Instruments in Worship?

July 20, 2009

Tony Sig

One of my favorite bloggers is an Eastern Orthodox priest in Cuba.  OrthoCuban spent some time as an Anglican missionary but eventually made his way into the Eastern tradition.  This previous experience, including his “western” and “protestant” theological education makes for his presentations of Orthodoxy to be intelligible to Evangelical ears.

He recently wrote a multi-part series( 1, 2, 3, 4, 5)  on why the Orthodox do not use instruments in worship.  I have to admit to sneaking away to Eastern churches when I get a chance.  The Divine Liturgy truly does provoke one to awe and gratitude to the Creator (does anyone know of a parish that does a Rite I sung Eucharist? I’d like to come visit).  Which is why my own response should be seen as deeply sympathetic to what Tradition has wrought in the East.

Despite this sympathy, I found myself disagreeing with the theological justifications provided for the ‘superiority’ of instrument’less worship.  Of course Fr. Ernesto never uses this phrase, but it could possibly be implied by the fact – which demonstrates his theological integrity I think – that he never says instruments should be banned; just that acapella worship is more ancient (which in Eastern Orthodox terms means better ;) ) and should therefore be preferred.

Questions on the Early Church

Fr. Ernesto points to some of the Church Fathers to make his point.  Though certainly the Fathers travel along a trajectory, they are not monolithic.  Several of the quotes, both in the Early Church and in the Reformers make what seems to me to be an important reason why they do not use instruments in worship.  A reason that does not, it seems to me, remain morally relevant in most contexts of which we here blogging might be a part of.  The bolded sections are my own highlights.

“ST. THOMAS AQUINAS: “Our church does not use musical instruments, as harps and psalteries, to praise God withal, that she may not seem to Judaize.” (Thomas Aquinas, Bingham’s Antiquities, Vol. 3, page 137)” – I know, he’s not an early Father but he is used as an example

ST. AUGUSTINE OF HIPPO: “Musical instruments were not used. The pipe, tabret, and harp here associate so intimately with the sensual heathen cults, as well as with the wild revelries and shameless performances of the degenerate theater and circus, it is easy to understand the prejudices against their use in the worship.” (Augustine 354 A.D., describing the singing at Alexandria under Athanasius, yes THAT Athanasius.)

JEAN CAUVIN (JOHN CALVIN): “Musical instruments in celebrating the praises of God would be no more suitable than the burning of incense, the lighting of lamps, the restoration of other shadows of the law.”

CLEMENT “Leave the pipe to the shepherd, the flute to the men who are in fear of gods and intent on their idol worshipping

And the list could go on.  But here we see that for them, musical instruments were associated with Judaism and the idol worship of the pagan temples. We no longer directly associate the use of instruments with either of these, neither do we associate them with immorality.  Then, could we perhaps rightfully ask whether or not this interpretive paradigm need hold to infinity?

*          *          *          *

There is another reason often used in some Fathers, and is used several times throughout Fr. Ernesto’s posts, both by himself and by a guest contributer in the 5th post, which it seems to me is an improper dichotimization between the “spiritual” and the “worldly” or the “flesh” or the “man-made’edness” of instruments.

The writers I am going to point to are not speaking about ‘musical instruments’ at all.  But they are very concerned with how our contingent and even ‘fleshly’ world and history are the necessary grounds for growth and sanctification; made so by the Incarnation of Jesus.

I am not going to pretend to reconcile the two emphasis’.  In fact I think that the two strains have been obvious in Christian tradition from very early and it persists to the present day.  I’m not going to pit “biblical” spirituality vs “platonic” spirituality.  I want the Catholic tradition, and so I choose not to choose…

“Flesh” vs “Spirit” – the false dichotomy

The arguments I have often heard for “Gregorian” vs “Folk,” “Instruments” vs “Not,” “Contemporary” vs “Traditional Hymns”  etc… to infinity, is that one “feeds the spirit/soul” and one is “fleshly,” such as dancing (except in those cultures where it’s not) or drums/guitar/organ/piano/etc…

We see have seen this in many  comments from our faithful Roman Catholic commentator Quickbeamoffangorn to some of the Church Fathers:

CHRYSOSTOM “David formerly sang songs, also today we sing hymns. He had a lyre with lifeless strings, the church has a lyre with living strings. Our tongues are the strings of the lyre with a different tone indeed but much more in accordance with piety. Here there is no need for the cithara, or for stretched strings, or for the plectrum, or for art, or for any instrument; but, if you like, you may yourself become a cithara, mortifying the members of the flesh and making a full harmony of mind and body. For when the flesh no longer lusts against the Spirit, but has submitted to its orders and has been led at length into the best and most admirable path, then will you create a spiritual melody.” (Chrysostom, 347-407, Exposition of Psalms 41, (381-398 A.D.) Source Readings in Music History, ed. O. Strunk, W. W. Norton and Co.: New York, 1950, pg. 70.) – certainly one of my favorite Fathers

CLEMENT “Leave the pipe to the shepherd, the flute to the men who are in fear of gods and intent on their idol worshipping. Such musical instruments must be excluded from our wingless feasts, for they arc more suited for beasts and for the class of men that is least capable of reason than for men. The Spirit, to purify the divine liturgy from any such unrestrained revelry chants: ‘Praise Him with sound of trumpet,” for, in fact, at the sound of the trumpet the dead will rise again (ah, St. Clement’s famous allegorical interpretations used to get around the inconvenience of texts he didn’t like)…

The general thrust is that it is the “soul/spirit” that is toward God and the “flesh/physical” that needs to be suppressed in order to become more sanctified or whatever.

This could be a result of “platonic” influence, it could be a misunderstanding of St. Paul’s use of “spirit” and “flesh;” whatever it is I think that two core Christian doctrines in particular contradict drawing the hard and fast line between the two.  Let us examine (briefly) these two doctrines, especially in light of two particular Church fathers.  I believe that by looking at them, and looking at “spirituality” in light of them, may overcome this problem.

In St. Irenaeus and St. Ignatius, we get a different sort of theological anthropology.  St. Irenaeus in particular I think, because of the nature of his works, lays out a Scriptural story that is among the greatest of all the Fathers.  In their works, both in the picture (quite Pauline) in Ignatius of Christ’s work being perfected in his suffering and martyrdom, and of the physicality and historical contingency of the Incarnation in Irenaeus against early ‘gnosticism,’ we see how in fact, salvation is not the imparting of ‘spiritual’ information, nor of the taking up of our ‘soul’ to ‘heaven;’ but spiritual growth and sanctification, even ‘salvation,’ is given shape by the humanity of Christ, both in the union of God with Humanity (Irenaeus) and the physical sufferings of Christ (Ignatius).  No body/soul, physical/spiritual dichotomy here.

Besides the Incarnation, we mights also point to the Resurrection.  Jesus is not raised a spirit/soul, gladly rid of his ‘flesh;’ instead Christ is raised, bodily and transformed,  ‘physical’ enough that his wounds are still visible and he is able to eat.  The picture in the NT is that of New Creation.  What God had made good, and which had been distorted, will be remade, his ‘realm’ and our ‘world’ will be united, and the picture of salvation as such is one of incorruptible physicality.  In Eastern language, even Theosis will involve the physical.

Indeed, I hope I’m not the only one to see the deep irony of an Eastern Orthodox Christian protesting the use of “man made” items to enrich/enhance worship.  The same people, after all, who are absolutely passionate about Icons for prayer and worship!

I hope I might be forgiven for appearing to go off the topic of music for a moment.  But I think it is important because of the emphasis in the posts, that “man made” instruments somehow make for less “spiritual” worship.  Because, of course songs are “man made.”  We create songs by verse and music, a skill or craft.  Perhaps, if songs are “man made” we should do away with them as well and focus on the “spiritual.”  Where does the line fall and who says where the line is?

Voice as “Catholic” Instrument

In the fifth post, Mr. Nathan Speir says this:

“3) The voice is a Catholic instrument. Their is no other man-made instrument that maintains a historical or cultural universality as the voice. Really, the creation of other man made instruments has many diverse mythologies, histories, and applications. Choosing additional instruments for the Church simply interrupts the Catholicity of the Church.”

I wanted to touch on this as a last point.  To what extent should “Catholicity” be pushed to mean “uniformity?”  Catholicity has much more to do with being united to Christ, and perhaps united to the Bishop, perhaps being united by common worship (though there are “Western Rite” Eastern Orthodox, etc…), but united by the use of the same instruments?  I would need to see that more clearly in Scripture and Tradition before I conceded to what seems to me to be an arbitrary line.  I mean no offense by that, but this is the same line of thinking that “Latin only” Roman Catholics use and it is one I have never felt squared with the reality of natural and unpurposeful diversity in the Christian body.

I wonder why stop there?  Why not use the same melodies?  Melodies are just as “historical” and “cultural” as an instrument inasmuch as they are constructed or “man made.”

*          *          *          *

If then, the Church Fathers had various reasons for not endorsing instruments in worship, and if an instrument being “man made” is no obstacle to theosis (or “spirituality” or whatever), and if Catholicity is more about Christ than it is about arbitrary lines of uniformity; then I wonder if perhaps one “doth protest too much” about instruments.

Peace Father Ernesto.

Reed Signature
“Flux” is a continuing series on my year visiting churches of various Christian traditions.

Flux I: Introduction Flux II: Old Stuff Flux III: Coming Soon

I first experienced Eastern Orthodoxy as a 21-year-old traveling through Ukraine. Even then, the tradition enchanted me. At the time I was interning with a missions organization working in Eastern Europe. I knew that many of the churches we were helping to plant were located in heavily Eastern Orthodox or Roman Catholic areas. It was also become increasingly clear that these traditions were undoubtedly Christian, perhaps in some ways even more Christian than me. So why are we evangelizing Christians? I wondered.

It was the opening spark of a lesson that took me a few years to learn: old stuff matters.

By “old stuff,” I mean the bulk of the ancient practices and symbols many modern Evangelicals (both intentionally and unintentionally) learned to de-emphasize or ignore. In my studies, I realized there were a number of questions I’d never fully explored: where did the Bible come from? who first outlined concepts like the dual-natures of Christ and the Trinity? what is our modern conception of hell based on? Many of the answers to these questions were found in studying the first few centuries of Christianity, an area of scholarship sometimes called Patristics or a little more broadly, Christian Origins.

I learned that whether one recited the creeds in church or not, they were formative and part of our shared Christian heritage. Whether one appreciated liturgy or found it dull, it was influential in shaping modern forms of worship. I learned that Sacramental theology left a precedent for how we expected to experience God–even if one didn’t look for Him in Eucharist anymore. Most importantly I learned that issues like church governance, division, authority, human sexuality and the role of the Church in the world were problems as old as Pentecost.

Perhaps most poignantly, however, I was struck by how bewitching the tradional forms of worship could be. The ancient liturgies enchanted me, the Icons arrested me–I felt myself being pulled into something older and bigger and altogether more enveloping than my previous, more individualistic Church experiences had been. All my life, I had endeavored to maintain the right belief or “Apostolicity*” of my faith. But it wasn’t until my year of visiting Churches, that I was first introduced to its commanility or “Catholicity**.”

* (Apostolicity in this case, just means the faith of Apostles, or what was handed down to us.)
** (Catholic not in the Roman sense, but in it’s older meaning of ‘universal’ or ‘entirety).

Authority Again

January 7, 2009

Tony SigPastor Bob Cornwall recently gave us three excellent posts reflecting on Phyllis Tickle’s latest book “The Great Emergence.” They reflect primarily on the issue of (Protestant) Christian “authority” with special reference to homosexuality.  They predict that the Protestant idea of sola scriptura is coming to a close. I posted a while back on this and concluded that sola scriptura is unable to accommodate the canonizing process.

To say the Bible is authoritative is to say that the compositional history and canonizing process is authoritative, which is to debunk sola scriptura.

Pastor Cornwall has hopes in the infamous “Wesleyan Quadrilateral.”  Whatever the historical origin of this system – the convergence of Scripture, Tradition, Reason and Experience – he feels that this system can be a methodology for arriving at doctrines or ethics which takes the whole of our reality into account and allows for the proper critique of our various interpretations.

I feel the timing of this is great for our site as the four of us only just took a break from this discussion but we had spent a fair amount of time (read chronologically!) going over this very issue.  I am going to throw a few more posts out on this as the topic is garnering a bit of a buzz.

I would like to reassert what I have already said, that Authority as such, is actually a secondary issue to a larger question.  Ecclesiology.  Who’s in and who’s out of your/the church? (Tony Jones has just asked this very question)  The reason that I believe this is a primary issue is because, if Bobs denomination The Disciples, were to vote on an issue, be it homosexuality, or Womens Ordination or the whatever; my bishop would have no say in this discernment.  So his reason and experience do not play any part in The Disciples doctrinal decisions.

Bob himself notes that this is the eternal problem…Whose Reason and whose Experience?  A Methodist commenter, Allen Bevere, also reminds us that “Reason” and “Experience” as distinct and wholly separable ideas simply fall apart under advances in epistemology.  The idea of pure “Reason” is no longer a tenable understanding of the phenomenon of knowing.  Thomas Kuhn also has derailed the myth of continuous progress in knowledge, going so far as to imply that we are unable to grasp reality ontologically because we only perceive external stimuli through our operating paradigms, or worldviews.

24,000 Protestant denominations bear witness to what happens when the privilage of individual interpretation without an interpretive magisterium is taken to its only conclusion.  A Roman Catholic who was once talking with Tony Jones said in frustration, “You Protestants, you’re children of divorce, and as such, you’ll just keep divorcing.” I essentially agree with this statement.  Not that I am one who has chosen divorce, having been raised a Protestant, but there is no Quadrilateral which will save us from divorcing when the issue gets hot enough. Look at how the Mainline is going down over homosexuality.  Even some Anglo-Catholics, of all Protestants the ones who should be immune to such actions, are leaving North American Episcopalian churches in droves, heading off to the RCC, EO, or even attempting to start a new Province.

I for my part, think that a process of ecclesiastical centralization (not neccessarily doctrinal!)(this is what ecumenism is about right?!) is what could potentially save us from the future ensuing chaos.  Though for a long time I have purposely identified with the so called “Emergent/ing (an ever increasingly intolerable descriptor) Church movement/conversation/yadayadayada, I fundamentally disagree with the seeming joy many voices get from predicting the demise of denominationalism.  The organization of Christians allows for the protection of our Tradition from novel interpretation and provides a focus for discipline, encouragement and mission.  That is not to say that “doctrines” are fixed, but that it should be a significant and difficult thing to do to alter doctrine; and in a free-church system, everybody gets to say whatever they want and others get no say in it.

It is precisely in a purposeful fellowship that diversity comes to find its good soil.  Diversity in a free-church system is chaos, but diversity in a denomination is such that in Christian charity it can be wide, but it can also allow for boundries to be set as to how far diversity can go before it becomes an impediment to Christian witness.

This is essentially how it is in the great Catholic traditions.  There is in fact quite a diversity within Catholicism, but unity is maintained through the Episcopacy.  Though it is quite likely impossible, I for one feel that it is though a strong Church system that the diversity which is inevitable in interpretation can find roots which force us to be confronted with the “other” in interpretation.  This idea is intolerable to us who have become accustomed to “freedom and democracy,” to “choice and conscience.”  Authority is scorned in our society in no small part because of the Reformation.

To conclude todays post I would like to leave you with this.  In his famous book “Orthodoxy,” G. K. Chesterton says something that I have pondered over much in the aftermath of my decision to leave the Assemblies of God and join The Episcopal Church.  Perhaps they are words worth some reflection.  Indeed, those too willing to “reform” might find some tempered thoughts in this gem of a book.

‘Catholic doctrine and discipline may be walls, but they are the walls of a playground. .. We might fancy some children playing on the flat grassy top of some tall island in the sea. So long as there was a wall round the cliff’s edge they could fling themselves into every frantic game and make the place the noisiest of nurseries. But the walls were knocked down, leaving the naked peril of the precipice. They did not fall over; but when their friends returned to them they were all huddled in terror in the centre of the island; and their song had ceased.’

AAF III: To The Text!

December 6, 2008

Tony SigI Clement: Salutation

“The church of God that lives as an exile* in Rome to the church of God that lives as an exile in Corinth”

*alternative rendering – sojourns (so Holmes), or “as alien” or “temporarily resides”

As noted in the intro, but now here asserted in the text, it is the church corporate in Rome which addresses the church corporate in Corinth. The feel is distinctly different than Paul who consistently draws attention to his apostolicity, or Peter who does likewise, or the psuedonymous writers who draw on apostolic authority (ie-some catholic and pastoral epistles). It is even less assertive than the gentle leader(s) of the Johanine Community, whose leader affectionately goes by the title “The Elder.”

It is more akin to, say Polycarp of Smyrna, who addresses his letter to the Phillipians simply “Polycarp.” Only here we see the focus of appeal made by the whole Roman community rather than focused on a single individual.

As Eusebius notes (EH 4.23.11), this letter has long been thought to have been authored by Clement of Rome. And several of the manuscripts give a title to the work saying variously: “Clement to the Corinthians I”-so Codex Hierosolymitanus (AD1056), similarily the Latin (11thc copy of likely 2nd or 3rdc pieces), Codex Alexandrinus (5thc; missing 57.7-63.4) leaves out the “I”; The Syriac has the letter in the NT and is dated (AD1169-1170), it’s title is a bit more grandiose, “the catholic epistle of Clement the disciple of Peter the apostle to the church of the Corinthians”; similarily the Coptic (incomplete, 4th and 7thc)

Since we do not have enough manuscripts to comprehend the tradition or family tree of the letter, we can observe that it is not until over a thousand years later that we see a title which mentions Peter; where it is not part of the text, and even the title only mentions “discipleship” as being a quality of Clement; there is here no mention of a Petrine or apostolic authority. Though there are several passages in the body of the letter which do give such an impression (ch 42-44), to which in time we will get.

[All info from Holmes 3rd ed]

Tony Sig
One of my favorite professors liked to say, just to ruffle up some feathers, that while the Church cannot make it without the testimony about Jesus, it can survive without the New Testament. “We did it for a few hundred years” he would say.

Consider this, for the first centuries it would have been the norm, not the exception, that an individual Church might have only one or two of the Gospels, perhaps the undebated Pauline letters, and perhaps some other book which acted authoritatively but is now not considered “scripture”, say The Shepard of Hermas.

What might “scriptural authority” have looked like in a Church which perhaps only had access to the Johannine Corpus (yeah, that’s latin guys, whatcha gonna do about it?)? Would their theology have been different or incomplete compared to us who have the “whole” New Testament? If to be a Christian one has to “believe” the right things, what of churches which did not have Hebrews, and so missed out on believing Jesus to be the Great High Priest in the Order of Melchizedek? What of a Church which only had the Gospel of Mark? Does it matter that the Revelation of John was hotly contested as a canonical book all the way up to the formation of the Canon? Or that much of the “Deuterocannonical Books” would have been widely used, even by Paul and John.

This is not even to mention other smaller yet significant details such as; what if the text of the book they had differed from the one we have? Mark without the extra endings, John without the Adulterous Woman?

I would tend to agree with Dan, although of course, I would nuance his argument; Scripture and Tradition are intertwined, and to look at the New Testament without taking into account it’s history as individual documents, spread variously throughout the Churches, and its long and complicated history to Canon is to mistreat Scripture. We make it our safe haven. It’s easy when different interpretations happen to just sigh and say “I believe in the Bible,” but I feel that that road is fraught with peril. How can we simply retreat to a bare belief in the Authority of Scripture when we know that the New Testament did not just fall from the sky. It was a bloody and political battle to the leather clad, red Lettered NIV Study Bible we have in front of us. Even the most conservative among us do not adhere to the belief, like that of Muslims, that the writers simply were dictated our Holy Books; yet we treat them as if they were. That this is a shallow understanding of our Scriptures is confirmed by the progress in Redaction, Canonical and Narrative Criticism; the best of which is being done by Evangelicals! I believe that kids like us will have to take on ourselves the huge battle to make our Scriptures honest if we are to continue to preach the Good News, and, even if we affirm orthodox Christianity, to “demote” the Bible will garner much scorn.

But neither do I believe the way forward is like the RC’s or the Orthodox. The Bible is not simply a product of “The Church,” who has the “authority” to declare what is wills, even if that “authority” is from God. This is where I think the Pentecostal’s have got it made, and a robust Pneumatology is the way forward. The Holy Spirit is amongst his people even to this day. The same Spirit that gave Peter a vision gives our own Missionaries visions. The same Spirit which directed the leaders in Jerusalem directs ministers now. I am much too unlearned to attempt to plot a detailed way forward as of yet, but these are the questions that need to be asked, and answers will not be easy in coming or in gaining acceptance.

dansig
I want to start by saying how much I enjoy this topic. I have heard Tony talk about this for about two years; it is fun to see Reed play these thoughts out in a whole new series of dialogues.

Let me begin by asserting first what I believe is an issue within these systems of analyzing authority: culture. I think all of us may have steeped ourselves deeply into dividing these issues as if they contained some sort of separate (I believe non-partisan fits here) line of epistemologically fitted logic, or “knowing”. All fittings stand inside their culture and are unforgiving of other lines of certainty. Take our group, how many of us would continue in practices of superstition (more appropriately – supernaturalism) while believing those acts are merely phenomenological (or solely conscious) events separate from existential reality? I would assume none of us. Did the early Christians believe their claims were without rational thought? We assume culture as these separate forms as if they preferred one to another, when in reality, the means in which one believed has continued to evolve (through technology and philosophy) through time due to culture.

Second, I see us separating scripture (bible – a term too specific & ambiguous for me to appreciate) and tradition. Perhaps there exists a line of logic I miss. Wesley believed scripture to be the unsullied revelation (word) of the one god to his people. I believe not this as much as tradition; passing revelation through sullied people as they understood their god to develop what most Christians (and fundamentalists the most ignorantly) call the Bible. Now if we were to remove the perfect nature (inerrancy, infallibility – in my opinion: deification) of the scriptures do we not have tradition?

Third, (really 2b) is not this tradition passed down by the means of the logic or “reason” of the times? Why can we not call the old way of ‘knowing’, like we knew Paul was the author of Hebrews, reason and now not call our ability to discern his lack of living to mean he was not the author (unless god used post humus penmanship – which I think bodes well for inerrancy) tradition?

Having said all of this I believe a simplified version of the Wesleyan Quadrilateral could be described as the Shoimakian Line: experience and tradition, that being historical and cultural.

Imagine this line being pulled by both ends, wiggling back and forth through the times as logicians, philosophers, historians and Orthodox Church attendees fight to pull and suck the line from the Essenes, Mystics, Charismatics, Pentecostals and Jesus Freaks. An historical/intellectual versus experiential/emotional tug-of-war disabling the other from taking complete control of understanding, while allowing their other half to struggle against their neighbor developing a certain mode of knowing.

I believe it is this battle that keeps our interests peeked, we prefer a specific balance to the two forms and may never agree on which should take hold of the line greater.

I believe this is my great problem with this subject. Whenever Reed asks me what should be our authority I always respond, “God” (yes capital “G”, the ungraspable one).

My reasons for this are twofold. First, I believe our worship, intellectual pursuits, meaningless banter and masochistic acts all bring us back to a desire to “know” our creator. For this reason the one to whom we direct out efforts is the authority on such matters. God would do it better; God may show us the way. Second, I believe every form of authority (bible, papal, maternal) is attempting to discern that exact thing: the desire of the creator. The problem is they cannot do it, may never do the speaking from the mouth of the divine. I mean this in its perfection, the church is the mouth of god; the people are the physical resemblance of the unseen god. But scrawny, dirty and comparably mindless.

I cannot count the number of times I have heard Reed’s mom speak to us in her semi-serious manner “Ok Danny, this is from the Lord God …” or “God would want it like that …” or “Bless him Jesus.” In these instances, I do believe God has spoken to me; spoken to me through an imperfect, culturally entrenched, extraordinarily lovely person who loves me, god and our combined existence. This is a voice of authority, but the authority is from god.

When the Pope speaks ex cathedra (and he is way more sinful than Reed’s Mom), he speaks for a god to the people. In this he speaks for “God” and that god remains the authority.
And of course, when someone reads the scriptures they may gain an inkling of the motivations, experiences and failures of a people who served this great god. They speak, through their experience to a new culture; on the behalf of their authority – god.

I would go into what making the authority the speaker would do to usurping the position of authority god has, but I believe this can be derived from above.

Now this is not to say, we should not be connected to the history of those listening to their authority in ecumenism. It is through this examination we see more clearly how our authority has dealt with us in the past and through this how he is continuing to deal with us now.  This examination of our historic roots as believers in god is surely connected to the world before us as it is to the world we stand upon. How others have reasoned this progression of revelation is equally important; they are our family, they are we.

This point is crucial to our understanding of god, in his interaction with the world. It means we do not stand on equal footing in our rationalizations. One who studies culture (ancient and recent) may gather drastic conclusions whereas the bible-belter who stands in front of a congregation lacking historic or current knowledge only speaks to a world behind his eyes.

On Christian Identity

August 8, 2008

Tony Sig
I suppose that for me, even if in a small and uncomplicated way, my search for understanding our identity as Christians started when I was in High School. My Church was squarely in the middle of three small towns, Monticello, Big Lake, and Becker. So it should come as no surprise that my Church contained people from those three towns, as well as others. By chance most of my friends in Youth Group were a year younger than me and did not attend school in Monticello where I did. Being the good young Christian that I was, I sought out other Christian friends at school because at the time I could only be friends with a non-Christian if I was trying to convert them. As it so happened, when I first started attending school, even before I had made close friends at church, I was sought out and befriended by members from the Youth Group out of the C.hristian M.issionay A.lliance church in town, it was just down the road from my church.

Old Timey Monticello, MN

Old Timey Monticello, MN

I vaguely remember being taught a resentment for some Catholics (by whom I do not recall), and a general distrust of those who did not speak in tongues, but I suppose that I had a fairly unique upbringing considering the Classical Pentecostal background from which I came. My father, always the simple and pious man that he is, even to this day, not being trained in Systematics did not make degrade other denominations. For him it was enough if they knew and sought the Spirit. I love him. Nonetheless, it was inescapable not to look down on others who did not experience the ecstasy to which I was accustomed. “Those gentiles without ‘tongues’ (or was it the Torah?), what do they know of God? Do they not read their Bibles? Again, I do not remember when or how these ideas crept into my head, but just watch the movie “Jesus Camp” to see how easy it can happen.
My friendship with the local CMA church blossomed all through my High School years. We would TP or fork each others yards; they once even hung a spare car door from one of the trees outside my house, where they got it I do not know. Despite the fact that I spent more time with my friends from Youth Group than with my CMA friends we still were close. I remember consoling them when their Youth Pastor had an emotional affair and was asked to leave the Church. I know that at least two of them are in ministry today.

All this is to say that it was not until my senior year or later that I looked back on my relationship with my friends and began to ask the question: “Does doctrine and/or experience matter?” This question was especially exasperated when I realized that these kids lived out their faith just as passionately as my friends and I did from the Assemblies Church. Most likely I still would have had questions about the Lutherans and Catholics in my town, but as I have come to better understand these sects, I am now more able to comprehend why they did not seem as ‘holy’ as me (at least as I defined holy) at the time. Eventually the great irony would come to me when I learned that the AG was born out of the CMA. Now that I am somewhat older, more experienced and more learned I find the question magnified. Considering there has always been doctrinal development, and considering the literally thousands of different Christian sects, all with degrees of variety, I wonder all the more, is there a nugget that is Christianity? Is there something that we all have in common and from which or toward which we might begin to come together? There is no question that our being apart harms us more than helps us. It damages our witness concerning God, it damages us when one outside considers the dogmatism of one group and rightfully points out that some other church down the road is not as harsh. Or from the other side, I read the comment of a confused lesbian from the AG who finds it disconcerting that she can just go down the road to a different church if she wanted to. Is it desirable or even possible to come together? What would be the benefits? The downsides? How does our exclusive claim of salvation as preached in our pulpits fair in a pluralistic Christianity? I know that I cannot even scratch the surface of these difficult questions. Still it is a topic that I feel compelled, even called to address.

Unity: Correct Belief, Correct Practice, common Tradition
However one throws the die, and however much different factions would beg to differ, Christianity cannot be reduced to any one of these three things: Correct Belief, Correct Practice, and common Tradition. Many circles tend to overemphasize Correct Belief. This would include even Roman Catholics and the Orthodox, although they never reduce the Faith only to this. This would at first seem to be quite an ‘enlightened’ form of our religion because it places little or no emphasis on ‘outward’ signs or actions, and so makes Christianity dependent on nothing but our ‘faith’ in God as properly discerned. This emphasis also seems at first glance to portray God in glowing terms as a God of ‘grace’ who is not interested in results because He knows that we could never live up to His demands. Most of us, having been raised in very ‘low’ Protestantism have reacted against this emphasis and now do not know what to believe, myself included. That is because the flaws in this system are raw and glaring after only a minor examination. The most obvious critique is that in none of our fellowships does everyone believe everything the same way (no Reed, not even the Orthodox). This is maybe one universal truth for all of Christianity throughout all of history.

A figure in early Christianity said, sadly with all seriousness, that Orthodoxy is that which has been believed by all, in all places, for all time. What a ridiculous statement indeed.

Even such foundational ideas as the Trinity and shape of the Canon have not been commonly understood for all of our history, and so Right Belief cannot stand by itself, not just because it is a narrow ideal, but because it is absolutely unattainable. Dogma also tends to be broadened out too far so that every minor belief is required of Christians in order to maintain good standing in the community, and even to be assured eternal salvation. For instance the nature and purpose of the Eucharist tend to be a litmus test in some communities, with ‘Scriptural Inerrency’ being one in others.

An overwhelming emphasis on Right Belief also tends to be shallow in that it often de-emphasizes the role of Right Practice so as to maintain a fierce emphasis on the ‘grace’ of God. Right Practice becomes an add-on to the Christian life, something that is ideal, but as long as one feels guilty for not putting the ‘Sermon on the Mount’ values into practice, guilt is usually enough to assuage the actual action. Or just as bad, Orthopraxy becomes only a tool in the hand of Evangelism, something used to manipulate people into ‘accepting Jesus as their Savior.’ In these type of circumstances Orthopraxy is usually a salve, an act of charity which rarely achieves what one might call ‘Justice’. It is not interested in challenging ‘politics’ and making things right, but mostly in setting up ministries that are like balm on a wound, when in this age of the Spirit we should be healing the wound. Not that these are bad things by any means, but the aggressive pursuit of Justice is generally left up to governments to deal with. It is because of this that Evangelicals are chastised as hypocritical. Church History and the role of Tradition also tend to be neglected when Orthodoxy is overemphasized.

Tradition played a zero role in my Christian upbringing. The closest that we got to Church History was reading the book of Acts. Even there it was read in a ‘biblical’ way which tended to overspiritualize things and undervalue the book as history. It was more of ‘proof’ that everybody should be speaking in tongues. Even in those Protestant churches where history is taught it used only to legitimize the need for the Protestant Reformation, usually chastising and blaming ‘Catholics’ for the period of Church History after Acts until Luther. It has no normative use for modern Church decisions, and the idea of it being ‘authoritative’ is rejected as Reformers are only interested in the Bible. This is so laughable because the doctrinal decisions of the Reformers are viewed as the only ‘Orthodox’ way to read the Bible and so even in churches that are supposedly ‘Bible’ only churches, tradition plays a severe and choking authoritative role, preventing fresh readings of Scripture and sweeping under the rug the fact that Tradition played and plays an important, yes authoritative role in their Ecclesial and dogmatic decisions. History in the Roman Catholic and Orthodox church is given a high place and is authoritative not only for ethical and hermeneutical decisions but also can be used for doctrine. But because their authority is tied into history they tend to paint a rosy and tainted view of history. The sins of Popes are smoothed over or not even talked about, the variety in tradition is downplayed; the Orthodox draw a firm line between east and west even before there was a division (and so reject ‘western’ influence even when there is nothing particularly unorthodox about it) and Catholics manipulate history to show that everyone else wrong and the reinforce the belief that even the Eastern Church ‘broke’ with the Catholics and so unification means being re-as simulated into the Roman church, which is still viewed as the one true Church. While the Orthodox claim every father as uniquely their own.

An emphasis on Orthopraxy is also narrow and–more than any other form of overemphasis–is the one that tends to be the least ‘Christian.’

Emphasis on Orthopraxy truly began to bloom via the Anabaptists after the Protestant Reformation. It is true that there were many saints before the Reformation who were outstanding examples of Christ-like behavior, but they never would have undervalued the role of Orthodoxy, mostly being good ‘catholics’. Seeing that violence was not limited to Protestant-Catholic fights, but also eventually even Protestant-Protestant fights, Anabaptists had a core of beliefs but practiced radical egalitarianism and held most things in common. This led to them being persecuted even by Protestants and eventually they were ejected from Europe and their home base became Pennsylvania. This overemphasis too has many things which at first seem to give the appearance of greatness but upon closer examination is shown to be lacking. It would seem to say, “See how we don’t fight over doctrine and how we live a ‘Christian’ life?” It also tends to paint God as a God who cares less about what his children believe (who can be expected to believe everything completely?) and more about them getting along and being compassionate. Indeed, if there was an error to make as far as overemphasis this is the one that I would tend to error towards. But upon closer examination this too is shown as shallow and unable to answer fully God’s call. For one, the Anabaptists and other such groups have separated themselves off from society. Their isolation leaves them unable to influence the direction of the rest of their Christian sisters and brothers and, as with an Orthodoxic overemphasis it is unable to move toward real global justice or what we might call the re-creation of the world. Within its own community it may be able to attain something like it, and this is also preferable to nothing at all, but because of it’s isolation, Orthopraxic Christians tend to be unable to address society and it’s faults. To put it another way it has no prophetic voice.

Being cut off from the Christian community at large these groups also have a single minded and unhistorical understanding of who Jesus is, who God is, and what is expected of us as believers. As with ‘Liberal Protestantism’ many of these groups view Jesus as a sort of Buddha, giving a list of how to live and achieve eternal life. And it should be said that even these groups have an ‘Orthodox’ core and far more so than the other Christian groups they are unable to deal with diversity of opinion. Members that are not willing to accept the core of the group are generally kicked out.

Another Orthopraxic group (sort of) within Christianity is “Liberal Protestantism.” I use this term not derogatorily, but to indicate the sub group in question. Because of their extreme skepticism concerning the ‘historicity’ of our salvific history they tend to reduce Christianity to living out Jesus teachings (teachings which according to them Jesus did not even say!). They use Church history to reinforce this belief manipulating it to say that when Orthodoxy is given precedence violence is soon to ensue. The reason that this is the least ‘Christian’ of the overemphasis is that, as already stated, Jesus is sucked out of his historical context, indeed who He really was, and is turned into a moral teacher with nothing of value to say apart from how to act. This tends to be an insult to our Jewish history as well as to our Christian history. It takes Christian and Jewish elements and creates a spare religion out of parts. This group tends to be well-to-do white western males and they are unable to interact with others whose opinions differ from them. They even tend to run the error of the fundamentalists replacing actual actions of justice with right beliefs about justice. It borders on idolatry because it takes the bits they like from our scriptures and histories and pretends like they perfected them. Because they are skeptical about ‘revelation’ they belittle the God from whom our testimony says these ‘moral’ rules came from.

As a first step towards unity I would propose a recognition that in order to maintain that which is truly Christian we must recognize that we have a common scripture, common tradition, and a complex canonizing process. That is to say we have access to the same books (even if not all of the books are the same as far as ‘cannon’), we all should have equal access to our history, not allowing any one group to claim any part of it only for themselves, and we should recognize that our doctrines and emphasis’ have changed over time and it is this traditioning process, utilizing these three facets, that is itself uniquely Christian.

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