Scott1 said:
Sean,
Thanks very much for the interaction.
I'll interact with your last reasoning here and you can feel free to respond to that if you like.
After that, I think the differences will be clear enough, helpful to those following, so further interaction on these particular points points will not be needed.
I greatly appreciate you taking the time to do this- it has been helpful to me to understand.
I have appreciated the opportunity to set forth and clarify my position on this subject. Although I have occasionally felt that you were avoiding or ignoring the force of some of my arguments, I thank you for your charitable responses, and am glad that we were able to keep the discussion in perspective, without getting too heated.
Scott1 said:
Kaalvenist said:
1. It is not actual salvation which qualifies someone for entry into the visible church.
Right,
actual salvation qualifies them for entry into the invisible church, the Body of Christ.
Kaalvenist said:
It is a profession of faith.
Yes, and we would agree there needs to be an examined, credible profession of faith, based on the gospel for church membership.
Kaalvenist said:
You confuse the issue by raising queries assuming the ability to know a person's election and regeneracy.
No,
Those in church authority make an imperfect judgment based on its credibility to protect our Lord and His Church.
We both agree that judgment is necessary for church membership.
Scott, you said,
Scott1 said:
If I'm understanding this logic, we are saying that God sovereignly redeems a sinner and admits him into His Body (the invisible church) but then that fact is denied until he knows enough other doctrine and can meet the maturity requirements of a particular denomination to be acknowledged as such visibly.
This statement implies what I said. You are arguing from the "fact" that a person is truly and sovereignly redeemed by God (and therefore received into the invisible church), and therefore has an automatic right to membership and privileges of the visible church. Such cannot be determined; and such is not in the purview of the minister(s) and elder(s) of the church when examining an individual for membership.
Scott1 said:
Kaalvenist said:
It is an illegitimate argument, to attempt to speak of those whom God has elected, redeemed, and effectually called as being brought into the invisible church, who ought therefore to be received into the visible church; but because of our man-made rule of adherence to an impossibly long set of complicated doctrines, they are kept back from what is their right and privilege. If we cannot infallibly know who they are, one cannot argue that we are restraining anyone from church membership who ought to be received as such.
Similarly, we cannot infallibly know if they "believe and receive" all the churches stated doctrine.
It would seem to be easier to determine the credibility of the former than the latter.
But we are called to make imperfect, infallible judgments judgments all the time.
1. You have avoided the force of my reasoning. You spoke of us wronging elect, regenerated individuals who cannot adhere to our subordinate standards, by not admitting them to the membership of the visible church. I argued that, until you can prove any given individual to be such, your reasoning is illegitimate; because perhaps we have not wronged a single individual who is such.
2. It sounds as though you are saying it is easier to know that a person is in a state of grace, than to know that they adhere to the faith and practice of the church. I submit the question to any unbiased individual, which is easier.
3. You probably meant "imperfect, fallible judgments," not "imperfect, infallible judgments."
Scott1 said:
Kaalvenist said:
2. It is possible for someone to be a true believer, and yet not a suitable candidate for church membership, because of failure to adhere to the church's doctrine and practice.
I would understand unsuitability to be a lack of understanding of the basis of their salvation or a disorderly life pattern given wholly over to unrepentant sin, not as the inability to comprehensively understand and agree with every proposition of doctrine in the church's written standards.
Kaalvenist said:
To clarify this, consider the case of a man called of God to be a minister of the Word and sacraments. His is a divine calling, which he ought to obey. But if he does not adhere to the faith and practice of the church to which he applies, they are not bound to receive him as a minister; rather, if their faith and practice is true, he is unfaithful to his calling in not adhering to their faith and practice.
Yes, but we would not ordinarily treat the minister as if he was an unbeliever either.
It would seem we would not deny him fellowship, the sacraments and discipline somewhere in Christ's Body.
1. Again, you miss the force of my argument. My reason for structuring my point as such was to evidence the following (perhaps I should have been more clear).
a. An individual may be divinely called to salvation, just as a saved man may be divinely called to be a minister.
b. Church members ought to be required to receive the subordinate standards of the church (assume the principle for a moment), just as church officers ought to be required to receive the subordinate standards of the church.
c. The refusal of an effectually called individual to receive the subordinate standards, and the church's subsequent refusal to admit him to membership, does not bring his salvation in question; any more than the refusal of a man divinely called to the ministry to receive the subordinate standards of the church, and the church's subsequent refusal to admit him to the ministry, brings his calling in question.
d. However, the church is right to refuse the one as a member, and the other as a minister, on the same ground.
e. And both individuals are rather demonstrating unfaithfulness in their respective callings, than any unfairness or unscripturalness on the part of the church.
2. Such a minister would be excluded from the membership of the church, just as surely as the aforementioned individual. If your phrase "somewhere in Christ's body" means that he gets to minister in a church adopting positions contrary to our subordinate standards; so also the individual could be received as a member in a church that does not maintain Scriptural order and discipline. But I thought our question revolved around what IS Scriptural order and discipline, not giving an allowance for unscriptural order and discipline.
Scott1 said:
Kaalvenist said:
3. I don't know of a pattern set forth in Scripture of receiving people into the communion of the church who continue ignorant of the church's faith and practice.
But we still have to admit, we have not found one single instance in Scripture of requiring adherence to an extended written statement of doctrine, other than a general acceptance to the teaching of the prophets and apostles in order to be member of a local church.
1. I have never argued that, in the Scripture times, anyone was ever required to adhere "to an extended written statement of doctrine." I would argue, rather, that with the gradual arising of different heresies, heterodoxies, and errors in the progress of church history, the confession of the church has necessarily been lengthened and particularized. As heretics and errorists have opposed different teachings or practices of Scripture, or have argued for their own unscriptural teachings or practices, the church has necessarily decided against them, and made its confession a little bit longer. This can be seen if one examines many of the confessions of faith found in Acts, with statements found in the later epistles (particularly those of John, dealing with the Gnostic heretics). While a simple confession like that found in Acts 8:37 may have sufficed in that particular time of church history, it would not have sufficed by the time the Gnostics were on the scene; and therefore particular statements concerning the person of Christ are deemed as necessary. At one point of time, the Apostles' Creed was deemed sufficient as a profession of faith; but it is well known that Mormons and other heretics have no problem with any of the articles of the Creed, and could recite it just as readily. If the sins of heresy and error did not exist, there would be no need for a church to have a confession of faith at all; but because of such things, confessions of faith are necessary; and because of the amount of church history we have had (with all manner of errors and heresies going before), it is necessary for a church to have a lengthy confession of faith, to distinguish from said errors and heresies.
2. Scott, as a deacon in a PCA congregation, you vowed to "sincerely receive and adopt the Confession of Faith and the Catechisms of this Church, as containing the system of doctrine taught in the Holy Scriptures." The deacon is a Scriptural office, with Scriptural qualifications. Where is there "one single instance in Scripture of requiring adherence to an extended written statement of doctrine, other than a general acceptance to the teaching of the prophets and apostles in order to be" a deacon in a local church? I submit that it cannot be found. But the requirement that deacons be "holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience" (1 Timothy 3:9) demonstrates that deacons (as other church officers) ought to adhere to the church's subordinate standards. That is the only text of Scripture of which I am aware which says anything even remotely on this subject for deacons; and yet this is deemed a sufficient proof for the order of every Presbyterian and Reformed church. But when literally dozens of such statements may be found requiring the same of church members, in the three different categories I originally laid out, it is not deemed a sufficient proof, and it continues to be questioned and opposed to this day.
Scott1 said:
Kaalvenist said:
Likewise, if the faith and practice of a church is true, it is the duty of a true believer to adhere to such, in order to be received as a member; their failure or refusal to adhere to that faith and practice is not the fault of the church, but of that believer.
Once a member, it can become a part of church discipline. It is certainly part of submitting to the governance of the church.
But if someone is absolutely convinced of believer's baptism obviously that true believer cannot in good conscience submit to infant baptism as you and I believe in. And if he joins a confessional church that adheres to that, he still ought be presumed a 'true believer,' a brother in the Lord, and a vital part of the Body of Christ.
1. It is unbiblical and illogical to receive a person into membership while he is in such a state or condition as would place him immediately under church discipline, and (if he continues unchanging and impenitent) serve as grounds for being cast right back out of the church. The discipline of the church, in its most general consideration, refers to the order of the church, and not merely the imposing of church censures. Receiving of individuals to membership who continue opposed to the subordinate standards is contrary to the order and discipline of Christ's church.
2. The order and discipline of every Reformed and Presbyterian church is against you on this point. It is a matter of fact that virtually every such denomination has ruled that those who refuse to baptize their infants are to be censured by the church. It is probably hoped that most Baptists in a Presbyterian church would quietly leave the church, asking for a letter of transfer, rather than wait for the church to discipline them. I would not, in any ordinary circumstance, question the piety of those with scruples against infant baptism; but that does not determine whether or not they ought to be disciplined by the church.