Dealing with Those Who Differ from You
A paper that should help heal the
rift between opposing parties, at least on a conversational level.
How
to Deal with Those Who Differ from Us
Dr.
Roger R. Nicole, Ph.D.
Part
l: What Do I Owe to the Person Who Differs From Me?
We
are called upon by the Lord to contend earnestly for the faith. (Jude 3)
That does not necessarily involve being contentious; but it involves
avoiding compromise, standing forth for what we believe, standing forth
for the truth of God-without welching at any particular moment. Thus, we
are bound to meet, at various points and various levels, people with
whom we disagree. We disagree in some areas of Christian doctrine. We
disagree as to some details of church administration. We disagree as to
the way in which certain tasks of the church should be pursued. And, in
fact, if we are careful to observe the principles that I would like to
expound for you, I would suggest that they may be valuable also in
disagreements that are not in the religious filed. They also would apply
to disagreements in politics or difficulties with people in your job or
friction within the family or contentions between husband and wife or
between parents and children. Who does not encounter from time to time
people who are not in complete agreement; therefore it is good to seek
to discover certain basic principles whereby we may relate to those who
differ from us.
It
seems strange that one should desire to speak at all about Polemic
Theology since we are now in an age when folks are more interested in
ecumenism and irenics than in polemics. Furthermore, Polemic Theology
appears to have been often rather ineffective. Christians have not
managed in many cases to win over their opponents. They have shown
themselves to be ornery; they have bypassed some fairly important
prescriptions of Scripture; and in the end, they have not convinced very
many people. Sometimes they have not even managed to convince
themselves! Under those circumstances, one perhaps might desire to
bypass a subject like this altogether.
In
order to approach this subject, there are three major questions that we
must ask; and I would like to emphasize very strongly that, in my
judgment, we need to ask them precisely in the right order: (1) What do
I owe the person who differs from me? (2) What can I learn from the
person who differs from me? (3) How can I cope with the person who
differs from me? Many
people overlook the first two questions and jump right away, to:
"How can I cope with this? How can I bash this person right down
into the ground m order to annihilate objections and differences?"
Obviously, if we jump to the third question from the start, it is not
very likely that we will be very successful in winning over dissenters.
So I suggest, first of all, that we need to face squarely the matter of
our duties. We have obligations to people who differ from us. This does
not involve agreeing with them. We have an obligation to the truth that
has a priority over agreement with any particular person; if someone is
not in the truth, we have no right to agree. We have no right even to
minimize the importance of the difference; and therefore, we do not owe
consent, and we do not owe indifference. But what we owe that person who
differs from us, whoever that may be, is what we owe every human
being-we owe them to love them. And we owe them to deal with them as we
ourselves would like to be dealt with or treated. (Matthew 7:12)
And
how then do we desire to be treated? Well, the first thing that we
notice here is that we want people to know what we are saying or
meaning. There is, therefore, an obligation if we are going to voice
differences to make a serious effort to know the person with whom we
differ. That person may have published books or articles. Then we have
an obligation to be acquainted with those writings. It is not
appropriate for us to voice sharp differences if we have neglected to
read what is available. The person who differs from us should have
evidence that we read carefully what has been written and that we have
attempted to understand its meaning. In the case of an oral exchange
where we don't have the writing, we owe the person who differs from us
to listen carefully to what he or she says. Rather than preparing
ourselves to pounce on that person the moment he or she stops talking,
we should concentrate on apprehending precisely what the other person
holds.
In
this respect, I say that Dr. Cornelius Van Til has given us a splendid
example. As you may know, he expressed very strong objections to the
theology of Karl Barth. This was so strong that Barth claimed that Van
Til simply did not understand him. It has been my privilege to be at Dr.
Van Til's office and to see with my own eyes the bulky tomes of Barth's,
Kirchliche Dogmatik (Incidentally, these volumes were the original
German text, not an English translation). As I leafed through these, I
bear witness that I did not see one page that was not constellated with
underlining, double-underlining, marginal annotations, exclamation
points, and question marks galore. So here is someone who certainly did
not say, "I know Karl Barth well; I understand his stance; I don't
need to read anymore of this; I can move on with what I have."
Every one of the volumes, including the latest ones that were then in
existence, gave evidence of very, very careful scrutiny. So when we
intend to take issue with somebody, we need to do the job that is
necessary to know that person so that we are not voicing our criticism
in the absence of knowledge but that we are proceeding from the vantage
point of real acquaintance.
Even
that is not enough. Beyond what a person says or writes, we must attempt
to understand what a person means. Now it is true that there are what
are called "Freudian slips," that is there are people who do
not express themselves exactly the way it should be done; but in the
process somehow they give an insight into a tendency that is there in
them all along and which leads them to express themselves in an
infelicitous but revealing manner. So it is appropriate, I suppose, to
note this as a personal footnote, so to speak, in order possibly to make
use of it at some time in the discussion. But if somebody fails to
express himself or herself accurately, there is no great point in
pressing the very language that is used. We ought to try to understand
what is the meaning that this language is intended to convey. In some
cases, we may provide an opportunity for an opponent to speak more
accurately.
I
have experienced this in my own home. I have noticed that my wife
sometimes says things like this: "You never empty the
wastebasket." Now as a matter of fact, on January 12, 1984, I did
empty the wastebasket. Therefore, the word never is inappropriate! This
tends to weaken the force of my wife's reproach. Well, I've learned that
I don't get anywhere by pressing this point. This kind of reaction is
not providing dividends of joy and peace in my home. I've learned,
therefore, to interpret that when my wife says "never" she
means "rarely" or "not as often as should be." When
she says "always," she means "frequently" or
"more often than should be." Instead of quibbling as to the
words never and always, I would do well to pay attention to what she
finds objectionable. And indeed, I should be emptying the wastebasket.
That is a regular part of a male role in the home, isn't it? Feminist or
not feminist, a husband and father should empty the wastebasket; and
therefore, if I fail to do this, even only once, there is good reason to
complain. Nothing is gained by quibbling about how often this happens. I
ought to recognize this and be more diligent with it.
Similarly,
in dealing with those who differ, we ought not to quibble about language
just in order to pounce on our opponent because he or she has not used
accurate wording. It is more effective to seek to apprehend what is
meant and then to relate ourselves to the person's meaning. If we don't
do that, of course, there is no encounter because this person speaks at
one level and we are taking the language at another level; and so the
two do not meet, and the result is bound to be frustrating. So if we
really want to meet, we might as well try to figure out the meaning
rather than to quibble on wording.
Moreover,
I would suggest that we owe to people who differ from us to seek to
understand their aims. What is it that they are looking for? What is it
that makes them tick? What is it that they are recoiling against? What
are the experiences, perhaps tragic experiences, that have steeled them
into a particular stance? What are the things that they fear and the
things that they yearn for? Is there not something that I fear as well
or yearn for in the same way? Is there not a possibility here to find a
point of contact at the very start rather than to move on with an
entirely defensive or hostile mood?
As
an example, it may be observed that in the fourth century Arius, and
undoubtedly many of his supporters, were especially leery of modalism, a
serious error in the conception of the Trinity whereby the Godhead
manifested Himself in three successive forms or modes as Father, Son and
the Holy Spirit rather than to exist eternally as Three Who have
interpersonal relations with each other. From Arius' vantage point, the
orthodox doctrine of the full deity of the Son and the Holy Spirit did
of necessity imply a modalistic view. It did not help that one of his
very vocal opponents Marcellus of Ancyra did, in fact, border
dangerously on modalism. Arguments designed to show the biblical and
logical strengths of the doctrine of the Son's full deity or vice versa
the weakness of Arius's subordinationism would not be likely to be
effective unless the instinctive fear of an implied modalism were
addressed and shown to be without
solid foundation. With all due respect to the soundness, courage, and
perseverance of those like Athanasius and Hilary who consistently
resisted Arianism, one may yet wonder if a more effective method of
dealing with this error might not have been to allay the fear that
orthodoxy inevitably would lead to modalism.
In
the controversy between Calvinism and Arminianism, it must be perceived
that the fact that many Arminians (possibly almost all of them) conceive
to affirm the complete sovereignty of God inevitably implies a rejection
of any free will, power of decision, and even responsibility on the part
of created rational beings, angelic or human. Their attachment to those
features naturally leads them to oppose Calvinism as they understand it.
It is imperative for the Calvinist controversialist to affirm and to
prove that he or she does not, in fact, deny or reject these modalities
of the actions and decisions of moral agents but that he or she
undertakes to retain these-even though their logical relation to divine
sovereignty remains shrouded in a mystery that transcends finite, human
logic.
Similarly,
the Calvinist should not glibly conclude that evangelical Arminians are
abandoning the notion of divine sovereignty because they assert the
freedom of the human will. It is plainly obvious that Arminians pray for
the conversion of those yet unbelievers and that they desire to
recognize the Lordship of God. The Arminian will do well to emphasize
this in discussion with Calvinists so as to provide a clearer perception
of the actual stance of both parties. It is remarkable that committed
Calvinists can sing without reservation many of the hymns of Charles and
John Wesley, and vice versa that most Arminians do not feel they need to
object to those of Isaac Watts or Augustus Toplady.
In
summary, I would say we owe our opponents to deal with them in such a
way that they may sense that we have a real interest in them as persons,
that we are not simply trying to win an argument or show how smart we
are, but that we are deeply interested in them-and are eager to learn
from them as well as to help them.
One
method that I have found helpful in making sure that I have dealt fairly
with a position that I could not espouse was to assume that a person
endorsing that view was present in my audience (or was reading what I
had written). Then my aim was to represent the view faithfully and fully
without mingling the criticism with factual statements; in fact, so
faithfully and fully that an adherent to that position might comment,
"This man certainly does understand our view!" It would be a
special boon if one could say, "I never heard it stated
better!" This then could earn me the right to criticize. But before
I proceed to do this, it is only proper that I should have demonstrated
that I have a correct understanding of the position I desire to
evaluate.
Part
2: What Can I Learn from Those Who Differ From Me?
In
the last section, we discussed the answer to the question, "What do
I owe the person who differs from me?" It is very important
throughout that one should remain keenly aware of such obligation, for
otherwise any discussion is doomed to remain unproductive. The truth
that I believe I have grasped must be presented m a spirit of love and
winsomeness. To do otherwise is to dispute truth itself, for it is more
naturally allied to love than to hostility or sarcasm. (Ephesians 4:15)
These may, in fact, reflect a certain insecurity that is not warranted
when one is really under the sway of truth. It may well be that God's
servant may be moved to righteous indignation in the presence of those
"who suppress the truth by their wickedness" (Romans 1:18).
This explains the outbursts of the Old Testament prophets, of our Lord
in His denunciation of the Pharisees and of the apostles in dealing with
various heresies and hypocrisies in the early church. These severe
judgments were ordinarily aimed at warning members of the flock rather
than winning over some people who had distanced themselves from the
truth of God to a point which left no room for hope of recovery. (Psalm
139:19-22; Isaiah 5:8-25; Daniel 5:26-30; Matthew 12:30-32; Acts
7:51-53; Galatians 5:12; Revelation 22:15) But when dealing with those
we have a desire to influence for the good, we need imperatively to
remain outgoing and gracious.
When
we are sure that our outward approach is proper, we need secondly to
safeguard the inward benefits of courtesy. We need to ask the question,
"What can I learn from those who differ from me?" It is not
censurable selfishness to seek to gain maximum benefits from any
situation that we encounter. It is truly a pity if we fail to take
advantage of opportunities to learn and develop what almost any
controversy affords us.
Could
I be Wrong?
The
first thing that I should be prepared to learn is that I am wrong and
the other person is right. Obviously, this does not apply to certain
basic truths of the faith like the Deity of Christ or salvation by
grace. The whole structure of the Christian faith is at stake here and
it would be instability rather than broad-mindedness to allow these to
be eroded by doubts. Yet, apart from issues where God Himself has spoken
so that doubt and hesitancy are really not permissible there are
numerous areas where we are temperamentally inclined to be very
assertive and in which we can quite possibly be in error. When we are
unwilling to acknowledge our fallibility, we reveal that we are more
interested in winning a discussion and safeguarding our reputation than
in the discovery and triumph of truth. A person who corrects our
misapprehensions is truly our helper rather than our adversary, and we
should be grateful for this service rather than resentful of the
correction. As far as our reputation is concerned, we should seek to be
known for an unfailing attachment to the truth and not appear to pretend
to a kind of infallibility that we are ready to criticize when Roman
Catholics claim it for their popes!
Our
reputation will be better served if we show ourselves ready to be
corrected when in error, rather than if we keep obstinately to our
viewpoint when the evidence shows it to be wrong. I should welcome the
correction. This person is really my friend who renders a signal service
to me! I should respond, "I was mistaken in this; I am glad that
you straightened me out; Thank you for your help." People who are
unwilling to acknowledge their mistakes, by contrast, may be called
stubborn and lose their credibility.
What
are the Facts?
In
the second place we may learn from one who differs that our
presentations, while correct as far as it goes, fails to embody the
truth in its entirety on the subject in view. Although what we assert is
true, there are elements of truth that, in our own clumsy way, we have
overlooked. For instance, we may be so concerned to assert the deity of
Christ that we may appear to leave no room for His humanity. As a
Calvinist, I may so stress the sovereignty of God that the reality of
human decision may appear to be ruled out. Here again, I should feel
grateful rather than resentful. The adversative situation may well force
me to give better attention to the fullness of revelation and preclude
an innate one-sidedness which results in a caricature that does
disservice to truth no less than the actual error may do. Many of the
mainline elements of Christianity are thus, "two-railed," if I
may express myself in a metaphor. Unity, yet threeness in God, immanence
yet transcendence, sovereignty of God and yet reality of rational
decision, body and soul, deity and humanity of the Mediator,
justification and sanctification, divine inspiration of Scripture and
human authorship, individual and corporate responsibility. One could
multiply the examples. When one of the factors is overlooked, one is
doing no better than the railroad operator who would attempt to run an
ordinary train with only one rail (I do not speak here of monorails!)
The person who differs from me may render me great service by compelling
me to present the truth in its completeness and thus avoid pitfalls
created by under-emphasis, over emphasis and omissions. Thus my account
will be "full-orbed" rather than "half baked!"
What
are the Dangers?
I
may learn from those who differ from me that I have not sufficiently
perceived certain dangers to which my view is exposed and against which
I need to be especially on guard. I may find out notably that there are
certain weighty objections to which I had not given sufficient attention
heretofore. Here again, I must be grateful for a signal service rendered
by the objector. Instead of being irked by the opposition, I should rise
to the challenge of presenting my view with appropriate safeguards and
in such a way as to anticipate objections that are likely to arise.
For
example, consider how the Westminster divines were led to express the
doctrine of divine decrees (Confession III/I).
"God
from all eternity did, by the most wise and Holy counsel of His own
will, freely and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass; yet so as
thereby neither is God the author of sin, nor is violence offered to the
will of the creatures, nor is the liberty or contingency of second
causes taken away, but rather
established."
The
three clauses following "yet so as thereby" are specifically
designed to ward off misunderstanding and to meet objections commonly
raised by Arminians or Arminianizing divines. The peculiar wisdom of
setting up these safeguards in the first article of that chapter is the
fruit of the bitter experiences made in more than half a century of
controversy issuing in rich balanced and nuanced expression of truth in
the Westminster standards.
In
France, certain barriers placed on bridges, terraces or quays are called
"garde fous", that is to say "safeguards for the
crazy." They provide a fence to prevent those who are careless from
falling off the edge. Those who disagree with us provide us with an
opportunity to ascertain areas of danger in our view and to build
"garde-fous" there. It would be a pity if we failed to take
advantage of such an opportunity.
What
about Ambiguities?
We
may learn from those who object that we are not communicating as we
should and that they have not rightly understood what we wanted to say.
In this we can be benefited also, for the whole purpose of speaking (or
writing) is to communicate. If we don't communicate, we might as well
remain silent. And if we don't manage to communicate properly what we
think, we have to learn to speak better. If ambiguities remain, and it
is apparent from the way in which the other person reacts that
ambiguities do remain, then we are challenged to make a presentation
that is clearer, more complete, more wholesome, and one that will
communicate better.
We
have Biblical precedents for this. The apostle Paul, for instance,
anticipated objections which arise from misunderstanding of his
doctrine. In Romans 6:1 he writes "What shall we say then? Shall we
go on sinning so that grace may increase? By no means!" This
objection provides a launching pad to articulate more fully his thoughts
so that readers will not be permitted to wander away, but will gain a
proper understanding of the truth. There are many other examples of this
approach in the Pauline writings. (Romans 3:3; 6:15, 19; 7:7, 13;
Galatians 2:17, 19 etc.) Even our Lord took pains to rephrase or amplify
some of His statements that the hearer had not rightly understood at
first (Matthew 13:18-23; 37-43; John 11:12-14, etc.)
The
effort made to clarify our thought for others will often result in
clarifying it also for ourselves. We may thus secure a firmer hold upon
the truth, a better grasp of its implications, and relationship to other
truths, a more effective way to articulate and illustrate it. These are
boons for which we may be grateful to those who differ from us.
When
we give due attention to what we owe those who differ and what we can
learn from them, we may be less inclined to proceed in a hostile manner.
Our hand will not so readily contract into a boxing fist, but will be
extended as an instrument of friendship and help; our feet will not be
used to bludgeon another, but will bring us closer to those who stand
afar; our tongue will not lash out in bitterness and sarcasm, but will
speak words of wisdom, grace and healing. (Proverbs 10:20, 21; 13 :14;
15:1; 24; 26; 25:11; James 3)
Part
3 How Can I Cope with Those Who Differ from Me?
In
the previous two sections, we sought to explore how to derive the
maximum benefit from controversy both as to those who differ by being
sure that we do not fail in our duty toward them, and as to ourselves in
welcoming an opportunity to learn as well as an occasion to vindicate
our position. Now after having given due attention to the questions,
"What do I owe?" and "What can I learn?" it is
certainly proper to raise the query, "How can I cope with those who
differ from me?"
Now
"coping" involves naturally two aspects known as
"defensive" and "offensive." Unfortunately, these
terms are borrowed from the military vocabulary and tend to reflect a
pugnacious attitude which injects bitterness into controversies. We
should make a conscious effort to resist that trend. Furthermore
"offensive" is often understood as meaning "giving
offence" or "repulsive" rather than simply "passing to
the attack." It may therefore be better to use the adjectives
"protective" and "constructive" to characterize
these two approaches.
I. Biblical Arguments
In
evangelical circles obviously this type of evidence carries a maximum of
weight if properly handled, for it invokes the authority of God Himself
in support of a position. This is what Luther so eloquently asserted at
the Diet of Worms, and what the Westminster Confession also bears
witness to in these words:
"God
alone is Lord of the conscience, and hath left it free from the
doctrines and commandments of men which are in any way contrary to His
Word, or beside it in matters of faith or worship" (WCF 20:2).
We
need here to be careful to make a reverent use of Scripture, quoting
every reference in a way that is consistent with its context. This will
protect our approach against the legitimate criticisms levied against
"proof-texting," a method that lifts scriptural statements
from their environment, and marshals them as if they were isolated
pronouncements vested with divine authority without regard to the way in
which they are introduced in Holy Writ. A notable example of this wrong
approach would be to claim that God sanctions the statement, "There
is no God" because it is found in Psalm 14:1 and 53:1.
We
must therefore, be careful to use the Scripture in such a way that an
examination of the context will strengthen, not weaken the argument.
Very few things are as damaging to a position as a claim to be grounded
in the authority of God's Word, only to find that a more careful
examination of the text in its context cancels out the support it was
presumed to give. An argument of this type, like the house built on
sand, "... falls with a great crash" (Matthew 7:27).
Likewise,
a well-advised person will be careful to avoid passages that
"boomerang,"- passages that are used as proof, but turn out to
be more decisive against the view advanced. For example, some people
quote Philippians 2:12, "Work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling" and forget that Paul continues, "For it is God who
works in you to will and to act...."
All
this demands that we should know the Word of God. God entrusted the
sacred Scriptures to His people in order that they may search it
diligently (John 5:39) and make it the object of their daily meditation.
(Psalm 119) To be acquainted with the whole counsel of God (Acts 20:27)
must be the aim not only of professionals like pastors and professors,
but of everyone who wants to be known as a Christian. To be sound in the
interpretation, correlation and application of the Scriptures is the way
"to be approved, a workman who does not need to be ashamed" (2
Timothy 2:15) and every child of God ought to aspire to that.
Defensively
we may be aware of passages that are often quoted to invalidate a stance
which we find scriptural. Sometimes we may anticipate this objection
even before it is raised and be prepared to show how it does not
undercut our view. If we have a particularly strong refutation, we may
at times wait until the person who differs quotes the passage. In this
was we may score the psychological advantage of destroying an argument
thought valid. Even this however, must remain within the framework of
"speaking the truth in love" (Ephesians 4:15).
In
some cases it may be possible to show that the interpretation which
would see in a particular passage an objection to the scriptural truth
we are undertaking to advocate is simply improper and indefensible
because it sets this Scripture in conflict with its context, or at least
with the larger context of the unity of divine revelation. In other
cases, it may be sufficient to show that there are one or several
plausible alternative explanations of this text that do not precipitate
the alleged conflict. Since we are obliged to seek the unity of the
truth, a plausible interpretation that averts a conflict deserves the
preference.
To
sum up, we must ever strive to take account of the fullness of biblical
revelation to have the boldness to advance as far as it leads, and the
restraint to stop in our speculations where the Bible ceases to provide
guidance. Polemic theology in this respect is simply biblical light
focused in such a way as to assist those who appear yet caught m some
darkness.
II
General Arguments
These
arguments direct their appeal to something other than the actual text of
Scripture, namely to logic, history and tradition. While the authority
involved is not on the same level as the Bible, the Word of God, it has
a bearing on the discussions and must be considered by those who wish to
make a strong case.
Appeal
to Reason. Human reason, especially when not guided by divine
revelation, is apt to go astray either in being unduly influenced by
prejudice (what we call "rationalizing") or when reason
forgets its proper limits and attempts to apply to the infinite what is
valid only for finite categories. Nevertheless, reason is a divine gift
to humankind, indispensable to the process of receiving, applying and
communicating revelation. (C£ J.I. Packer, "Fundamentalism"
and the Word of God, pages 128-137.) It is a part and parcel of God's
image in humanity. To fly in the face of logic is to court self
destruction, for logic has a way to beat its own path in the process of
history. Rational arguments may therefore be presented with propriety,
and those advanced by people who differ from us must be addressed.
1.
Positively, it behooves me to show that my view is in keeping with the
totality of revealed truth, with the structure of the Christian faith as
an organism of truth. I will promote the acceptance of an individual
tenet if I can show that it is inescapably related to some other element
of the faith on which I and the one who differs from me have agreement.
For instance, one who accepts the doctrine of the Trinity is pretty well
bound to confess the deity of Christ and vice versa.
Specifically,
it is in order to make plain the damaging or even disastrous effects
that a departure from the position I advocate will logically entail. In
doing this, I must carefully distinguish between the view that the other
person actually espouses and the implication that I perceive as
resulting from it. Failure to make this distinction has resulted in the
ineffectiveness of much polemic theology. Christians have wasted a huge
amount of ammunition in bombarding areas where their adversaries were
not in fact located, but where it was thought they were logically bound
to end up. Perhaps God has providentially so ordained in order that
polemic theology should not be as destructive as the combatants
intended. To struggle with a caricature is not a "big deal."
and to knock down a straw man does not entitle one to the Distinguished
Service Cross! To be sure, it is a part of the proper strategy to show
those who differ that their mew involves damaging implications that will
be difficult to resist m the course of time, but one must remain aware
that it is the present position rather than anticipated developments
that must be dealt with.
2.
Negatively, I need to face the objections that are raised against my
view. Some of them are irrelevant because they are based on a
misunderstanding of the issues. To deal with these will help me to
clarify my position and to reassert it with proper safeguards against
one-sidedness, exaggeration or misconceptions. For instance, I may show
that definite atonement is not incompatible with a universal offer of
salvation in Christ, even though the supporters of universal atonement
frequently think it is. Other objections may be shown to be invalid
because they apply to the view of those who differ as well as to mine.
Still other objections may be recognized as peripheral, that is to say,
difficulties that may or may not be resolved rather than considerations
that invalidate a position otherwise established. For instance, some
alleged contradictions between two passages of Scripture represent a
difficulty for the doctrine of inerrancy rather than a discreditation of
this otherwise well-established tenet of the faith. Obviously the most
advantageous situation is found when an objection can be turned around
to become a positive argument in favor of the view objected to. Jesus'
treatment of the Old Testament Law in Matthew 5:21-42 is a case in
point. It might appear to a superficial reader that in this text Jesus
repudiates the authority of the Law, when in fact He confirms it and
reinforces it by His spiritual interpretation.
Furthermore,
it is sometimes effective to challenge a person who differs from us to
press for an alternative approach which we may then proceed to
criticize. For instance, a person who denies the deity of Christ may
well be pressed to give his or her answer to the question, "Who do
say that I am?" (Matthew 16:15). Any answer short of full deity may
be shown as deeply unsatisfactory, as leading to some form of polytheism
or as failing utterly to account for the facts of the life, death and
resurrection of Christ. It may be hoped that those who have
unsatisfactory views may then leave the smoldering ruins of their system
and take refuge in the solid edifice of the faith "once for all
entrusted to the saints" (Jude 3).
Appeal
to History and Tradition. The course of history is a remarkable
laboratory that permits us to observe the probable developments that
issue from the holding of certain tenets. The decisions of councils or
the pronouncements of confessions of faith are often geared to guard
against erroneous opinions that God's people recognized as dangerous or
even fatal to the faith. To neglect this avenue of knowledge is to risk
repeating some mistakes of the past that an acquaintance with history
might well have enabled us to avoid. The Christological debates of the
fourth and fifth centuries should protect us from the twin errors of
Arianism and Apollinarianism, of Nestorianism and Monophysitism without
our passing through the convolutions that the church of those days
experienced. The Reformation of the sixteenth century, similarly, should
shield us from repeating some of the mistakes of the Roman Catholic
Church.
Positively,
it is proper for me to attempt to prove that I am in line with orthodoxy
in general and specifically with statements of faith that have received
wide acceptance or that are part of the subordinate standards of my
church or of the church of the one who differs. This will be especially
significant if the formulation was established for the purpose of
warding off a position analogous to that of my opponent. Now all manmade
statements are subject to revision and correction, but it appears prima
facie impossible that a view that flatly contradicts the Nicene Creed or
even the Westminster Standards should turn out to be right, while these
revered creeds, tested as they were through centuries of Christian
thinking, should be wrong.
Specifically,
the position of the one who differs may so closely approximate a
well-known heresy adjudged as heterodox that the course of history may
provide a portrayal of what happens to those who entertain it. The
disastrous course of Arianism, culminating as it did in the Moslem
conquest of North Africa, may be an example. We need, however, to be
careful to recognize the importance of weighing all operative factors
rather than just some selected ones which seem to suit our purpose. The
demise of Christianity in North Africa applied largely to Egypt where a
monophysite tendency prevailed, as well as to the lands that had been
conquered by the Vandals with their Arian commitment.
Those
who would gloat over the increasing heterodoxy of the Arminian movement
in the Netherlands should probably be somewhat sobered in thinking of
the destiny of Calvinism in New England, which moved from high orthodoxy
around 1650 to the rather massive Unitarian and Pelagian defection at
the beginning of the nineteenth century. These remarks do not invalidate
the value of the lessons of history, but merely admonish to caution in
applying them.
Negatively,
the course of action would parallel closely what was described above.
Objections raised against my view may be shown to be counterproductive,
because they support rather than undermine my mew; irrelevant, because
they fail to address my real position or because they burden equally the
objector's view; or inconsequential, because they have only a peripheral
bearing on the issues.
III Christian's Goal
Perhaps
the most important consideration for the Christian is to remain aware at
all times of the goal to be achieved. It is the consistent perception of
this goal that will give a basic orientation to the whole discussion:
Are we attempting to win an argument in order to manifest our own
superior knowledge and debating ability? Or are we seeking to win
another person whom we perceive as enmeshed in error or inadequacy by
exposing him or her to the truth and light that God has given to us?
If
the former be true, it is not surprising if our efforts are vain: we
should be like physicians who take care of patients simply in order to
accredit some pet theory. If the latter be true, we will naturally be
winsome. This will increase our patience when the force of our arguments
does not seem to have an immediate effect. This will challenge us anew
to understand those who differ in order to present the arguments that
are most likely to be persuasive to them. God has appointed all of us to
be witnesses to the truth. (John 1:7; Acts 1:8) God is the one who can
and will give efficacy to this witness. We should never underestimate
His ability to deal even with those who appear most resistant. Who would
have thought that Stephen could actually reach the heart and mind of
anyone in the lynch mob that put him to death? But his great discourse
was actually sowing goads in the very heart and conscience of Saul.
(Acts 26:14) Acts 7 showed that his argument was sealed by his
Christ-like spirit in the face of this atrocious murder. (Acts 7:59-60)
His witness was used by God to win over perhaps the ablest of his
adversaries, who was to be the great apostle Paul!
A
Christian in carrying on discussions with those who differ should not be
subject to the psychology of the boxing ring where the contestants are
bent upon demolishing one another. Rather "The Lord's servant must
not quarrel: instead, he must be kind to everyone, able to teach, not
resentful. Those who oppose him he must gently instruct, in hope that
God will grant them repentance leading them to a knowledge of the truth,
and that they will come to their senses..." (2 Timothy 2:24-26). |
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