meeting highlighted two paradigm shifts with regard to doctrine that
need to occur if the Salvation Army in the UK is to recover its role as an
evangelistic, growing church.
The
first has to do with the nature of “Doctrine” in itself – or “The Doctrines” in
themselves. I know that sometimes they are honoured as much in being ignored as
being looked at; I've lost count of the number of Salvationists who have told
me that there was a cursory or even dismissive discussion of the doctrines when
they became soldiers. Or no discussion at all.
And
one gets the impression that when we do look seriously at doctrine, it tends to be primarily with a view to just such moments of transition. Doctrinal study occurs in preparation for our key steps of commitment – be it preparation of recruits for
soldiership or cadets for commissioning. Approached like that, it is all too
easy to see the doctrines as a static test, a one-off exam, a hurdle to be
jumped. But doctrine is actually doctrine. It is the stuff we teach. It is a
summary of our message. Doctrine is what we say, what we proclaim. It is an
active, dynamic, exciting concept. “We who are being commissioned today are
looking forward to getting these truths out into the communities which we
serve.”
The
trouble with the word “doctrine” is that for some reason it gives the
impression of stuffy dustiness, of staticness. It is not only in TSA that “The
Doctrines” are those old statements which are signed ‘at the beginning’ and
never more referred to. But that isn't and can't be and mustn't be the case for
any church. We should be saying, “Here is the centre of our message!” This is
what we talk about, what we proclaim: God in his glory, his Word in its
authority, his Son in his wonderful person and atoning work, his Spirit and his
holy-making transformation, the eternal urgency of it all. When a senior
officer proclaims the doctrines of the Salvation Army at a welcome service for
new cadets, and that is cause for remark or even complaint, it does leave you wondering what he is supposed to be preaching! We need to recover the Doctrines as Message, as Teaching and Preaching synopsis.
The
other paradigm shift that is needed is to accept that the Salvation Army doctrines are a
statement of specifically evangelical doctrine. Actually, they are a statement of a subset
of evangelical doctrine; the eleven sections are a description of
specifically Wesleyan belief and exclude evangelicals of other streams. They
are more restrictive than the breadth of Evangelicalism, and deliberately
so.
Now,
one of the oddities in Salvation Army theological circles is the frequent
affirmation that the opposite is the case. It is said that the doctrines
were always very flexible, very broad, very accepting. The implication is that
our statement is actually wider than evangelical doctrine. Indeed, despite the Army’s
own self-description as an “Evangelical part of the Christian Church” (see, e.g.
here), it seems fairly common to show disdain even towards the word evangelical.
Given the awful mess the term finds itself in through association with Trumpery
and the like in the USA, I can empathise, but historically there is no doubt
that our doctrines position us squarely in one specific part of the movement
called evangelicalism.
The view we need to recover can be shown diagrammatically like this: against the backdrop of all the “non-evangelical” options out there, evangelicalism classically defines itself in terms of its beliefs. Salvationism, with its roots in the Methodist New Connexion, is a narrower subset within the evangelical family. Anyone coming to the SA doctrines with previous experience of the great, detailed, 17th century confessions (Westminster, Savoy, London), and then of the short 19th and 20th century doctrinal bases of the evangelical movement (EA, IVF, WEC, OMF etc) would immediately recognise the SA statement as falling into the pattern of the latter group. They would also quickly spot that we have a distinct Wesleyan slant that has deliberately excluded Calvinists, who would be welcome alongside Arminians in the other evangelical bodies.
In contrast to this, a common view at present is shown in the second diagram. What
is frequently implied, or even explicitly stated, is that the Doctrines are
somehow wider and more flexible than evangelicalism, taking in views that would
certainly be regarded as non-evangelical historically and at present.
That
the first diagram corresponds accurately to our historic and present identity
is borne out by the excellent introduction to our Handbook of Doctrine:
Our doctrinal
statement, then, derives from the teaching of John Wesley and the evangelical
awakening of the 18th and 19th centuries. While there was significant
correspondence between evangelicals in the mid-19th century, indicated
especially in the nine-point statement of the Evangelical Alliance of 1846, the
distinctives of Salvation Army doctrine came from Methodism. The Salvation Army Handbook Of Doctrine Page xviii
The tendency to emphasise the
breadth and liberty implicit in the doctrines often leads to discussing them with
an emphasis on flexibility and diversity of interpretation rather than from the standpoint of definite and clear shared truth. Sometimes one feels that the driving motive for this claimed flexibility is precisely the accommodation of non-evangelical views while “affirming” the doctrines. Beliefs that the SA founders were deliberately and explicitly excluding are now accepted as falling within the range permitted by a new, elastic reading of the founders' words. It is that reading which is an innovation, and insofar as it seems to permit people to say they believe the doctrines while actually believing something else, it is a danger to the movement.
This may have been one motive for any angst at the TC’s sermon; by appearing to foreclose the question of “flexibility” through affirming the doctrines, he seemed to make that elasticity and the whole business of “exploring interpretations” look redundant, or worse. Certainly, what he had to say entered into sharp confrontation with simple unbelief. I cannot forget being told “No one believes those crazy doctrines!” by an SA employee some years ago; however much that statement came out of immaturity and the desire to shock, I think it was a manifestation of a mindset with which the TC came into conflict at the welcome weekend.
This may have been one motive for any angst at the TC’s sermon; by appearing to foreclose the question of “flexibility” through affirming the doctrines, he seemed to make that elasticity and the whole business of “exploring interpretations” look redundant, or worse. Certainly, what he had to say entered into sharp confrontation with simple unbelief. I cannot forget being told “No one believes those crazy doctrines!” by an SA employee some years ago; however much that statement came out of immaturity and the desire to shock, I think it was a manifestation of a mindset with which the TC came into conflict at the welcome weekend.
I know I am an oddity in TSA. I
can’t even sign the doctrines myself! But I am honest about that, and I don’t sign
them. And I am trying to honour them. And I don’t think I am alone in longing
for one thing, and one thing alone, to dominate again in our church – we want
Jesus and his gospel. We long to hear about God and his creation and our fall
into sin, and new hope through his Kingdom coming in Jesus. We long to hear
about Jesus’ life and kindness and wisdom and death and resurrection and the
coming of his Spirit. We long to hear about repentance and faith and assurance and
growth and holiness and hope and homecoming. We long to hear about heaven and
hell. We long for the old, old story. We long for a message which is
recognisably the message of our Founders. We long for Blood and Fire – the atoning
work of Christ, preached in the power of the Spirit.
That is what God gave us through the TC last
Saturday night. We don’t yet know
whether the hardest task for the Messengers of the Gospel is going to be to go
on preaching the authentic message when they are ridiculed by the world... or ridiculed
by the church. But until the headline “Territorial Commander Affirms the
Doctrines at Cadetsʼ Welcome; All Present Agree Fully” sounds a bit less Babylon Bee, I fear that it may be the
latter.
Oi Andrew! Participo dos mesmos anseios que expressaste no penultimo bloco que escreveste.Que Deus te abençoe e te use para Sua honra e glória. Abraços, Tuti
ReplyDeleteObrigado, Tuti! Que bom ter contato tb por aqui! Que Deus nos guie em dias de confusão.
Delete