Lesson 17 – Benediction (Ephesians 6:21-24)

May 28, 2025

The language of peace, grace, and faith connects the benediction of Ephesians with its salutation. These are dominant topics in Ephesians: the peace the cross as effected through overcoming hostility in the world, the grace God gave to humanity in Jesus the Messiah, and the faith the people of God have in God’s work through the Messiah. God is the resource of peace and grace, which is enjoyed through faith. The benediction adds an emphasis on love. Paul sends peace and love to his readers, and blesses them with eternal grace from the Father for those who love the Messiah.

The salutation and benediction bookend the letter with the themes in which the letter has been immersed. God is the source of all grace and peace through the Messiah, and people respond to this blessing through faith and love.

A key problem in translation comes with the last word of the letter: immortality or incorruptibility (ἀφθαρσίᾳ). Is it the love that is incorruptible or undying (ESV, RSV, NIV, NASB20) or sincere (KJV, NKJV), or is it Jesus who is immortal, or are we who are graced with immortality (NLT). I tend to think the latter, that is, God graces us with an eternal life in Christ Jesus (cf. Arnold’s commentary).

The closing of the letter also identifies the carrier of the letter, perhaps even Paul’s secretary or amanuensis. Two elements are particularly significant: his character and his function.

In terms of character, he is described in the same way that Paul describes his intended audience in Ephesians 1:2 — “faithful in” (πιστὸς
ἐν) in the Lord or Jesus the Messiah. Paul holds him in high esteem: beloved brother (ἀγαπητὸς ἀδελφὸς), just as Paul blesses his readers with love (ἀγάπη), and faithful (πιστὸς) minister or servant (διάκονος).

His function is two-fold: information and encouragement. The readers may have been concerned about Paul’s imprisonment and how his mission was progressing (or not). Tychicus will provide that information. But also he will be able to explain everything so that the readers are encouraged. The bearers of letters in the ancient world were often also the original readers of the letter to the addressees, interpreted the letter, and answered questions about the letter and its author. Paul sends a beloved brother to serve in this capacity, though he would probably not be available to interpret and answer questions for every reading if the letter is intended as a circular one. We might imagine that he would present the letter to every house church in Ephesus, or perhaps copied for every house church. But we are speculating.

We do know that Paul send the letter to Colossae through Tychicu in addition to this one (Colossians 4:7-8).

The letter to the Ephesians has grounded their identity in the Jewish Messiah because God has rescued/blessed Israel through the Messiah by the power of the Spirit. The gentiles are also included in this blessing, and they are now members of the same body with Israel, the new human Jesus the Messiah. Because of this new humanity grounded in God’s saving act, readers are invited to walk worthy of their calling, status, and relationship. Consequently, they live in peace, patience, kindness, and forgiveness with each other through mutual submission. Living as such a community, they are equipped with God’s gifts and armor to partner with God in the battle against the cosmic forces of evil!


What is the Gospel?

May 23, 2025

A PDF is available here.

For a 2016 class, I prepared a statement of the gospel. I believe it is has a longer history but I am uncertain. Since I will soon begin reading Five Views on the Gospel (due out in June), I thought I would share my own thinking (at least as it appeared in 2016). Once I have read the Five Views book, then I will assess and see what sort of adjustments, expansions, or changes I might need to make to this summary. I am sure my summary is inadequate as a full account, though its focus might be on target. I expect my understanding of the gospel will be enriched by reading Five Views.

The point of this document is to articulate the gospel in terms of what God has done to accomplish God’s own purposes and goal. That, to me, is the gospel–God’s redemptive work. This statement neither attempts to define how to respond to the gospel (e.g, faith [or even allegiance], obedience to the gospel) or describe the gospel’s specific benefits (e.g., reconciliation, redemption, justification, sanctification, transformation, theosis, glorification, etc.). This document is focused on what the Father has done in the Messiah (or King) by the power of the Spirit to accomplish the Triune God’s redemptive work.

This is a 2016 statement. I resisted editing it or changing it, though I saw some places where I would like to do so.

______________________________

The good news is this: God has fulfilled the Abrahamic promise in Jesus the Messiah, the Son of God.

The Synoptics open with this announcement, whether it is the genealogy in Matthew, or Mark’s title, or Luke’s songs. The expanded salutation in Romans summarizes it (Romans 1:1b-4):  “the gospel of God, which he promised beforehand through his prophets in the holy scriptures, concerning his Son, who was descended from David according to the flesh and was declared to be Son of God with power according to the Spirit of holiness by resurrection from the dead, Jesus the Messiah our Lord.”

This good news was announced to Abraham (Galatians 3:8) and anticipated by the exiles (Isaiah 52:7; cf. Romans 10:15), but it arrived in the ministry of Jesus (Mark 1:15). The early church proclaimed the good news that Jesus is the Messiah (Acts 5:42; 8:12) who confirmed the good news of the promise (Romans 15:8), through whom the story of Israel came to its fulfillment (Acts 2; 3; 10; 13; 26:6), and by whom the Gentiles are included in the promise (Ephesians 2:17; 3:6-8). The Abrahamic promise is fully realized when God invites those who have persevered in faith (“overcome”) to “inherit these things, and I will be their God and they will be my children” (Revelation 21:7).

The good news is this: God has acted through Jesus the Messiah in the power of the Spirit to reverse the curse by inaugurating, effecting, and guaranteeing new creation.  Or, more simply, Jesus the Messiah is both the good news embodied and the bearer of the good news of the kingdom of God.

The telos of creation, which tumbled off-track in the human tragedies of Genesis 3-11, is reaffirmed in the Abrahamic promise, anticipated in the story of Israel, proleptically actualized in the history of Jesus the Messiah, inaugurated in the history of the church, and fully realized in the inheritance of the new heaven and new earth. In this way, through Jesus the Messiah, Abraham and his descendants—those who trust in the Messiah—inherit the cosmos (Romans 4:13).

The “Christ Event” is the means by which this inheritance is secured. God keeps faith with Abraham through the Messiah, and God reconciles the world in the Messiah. By “Christ Event” I primarily mean an event within history (created time and space) though also mediated to us through an existential encounter in the Spirit.

  • The incarnation of the Logos as Jesus of Nazareth united God and humanity.
  • The ministry of Jesus proleptically realized the future in the present.
  • The death of Jesus defeated the powers through obedient surrender to God.
  • The resurrection of Jesus inaugurated new creation.
  • The enthronement of Jesus at the right hand of God guarantees the future of creation.

The “Christ Event” is the means to an end, and the good news is both the means and the end. The arrival of Jesus the Messiah is good news, and the end, accomplished through the Messiah, is also good news (the “good news of the kingdom”).

Incarnation. “God in the flesh” is good news because the person descended from Abraham is also the same one who descended from heaven by the virgin birth through the power of the Spirit, the Son of God. This one is both human and divine, and therefore unites God and humanity in intimate fellowship. The incarnation completes creation by realizing its telos, which is the mutual indwelling of God and humanity within the creation.

Ministry. The ministry of Jesus—empowered by the Spirit—is eschatological in character because the future, which is the kingdom of God, is proleptically present through the reconciling work of the Messiah. “The good news of the kingdom of God” is this:  the blind see, the lame walk, the poor rejoice, the dead are raised, sins are forgiven, the oppressed are liberated, and people groups are reconciled. The promises to Israel are realized in the ministry of Jesus, and the curse is reversed.

Death. The death of Jesus defeated the powers arrayed against humanity. Those powers included sin, the demonic, and oppressive social structures. Jesus endured the cross in obedience to the Father, and through that obedience overcame evil, redeemed creation, and demonstrated both the love and righteousness of God. Through obedience unto death, the Son overcame evil with good.

Resurrection. The resurrection of Jesus by the power of the Spirit inaugurated new creation. As the firstborn from the dead, the resurrected Jesus is the beginning of new creation. He is the new humanity, which is the first installment or first fruit of a renewed creation, including the resurrection of the dead. Death is defeated, and new life is realized.

Ascension. The enthronement of Jesus at the right hand of God guarantees the future of creation. Jesus, as new human—the son of Abraham, son of David—reigns until creation is fully redeemed, including the redemption of humanity in body and soul. As the reigning Lord, Jesus pours out the Spirit upon the renewed Israel, the church, until the last enemy is destroyed.

The good news, then, is the faithfulness of God who keeps the Abrahamic promise to renew the creation, which results in the reconciliation of God, humanity, and creation. This includes such benefits as the forgiveness of sins, transformation of body and soul by the Spirit as new creation, and the destruction of opposing powers. This good news is accomplished by the faithfulness of Jesus the Messiah, who as both Son of God and Son of David, unites God and humanity so that they might dwell together within the creation.


Psalm 131 – Derek: Meditating on the Psalms

May 22, 2025

This is one of the most beautiful images of rest, calm, and peace. Our souls are like a nursing child resting in her mother’s arms after a feeding. This is the hope of Israel, and invites us to humble ourselves before the Lord, whose greatness we can never exhaust or fully comprehend. O Israel, hope in the Lord, now and forevermore!


Psalm 132 – Derek: Meditating on the Psalms

May 22, 2025

Bobby Valentine and John Mark Hicks discuss what they call the “theological anchor” of the Songs of Ascents. The pilgrimage to Mt. Zion to assemble with the people of God is grounded in the Lord’s oath to David and his descendants in response to David’s oath to the Lord. As the people ascend the mountain to gather at Zion, God descends to meet them and rest in his sanctuary with them. God shares this rest of communion, joy, blessing, and hope with the people. They come in hope, are clothed with salvation, shout for joy, and receive God’s blessings.


Lesson 16: Participate in the Cosmic Struggle (Ephesians 6:10-20)

May 21, 2025

Just as Ephesians 1:3-14 is the opening doxology that casts a vision for the redemptive work of the Father through the Son in the Spirit, Ephesians 6:10-20 is the letter’s concluding invitation to participate in the ongoing work of God by struggling with the rulers, authorities, and powers in the heavenly places. Having laid the ground of our inclusion into the family of God in chapters 1-3, and inviting believers to imitate God as new creatures in Christ by the power of the Spirit in chapters 4-6, this final section of the letter is a bugle call to participate in the fight against evil. In the strength of the Lord, we engage the powers of evil as we clothe ourselves in God’s own armor of righteousness, salvation, truth, and the gospel of peace. Through the word of God and praying in the Spirit, we can not only stand against evil but also advance the cause of the kingdom of God.

Given the allusions to Isaiah 11:5, 52:7, and 59:17 in Ephesians 6:14-17, “this text portrays the church as a community of ‘divine-warriors’ who continue Christ’s mission by extending the new creation.” It functions, then, to summarize the whole letter. The armor is “more than a defence against the devil, but instead helps expand the new creation inaugurated by Christ’s death and resurrection.” (See Mark D. Owens, “Spiritual Warfare and the Church’s Mission According to Ephesians 6:10-17,” Tyndale Bulletin 67 (2016): 87-103.)

Allusions to Isaiah

Isaiah: New ExodusEphesians: New Creation  
“Righteousness (δικαιοσύνῃ) shall be the belt (ἐζωσμένος) around his waist (τὴν ὀσφὺν), and faithfulness (ἀληθείᾳ) the belt around his loins” in 11:5.“Stand, therefore, and fasten the belt (περιζωσάμενοι) of truth (ἀληθείᾳ) around your waist (τὴν ὀσφὺν) and put on the breastplate of righteousness (δικαιοσύνης)” in 6:14.
“How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of those who bring good news, who proclaim peace, who bring good tidings (πόδες εὐαγγελιζομένου ἀκοὴν εἰρήνης, ὡς εὐαγγελιζόμενος ἀγαθά), who proclaim salvation (σωτηρίαν), who say to Zion, ‘Your God reigns!’” in 52:7.“As shoes for your feet (πόδας) put on whatever will make you ready to proclaim the gospel of peace (τοῦ εὐαγγελίου τῆς εἰρήνης)” in 6:15.
“He put on righteousness as his breastplate (ἐνεδύσατο δικαιοσύνην ὡς θώρακα), and the helmet of salvation (περικεφαλαίαν σωτηρίου) on his head; he put on the garments of vengeance and wrapped himself in zeal as in a cloak” in 59:17.“Put on the breastplate of righteousness (ἐνδυσάμενοι τὸν θώρακα τῆς δικαιοσύνης)” in 6:14 and “Take the helmet of salvation (περικεφαλαίαν τοῦ σωτηρίου)” in 6:17.

Wisdom 5:17-20 – “The Lord will take his zeal as his whole armor (πανοπλίαν), and will arm all creation to repel his enemies; he will put on righteousness as a breastplate (ἐνδύσεται θώρακα δικαιοσύνην), and wear impartial justice as a helmet (κόρυθα); he will take holiness as an invincible shield (ἀσπίδα), and sharpen stern wrath for a sword (ῥομφαίαν) and creation will join with him to fight against his frenzied foes.”

Significance of Ephesians 6:10-20 Paul urges his readers to participate in the mission of God to defeat evil by sharing in God’s role as divine warrior (cf. Longman and Reid, God is a Warrior). They dress in God’s armor (thus, God’s truth, righteousness, salvation, gospel of peace, God’s word/sword). This participation is both offensive and defensive. The proclamation and embodiment of the gospel is not only a witness to new creation but a participation in new creation which struggles against cosmic powers and defeats evil in the strength of the Lord. Just as Joshua was encouraged to be strong and defeat the enemy to receive the inheritance (Joshua 1:6), so renewed Israel—as new humanity—participates in the defeat of God’s enemies through God’s strength and ultimately receives an inheritance.


The Authentic Traditional Interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:11-14

May 20, 2025

PDF file of blog here.

What is the historic traditional interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:11-14? The complementarian and egalitarian interpretations are both of recent vintage and responses to cultural shifts.

In her book An Historian Looks at 1 Timothy 2:11-14: The Authentic Traditional Interpretation and Why It Disappeared (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2012), Joan G. Brown explores the “traditional interpretation” of 1 Timothy 2:11-14 through the lens of major Protestant commentators from the Martin Luther to Charles Hodge, from the early sixteenth century to the mid-nineteenth century. She argues that the “authentic traditional interpretation” applied this text to civil and social order whereas contemporary traditionalists (who exclude all female audible and visible leadership in the assembly based on 1 Timothy 2:12) and complementarians (who primarily exclude women from preaching and ruling authority in congregational leadership based on 1 Timothy 2:12) do not. More recent views have shifted away from grounding social order in the creation ordinances (as it relates to male and female), while applying them to the home and church. This is a new interpretation. Culture, Brown argues, is responsible for this shift more than exegetical prowess.

Moreover, many who articulated the “authentic traditional interpretation” also believed that the kingdom of God is not bound by the natural law that governs the social order because God gifts women in extraordinary ways (beyond natural law) for public leadership in the community of faith. That conclusion is disputed by contemporary traditionalists (no voice for women leaders in the assembly) and complementarians (typically excluding mostly preaching and some more). What happened? Why did the traditional interpretation change? Brown attempts to answer that question.

Her research discovered (pages 28-29) that earlier interpreters grounded the subordination of women to men in the creation ordinances and the fall. This natural law applies to civil order and society. Women are inherently inferior to men and are prohibited from participating in the social order since they are not emotionally or constitutionally equipped to be leaders. The complementarian New Testament scholar Daniel Doriani also noted that until recently the historic record of the church affirmed the “ontological inferiority of women.”[1] In other words, women—as historically viewed by the dominant church traditions prior to the late nineteenth century—are inferior to men. This is not a mere “role” differentiation (which is language that does not enter the mainstream until the 1970s) but ontological difference (including, for many, the secondary or derivative status of women as divine imagers of God).

Consequently, public leadership (e.g, civil government) and public speaking (in whatever social or civil venue) were not sanctioned. These Protestant exegetes and leaders believed women were excluded from leadership in the civil order because natural law was grounded in creation and the fall, according to 1 Timothy 2:11-14. This would exclude female political leaders as well public professions such as college professors, medical doctors, lawyers, etc.

At the same time, according to many of these traditional leaders (e.g., the Reformer John Calvin, the Puritan Matthew Poole, and the Methodist Adam Clarke among others), this exclusion is not organic to the kingdom of God because God’s kingdom is spiritual and animated by the gifts of God’s Holy Spirit. Within the spiritual kingdom God, according to Scripture, calls women to function as prophets and leaders (whether Deborah, Miriam, Huldah, Anna, Phoebe, prophets in Corinth, etc.). Some of these Protestant interpreters read Galatians 3:28 as making this very point, that is, while the social order may not permit women to speak, in Christ they are gifted to exercise whatever God gifts them to do, including gifts of speech. However, in deference to civil order and society which are grounded in natural law and the dominant practice of culture, the church calls men to lead so that the church does not scandalize the culture in which it exists.

In other words, there was a time in the history of interpretation when women were excluded from leadership in the church because the social order required men to lead rather than women, and the church did not want to offend that social order and subvert the church’s missional interests. This is further complicated by the way authors assumed or argued for a two-kingdom theory: the kingdom of nature/world/civil and the kingdom of God. The former is grounded in natural law, but the latter is grounded in Christ. Since the kingdom of God exists in the world and does not want to give unnecessary offense, it defers to the social order as a missional strategy so that the gospel might have a hearing.

Exclusion from leadership in the social order is also the typical understanding within the Stone-Campbell Movement, especially among churches of Christ. However, the movement tended to exclude women in public leadership in both the home and church (with some significant exceptions, of course). For example, in 1874, D. G. Porter (Christian Quarterly [October 1874], 489-90) concluded women have no right to vote “unless, indeed, it is proposed to proceed upon what seems the absurdist of all principles, namely, subordination at home and in the Church, but independence and equity abroad. We call this proposition absurd, because it would seem that if woman can be equal to man in authority anywhere, it must be at home and in the Church; and that her equality here, if indeed that ought to be her position, must be the foundation of her equality in external affairs.”  Porter argued women should be excluded from voting because they should be subordinate to men in society just as they are in the home and church. He contended that the principle of equality is more rationally applicable within the church than in broader society.  To him, the link between society and church/home was both biblical (based on 1 Timothy 2:12-13) and logical, and if society embraces the equality of women and men, then the church and home must as well. He was against public leadership by women in both, including voting.

Or, to put it another way, James A. Allen, a leading evangelist in Nashville and future editor of the Gospel Advocate, wrote: “It is the law of nature, and the law of God, that the influence of woman must be exercised through man, and when she takes the reins in her own hands it works evil to both man and woman by lifting her out of the sphere in which she was placed by the Creator. . . God has not created her to take the lead or occupy the platform or religion” (Gospel Advocate [December 19, 1907] 812, emphasis mine). Allen and, we might add the Gospel Advocate staff, opposed suffrage because of 1 Timothy 2:11-14.

These two Stone-Campbell authors represent the hardline traditionalists who excluded women from all public speaking in both society and church due to creation ordinances. While this was not the exclusive understanding in the Stone-Campbell Movement, or even among Churches of Christ, it was standard in southern churches of Christ. This includes David Lipscomb (see this blog). However, Lipscomb argued for a wide latitude for the participate of women in private settings, including teaching Bible classes at the church building that including men and women.

In the late nineteenth century, this perspective flip-flops (page 63). Traditionalists in the late nineteenth century began to read 1 Timothy 2:11-14 as applying only to the church and home and did not apply it to the social order. The creation ordinance was limited to church and home. Consequently, while the consensus previously applied 1 Timothy 2:11-14 to the social order, new interpreters applied it only to the church and home, and not to the social order. The complementarian Doriani calls this a “reinterpretation” of 1 Timothy 2:11-14.[2] Churches of Christ also participated in this flip-flop where were only prohibited from public leadership in the church but not in society.

Brown’s book explains this flip-flop. Both enlightenment culture (where women increasingly participated in the social order) and the revivals of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in first and second Great Awakenings (where women often participated audibly and visibly in the leadership) contributed to the flip. The abolition, temperance, and suffrage movements also opened the doors for women to participate in the social order, and ultimately, they were slowly accepted and even ultimately elected to roles in the social order by the mid-twentieth century. At the same time, women in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries participated in the revivals as readers, exhorters, song leaders, and even sometimes preachers among other public sorts of leadership.

The flip came when the church began to accept the cultural shift towards women leaders in the social order but resist the rise of women leaders in the ecclesial sphere. Traditionalists (those who wanted to exclude women from public leadership) began to interpret 1 Timothy 2:11-14 as prohibiting women from public leadership in the church but did not apply the creation ordinance as it was traditionally understood—they no longer applied it to the social order. Consequently, women were expected to be silent in church, but they could now exercise authority over men in the civil and social sphere.

The historic “authentic traditional” interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:11-14 taught that women are inferior in nature, emotionally unfit for leadership in the social order, and excluded from public leadership in the social order. Yet, this tradition of interpretation opened doors for female leadership in the church by God’s giftedness (including women preaching in the medieval era), though the church typically did not exercise those gifts due to potential social scandal.

The recent rise of complementarianism in the mid-to-late twentieth century (whether “hard” [traditionalist] or “soft” versions) where women are not regarded as inferior for leadership in the social order, are thought emotionally fit for leadership in the social order, and are not prohibited from public leadership in the social order by 1 Timothy 2:11-14 is a new interpretation. It is not the historic, traditional interpretation of the church. Yet, this new interpretation now explicitly excludes women from public leadership in the church (to varying degrees depending on who the complementarian is) while opening wide the doors to female public leadership in the civil and social order.

It appears traditionalists, historically, succumbed to cultural pressures in much the same way many accuse egalitarians of succumbing to cultural pressures. Whereas the traditional position excluded women from leadership in the social order until the cultural movements of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (e.g., temperance, “new woman,” suffrage, etc.), the cultural shift seemingly changed their mind and the creation ordinances began to be applied only to the home and church.

In other words, complementarians have been influenced as much by culture as complementarians accuse egalitarians of being so influenced. None have escaped the impact of cultural influence.


[1] Daniel Doriani, “History of the Interpretation of 1 Timothy 2,” in Women in the Church: A Fresh Analysis of 1 Timothy 2:9-15, ed. By Andreas J. Kõstenberger, Thomas R. Schreiner, and H. Scott Baldwin (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1995), 257.

[2] Doriani, 258-59.


Searching for the Pattern: A Response to the February 2024 Issue of Truth Magazine

May 18, 2025

A PDF version is available here.

Over a year ago Truth Magazine published an issue that reviewed several of my books, including Searching for the Pattern. In this blog I respond to some prominent concerns in these articles. Some of these are expressed in almost every article by different writers. I thank the reviewers for reading and responding. I’m grateful for their interest and their sense of the discussion’s importance for churches of Christ.

In all my writing and interactions with people my goal is to communicate with a loving, kind, charitable, and generous spirit. No doubt I sometimes (perhaps even often) fail to exhibit that charity. I am grateful when I am challenged about that.

I self-published Searching for the Pattern: My Journey in Interpreting the Bible at Amazon in 2019 (available in print, kindle, and audio; my references to the book will come from the printed copy). I attempted to explain how I presently read the Bible in contrast to how I once read it. Having taught theological hermeneutics in graduate schools for over twenty-five years by 2019, many former students and interested parties wanted something accessible and contextualized within churches of Christ they could give to others to explain the move from a blueprint pattern hermeneutic to a theological hermeneutic. [I had also published a series of blogs in 2008 on hermeneutics that also interested some.]

While I did not conceive my book as a direct assault on non-institutional views among churches of Christ, I can see how it is reasonable to experience it that way. I raised the non-institutional horizon because that was part of my own early experience in wrestling with the received blueprint pattern hermeneutic. This is one reason I did not go into the history, sociology, and psychological dimensions of the institutional/non-institutional division. It was not a conscious part of my deliberations, though I am sure I did not escape the subconscious influences (none of us do). At the same time, I recognize the value of assessing non-institutionalism and its reading of Scripture in its historical context.

Also, I did not pursue the theological dimensions of non-institutionalism that I find healthy (including the emphasis on the faith and good works of people in the local congregations rather than relying on institutions funded by congregations or individuals). There is a theological argument for non-institutionalism that resonates with me regarding the problems of institutional power and denominational machinery. The focus of my book, however, was on the way the blueprint hermeneutic had been employed among churches of Christ since the 1860s (not only in non-institutional congregations).

There is a place for heeding the warnings of church history. I studied historical theology academically because I believe that is important. However, while I wrote with a historical consciousness, my goal in Searching for the Pattern was to explore how to read the Bible more deeply in the present moment; it was a hermeneutical goal rather than a historical one, though those two are often interrelated. My intent was to seek to understand the text rather than reading the biblical text through the lens of pressures among churches of Christ in the mid-twentieth century. I do not want to ignore history or devalue its significance, but neither do I want mid-twentieth century controversies to determine or shape the meaning of a text in its own historical setting and context (at least as best I can).

I did not write Searching for the Pattern to justify any specific practice as an agenda item but to explain and illustrate the hermeneutic that I employed in previous books like Come to the Table, A Gathered People (with Bobby Valentine and Johnny Melton),  Down in the River to Pray (with Greg Taylor), and Enter the Water,  Come to the Table among other pieces. The appendices in Searching for the Pattern reflect something of that (especially assembly and baptism). I have since written three other books that, I hope, helpfully illustrate my hermeneutical practice (Around the Bible in 80 Days, Women Serving God, and Transforming Encounters). Women Serving God is the second in a trilogy, but I did not conceive this trilogy until after I had published Searching for the Pattern. The discussion of women serving God was suggested to me as a next book by several friends and then I began to think of a trilogy while writing Women Serving God. The third book has not yet been published but perhaps it will appear next summer.

In this post, I respond to several criticisms that appeared in the non-institutional (or congregational) journal Truth Magazine (February 2024). Steve Wolfgang, whom I regard as a friend and brother as he does me, pulled together some writers to respond to various aspects of the book. [Correction: editor Mark Mayberry invited, collected, and edited the reviewers.] I have pondered for over a year whether to respond, and I finally committed to addressing some specific points that I find particularly significant for engagement. In this blog I will focus on Searching for the Pattern. Several other articles discuss Come to the Table and Women Serving God. Perhaps I will comment on those in the future.

Concern #1: Did I privilege “feelings over the often-challenging clarity of Scripture” (Truth Magazine, p. 85)?

This question comes in the context of my early consideration of non-institutionalism. As I employed the received hermeneutic (searching Acts and the Epistles for a blueprint pattern authorized by commands, examples, and necessary inferences) it seemed to me that its “rigorous application. . . warranted the conclusion” that congregations were forbidden to share their corporate resources with non-believers because there was no authorization in Acts and the Epistles through any command, example, or necessary inference. My “gut,” as I called it in Searching (pp. 88-90), said something was wrong with this conclusion. At the same time, I recognized my “gut” could be wrong, and it too needed examination because hearts and guts are often deceived, as I said: “I knew I could not always trust my gut” (p. 90).

I ask the reader to pay close attention because “gut” can mean different things depending on the framework in which it is heard. Some may hear it in the vein of emotionalism or a function of confirmation bias. Perhaps I should have chosen different language to make the point. That is my fault, and I apologize for the confusion it created.

My “gut,” however, was not a feeling untethered to the biblical text and its narrative. On the contrary, my “gut” was shaped by the narrative itself, which I explained in the book (pp. 89-90). It was a theological intuition grounded in my formation by the story of God I learned in Sunday school, communal prayers, reading the Bible, listening to my father’s preaching, and singing the hymns of the church. It was a “gut” formed by faith and the teaching of Scripture. It was, I think, a well-informed and well-formed gut. It was not emotionalism.

The choice was never between feeling and Scripture, but between a story-formed understanding based on Scripture and a humanly constructed hermeneutic with a grid for determining authoritative practices that concluded God’s people ought not to share from their church treasury with non-Christians. While the blueprint patternist hermeneutic with its specific (and complicated) use of commands, examples, and inferences seemingly led to a non-institutional conclusion, I believed that conclusion rendered the method (not Scripture) suspect and misguided. Notice “my gut” responded to the method that generated a specific teaching, not the teaching of Scripture itself.

If the biblical text had said, “the covenant people should only share with covenant people,” I would say, “Yes, Lord.” But it does not. It is not that clear, and whatever “clarity” might be claimed is based on a complicated method. It was the blueprint method (not explicit Scripture) that generated a conclusion that was inconsistent with Scripture. It is inconsistent with the story of God from creation to new creation that loves the alien, sends the rain on the just and unjust, and sent Jesus to die for us while we were still enemies. My “gut” was not grounded in emotion or feeling but in the grand narrative of Scripture and specifically the inexpressible gift of Jesus the Messiah to sinners, the enemies of God. My “gut” response was not a rejection of Scripture but a rejection of the specific hermeneutical method because of Scripture. I was led to question the method because its conclusion was so incongruent with the broad sweep of Scripture itself.

Moreover, I rejected the blueprint method’s conclusion long before I was even close to progressive or postmodern (not sure I am now even). So, it is puzzling to see one reviewer appraise my “gut” as the “jumping-off point for the progressive” as if the point was, “This is what the Bible says, but I don’t like it, so I will find some way around it.” Actually, the “saints-only” position “did not sit well with my gut” because this is the opposite of what the story of God teaches in its grand narrative. It was not a rejection of the teaching of Scripture as if I were judging God’s word but a rejection of the specific hermeneutic that, in the view of some, seemingly generated that conclusion. A hermeneutic that leads to the conclusion that the corporate body of Christ cannot share their resources with a poor unbeliever, in my estimation, must be flawed because it is so counter to imitating the God who loves and gives to all people. That is not an emotional conclusion, but a reasoned one based on the narrative of Scripture.

Concern #2: Are blueprint patternism and a theological hermeneutic mutually exclusive methods or tools?

This is an important question. At one level, it asks whether using commands, examples, and inferences are compatible with a theological hermeneutic. “Yes” is my answer. I affirmed that in the book (pages 142-143 or see my video here). Everyone uses commands, examples, and inferences in some form, and everyone searches for some kind of pattern or model. The question is not whether we use them, but how we use them and how we then correlate the data (which was the occasion for the divide between institutional and non-institutional congregations). More importantly, it is also about in what framework we use them (which is where a significant difference lies).

I employ commands, examples, and inferences to discern the will of God, but I do not use them within the framework of a blueprint patternism (which is described in Part I of the book). I do not deny the reality of how rhetoric provides categories of command, example, and inference, but I question how they are construed in service to the search for a blueprint pattern for congregational work and worship. This construal involves complicated rules which are neither intuitive nor obvious from the biblical text. For example, Roy Cogdill has seven rules or laws to determine whether an example is binding alone (Walking by Faith, pp. 22-28). This kind of patternism treats the text in a way inconsistent with its own nature, intent, and genres.

The two are mutually exclusive at the level of framework. They are searching for different sorts of patterns. In other words, I believe the blueprint pattern hermeneutic reads the Bible in a way that it was not intended to be read; it searches for something that is not there (e.g., an ecclesial blueprint for the acts of worship in an assembly). That hermeneutic reads the text to construct a blueprint by mining the data of Acts and the Epistles correlating them through particular extra-biblical guidelines and then constructs what does not itself appear in the text as a detailed, specific, and exclusive pattern. I think that framework is problematic and inconsistent within the biblical text. That framework generates an exclusive system one does not find in Scripture itself. That is what I reject in Searching for the Pattern. I do not reject the reality of commands, examples, and inferences.

The blueprint hermeneutic and theological hermeneutics operate within two different frameworks. In that sense they are incompatible. The blueprint hermeneutic creates something that does not actually exist—it is the product of the hermeneutic. The theological hermeneutic, it seems to me, explores the text to discern the mystery of Christ and imitate God. I employ this hermeneutic because it is what I see, for example, Jesus and Paul doing (as I discuss in the book, pp. 90-104, 177-181).

To be sure, blueprint advocates can and do employ a theological hermeneutic at times. I am grateful they do. I think, for example, James A. Harding did this. In this sense they are not mutually exclusive because some employ both, but ultimately—as frameworks—they conflict at points (e.g., the “saints-only” view, frequency of the Lord’s supper, etc.). Blueprint advocates also seem to prioritize the constructed blueprint (called positive law in the Restoration Movement) over the conclusions of a theological hermeneutic. I rejected the blueprint hermeneutic as a method, in part, because it conflicted with God’s own identity as one who loves all, shares his resources with all, gives his Son for all, and calls us to imitate God (this returns to the point in concern #1). Thus, I prioritize the theological story of Scripture over a pattern generated and constructed by the blueprint hermeneutic (and not everyone agreed that the pattern entailed the “saints-only” position).

Concern #3:  should we be concerned if “the church ‘is ‘scandalized’ and ‘shame[d] in the eyes of contemporary culture’?” (Truth Magazine, p. 87).

While this concern arises from a reading of Women Serving God (p. 210), it applies also to whether hermeneutical shifts are based on fear of cultural shaming.

I am not concerned about cultural shaming if it is a matter of truth. Culture may shame the church because it believes Jesus rose from the dead, affirms the traditional sexual ethic, or opposes abortion. I am willing to accept that shaming and cultural scandal. I am not at all dissatisfied with biblical teaching, though I am sometimes disappointed by how some people have taught the Bible or made it say what it does not say (including myself).

At the same time, we should be concerned with cultural shaming and scandal if a biblical truth is not at stake. If, for example, the church requires practices that are not required by Scripture or inconsistent with Scripture, and this creates the occasion for cultural shaming, then this is a significant problem. Paul was concerned that the church should not offend culture in 1 Corinthians 10:32.

In principle, however, I am unconcerned about whether the culture shames the church if what the church practices and teaches is the will of the Lord. But if it is not the will of the Lord, then when the culture shames us and we give offence, it hinders the mission of God. One example of the latter is how many churches supported and defended the institution of American slavery in the 1600-1800s.

Concern #4: Can we “follow God’s pattern and trust in God’s grace for our assurance?” (Truth Magazine, p. 94).

Yes! Otherwise, we must choose between living in perpetual doubt (knowing we have not obeyed the pattern perfectly or have understood it perfectly) or living in self-righteousness (as if we have obeyed the pattern and understood it perfectly). This is not an either/or. There is another option. We seek to do the will of God even though we will always do it imperfectly and we trust in God’s grace which does not require perfection. In this sense I wrote that we might want to “let go of perfectionism”—whether personal or ecclesial. As the reviewer wrote, “There is a difference between perfectionism and faithfulness” (Truth Magazine, p. 94). That is my point. We can be faithful to God even when we do not perfectly follow the pattern or even perfectly understand the pattern. Perhaps we can see this point more clearly when we recognize (as we all do) that Jesus is our pattern for life and loving. None of us measure up to that standard or understand it fully.

Some perceive in my language a “disgust for careful obedience” (Truth Magazine, p. 99).  I hope I do not; I do not think I do. I want to obey God carefully. I seek to obey God in every way I see God’s call upon my life. I want to discern the will of God and walk in it.

One writer wrote that I am attempting to “hoist[my] readers onto the horns of a false dilemma” (Truth Magazine, p. 100). He then quotes what he apparently thinks is me (“Hicks . . . He says, . . .”). He mistakenly attributes the quotation of David Lipscomb to me (Searching, 169; from Gospel Advocate [May 30, 1912] 671). I think it is a helpful thought, so I do not mind the attribution.

“I had rather go before God realizing my weakness and liability to sin, trusting Him for mercy and pardon, than to go relying upon my good understanding and obedience to the perfect will of God.”

My interlocuter comments, “why does it have to be one or the other? Can’t we go before God with confidence because we tried to understand and do His will out of love and gratitude while still realizing that we are sinful, and so we trust in His grace for mercy and pardon?” (Truth Magazine, p. 100; emphasis mine). Absolutely! The key point, however, is “tried” (or seek). We all do that imperfectly in our weaknesses such that our “good understanding and obedience” (which are imperfect) are insufficient imitations of the “perfect will of God.” Yes, let us do our best to discern the will of God (understand it) and obey it, but since it is an imperfect understanding and obedience, let us learn to ultimately rely on the “mercy and pardon” of God.

Concern #5:  Can we “know the will of the Lord, when the Bible teaches that we can (Eph. 5:17)” (Truth Magazine, p. 95).

Yes, we can know the will of the Lord. We are called to discern the will of God and walk worthy of our calling as children of light in the darkness and as wise people (Ephesians 4:1; 5:8, 15). That is the point of hermeneutics, that is, to discern the will of God for our lives.

When we read Ephesians, we can both understand the “mystery of Christ” (Ephesians 3:3-4) and discern what the will of the Lord is for our lives (Ephesians 5:17). In the former, we understand what God has done in Christ by the Spirit, and in the latter, we see how God calls and commands believers to respond to what God has done: to be kind to one another, love one another, forgive one another, submit to another, be patient with one another, avoid sexual immorality and greed, use our language with grace and compassion rather than in anger, etc. We can discern the will of God for our lives, and, ultimately, this is about imitating God and Christ (Ephesians 5:1-2).

But I suspect that my respondent has something more particular in mind such as the blueprint pattern for the work and worship of the church. Because I reject the blueprint hermeneutic, it seems that I deny that we can discern the will of God. In fact, however, what I reject is not the will of God but a blueprint hermeneutic that generates a construct that is supposedly required by the will of God when it is not.

Perhaps, however, another thought looms in the background. The blueprint hermeneutic proports to arrive at conclusions with little ambiguity and significant certainty. The theological hermeneutic seems, at times, to be more ambiguous than certain. There is an element of truth here because I think the blueprint hermeneutic claims certainty in some specifics where there is none, and the theological hermeneutic recognizes that there is ambiguity regarding some specifics (e.g., see below on the frequency of the Lord’s supper).

Perhaps this ambiguity is the origin of the charge that I assume we cannot know the will of the Lord. The question is not whether ambiguity denies the capacity to discern the Lord’s will. Rather, it may be that ambiguity is part of the Lord’s will in the sense that God has not specified some specifics though the blueprint pattern assumes God has. It may be the ambiguity is intentional, that is, God does not have a specific frequency in mind for the Lord’s supper.

But a further thought may also be lurking in the background. The charge against the theological hermeneutic is that its ambiguity is a slippery slope and provides an opportunity to assert a broad theological principle to subvert and deny biblical truths. This is a legitimate concern. However, the danger is mostly present when a supposed theological principle is used to supplant and overturn an explicit directive or prohibition in Scripture. This is what Richard and Christopher Hays do in their recent book. That is not a properly functioning theological hermeneutic.

When there is an explicit directive or prohibition in the biblical text which is (1) consistent throughout Scripture, (2) rightly understood in its contexts, (3) applied in diverse cultures without adaptation and with theological grounding, and (4) is rooted in the origins, narrative, and goals of God’s story, the theological hermeneutic has solid ground to hear and obey (I think blueprint advocates probably agree with the above sentence). [The numbers are not “steps” but only for clarity about the sorts of things to consider; and these points are not necessarily the only considerations, but they are substantial ones.]

My problem with the blueprint hermeneutic is what it adds to a theological hermeneutic based on a pattern constructed from the text by correlating commands, examples, and inferences deemed binding and exclusive because of inferred propositions. It creates prohibitions and directives that are not explicit in the text and sometimes are used to bind the consciences of others as a condition of fellowship (whatever those conditions are in terms of identifying the true church, such as weekly communion).

The theological hermeneutic is not a slippery slope. It maintains what is substantive, explicit, and rooted in the narrative as a backstop against the misuse of so-called theological principles that subvert and uproot explicit God-given traditions communicated in Scripture.

Concern #6: “Are commands fundamentally legal tests of loyalty or are they modes of transformation?” (Truth Magazine, p. 95, quoting Searching for the Pattern, p. 173).

My reviewer answered, it is both! I agree. This is a both/and. Obedience to God’s commands is a matter of allegiance. Our baptisms are oaths of allegiance; they are acts of discipleship though much more, of course. I thank the reviewer for pressing this point. At the same time, in the context of my discussion, I was pointing to the ultimate goal (telos) of commands. That is why I added the word “fundamentally.” God’s goal is transformation into and conformation to the image of Christ.

The context in which I raise this question is more layered than the abstract question itself (Searching, 174-177). It comes against the backdrop of discerning the blueprint pattern so that it becomes a test of the true (loyal) church. Thus, the only true assembly of believers is the one that correctly discerns the specifics of the blueprint, does them, and does them exclusively. In that setting the emphasis in “legal tests of loyalty” proceeds in legal categories (binding example?), tests of fellowship (which example is a line in the sand?), and identification of loyalty to the pattern.

My primary concern in that section of the book was that the pattern constructed out of the text through humanly devised rules (e.g., specific commands or examples that exclude coordinates) became fundamentally a test of loyalty. Such a move tends to (but does not necessarily) supplant, overrule, or minimize the goal of transformation, which is God’s ultimate purpose. The test of loyalty for fellowship based on a correct pattern becomes more important with respect to divine judgment and fellowship than transformation.  Or, as James A. Harding put it, obedience to positive law has priority because one can keep that precisely and perfectly but we cannot keep moral law perfectly due to our weaknesses.

Perhaps this is where concern arises about obedience and grace as well. If one believes a blueprint hermeneutic can generate implicit positive commands (in the sense of positive law) from the scattered data of Scripture (e.g., the Lord’s supper every Sunday and only on Sunday as a test of a true church), then obedience to that positive command is a test of loyalty and one must obey it perfectly and precisely. In this sense, perfect obedience is expected and necessary. When one prioritizes commands as tests of loyalty, this tends toward the expectation of perfect or precise obedience such that grace is dependent upon complete obedience of all the positive laws (whether implicit or explicit). The previous quote from Lipscomb addresses this well; we seek God’s mercy and pardon even when we fail to keep positive laws as well as moral ones imperfectly.

God’s commands, while they do function as oaths of allegiance and commitments of loyalty, primarily function as modes of transformation. God commands in order to transform us and not primarily to test our loyalty. Does God test us? Yes, of course. But why does God test us? The answer in Deuteronomy 8:1-4 and other texts is to see what is in our hearts. God wants to transform the heart, and his commands are means toward that end. To the degree that we think of them as only or primarily tests of loyalty we are in danger of reducing God’s commands to abstract fiats that draw a line in the sand between the saved and lost. That, to my mind, is dangerous, and it misses the ultimate point of commands which is transformation into the image of God.

Concern #7: “Searching for the Pattern begins with a condescending tone…[and] repeatedly labels the churches he grew up in as ‘simple folk’” (Truth Magazine, p. 99).

I did my best to avoid a condescending tone. Perhaps I failed. Readers will have to judge for themselves. I expressed love for the churches of my youth (as well as the church today) and the people in them. I warmly and gratefully acknowledge that I was formed by their spiritual mentorship. I have no ill will toward them. In fact, I used the phrases “simple folk” (once) or “simple people” (twice) on pages 24-25 (and only on those pages) to describe their modest means, hard-working culture, and unadorned practices. “Simple” was a compliment, not a criticism. Those people (including my parents) and the simple practices of congregational life formed me. I am grateful. Simplicity has tremendous value, and I seek a simple faith in the Lord Jesus. At the same time, I can see how “simple” could be heard negatively, though I did not intend that.

I did use the word “simple” in another way in the book (e.g., Searching, 79-80). I used it in contrast to something complicated. Part of the appeal of the blueprint hermeneutic is its supposed simplicity, but the more one digs into its argument and application, the more complicated it becomes. It is not simple (e.g., deciding when an example is binding and when it is not, when a command excludes a coordinate, or when an inference is necessary to decide whether it is a line of fellowship or not). What I once thought was simple in terms of “simply obeying the Bible” did not turn out to be so simple, especially in the blueprint hermeneutic. In other words, hermeneutical decisions or discerning the will of the Lord is not always simple or facile. This is especially true when it is complicated by extra-biblical hermeneutical rules that seek to identify a specified blueprint in Acts and the Epistles that is not there. In that way, the blueprint hermeneutic and its use of commands, examples, and inferences in that framework are not simple but complicated. It is not common sensical. It constructs specified patterns that do not actually exist and are not explicitly articulated in the text.

Concern #8: “No one opposes Jesus as the pattern, but how does that work practically? . . . What does the ‘the pattern of Jesus’ entail? And SFTP avoids specifics” (Truth Magazine, p. 101).

I am grateful no one would oppose Jesus as the pattern. The point, however, is that Jesus as pattern stands in contrast to a blueprint constructed out of the data of Acts & the Epistles (cf. Searching, 133-136, 181-184). When I talk about Jesus as pattern, I am focusing on the redemptive story of Jesus: his incarnation, ministry, death, resurrection, and enthronement. This is the mystery of Christ; it is the gospel itself. Jesus as pattern refers to what God has done in Jesus by the power of the Spirit for our salvation. Or, as I expand it in other places with the summaries we find in the New Testament, it is the pattern of divine saving activity which God works for us. It is the story of God’s inexpressible gift that shapes our lives. When we respond to this work of God, we are obedient to our confession of the gospel of Christ (2 Corinthians 9:13).

The pattern as I conceive it, then, is the narrative of God’s work for us, and our response to that narrative is conformation to the image of Christ or the imitation of God as God is known through the narrative.  We seek to understand the mystery of Christ and embody that in our congregations and in our lives. But the “mystery of Christ” is not a constructed ecclesial blueprint with prescribed specifics that the text never articulates. Rather, the mystery of Christ is the narrative of God’s work; it is the story in which we participate as disciples of Christ as we imitate God and Jesus.

How does this work practically? I attempted to answer that question in the book, but I could have done more to clarify, explain, or illustrate. That would have made it a much longer book. Yet, readers can see extended examples in my other books, including the trilogy of Come to the Table, Down in the River to Pray, and A Gathered People. Or read my most accessible book, Transforming Encounters. The appendices in Searching for the Pattern function as brief illustrations, and several texts are used as examples in the main part of the book, especially 1 Corinthians 16:1-2 and the Lord’s supper. They are illustrations of the theological hermeneutic at work as I seek to discern the will of God through the narrative, including its commands, examples, and inferences.

Part of the problem, it seems, is that the blueprint hermeneutic identifies details and specifics that only the blueprint hermeneutic could construct from the data. Consequently, when those same specifics are not in the pattern I discern in the narrative of Scripture through the lens of the mystery of Christ, then my sense of the pattern is judged incorrect. To the blueprint interpreter it looks like I avoid specifics because I do not have all the specifics the blueprint interpreter expects.

Does Searching for the Pattern advocate any specifics? There are abundant specifics (assembling, baptizing, communing at the table, etc.) but perhaps not the sort that my reviewer anticipates, expects, or desires. This is where I suggest we must let the narrative of Scripture tell its own story rather than imposing expectations on it. The specifics must arise out of the story itself rather than out of a construct of that discovers, correlates, and rearranges the data in the New Testament into a blueprint that is not explicitly there.

For example, is there a prescribed frequency to the Lord’s supper in Scripture? I discuss this in Searching on pages 159-162. Some might say I am avoiding specifics when I claim that there is no prescribed frequency or exclusively specified day for the Lord’s supper. To generate a positive law that the church must eat every week and only on Sunday is the effect of the received blueprint hermeneutic. At the same time, this is an inference from the text, and it is not a necessary one even within the blueprint hermeneutical model. Yet, the frequency of the Supper is typically considered a consensus model for how to use the blueprint method (e.g., J.  D. Thomas, We Be Brethern, pp. 93-104;  Roy Cogdill, Walking by Faith, pp. 14-15).

The theological hermeneutic notes that the New Testament tells us the story of the resurrection of Jesus, the breaking of bread with Jesus, and a table to which God has invited us. There is a command to do this in remembrance of Jesus, there are examples of breaking bread daily in Acts 2:46 and of breaking bread on the first day of the week in Acts 20:7, and there are multiple connections between Israel’s table and the church’s table as well as how the ministry of Jesus teaches a kingdom table etiquette. There is a theology of the table that reaches from Israel through the ministry of Jesus and his church into the new heaven and new earth (the Messianic banquet). The theological narrative is rich and deep. But there is no explicitly prescribed frequency. Rather, there is the joy of the disciples breaking bread with Jesus whenever and wherever there is an opportunity for the community to gather and celebrate what God has done for us. Or, as Paul said, “as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup” (1 Corinthians 11:26).

I hasten to add, as I did in the book, that there are good theological reasons to gather around the table of the Lord every first day of the week. I practice weekly, and I encourage it and teach it as a weighty theological conclusion. However, it is not prescribed such that a church is unfaithful if they do not eat every Sunday, if they eat more than once a week, or if they also eat on Wednesday or Thursday. The theological point is that it is a joy to gather with the people of God at the table of God whenever there is opportunity. I often gather around the table of the Lord with disciples of Jesus in my home. It does not matter what day or how often. What matters is that we commune together in the body and blood of the Lord, love and serve each other at the table, and proclaim the gospel.

I suppose one could say I avoid specifics because I do not think there is a prescribed day or frequency. But it seems to me that the case for a prescribed day or frequency as a ground for discerning a true church is based on inferences and rules generated by a blueprint hermeneutic rather than stated in the text. On this point, it seems to me the theological hermeneutic is more faithful to the text and its ambiguity (liberty or freedom is another way of saying that) than the blueprint hermeneutic which forces the text to prescribe something the text never explicitly states. The prescription is itself an inference, and it is not a necessary one. Sometimes we create specifics that bind the conscience of others and are made tests of loyalty that are not prescribed by the Lord or explicitly in the Lord’s will. That binding of inferences is exactly what Thomas Campbell’s Declaration and Address condemned (as I noted in the book, pp. 82-83).

Concern #9: Do the “Gospels contribute heavily to the pattern of Scripture” (Truth Magazine, p. 99)?

Yes, I think they should (Searching, 133-137). The ministry of Jesus is a resource for how we think about the mission and practices of the church. The ministry of Jesus embodies the mission of God in the world, and the mission of Jesus is the mission of the church. So, yes, the Gospels form and shape the pattern we seek to obey. I stressed this in many ways, including reading the Bible like Jesus reads the Bible.

But the question is more specific than this. The reviewer disputes that the Gospels are not used to discern the pattern in the blueprint hermeneutic. Historically, even going back to Alexander Campbell, the practice of the blueprint hermeneutic draws some lines between the ministry of Jesus and the practices of the church (see Searching, 30-33). Part of the context of my discussion of the Gospels is how the distinction between the covenants is understood. In Acts 2 God inaugurates the new covenant and the church begins through the outpouring of the Spirit from the exalted King Jesus. From that point forward, the apostles teach and practice, as the blueprint hermeneutic argues, the pattern that Jesus gave the disciples, especially during the forty days of his resurrection appearances. Jesus, it is sometimes said, showed them the pattern, analogous to how Moses was shown the pattern for the tabernacle on Mount Sinai. Apostolic teaching in Acts and the Epistles, then, defines the pattern for the work and worship of the church, not the Gospels.

In the context of a specified ecclesial pattern for the work and worship of a congregation rather than the ethical teaching of Jesus (e.g., his teaching on divorce and remarriage, on loving enemies, etc.), the Gospels have no legal, positivistic, or authoritative function for the practices of the church unless what is found in the Gospels is repeated in Acts and the Epistles.

Here is a classic example. Jesus instituted the Lord’s supper on a Thursday night, but this is not a pattern for the church because Acts and the Epistles only authorize the first day of the week (so the argument goes). Thursday, even though it was the day Jesus gave the bread and fruit of the vine to his disciples, is not an authorized time because the Gospels do not set the pattern for the church. The example of Jesus is insufficient for a Thursday Lord’s supper because his actions do not constitute a pattern for the church. Part of the reason they do not is because Jesus was still acting under the old covenant. We practice eating the bread and drinking the fruit of the vine because this is sanctioned by Paul in 1 Corinthians 11 (e.g., something in the Gospels is repeated in the Acts & the Epistles and thus gives it apostolic authority for ecclesial practices).

The Gospels, as the hermeneutic typically proceeds, are insufficient as patterns for the work and worship of the church. The ethical teaching and example of Jesus might apply to individuals (e.g., Jesus heals gentiles outside of the covenant community) but does not apply to the church (who cannot share with people outside of the covenant community according to non-institutional congregations). It is in this sense that I noted that the pattern for the blueprint is only found in Acts & the Epistles; it is not found in the Gospels, according to the typical blueprint hermeneutic in the history of churches of Christ.

Concern #10: Searching for the Pattern, as an example of “’Progressive Christianity’ is all about feelings, experiences, and ultimately, it is all about the following. The movement is focused on how I can impact people so they stay invested in my material and my podcasts, thus keeping my following?” (Truth Magazine, p. 131).

This is disappointing. It assesses my motives rather than my teaching. I hope readers understand how inaccurate it is to describe my book as focusing on “feelings” and “experiences.”  Perhaps the above concern is largely due to a misunderstanding of what I meant by “gut,” and I will assume some responsibility for that potential misunderstanding. At the same time, the book is immersed in the text of Scripture. But I do not see how my book suggests that I am simply catering to a following and keeping people interested in me. The above statement is a projection onto my work rather than arising from it. It imposes a motive which, if I know my heart, is simply false.

I am also accused of postmodernism. I’m not sure what that means except that my perceived emotionalism and fondness for the language of “story” are evidence of it. I previously debunked the emotional charge generated by my use of “gut.” The charge based on the use of “story” is strange to me. I would understand it if my story (in terms of my experience) was the basis of my teaching. But “my story” (as in the title of the book) is about my pilgrimage or journey. It is a biblical theme. Whether it is a journey in the wilderness, or the ascent of pilgrims to Mount Zion, or the journey of Christ’s life from birth to baptism to death, we all have a story and we are all on a journey. The journey is where we seek to discern the will of the Lord, know it better, understand it more deeply, and grow in love for God and each other. It is the journey to more fully know the love of Christ that passes all knowledge. It is not a postmodern declaration but a desire of the heart for which we pray just as Paul prayed for the Ephesians in 1:15-19 and 3:14-21.

So, my prayer for all my reviewers is that “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give [us] a Spirit of wisdom and revelation as [we] come to know him better.” With Paul, “I pray that [we] may have the power to comprehend, with all the saints, what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, so that [we] may be filled with all the fullness of. God.”

I am grateful we are on this journey from glory to glory until we are fully conformed to the image of Christ, my brothers and sisters!


Psalm 129 – Derek: Meditating on the Way

May 15, 2025

In Psalm 129 Israel remembers its oppressive past (and perhaps present as well) as they journey to Zion to gather with the people of God for the praise and blessing of Yahweh. Those who hate Zion–the place where God dwells-have no part in the blessing, and Israel has been sustained in their history by God’s righteousness, faithfulness, and blessing.


Lesson 15 – Spirit Filled Households (Ephesians 6:1-9)

May 14, 2025

Whereas Paul does not command the wives to “obey” their husbands in Ephesians 5:21-33, he does command children to “obey” their fathers (and honor their parents) and for enslaved people to “obey” their earthly masters. How, then, does the call to mutual submission in Ephesians 5:21 function in this insistence on obedience for children and enslaved people? And, further, is Paul endorsing slavery and accommodating the powers?

Ephesians 6:1-9 is a continuation of what it means to be filled with the Spirit as a community that praises God, giving thanks, and mutually submits to another. Just as the instructions to wives and husbands hang on the participles in Ephesians 5:19-21, so do the instructions in Ephesians 6:1-9 as this is the conclusion of the section that began in Ephesians 5:15.

When the community of God is filled with the Spirit, it is filled with praise and mutually submissive relationships. Paul applies this to children and fathers in Ephesians 6:1-4 and to the enslaved and their masters in Ephesians 6:5-9. What does that look in those relationships that in Greco-Roman culture were characterized by dominance and coercion?

Perhaps the most striking aspect of Paul’s instruction here is that he addresses both children and the enslaved. He assumes they are present in the community (they are listening to this read in their assembly), they have agency (decisions to make about how to act), and they are responsible to live in a way that imitates God (Ephesians 5:2) and serves the Lord Jesus. They are members of the community, and therefore they are to walk worthy of their calling (Ephesians 4:2), be kind to one another (Ephesians 4:32), forgive one another (Ephesians 4:32), and submit to one another (Ephesians 5:21).

That Paul addresses them at all is startling since this is not the case in standard Greco-Roman household instructions. Paul gives them dignity and honors them with these instructions whereas in the ancient world they were non-persons without rights or agency. Given this dignity, Paul expects them to live worthy of their calling as members of the body of Christ.

Whatever say about these relationships, they are followers of Jesus the Messiah and share a kinship with the rest of the body of Christ: “we are members of one another” (Ephesians 4:25). The familial relationship in Christ transcends the wife/husband, child/father, and enslaved/master relationships. They are sisters and brothers first, and then whatever relationship connects them. Consequently, there are responsibilities to each other that shape how we live with each other, and one of those is mutual submission. This is true even for enslaved persons. Paul, for example, expected Philemon to receive Onesimus “no longer as a slave but more than a slave, a beloved brother” (Philemon 16).

Children must obey their fathers and honor their parents, and fathers train their children rather than exasperate them. “Obey” was not used for the relationship between wives and husbands, and here it is appropriate because of the nature of the dependency between children and parents.

The enslaved must obey their earthly master as slaves of Christ, enthusiastically serving them in a way that recognizes they are serving the Lord Jesus when they obey their earthly masters. Masters are to do the “same things” for their charges, and do so without violence or threats as both have the same Master (Lord) in heaven. The mutuality of this relationship is seen in the mutual service both rendered to the Lord Jesus, and they both act without partiality toward the other.

Many modern believers are disturbed that Paul does not command the masters to free the enslaved persons in their charge. Paul does command the masters to treat their slaves with fairness, without coercion (threats), and to have the same attitudes (including service!) toward his charges as they were to have toward him (“do the same [things] to them”). This is a very different relationship than Greco-Roman enslavement practiced where masters had the right to abuse, coerce, and even kill their charges. Threats and punishments were how masters controlled their them. Enslaved people had no rights in the Greco-Roman world, though many were equipped with education, skills, and even could earn money to purchase their own freedom. Whereas Greco-Roman masters had no obligation to treat them fairly or as persons, Paul insists serving the Lord Jesus means something radically different.

But still, why did not Paul command believing masters liberate the enslaved people in their house? The Ephesian house churches lived in a social world where slavery was unquestioned, integral to the economy, and part of the social order of the empire. Followers of Jesus were in no position to challenge that social reality. They could not change the legal system; it was not a democracy or even a Republic. There was no legal recourse. Slaves made up about 10% of the population of the empire, and 30% of the people who lived in Rome itself.

Paul could not call for a wholesale movement to free enslaved people in the Ephesians house churches as this was illegal and would have involved severe sanctions and hindered the opportunities to proclaim the gospel. Freeing slaves in large numbers was regarded as a danger to the social order. For example, during the reign of Augustus, Lex Fufia Caninia was passed in 2 BCE that placed limits on the manumission of enslaved peoples: one could only free some slaves and not all of them. For example, if you had 10 slaves, you could only free 5, and if you had 30 slaves, you could only free 10. The empire discouraged freeing slaves, and no person could be freed under 30 without appropriate legal procedures.

Rather, Paul encourages the Ephesian house churches to change the social order within the community of faith. They can act toward each other in mutual submission rather than living in a social hierarchy within the house church itself. No longer would there be male or female, slave or free, or Jew or Gentile (as Galatians 3:28 says). Rather, they are sisters and brothers as part of the family of God the Father. They are a new creation in an old, sinful world, and their relationships within the community bear witness to the new reality created by God through the death, resurrection, and enthronement of the Messiah. Change begins at home—between wives and husbands, between children and parents, and between the enslaved and the masters.

Does this constitute an endorsement of slavery? I don’t think so. It is more a social realism as well as a missional strategy. Paul suggested that enslaved people seek freedom when they are able (1 Corinthians 7:21). The church cannot revolutionize the empire’s slavery practices in any immediate sense. It can change the dynamics within the community of faith so that there is justice and equity for all (cf. Colossians 4:1). Just like Christians cannot change the practices of oppressive authoritarian regimes but must live within that social order (think about Christians in Iran, for example), so Paul does not call for a social revolution that would hinder the proclamation of the gospel. Instead, he calls for a revolution within the community that will bring light into the darkness of the social world in which the church lives. A revolutionized community of faith might ultimately effect some social change as leaven leavens a whole lump. However, ultimately, the church failed to change the social order when it became a Christian empire, and this is a stain on the witness of the church through the centuries. Enslaved people were not liberated—not until worldwide movements by Christians in the 18th and 19th centuries led an abolitionist movement.

In effect, I think in Ephesians 6:5-9 Paul recognizes that the believing community of Jesus must live within the social order of its environment even as they subvert that order in their own practices within the community.


BOOK REVIEW: Matthew Bates, Beyond the Salvation Wars

May 11, 2025

PDF version of the Review available here.

Beyond the Salvation Wars: Why Both Protestants and Catholics Must Reimagine How We Are Saved, authored by Matthew W. Bates, is a provocative contribution to the “salvation wars.” It not only explores common ground among disputants but also invites them to embrace a holistic perspective “beyond the salvation wars.” That perspective, according to Bates, grounds Christian soteriology more in the language and conceptual world of the text than in the historic technical language of Catholic and Protestant theological systems.

The salvation wars have been with us for a long time. We might say since the beginning (Galatians and Romans). We could also talk about Augustine and the Eastern church, Luther and Eck, Arminius and Gomarus, Wesley and Whitefield, and in recent history with John McArthur (Lordship Salvation) and Zane Hodges (Free Grace). They are probably not going away.

The Lordship Salvation controversy in the 1990s (sparked by John MacArthur, Jr.’s 1988 book The Gospel According to Jesus) was about the relationship between faith and works, between perseverance and assurance, and obedience and mental assent. There are similarities with Bates’s proposal, but the Lordship debate took place within the categories of Protestantism as Bates describes Protestants. The Lordship Salvation controversy illustrates the diversity of thought within Protestantism but also the vitality and passion that accompanies suggestions that works may play a role in our justification. Bates, in some ways, has renewed this discussion and pushed it forward by offering a model that steps outside of the conceptual frameworks of traditional Catholic and Protestant systems.

Basic Purpose

Bates’s proposed soteriology values insights from both Catholics and Protestants. At the same time, he calls those traditions back to their roots in the language of Scripture and to recognize Scripture’s social and historical setting within Second Temple Judaism. He applies the insights of the New Perspective on Paul as well as the Jewishness of early Christianity. Bates returns to the text of Scripture for language, concepts, and connections rather than privileging the dogmatics of Reformation era polemics.

For example, some, reading “righteousness” or “justification” (and corresponding verbs) through the lens of Protestant dogmatic theology, think it only or primarily refers to a past forensic event in the life of a believer. However, Paul does not use “righteousness” (δικαιοσύνη and its cognates) only in reference to past events. Protestant theology has always recognized that there is another aspect to soteriology (the practice of righteousness, as in progressive sanctification) even when justification is strictly defined as a punctiliar past act of God (also called definitive sanctification). Nevertheless, a careless reading of δικαιοσύνη constricts Paul’s use to a specific definition of justification rather than recognizing its range of meaning and its varied temporal senses.

In Beyond Salvation Wars, Bates proposes a third way. He does not reject Catholic and Protestant soteriology as devoid of gospel. On the contrary, he recognizes that Catholics and Protestants stand on solid common ground when it comes to the narration of the mighty acts of God to liberate us from sin and corruption. Both Catholics and Protestants affirm the gospel.

This third way—an allegiance model—intends to move “beyond” the divide of Catholic and Protestant to propose an alternative soteriological model. Bates recognizes that his model has both Catholic and Protestant elements, and it is this matrix that holds out the possibility that both Catholics and Protestants might recognize themselves to some extent in the allegiance model. He hopes this will facilitate a move toward greater unity grounded in careful attention to the language and argument of Scripture.

What is the Proposal?

The roots of his proposal are present in two previous books, Gospel Allegiance: What Faith in Jesus Misses for Salvation in Christ and Salvation by Allegiance Alone: Rethinking Faith, Works, and the Gospel of Jesus the King. To fully appreciate Beyond Salvation Wars, though it contains its own argument, one needs to pay attention to the function of the previous two books. This is especially true since those books themselves participate in the “salvation wars,” though Bates hoped they would somewhat clarify the struggle.

“[B]oth Catholics and Protestants have responded to the gospel in saving fashion” (256). They both affirm the fundamental saving acts of the gospel, and they both live out that gospel in ways that receive the benefits of the gospel. In other words, both believe and practice the faith that saves. This is a strong ecumenical point. The “salvation wars” between Catholics and Protestants are not about eternal destiny or the authenticity of God’s work in the hearts of these believers.

At the same time, according to Bates, both Catholics and Protestants miss the bigger picture which involves a more holistic soteriology. The gospel-allegiance model moves us toward that holism while embracing aspects of both Catholic and Protestant soteriology but also rejecting aspects of both.

To grasp Bates’s proposal, it is important to understand how he positions himself in relation to Protestant and Catholic soteriologies. Based on chapter ten, I have created the following chart. The language is Bates’s. I have only chosen eight elements from a larger list (the bullet points in the chapter), and I have correlated them (not Bates). The chart identifies the differences between the three models.

ProtestantAllegiance  Catholic
Faith is the sole instrumental means by which a person is justified.What causes Holy Spirit union for an individual—justification’s precise instrument—is voluntary and repentant allegiance to King Jesus, and its premier form is a declared oath of fealty during a baptism.Baptism alone is the instrumental cause by which we are justified.
Faith means personal interior trust that God’s promise of salvation through Jesus’ death and resurrection is true.Saving faith is relational, outward-facing, embodied, and best understood as declared allegiance to the Christ.Faith is two-part, consisting of essential dogma to be believed and the personal act of believing it.
The cross is the center of the gospel.The gospel can be summarized: Jesus is the saving king.Jesus’s merit is the basis of salvation.
Justification by faith is part of the gospel.Jesus’s justification by his pistis is part of the gospel, since his allegiance in taking the path of the cross resulted in his resurrection proving that God justified him.Imparted righteousness, involving brief baptismal contact followed by a separation in righteousness between the divine and the human, is the dominant metaphor for explaining how justification happens.
Good works are required within sanctification as evidence that justification has already transpired.Justification and sanctification are not biblically distinct portions within a personalized order of salvation.Each person must nurture and grow in justification by performing good deeds in cooperation with the Holy Spirit to receive final justification.
An individual is justified when Christ’s righteousness is imputed.Justification by pistis includes works as an embodiment of allegiance but cannot require universally mandated works.An individual is made righteous at baptism, but only to the extent that previous merit and present cooperative disposition allow.
Imputed righteousness means a person is legally reckoned as righteous and declared innocent in God’s sight even while that person remains a sinner.A person is not justified when the Christ’s righteousness is imparted or imputed but when a person is incorporated into the Christ’s righteousness.The formal cause of a person’s justification is not a perpetual sharing in God’s own or Christ’s own righteousness; rather, at baptism the Holy Spirit gives each person their own righteousness by renewing their mind.
A person’s justification is perpetually sourced in Christ’s righteousness as an external (alien) source.In the past, present, and future, the individual who is justified perpetually shares in the righteousness of God through an externally sourced union with the righteous king and his body as intrinsically facilitated by the Holy Spirit.After baptism a person’s righteousness (justification) is her or his own rather than perpetually sourced in God’s or Christ’s extrinsic righteousness.

Each tradition, we should remember, confesses the gospel story of the gracious God who redeems humanity through the incarnation, death, resurrection, and enthronement of Jesus the Messiah in the power of the Holy Spirit. Given Bates’s discussion, permit me to summarize the different models in this way.

  • The Catholic model: God justifies through imparting righteousness at baptism which is nurtured and grown by the Holy Spirit through good works, by continued belief (including the dogma of the church), and by using the sacramental means of the church such that a person’s own righteousness constitutes or contributes to their final justification.
  • The Protestant model: God justifies through the imputation of the Christ’s alien righteousness by the interior act of faith alone in Jesus as personal Savior independent of any embodied acts, and that justification is evidenced in good works (including baptism) in the process of sanctification, but those works neither contribute to one’s final standing before God nor are part of God’s essential criteria for final judgment.
  • The Allegiance model: God justifies through a Spirit-facilitated corporate union with Christ’s own justification (righteousness) by a personal embodied allegiance to King Jesus ordinarily offered as a fealty oath at baptism and is sustained by good works as continued professions of loyalty, which are necessary for the ratification of justification at the final judgment.

There are multiple potential caveats with such wide-ranging categorizations. One is the inability (due to space) to nuance positions in the light of the diversity within each tradition. Bates makes a good faith attempt to highlight some, but it is an impossible task. So, we must read at the level of generalization and recognize that there are nuances that mitigate and even subvert some general characterizations for some within each tradition. For example, the function of “good works” in the Protestant tradition is quite varied and sometimes consistent with Bates’s own point.

Within the Protestant tradition, for example, the differences between Calvinists, Classic Arminians, Wesleyans, Mennonites, Restorationists, etc. are insufficiently noted. Wesleyans and perhaps even more so Restorationists are probably closer to the Allegiance model than the Protestant model in many respects (especially true since the Protestant model is largely Reformed). Even among Reformed Baptists there are significance differences about the sacramental meaning of baptism (e.g., for some it is not merely a good work, as I summarized it above). However, the broad sweep of the book means such deficits are practically unavoidable, and readers should keep the purpose of the book in mind without getting too frustrated by the missing nuances.

Nevertheless, the Catholic and Protestant models adequately and broadly represent two distinct streams. At the same time, Eastern Orthodoxy, though generally absent from the “salvation wars” in American Evangelicalism, would be a welcome addition to the discussion as its soteriology offers some unique perspectives. Some of those are more in line with the Allegiance model than either the Catholic or Protestant ones (especially in contrast to Reformed theologians). But one book cannot do everything, and so I do not fault it on this score.

Bates encourages us to embrace the Allegiance model as a move toward greater unity in the body of Christ. He suggests early Christianity (including the second century, e.g., Irenaeus’s On Apostolic Preaching or the substance of the Apostles’ Creed) reflects the ideas and practices of the Allegiance model more than the Catholic and Protestant. He also appeals to readers to organize, discuss, and promote the Allegiance model both in congregations and in parachurch networks (like Renew.org), as an alternative path for the church.

Affirmations of this Proposal

First, I appreciate the catholic (universal) identification of the gospel. This is important in two respects: (1) the gospel’s identity, and (2) the universal embrace of that gospel by all historic Christian traditions (especially Roman Catholic and Protestant). Regarding the former, Bates lists ten points (p. 38):

  • preexisted as God the Son,
  • was sent by the Father as promised,
  • took on human flesh in fulfillment of God’s promises to David,
  • died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures,
  • was buried,
  • was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures,
  • appeared to many witnesses,
  • is enthroned at the right hand of God as the ruling Christ,
  • has sent the Holy Spirit to his people to effect his rule, and
  • will come again as final judge to rule.

These ten items are universally embraced by historic Christian traditions. It is the core faith of the Great Tradition. This is not only common ground between Catholics and Protestants; it is the bond of unity itself. As Bates wrote (p. 48, emphasis his), “All major streams and Christian denominations agree about the actual biblical, apostolic gospel and hence are fully Christian.”

Second, I appreciate the distinction between the gospel itself and the human response to the gospel. The gospel is what God has done in the Messiah by the Spirit. God has inaugurated a new creation in the kingdom of Jesus the Messiah. God has established, through the faithfulness of Jesus and in the power of the Spirit, a justified corporate reality over which the Messiah reigns. When people respond, they are included in this kingdom—the corporate body of Christ. The gospel, then, is what God has done and continues to do in the Messiah by the power of the Spirit. Our response believes and obeys the gospel (or, we profess our oath of fealty to King Jesus and live consistent with it) but is not the gospel itself. For Reformed theologians, the response to gospel is a divine act as God regenerates people so that they irresistibly come to faith. Consequently, Reformed theologians object to this distinction since the gospel includes the divine act that creates faith in the hearts of individuals through God’s predetermined election. In his chapter on election, Bates rejects the Reformed understanding of unconditional individual election.

Third, it is helpful to remember the practical and theological role that the “sacramental system” plays in Catholic life. While there are positives to sacramentalism, the system is problematic. Institutionalized sacramentalism gets “front billing” (p. 51). Ecclesial sacramentalism, then, becomes the exclusive means by which the gospel is mediated. Bates critiques this in several ways since it functionally displaces, without erasing, the gospel.

Fourth, Bates correctly critiques the Protestant gospel model as too individualistic, unnecessarily truncated in its focus on the forgiveness of sins, and narrowly located in the cross such that personal justification by faith alone is the gospel itself. The Protestant model is fundamentally an atonement theology, primarily penal substitution. While the application of the gospel includes the forgiveness of sins (e.g., justification), the function of the gospel—according to Bates—is the proclamation that Jesus is King and reigns over the world to fill it with the glory of God. This means that reign of Jesus has social and liberating implications for both the ecclesial community and the world. Like the forgiveness of sins, social impact (as described in the Messiah’s mission in Luke 4) is one of the benefits of the gospel, though it is not the gospel itself.

Fifth, Bates advances a general Arminian soteriology though it is more Wesleyan (e.g., participatory sanctification) than Classic Arminian (e.g., total depravity). He pushes against Reformed soteriology in his opposition to the doctrine of the perseverance of the saints and his emphasis on the conditionality of the gospel’s benefits though there is an unconditioned promise for all (universal potential). The “[p]erformance of the pistis action is the condition” (p. 77).

Sixth, Bates distinguishes between “works” and “works of the law” in Paul. This is an involved discussion (see Gospel Allegiance, chapter 6), but essentially Paul rejects the saving value of the covenantal works of the Mosaic law which functioned as boundary markers for the true people of God. At the same time, Paul expects believers to devote themselves to good works, affirms believers can actually practice righteousness, and recognizes they will be judged according to their works on the final day. I basically agree with the New Perspective Bates articulates, the necessity of good works in the life of the believer, and role works play in the final judgment. Bates stresses that these works are done by the power of the Spirit and through participation in the Christ’s body. They are not autonomous acts of obedience which secure their own righteousness. The believer is justified by the Christ’s faithfulness through inclusion in his corporate body.

Seventh, Bates advocates what Michael Bird has called “incorporated righteousness” in contrast to Catholic imparted or infused righteousness and a Protestant imputed righteousness. He hopes this is a move beyond the salvation wars in the sense that both Catholic and Protestant can recognize at least part of themselves in his language while at the same time embrace a broader model. Incorporated into Christ, we are righteous because the head of the body is righteous. This gift of righteousness involves a process of becoming righteous through the work of the Spirit (sanctification in Protestant terms).

Eighth, the move to past, present, and future soteriological categories rather than construing Paul’s language of justification, sanctification, and glorification as technical terms is a healthy one. The use of technical terms is shorthand, but we must recognize the shorthand for what it is and not permit their technical meaning to constrain the biblical text. Consequently, we recognize that δικαιοσύνη may refer to something past, present, or future in Paul. This is also true for holiness (ἁγιασμῷ) and its cognates. In fact, for over 20 years, I have used something like this chart.

Word-GroupPastPresentFuture
“Righteousness”Rom 3:24; 5:1Rom 6:13, 16-19Gal 5:5; Rom 2:5-8
“Sanctification”1 Cor 6:112 Cor 7:11 Thess 5:23
“Salvation”Eph 2:5,82 Cor. 2:15Rom 5:9, 10; 13:11
“Glory” 2 Cor 3:18Rom 8:17, 30
“Set Free”Rom 6:18,20; 8:2Gal 5:13Rom 8:21
The Spirit’s WorkGal 3:2-5Gal 5:22-251 Cor 15 “spiritual”

Ninth, there is much that resonates with my own faith tradition, the Stone-Campbell Movement or American Restoration Movement. These include: credobaptism, oath nature of baptism, baptism as part of the conversion narrative, the necessity of good works in terms of final justification, the emphasis on the basic “gospel facts” (as Alexander Campbell called them), the general Arminian approach (conditional individual inclusion in a corporate election, rejection of total depravity in its Calvinist form, and the possibility of losing authentic faith), faith prior to regeneration, the necessity of sanctification, the “works of the law” referring to the Mosaic covenant in distinction from works for which God created us (many commentaries argued this in the 19th and early 20th centuries), a restorationist impulse that seeks to ground the gospel and our response in the biblical text and early church, valuing biblical language in contrast to the language of systematicians, and the ecumenical function of a set of core or universal “gospel facts” (as the church seeks to maintain the unity of the body).

Tenth, to illustrate point nine in a specific way, in his essay “What Constitutes Acceptable Obedience?” (in Salvation from Sin [1913], 217) David Lipscomb reflects some of Bates’s emphases: “Baptism is an act of more sacred import than other acts of obedience. It is the act which first manifests and declares faith in Christ Jesus and that consecrates man to the service of God. It is a more sacred act, just as the oath of allegiance that a foreigner takes to a human government is more sacred than the ordinary observance of the laws of the land. To violate the laws of the land is a misdemeanor; to violate the oath of allegiance is treason to the government. While, then, baptism is a more sacred act of obedience, inasmuch as it is the consecrating act and that in which man obligates himself to a life of obedience to Christ, in which he passes out of self into Christ as a member of his body, still it is subject to the same rules as other service. The same conditions render it acceptable or unacceptable as affects other service. Baptism, to be acceptable, must be submitted to (1) from faith in Christ; (2) the person commanded to be baptized, the believing penitent, must be baptized, buried with Christ into death; (3) it must be done from a scriptural motive, with a scriptural design or end in view.”

Expansions of and Adjustments to the Proposal

In such a comprehensive work readers can imagine any number of threads Bates could have pursued. However, the gracious reader recognizes the limits within which every author works. We must read within the confines of the intended purposes of a book. Otherwise, there would be no end to our caveats.

At the same time, there are places where we might imagine the argument could be improved, where a point needs greater nuancing, or where the introduction of other language might better serve the author’s purpose. I offer four suggestions. None radically alter the substance of the project, however.

First, the ten points Bates suggests as the gospel are solid. Yet, they are strikingly Pauline (though not exclusively so). I think these ten points need some narrative expansion (also true of the Apostles’ Creed; cf. Moltmann’s suggestions). My expansion is not in the direction of the Protestant model (e.g., must include the justification by faith or the benefits of the gospel) but to a fuller narrative. I suggest three.

  • The gospel includes a narrative about creation as well as redemption because redemption is (re)new creation. King Jesus is the image of God who rules just as God intended for humanity in the beginning. As participants in the kingdom of God, we benefit from the rule of Jesus and participate in his reign (seated with him in the heavenlies). The good news is that God’s goal in creation reaches its fulfillment in the (re)new creation with an enthroned King. Creation is where the Apostles’ Creed begins.
  • While the second and third points in Bates’s list include a reference to promises, the gospel is proclaimed in the promise to Abraham. “All nations will be blessed is the gospel proclamation” (Galatians 3:8; p. 83).  I would like to see some reflection on what this might mean for the ten gospel facts, their expansion, or nuancing. We see this kind of expansion in the sermons in Acts (e.g., Acts 13:16-41). The lack of reference to Abraham or the story of Israel (except the promise to David) seems anemic to me.
  • The gospel includes the narrative of Jesus’s ministry. There we see the purpose and effects of the anointed regent (not yet enthroned but acting in prospect)—what does the King do? What is the goal of the kingdom? What gospel promise is present in the royal activity of Jesus in his ministry? Indeed, attention to the kingdom ministry has something to say about Christus Victor (victory over death, disease, demons, chaos, sin, etc.). The preaching in Acts includes the ministry of Jesus in its rehearsal of the gospel story (Acts 2:22; 10:36-38). Moreover, the Gospels are themselves the narrative story (Mark 1:1). Some reflection on what this might mean for the ten gospel facts would be helpful. How might the ministry of Jesus further define the gospel and illuminate its meaning (as well as its benefits)?

Nevertheless, I affirm the ten points, though I expand them in terms of God as creator, the promises to Abraham, and the royal ministry of Jesus. For the purposes of this book, however, the ten points articulate a solid basis for the unity of the church in the proclamation of the gospel, the heralding of King Jesus.

Second, I appreciate the move by Bates to position himself between sacramental ex opere operato (Catholic) and the exclusion of the sacraments from any soteriological meaning (as the Protestant model typically claims). Bates is not anti-sacramental, but he is anti-ex opere operato. Neither is he opposed to attaching a soteriological meaning to baptism. He opposes the Catholic model because it gives no function to pistis (voluntary allegiance), and he opposes the Protestant model because it fails to recognize baptism as a participating means (though he does not use the traditional language of “means of grace”). The former is mandatory for salvation while the latter has no place for baptism in its conversion narrative. In general, I appreciate the middle ground Bates digs out for himself where he opposes both ex opere operato and sine qua non baptismal theologies.

Bates rightly emphasizes that baptism is a personalist and voluntary act of allegiance or loyalty. It is an act of discipleship. However, self-baptism is dubious but possible (how does that square with burial as a symbol for baptism?). Unbaptized apostles seems untenable to me. Jesus was baptized, and Jesus had a baptismal ministry, and it would be anomalous if the disciples themselves had not been baptized in the ministries of Jesus or John. At Pentecost they received the Spirit to complete their kingdom entrance through water and Spirit. And focusing on repentance as the key rather than faith, repentance, and baptism as a total conversion narrative with regard to the forgiveness of sins is problematic (that would involve a detailed discussion not suitable for this review).

Most importantly, I think baptism as means of grace is underplayed. In other words, what does God do when we consecrate our bodies (which Bates emphasizes) in this loyalty oath (the original meaning of sacramentum)? Is baptism a means of grace or a mystery (another meaning of sacramentum)? I call attention to only two points, though much more could be said. (1) One must account for the baptismal means (instrumental) language in the New Testament. Sacramental realism takes the language of “baptized into (εἰς) Christ” and “buried with him by (διὰ) baptism” as performative so that we are raised with him to walk a new life (Romans 6:3-4) through allegiance/faith (Colossians 2:12, also containing a participle of means). There is also means language in Titus 3:5: God saved us through the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit (ἔσωσεν ἡμᾶς διὰ λουτροῦ παλιγγενεσίας καὶ ἀνακαινώσεως πνεύματος ἁγίου). Second, the language of justification is connected to baptism. This is true in Galatians 3:26-27 (children of God by pistis “because [γὰρ] as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ”), Titus 3:5-7 (“saved us…having been justified”), and Romans 6:3-7 (baptized into his death. . . the one who died has been justified [ἀποθανὼν δεδικαίωται] from sin).To be fair, Bates does not ignore these texts and argues that baptism is never linked to justification as an instrument of that benefit.

My point is this. Though Bates rightly recognizes a “yes and no” answer to the question of whether baptism is saving, I would have liked to see more sacramental realism in the “yes” part while also affirming the “no” aspect (e.g., it is not ex opere operato and the case of Cornelius illustrates that baptism is not a sine qua non). I think we can affirm baptism as a means of grace that participates in pistis—the two can go together. And Bates does link them. At the same time, I suggest a fuller exploration of whether God actually does something gracious through baptism as we bodily profess our allegiance to King Jesus. I think this is the ordinary means by which God washes away sins and bestows forgiveness. At the same time, Bates and I agree that baptism is part of the conversion narrative as penitent persons embrace Jesus as King in an embodied public act of discipleship, which in that context is ordinarily, as Bates describes it, “regenerative” (p. 137).

Third, Bates consciously works in Western categories as he dialogues with Catholic and Protestant models. That is ambitious in and of itself. So, my next suggestion is offered in prospect; it is not a critique. While Bates occasionally uses the language of “participation,” I think it would help his case to embrace that language more and make it integral to his argument. He appreciates Michael Gorman’s emphases, and Gorman has introduced many to the language of the East, including becoming, participation, and theosis.

This would be particularly helpful when thinking about sanctification, transformation, or the present pursuit of righteousness. It would also have significance for the final goal of God’s redemptive work and the reign of Jesus. As we live within the incorporated righteousness of Jesus the Messiah grounded in his faithfulness by which he became King, we participate in the righteousness of God and become partakers of God’s righteousness through communion with the Father, Son, and Spirit. I suspect Bates has no problem with that sort of language. I only suggest it become more integral to his argument. We respond to God’s gracious gift of King Jesus by committing ourselves to his kingdom through an oath of allegiance by which we are incorporated into the kingdom of God wherein we participate in the life of God in holiness, righteousness, and liberation (or redemption). By the power of the indwelling Spirit we participate in the communion of God whose life empowers our own and increasingly conforms us to the likeness of God (theosis).

Fourth, while I recognize that the book expounds a King Jesus model, I wonder where the priestly Jesus fits into this picture (priests are also anointed). It seems the priestly dimension is highlighted in descriptions of Protestant atonement theology but not in the Allegiance model. Bates does affirm, of course, that Jesus is high priest (p. 34). However, unless I missed it, Bates does not provide any guidance in how to think about the priestly role of Jesus. He does not focus on atonement theology per se or atonement models (except Protestant penal substitution). “Christ died for our sins” is part of the gospel everyone believes, though there are a range of opinions on what that means. So, I am curious: how does the priestly role of Jesus fit into the Allegiance model?

Conclusion

What is the contribution of Beyond Salvation Wars to the salvation wars? I will name three.

  • It highlights the soteriological unity of the various models in their affirmation of the gospel narrative. This is one way to move beyond the salvation wars, that is, through recognizing a deeper unity grounded in the mighty acts of God.
  • It maps out an alternative beyond Catholic institutionalized sacramentalism and individualistic Protestant justification by personal trust alone. The Allegiance model affirms incorporated righteousness embraced through a voluntary baptismal oath of loyalty by a penitent believer.
  • It grounds discipleship in allegiance to King Jesus where obedience to the King (“good works”), by the grace of the Holy Spirit, receives soteriological meaning. This stresses both the significance and necessity of discipleship.

I appreciate Bates’s work. Reading the book is informative, thought-provoking, and direct (no beating around the bush). Bates has provided an alternative way to affirm broadly Arminian and Anabaptist values within a New Perspective reading strategy. He seeks to take the text seriously and read it carefully without the constraints of systematic categories (particularly in the wake of Reformation polemics). His Allegiance model reframes the discussion of soteriology from primarily atonement theology (cross and penal substitution) for saving individuals to the enthronement of King Jesus whose faithfulness produced a corporate reality in which those who swear allegiance to the King may participate and receive all its benefits. I find this helpful.

Perhaps it will not create much unity—the Catholic and Protestant models are well-entrenched. But it does offer a way to think about soteriology that is consistent with the basic facts of the gospel narrative and helpfully reflects on what God has done in King Jesus for our sakes through the Holy Spirit. It is a strong Trinitarian soteriology that invites us to participate in the life of God in the kingdom of God under the reign of King Jesus.