Friday, September 13, 2013

Inerrant & Infallible Heroes?

Who is your theological hero? Perhaps it is someone whose writings have greatly influenced you; or their preaching; or their discipleship. Perhaps you have more than one. That happens to be the case for me. I don't think I could pinpoint any one individual theologian or preacher as being THE main go to guy to find answers to perplexing theological or practical matters; I try to see what a number of them will say on an given issue to see which opinion best comports with what the Scriptures say. Depending on the topic, some will be better than others. For some people, though, there is a main go-to guy to get the definitive answer to the matter in question. Unfortunately, I have seen this go too far as the opinions of the said theologian to whom the person will refer becomes its own gospel. "So and so said it, so it must be true; it must be right." In such cases, it becomes nearly impossible to disagree with the person and their pet theologian, because how can their favorite theologian ever possibly be wrong! Now, I don't think everyone does this, and this may not apply to any of you who are reading this; it's just something I've been noticing and thinking about lately and I decided to express some of those thoughts.

What causes such an attitude in people? There are probably a lot of reasons, but there is one in particular that tends to stick out rather prominently in my own observations (which I realize does not prove anything in and of itself). Many times the "hero theologian" is one who had a profound impact on the thought life of the individual. It could be that the person's hero led them to faith in Christ, or more specifically in my circles, led them to the Reformed faith. While not knowing the individuals personally, I know of a particular church where members left because the pastor taught a Sunday School class refuting a book written by a well known heretic radio personality. The book? It was called 1994? by Harold Camping. If I may be allowed to go out on a limb here, I'm guessing my pastor friend was right. Now a lot of those folks that left that church were greatly influenced by Camping and some professed to having been saved through his radio program. Unfortunately, that gratitude turned Camping into an idol for them; in their eyes Camping could say no wrong. So, when my pastor friend taught the Sunday School class refuting the book, they left. Of course, not long after that, Camping declared the church age to be over and that everyone should leave their church - sadly, many did so simply because (insert stadium echo here) HAROLD CAMPING said so. He tried predicting the end of the world again much more recently and many people jumped on his bandwagon again. By the way, if you're reading this blog post, it's a safe bet that he was wrong again.... just sayin'. As an aside, I've seen online references to Camping having repented after his prediction failed to come to fruition. I can only hope that is true.

It's not just guys like Harold Camping though. I see this happen to folks (on Facebook and online discussion groups) who have what we might say are the more conservative theological/pastoral heroes, i.e., men who are regarded as having a high view of Scripture: names like John Piper, John MacArthur, RC Sproul, J Gresham Machen (really, OPC guys can go too far here also!), Meredith Kline, Tim Keller, John Calvin, Doug Wilson, RJ Rushdoony, Michael Horton, Cornelius Van Til, and Joel Osteen. Okay, that last one was just to see who was really paying attention; that name doesn't belong. In all seriousness, while it is a good thing to remember those who went before us and honor those who are currently seeking to proclaim with boldness the truths of Scripture, we cannot make these or any men idols regardless of how much God may have used any or some of them in your Christian walk. They are (were) fallible. They make (made) mistakes. They sin(ned). They need(ed) God's grace in their sanctification. Do not merely assume that simply because "great theologian so and so" said it, that his comments settle the matter. Perhaps he's right, but do not be so quick to assume it merely because it was he who said it - the word of God is what settles the matter!

How do you know if you have made a theologian/pastor into an idol of this kind? Give yourself a little test: do you ever quote other theologians/pastors/authors? Do you ever recommend other theologians/pastors/authors to friends or just your favorite one? Have you ever found anything from your favorite theologian with which you disagree and can articulate what you dislike about it? When someone else critiques your favorite guy in a way you had never considered, do you simply dismiss it with a wave of the hand or do you really think about the substance of the critique? Remember that it is God who saved you; it is God who sanctifies you. These men are merely the instrument by which God brought you to Himself. I'm not saying you should give away all your books from your favorite author, but rather to have a proper perspective. A simple way to do this is to expand your list of theologians whom you read. What do others say about the matter? What do others who disagree with "my guy" say about the matter? Of course, the Holy Spirit speaking in and through the word must be the final arbiter in all matters of doctrinal controversy. We ought to thank God that He has raised up men, both past and present, who can expound God's word in great and meaningful ways; let's not make more of them than they are or would even wish to be. They are men saved by grace through faith, men who need the same grace you and I need.

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