THE
SWORD AND THE TROWEL
(DECEMBER, 1889)
THIS
MUST BE A SOLDIERS BATTLE.
ONE who
is very valiant for the truth said to us, This must be
a soldiers battle. In that utterance we heartily
concur. The gospel of the Lord Jesus is now assailed all along the
line. Scarcely a denomination is free from the enemies of the truth:
they are within our ranks. In the Church of England the superstitious
errorists are more to the front than the skeptical; and it is not
an easy warfare which falls to the lot of Evangelicals within the
Establishment. How is it they are there? Those who are seeking a
decision upon the matters raised by the action of the Bishop of
Lincoln, are going straight to the point, and raising the question
of Mass or no Mass in the most plain and practical manner. But if
the result of the episcopal trial should be unfavorable, every Protestant
man and woman should look upon the case as one for the personal
conscience, and should, by individual action, drive the Evangelicals
to a plain and unmistakable course of action. Among Baptists, the
great need is the personal investigation of the matters in debate
by the members of our churches. It is clear that the members of
the Council have nothing to say except by way of rebuke of any who
protest against the growing error. The ministers also cry, Peace,
peace, where there is no peace. If sturdy individuality took
up the matter, and godly men were determined not to remain in league
with those who depart from the truth, the issues would be speedy.
A Congregational
minister asks for an opportunity for the rank and file of the ministry
to speak; and his impression is, that ninety-five percent. Would
be found to be on the old lines. We sincerely wish that we could
believe it; but we think he puts his percentage far too high. Still,
if in our free churches there were fair opportunities for utterance,
either by the voice or through the press, we feel confident
that the Broad School gentlemen would find themselves very much
in the minority. But the hour of free speech will not come till
the old Nonconforming spirit asserts itself in the pastors, deacons,
and church-members, and the gag is taken off from the religions
press. We are glad to hope that by other organs the truth will yet
gain liberty to speak through the press. It is possible that a clique
is now predominant, and that the mass of the people are misrepresented
by them: if it be so, let them declare themselves.
The
Free Church of Scotland must, unhappily, be for the moment regarded
as rushing to the front with its new theology, which is no theology,
but an opposition to the Word of the Lord. That church in which
we all gloried, as sound in the faith, and full of the martyrs
spirit, has entrusted the training of its future ministers to two
professors who hold other doctrines than those of its Confession.
This is the most suicidal act that a church can commit. It is strange
that two gentlemen, who are seeking for something newer and better
than the old faith, should condescend to accept a position which
implies their agreement, with the ancient doctrines of the church;
but delicacy of feeling is not a common article nowadays, and the
action of creeds is not automatic, as it would be if consciences
were tender. In the Free Church there is a Confession, and there
are means for carrying out discipline; but these will be worth nothing
without the personal action of all the faithful in that community.
Every man who keeps aloof from the struggle for the sake of peace,
will have the blood of souls upon his head.
The question
in debate at the Disruption was secondary compared with that which
is now at issue. It is Bible or no Bible, Atonement or no Atonement,
which we have now to settle. Stripped of beclouding terms and
phrases, this lies at the bottom of the discussion; and every lover
of the Lord Jesus should feel himself called upon to take his part
in an earnest contention for the faith once for all delivered to
the saints. From the exceeding boldness of Messrs. Bruce and Dods,
we gather that they feel perfectly safe in ventilating their opinions.
They evidently reckon upon a majority which will secure them immunity;
and our fear is that they will actually gain that which they expect.
We are not sanguine enough to believe that they are mistaken. Unless
the whole church shall awake to its duty, the Evangelicals in the
Free Church are doomed to see another reign of Moderatism. Have
they suffered so many things in vain? Will they not now make a stand?
Finding
ourselves in a community which had no articles of faith, and seeing
deadly error rising up, we had no course but to withdraw. Whether
others think fit to do so or not is no part of our responsibility;
but nothing can free any true believer from the duty of maintaining
pure and undefiled religion in its doctrine, as well as in its practice,
by every means in his power. The most quiet country minister, the
most retiring deacon or elder, the most obscure Christian man or
womaneach one must come up to the help of the Lord against
the mighty. The crisis becomes every day more acute: delays are
dangerous; hesitation is ruinous. Whosoever is on the Lords
side must show it at once, and without fail. Let those who so sadly
pine for another reformation, and a remodeled creed,
stand out and say so, and no longer conceal their sentiments, or
eat the bread of men at whose most cherished convictions they are
stabbing with might and main. Let these be honest, and let the Evangelicals
be true. The church expects every man to do his duty.
NOTES
(FEB. 1890)
A
certain newspaper paragraph very kindly attempts to comfort Mr.
Spurgeon at his worst stage of depression concerning the doubts
of the day, by the assurance that religion can never pass
away. We can assure our friend that we never thought it could. No
fear as to the ultimate victory of the truth of God ever disturbs
our mind. We are sure that the doctrines of the gospel will outlive
all the dotings of modern thought. The trouble is that,
for the moment, error is having its own way in certain parts of
the visible church, where better things once ruled; and, worse still,
that good men will not see the evil, or, seeing it, wink at it,
and imagine that it will do no very great deal of harm. It is ours
to give warning of a danger which to us is manifest and alarming;
and if the warning makes us the butt of ridicule, we must bear it.
Our protest is, no doubt, regarded by some as a piece of bigotry,
and by others, as the dream of a nervous mind. Neither conjecture
is correct; but we speak the words of love and soberness. An American,
who enquired of certain leaders in the Down-Grade what
they thought of Spurgeons conduct, was informed that sickness
and age had weakened his intellect. This has been their contemptuous
method all along; but facts are not to be set aside by such remarks.
Be the protester what he may, he declares his protest to be
solemnly needful, and he begs for attention to it. It may be the
old truth is in the minority, and that those who uphold it are thought
to be troublers in Israel, and causers of false alarm: but we are
none the less confident that, when good men return to their better
selves, they will see differently. Bitterly will some regret that
they allowed matters to drift, and drift, till they had wrought
incalculable mischief. We have spoken in saddest earnest. It is
no pleasure to us to stand apart, and refuse complicity with what
we judge to be a great crime. Our witness is on high. The
Lord will judge between us and the enemies of the faith in his own
good time !
From
a Congregational Church a brother writes : I have heard
several friends say that your pictures of the Down-Grade
are overdrawn; but in our church they have been photographs.
Commencing with denial of eternal punishment, our minister has gone
on to talk of Marks garbled statements, the
legend of the Angels song, and The myth of the
Resurrection. He says, Christ is the natural son of
Joseph and Mary, and that the Bible is but one
of the Scriptures of the human race. .... May the churches
heed your warning, and so be saved from our fate ! In this
instance, old members are driven out, and all protesters are held
up to ridicule in the public prints as bigots wanting in common
sense. The churches are, some of them, courting the fate of this
church by seeking out clever men for preachers, irrespective of
their doctrinal beliefs. But, on the other hand, many are growing
cautious, and, having been once bitten, are shy of the new school.
The evangelicals in the churches are beginning to be divided from
the Broad School; and when the opportunity has occurred, they have
been, in some cases, strong enough and bold enough to claim their
rights. We wish it were so more generally; but we know several notable
instances which put us in good hope that the present tyranny of
falsehood will not last for ever. Still, these brighter signs are
but gleams in a darkening sky. The men who take the lead are, in
many cases, halfhearted as to truth, and they yield themselves up
to the dogmatic assertions of the non-evangelical intruders. Tender
as mothers to every new heresy-vendor, the men in office in the
denominations have a hard, ungenerous side for the faithful adherents
of the old gospel. We may go where we willwe are not worth
a thought; but the most flippant blasphemer shall have honor for
his courage and independence! Happily, this is a small matter to
some of us now, for our ecclesiastical relationship">are for ever
severed; but there is none the less of gross injustice in such conduct
towards those who cannot turn their coats, or profess to love what
they inwardly abhor.
NOTES
(MAY 1891)
NUMBERS
of friends now write to say how true our words upon the Down-grade
were years ago. It is our deep regret that it should be so. We spoke
not without knowing what we were about. It was not possible for
us to give up all our authorities, nor would it have served any
useful purpose to have published names; but we spoke truth which
we could not help believing, and spoke it without exaggerating.
Matters were even worse than we knew of. We have not only to do
with the lion of open unbelief, but with the foxes of craft, who
profess to love the gospel which they labor hard to undermine. If
we had to bear our witness over again, we should not soften a syllable,
but add emphasis to it. Indignant correspondents continually send
us notices of amusements held by various churches; certainly, they
can hardly become more childish and inane. But we cannot be perpetually
recording and talking about these absurdities. Cannot Christian
people make their own protests more emphatic in their several districts?
It is all very well to send this wretched rubbish to us; but why
not sweep it away yourselves? If we had a gracious revival, good
people would find better things to do than to get up nigger entertainments,
and theatricals.
Our old-fashioned
Wesleyan friends must be greatly surprised by the utterances of
certain of their leading men; they have great need to look after
the professors who train their rising ministry; for if they cannot
give a better account of Holy Writ than the divine from Richmond,
tutorship is in a poor way. The record given of the meeting, in
the newspapers, was more alarming than the actual facts; for the
seamy side of the talk was made more prominent than it really was;
but the very best we can make of Professor Davisons paper,
and the comments upon it, causes us great apprehension. With the
delicate tread which reminds us of Agag, error enters as though
it were a well-known and familiar friend. Certain books of the Bible
are dealt with in reference to modern criticism with the air of
one who has settled the business, an placed the matter beyond dispute.
Very modestly as to language, but very dogmatically as to statement,
the Professor lay down the law. We do not accept a syllable of that
unquestionable result of scholarship which he so coolly propounds.
Although upon the doctrines of grace our views differ from those
avowed by Arminian Methodists, we have usually found that on the
great evangelical truths we are in full agreement, and we have been
comforted by the belief that Wesleyans were solid upon the central
doctrines. We are truly sorry that we are now placed in doubt. Surely
there are voices which will yet be heard. We know that there are
hearts that are aching because of this last movement of leading
religionists in the downward way but will anyone be bold enough
to speak out? Ostracism seems to be dreaded so much, that good men
and true hold their tongues. Nevertheless, we know the Holy Spirit
did not use words at random, and we shall never consent to that
liberalism which, in destroying the shell of the language, really
kills the life-germ of the meaning.
MR.
SPURGEONS CONFESSION OF FAITH. (AUGUST 1891)
&black">UITE
a stir has been caused lately by the publication of the following
document, which has been erroneously called Mr. Spurgeons
Confession of Faith, or Manifesto:
We,
the undersigned, banded together in Fraternal Union, observing with
growing pain and sorrow the loosening hold of many upon the Truths
of Revelation, are constrained to avow our firmest belief in the
Verbal Inspiration of all Holy Scripture as originally given. To
us, the Bible does not merelack">contain the Word of God, black">is
the Word of God. From
beginning
to end, we accept it, believe it, and continue to preach it. To
us, the Old Testament is no less inspired than the New. The Book
is an organic whole. Reverence for the NEW Testament accompanied
by skepticism as to the OLD appears to us absurd. The two must stand
or fall together. We accept Christs own verdict concerning
Moses and all the prophets in preference to any of the
supposed discoveries of so-called higher criticism.
We hold
and maintain the truths generally known as the doctrines of
grace. The Electing Love of God the Father, the Propitiatory
and Substitutionary Sacrifice of his Son, Jesus Christ, Regeneration
by the Holy Ghost, the Imputation of Christs Righteousness,
the Justification of the sinner (once for all) by faith, his walk
in newness of life and growth in grace by the active indwelling
of the Holy Ghost, and the Priestly Intercession of our Lord Jesus,
as also the hopeless perdition of all who reject the Savior, according
to the words of the Lord in Matthew 25:46, These shall go
away into eternal punishment,are, in our judgment, revealed
and fundamental truths. Our hope is the Personal Pre-millennial
Return of the Lord Jesus in glory.
C. H.
SPURGEON., J.A. BROWN, M.D. F.B. MONTI, A. G. BROWN., J.G. COX.,
J.S. MORRIS., J. DOUGLAS, M.A. E.J. FARLEY., H. SINCLAIR PATERSON,
M.D., W. FULLER GOOH. ,A. FERGUSSON., FRANK M. SMITH., G. D. HOOTER.,
FINLAY GIBSON., CHARLES SPURGEON., J. STEPHENS, M.A., CHARLES GRAHAM.,
J.L. STANLEY., FRANK HITE., J.W. HARRALD., H. E. STONE., J. H. BARNARD.
,W. JACKSON., W. THOMAS. ,J. WESLEY OUD. ,W. R. LANE. ,GEORGE TURNER.,
W. H. BROAD., H.O. MACKEY. ,W. WILLIAMS.
Because
Mr. Spurgeons name was appended to this avowal of belief,
it was supposed that hvery wise people even discovered that
this was the creed that Mr. Spurgeon wanted to force down the unwilling
throat of the Baptist Union! Poor souls, it is really a pity to
be obliged to dispel such blissful ignorance! Yet dispelled it will
be, as soon as the simple but true story of the manifesto is told.
About
eighteen months ago, the seven brethren, whose names appear at the
head of the above list, banded themselves together as a Fraternal;
and from time to time they have invited other like-minded brethren
to join them. Membership is not confined to Baptists. Dr. Sinclair
Paterson belongs to the brotherhood, as did the late Dr. Adolph
Saphir, until he was called to the presence of the Lord he had so
long and faithfully served. Several public meetings have been held,
at which clear testimony upon the fundamental doctrines of the gospel
has been given by various members. In addition, many private gatherings
for prayer and consultation upon the Word and work of the Lord have
taken place. At one of these, it was suggested (not, however,
by Mr. Spurgeon) that the time had arrived when attention should
be called, through the religious and secular press of the country,
to certain truths which, in many quarters, are either ignored or
rejected. The suggestion met with general approval, a committee
was appointed to prepare the document; in due time it was submitted
to the whole company, and when the exact wording had been settled,
each member signed it in the form in which it has been published
to the church and the world. It might just as well be called Mr.
Archibald Browns Confession of Faith, or Mr. Whites,
or Mr. Hoopers, or Dr. Patersons. It is as much theirs
as it is Mr. Spurgeons, and as much his as theirs; but no
more appertaining to any one of the thirty than to all the rest.
It is
certainly a confession of faith in this sense, that
the brethren whose names are appended to it do believe what
they there state, and they are not ashamed to confess their
faith before any number of witnesses; but no one of them would think
of regarding this short statement as a full declaration of all that
he believes about the great verities of God. As for Mr. Spurgeons
Confession of Faith, any one who wants to read that will
find it writ large in the thirty-six volumes of The
Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit. If the reading of two thousand
two hundred sermons is too great a task for the searcher after Mr.
Spurgeons Confession of Faith, he will be able to get
a condensation of it in the Presidents Address delivered at
the last College Conference We venture to repeat here almost the
last words written by Mr. Spurgeon before his illness :
The
Greatest Fight in the World is our testimony for the present
moment. It is to be had in a neat form, and at a very small pricenamely,
sixpence. Nothing would please us more than to see it scattered
by scores of thousands, and rousing a controversy on essential truths
.... Those of our readers who abhor modern heresies, will be our
true allies if they will help us in scattering this bombshell where
it may do execution. In this address we speak without bitterness,
but also without reserve. The present policy of the Down-grade men
is to be quiet and cautious; but we shall no more copy their method
than their doctrine. Our speech is outspoken. Friends will be pleased
to know that the demand for the first edition far exceeds our expectations.
Why not go in for fifty thousand? A translation of Mr.
Spurgeons Confession of Faith, that even men of the
world can understand, will be found at the Stockwell Orphanage,
where living faith shows itself in works of mercy for the widow
and the fatherless (James 2:14-18).
The manifesto
has not met with universal approval. The Christian World ridiculed
The Faithful Few, by the quotation
marks in the heading of a short article, in which it said :
It is a document which few will read without a feeling of perplexity
and sadness. These thirty gentlemen appear to regard themselves
as a little band of faithful adherents to the truth amidst a faithless
church. The profoundest thought, the highest learning, the devoutest
inquiry, are by implication branded as treason to the truth, if
they have reached conclusions different from those propounded in
this manifesto. Infallibility would seem to be the reward of the
resolute refusal to allow the light of science and scholarship to
fall upon the divine Word.
All must
be wrong except the few who can pronounce this Shibboleth
Thank you, dear Christian World; but your censure is a choice
compliment and commendation to every member of the Fraternal! The
Echo called the manifesto A Voice from Dark Ages.
A northern newspaper wrote as follows: No one who does
not possess the power to an alarming extent of persuading himself
anything, can possibly, if he have any real acquaintance with the
controversy, hold the views as to the sense in which the Bible
is divine revelation which prevailed ,in almost all the churches
fifty years ago, It is not that theories have been formed; but
facts have been brought to light which must modify old-fashioned
opinions, and have already modified them to a considerable extent.
It did not, however, require any new discoveries of criticism to
disprove the dogma of verbal inspiration upon which Mr. Spurgeon
and his friends insist as one of the prime essentials of Christianity.
If it be an essential, then Christianity is no better than a myth.
And these men, with all their boasted loyalty to religion, ought
surely to see that in associating the Christian belief with unnecessary,
unprovable, and directly disprovable dogma, they are doing the work
of the atheist and unbeliever, who stand by smiling to see the process
of destruction going on from within. If religion and verbal inspiration
must stand or fall together, then it is the latter alternative which
will happenassuredly they will fall. The italics are
ours.
The
Baptist, in publishing the manifesto, said :It is
perhaps remarkable, not so much for the signatories, as for the
names which are conspicuous by their absence. Similar remarks
have been made by other papers; but the writers of them appear not
to have noticed the first words of the document : We,
the undersigned, banded together in Fraternal Union. It is
just what it professes to be, an avowal of belief made by the members
of a Fraternal. If it is asked, Why is Mr. So-and-sos
name not there? the answer is, He is not a member of
the Fraternal, and therefore his name has no right to be there.
Many clergymen and ministers have written, expressing their willingness
to sign the manifesto; and various signs indicate that there is
a very widespread desire for some kind of union in which lovers
of the old faith might join with brethren like-minded, without being
compromised by association with those who are not one with them
in the faith. That, however, was not the object of those who signed
this paper. Fraternals have been used often enough for the spread
of Down-grade error; it therefore seemed right to make use of a
Fraternal for the declaration of belief in Up-grade truth. If any
Down-graders are not satisfied with what has been done, let them
accept the challenge of the editor of Word and Work, himself
one of the signatories of the document :
Such a
manifesto as this is at least timely, and the men who sign it make
no secret of their creed. Is it too much to expect that those who
have changed their beliefs will be honest enough to express in language
similarly plain the extent of the change, that all the world may
see clearly where they stand? It is a fair challenge; will it elicit
a fair response?