My Retraction: A 15-year Baptist
turns Paedobaptist and Becomes Reformed.
A little bit about my journey in
understanding how Covenant Theology is the overwhelming these of God's
Redemptive plan, and how God sanctified me further. A Baptist
turns to be a theologian of Covenant Theology. How could such a thing happen?
My
Retraction: A 15 Year Baptist
Turns Paedo-Baptist
and Becomes Reformed
By Dr. C. Matthew McMahon
(September, 2002, and updated
December 2006)
In the latter years of Augustine’s life, after sifting through his
literary works as a whole, in book 2 of his Anti-Pelagian Works, we find
him writing down a number of “retractions.”
What are retractions? Augustine
revisited certain topics on which he had previously written, and much to
his dismay, there was much that he knew he had written in error. In desiring to be as biblical as he could, he mentioned the
errors in a “retraction” of their validity and then explained what
his position had become. He
recanted of what he had written, and then revisited the topic under a
more thoroughly biblical view. For
instance, he withdrew his ideas concerning the Platonic view of the
pre-existence of the soul to accept a biblical view.
This was quite honorable for Augustine to do so in keeping with
being a faithful
steward of God’s Word. Yet,
at the same time, Christians can relate to Augustine's retractions as a
whole. In other words, as Christian's grow in grace, they are
weaned away from poor theology and receive that which the Spirit of God
lavishes upon them during their faithful study.
I
have read much of Augustine. I was moved by his retractions
because in his day and age it was hard to make statements as one in the
lime-light, and then retract. It is amazing how we, now, can read
his works and see his humility in his move from error to the truth.
Retractions are difficult. I can personally relate on how it is very
difficult to make a retraction.
How would you feel if after fifteen years of believing something, and
contending for something, (something you thought was the absolute truth) that you found it was biblically inconsistent?
What if you had taught "wrong doctrine" for fifteen years and causes
other to believe it, and then found you were wrong?
Retractions are not easy to deal with.
Even the great Martin Luther stuttered a moment when the King
demanded he retract his writings and recant at the Diet of Worms in 1521.
Contrary to popular belief, Luther did not shake his fist
in the wind and stand his ground – rather, he asked for more time to
think about it. In the
end he made the right choice, but it certainly was not without
difficulty and sacrifice. Retractions are difficult.
I
have a retraction of my own to declare.
This retraction is a very difficult retraction to make since it
affects my entire theological outlook concerning covenant theology, the
bible and covenant signs.
It is also a very complicated one to make in light of all the
positive email response I have had to “God’s glory” in dealing
with this issue faithfully from the Dispensational and Baptistic point of view.
For those who have agreed with me on this issue in the past, you
will need to be patient with me, because you are going to violently
disagree with me. You will shake your head, maybe even your fist,
or even maybe weep. I have moved, in aligning my thoughts with the
faithful of the historical church, to
what I believe is a more consistently biblically view of the bible as
a whole. This
retraction will be difficult for “faithful friends” to believe.
I have vehemently debated many Presbyterian and Reformed brethren
on the issue of Paedobaptism, or Infant Baptism, and how I thought I was
being covenantally faithful.
I have written against them on countless occasions in hundreds
of emails, and have published 14 articles on the web demonstrating the
“utter folly” of that “pernicious error of Paedobaptism;” or as the Baptist RBC
Howell states, the “evils” of that error.
Even at that point, I was not through, for I had another 8
articles to publish on the subject. I also had in mind to systematically destroy Turretin’s
“illogical arguments” in his third volume of Elenctic Theology,
as well as silencing Calvin’s barking in his Institutes on the
subject, book 4, chapter 16. I
had read all the major works written by faithful Baptist ministers and I
knew my position well. As
it stands right now, I may honestly say that I know the Baptist
arguments inside out and backwards as I have understood them for 15
years. I know the
exegetical ideologies. I
know the hermeneutic behind the debates.
And not only this, but in my desire to be firmly acquainted with
the “deviant view,” I had faithfully read and reread the best
divines of the past who held to Infant Baptism: Turretin, Ames, Dabney,
Hodge, Calvin, Berkhof, Edwards, Owen, Perkins, Love, and the like.
I had attended a Presbyterian Seminary and knew all of the
arguments from a contemporary view.
I listened attentively to such teachers as Sinclair Ferguson, RC
Sproul, John Gerstner, J.I. Packer, Reggie Kidd, and Richard Pratt on this subject in
their own classrooms during my seminary years.
I was as sure as the day was long that I was biblically sound and
exegetically solid in my defense of credo-baptism, or
believer’s baptism, alone.
I attempted to be as biblically careful as I could, since, I
could not allow myself to be wrong on such a vital issue where so many
great preachers and teachers in the history of the church believed such
a doctrine. In other words, I knew
church history. I knew that as an honest Baptist, I had to admit
that for over 1600 years, since Christ, the church had theology wrong.
Their ecclesiology and redemptive theology was simply mistaken, and on
key point, the Baptists finally got it right. Yes, not until 1689
(the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith) the Baptists set the record
straight though all of the predecessors had their ideas about entrance
into the church, and the manner of God in dealing with covenant families
was just plain wrong. No one had it right until "we Baptists" came
to town. Was that arrogant of me? Yes. And
Historically impossible to prove, but it was the logical outcome of my
adherence to "credo-baptism". Though the
greatest minds through the history of Christendom differed with me, I
had to stand on the bible. I
could not allow my desire to be aligned with great men be a temptation
to me (who would not want to be associated with them?).
I had to be sure I was right, and I honestly thought I was.
I truly believed that Covenant Theology and that wicked practice
of infant baptism was a great evil, and I said
so with a brutal confidence.
But in
all this,
I was in error.
I have retracted and
recanted the “Baptist” position against Covenant Theology and Infant Baptism.
There are good and valid reasons why this is so.
It is not that I went looking to change my entire theological
outlook on this issue from a newly renovated covenantal perspective.
It was not that I was reading Owen or Edwards on the subject once
again, and that sparked my thoughts.
In all honesty, and with a sincere heart, I must admit that it
was the Bible, and the Bible alone that changed my outlook on this.
I know the next couple of paragraphs are going to be very
difficult for my Baptist brethren to hear, but I must say, I
have really, honesty and truly changed my position as a result of exegetical
study and reflection.
I thought being "Reformed" was believing in predestination, or
TULIP. Well, that was a huge
mistake. I wanted to be "Reformed" and so I changed the definition
of "Reformed" to suit my taste. I wanted to be counted in the
theological outlook of Westminster, with just a few tweaks here or
there, so I fell into the same trap that "Reformed Baptists" fall into
today - they claim the title and are not honest to admit that they
cannot possibly be Reformed with holding to Reformed Theology. So
instead, I redefined "Reformed" to simply mean - I believe in TULIP.
Historically, this is a misnomer. It simply is historically
impossible to demonstrate. Ask any Baptist where "Reformed" came
from, and he'll point you to the Synod of Dorst. Little does he
know it is a direct reference, written by a Lutheran, to explain the
ecclesiology of Calvin's Institutes. In other words, being
Reformed meant 1) Covenant Theology, 2) Paedobaptist, 3) following
Calvin's view of the Lord's Supper, and 4) the ecclesiology of the
Institutes. In other words, Baptists simply cannot be Reformed in
any sense of the word.
In
attempting to be as sensitive as I can to those who “followed my
thoughts” on the Baptist position and thanked me for such articles, I
must first tell you where this change took place.
Have you ever stood “outside” yourself while you were talking
and thought to yourself, “Self, why are you saying that?
That does not make any sense at all?” – but then you keep
right on talking? Hopefully
you can identify with that. Oftentimes
it is a result of a “slip of the tongue” and we say to ourselves,
“OUCH! I should never have said that!”
But sometimes we stand outside of ourselves and think about what
we are saying while we say it.
We listen to ourselves and hear the arguments afresh. It is almost as if we are arguing with ourselves to come to a
specific conclusion about something.
Well, in my case, this happened during a study at my home.
I was teaching on the doctrine of Perseverance of the Saints.
A question arose on the warning passages of the New Testament,
and there I was suddenly, listening to myself answer this question which
was put to me, but I knew I was not correct in my answer, though it was
my standard baptistic answer.
This seemingly innocent question tumbled me into an immense
theological debate with myself later that night.
I reread the Old Testament and New Testament passages on
covenant, baptism and circumcision.
I reread all the major writers again on the subject of the
covenants and the covenant signs of infant baptism and baptism.
Then it dawned on me, and it became clear: it was a question of my
hermeneutic.
Some
of you long standing Congregationalists or Presbyterians reading this
may be saying, “Well of course your hermeneutic is the answer!”
That is all well and good to say, but to communicate it
in a way in which you HELP the Baptist understand why you think
he is interpreting the Bible with incorrect presuppositions is the key.
Leading neophytes step by step, clearly and succinctly is how they
learn. Not just blathering a host of theological ideas that fly
over their head. This neophyte would have loved some step by step
instructions in those days. But oftentimes, the arguments surround
"Baptism" and not what they should - 1) hermeneutics, and 2) Covenant
Theology. Forget baptism for a moment. Forget circumcision
for a moment. Forget the last 5 minutes of the conversation.
Its the preceding 5 HOURS of the Covenant Theology that needs to be
straight before we ever get to the application of Covenant Theology in
the covenant sign.
Many
times the great reformers and puritans simply “barked.”
Calvin is among the best. When
he is on your side you cheer him on.
When he is against you, then you scowl.
Well, I scowled at Calvin many times on this issue.
He said “…in this age, certain frenzied spirits have
raised, and even now continue to raise, great disturbance in the Church
on account of Paedobaptism, I cannot avoid here, by way of appendix,
adding something to restrain their fury.”
(Institutes, 4:19.1)
You see, for someone trying to learn or understand the
Scriptures, it is not always helpful to mimic Calvin here.
It would be more constructive to deal with core issues rather
than ad hominem arguments. On the other hand, many puritan divines will argue upon
secondary issues which are not the heart of the matter.
When this happened, I was always confused as to why Calvin, Owen,
Reynolds, Love, Van Mastricht, Ames, Turretin, Edwards, etc., would be “so off course.”
I neglected to ascertain their complete mind on the ideas behind
the covenant of redemption and of grace, and was arguing against infant
baptism without a proper view of those foundational ideas. Not
only was I putting the cart before the horse, I was putting the stall
before the horse before the cart, before the....well you get my meaning.
Arguing
secondary issues is not restricted to ancient writers.
RC Sproul debated Alister Begg at great lengths on secondary
issues at a Ligonier conference some years ago that I attended.
RC never addressed why he thought Alister was wrong at the heart
of his hermeneutic. He just
argued with Alister about the issues surrounding the subject - baptism. He argued for familial solidarity when he should have been
dealing with hermeneutics and the foundations of the Covenant of
Redemption and Covenant of Grace.
Why
was there confusion for me as a Baptist?
Why did I think that Infant Baptist was not dealing with
“texts” which “proved” their case?
Why did I think this way in particular?
I was simply dumbfounded at the Presbyterian’s lack of
exegetical prowess when it came to Infant Baptism.
Why? It was the
answer to this question that helped me understand why I was wrong on
this issue for so long. I
thought I was “Reformed” but in reality, I could not escape a form of Dispensationalism, which I now believe, is
inherent in the
Baptistic position, and inescapable.
I abrogated certain aspects of the Old Testament’s form and
substance. (It is the
“and substance” which makes the difference.)
The Puritans divines I love so much simply confounded the issue
all the more because they continually dealt with the secondary issues of
arguing specific texts, without ever taking to task my faulty
hermeneutic in the first place. Now that is not to say they did not do an exemplary job at
the text and its exegesis. But
they never dealt with the heart of the matter at the time
they were arguing their case. They
should have told me to go back to understanding the Old Covenant before
I tackled the New Covenant, and they should have opened my eyes to
certain non-negotiable (eternal) traits of the Covenant of Grace which
run historically through the entire Bible - those I thought I knew
all about, but really swept under the rug.
What I have to say next is critical to understand. I see four main reasons why I was a Baptist:
1) I was dispensational to in my thinking because of an
abrogation of the Old Testament covenant in an extreme manner, 2)
I studied the doctrine of the “covenant” from the New Testament
backwards to the Old Testament (in other words, I did theology
backwards), 3) I defined the “sign” of Baptism
strictly as, “the outward sign of the inward work of regeneration,”
and 4) I thought that the terms "salvation" and "new
covenant" were coextensively the same thing.
In point “1”, there is much to explain and most “Baptists” will vehemently deny this as I did (I can already hear them
mumbling to themselves in consternation!).
Suffice it to say that I will be addressing this in future
articles (such as these:
Turretin's Views of Covenant,
John Owen's Views of Covenant,
Children in the Covenant
Of Grace, The
Internalization of the Law Not "New",
Covenant - God, to you
and your children). My “Baptistic” theology, from a covenantal
perspective, was dispensational – I could not escape this to
some extent even though I did not see how this could possibly be.
Point “2” is more prevalent. If
you attempt to understand the Bible beginning from the New Testament and
work backwards into the Old Testament you will almost always end up
Baptistic. If you argue
from the New Testament backwards then you have begun with
a wrong hermeneutic. This
idea is very important. I
had, in reality, neglected it.
Point “3” is also very important.
The very ideas associated with the ordinance of baptism in the
new covenant for me as a Baptist were different than one who believes in
Covenantal Theology. This
is a result of the manner in which I understood what “covenant”
theology is all about. I was in error about my understanding of covenant theology.
This again will be addressed in future articles.
Point 4 is critical. If you think the New Covenant is coextensive
with salvation, you will always wind up Baptistic. This is
probably the most serious error in trying to understand the arguments
here. Every covenant in the Bible, from Adam forward, included
unbelievers. The New Covenant, in this respect, is no different.
That is why Christ can promise salvation and damnation in the same
breath to those in the New Covenant. (1 Cor. 11, Heb. 6 and 10).
Until the Baptist comes to grips with this, there is no way for him to
understand Covenant Theology because he radically transforms the nature
of God's covenant when he deals with the New Testament. The substance of
the Covenant of Grace changes, which makes the Baptist, inescapably,
Dispensational.
In
my “switch” I realized that as a Baptist I continually and forever
argued against secondary notions and not by the basic and key
ideas which are foundational for the rest of biblical interpretation.
I was arguing about the color of the horse when all along I
should have been arguing about the structure of the cart he was pulling.
It
may be that you as a Baptist, reading this very brief (but important)
retraction, cannot believe your eyes or ears (you are shaking your head
right in front of your monitor as you read!).
You may be even praying for me right now – that I would come to
my senses! Maybe you are
saying, “Oh what a wretched mistake he is making!
What a horrible hermeneutic he has embraced!”
Please, do not ever stop praying for me.
I always need your prayers.
However, certain pieces of the puzzle that always seemed to
“puzzle me” have fallen rapidly into a grid locked picture of the
grace of covenant theology. I
believe they should have been there all along.
But at
least take this to heart, if you are a Baptist - in your position, you
must, if you are at least humble and honest, agree with me that your
position is relatively new. It sprung up int he 17th century.
It was not held until the heretical Anabaptists appeared on the scene.
That means that the church has been wrong about her theology for 1700
years until you, my friend, and your partners in this new fangled
theology, got it right. It means that God, in all His great wisdom
and providence, waited 1700 years before He "enlightened" His
ambassadors to the truth of how He wanted His church run. It even,
on a base level, questions the very providence of God in the way He
deals with His church. It calls into question Jude's admonition,
that the faith HAS been once delivered to the saints. But you,
friend, are saying that we have all had it wrong, and that we are just
getting it right. You, friend, are saying that the historical
position of the church's ecclesiology, by the greatest minds the church
has known, were, for all intents and purposes, completely wrong about
how the church should be run, and what God desired for His church.
Not only did we not know the truth, but God allowed His church to
purposefully languished for one thousand seven hundred years until the
Baptists came along. They all had it wrong. And you, and a
few others, have it right. (On that note alone, ponder promptly and
heavily.)
As a result of all of this, I have reposted my position in many
articles. There are
many texts to reconsider and fit into their proper places.
There are a host of concepts to deal with.
I will deal with all the texts that I as a Baptist used to argue
over as time goes on. Many are
already published, and many of them have been consolidated into a
concise book called, "A
Simple Overview of Covenant Theology". (This book is available
through
Puritan Publications.) I
also have much to say in a compendium of articles on covenant theology
and the issues surrounding the biblical ideas contained therein, in the
Covenant Theology section of
this site.
For
those who had been following my articles on Believer’s baptism as I
have posted them pertaining to adults, please understand that the
Paedo-Baptist does not discount that adults should be baptized.
I still believe that men should repent and be baptized.
However, I will now covenantally insist that the seed of
the believer should be baptized as well, lest God count them as
unclean. There are
theological and biblical reasons for this, both exegetically and
creedal.
I
covet your prayers, and deeply regret that I have lead many of you down
a long path that excluded some of the most glorious truths of the bible.
I publicly ask your forgiveness for my own personal irresponsible
exegesis, subtle dispensational thinking and my backwards hermeneutic.
I
welcome all emails
as I always have.
Your
Humble Servant,
Dr. C.
Matthew McMahon, Sept. 2002
Updated
December 2006
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