Returning to Our Roots - The Five Sola
Sola Scriptura: Our Only Foundation
Many critics of the Reformation have attempted to portray it as the invitation to individualism, as people discover for themselves from the Bible what they will and will not believe. "Never mind the church. Away with creeds and the church's teaching office! We have the Bible and that's enough." But this was not the reformers' doctrine of sola Scriptura--only Scripture. Luther said of individualistic approaches to the Bible, "That would mean that each man would go to hell in his own way."
On one side, the reformers faced the Roman Church, which believed its
teaching authority to be final and absolute. The Roman Catholics said
that tradition can be a form of infallible revelation even in the
contemporary church; one needs an infallible Bible and an infallible
interpreter of that sacred book. On the other side were the Anabaptist
radicals, who believed that they not only did not need the teaching
office of the church; they really didn't seem to need the Bible either,
since the Holy Spirit spoke to them--or at least to their
leaders--directly. Instead of one Pope, Anabaptism produced numerous
"infallible" messengers who heard the voice of God. Against both
positions, the Reformation insisted that the Bible was the sole final
authority in determining doctrine and life. In interpreting it, the
whole church must be included, including the laity, and they must be
guided by the teachers in the church. Those teachers, though not
infallible, should have considerable interpretive authority. The creeds
were binding and the newly reformed Protestant communions quickly
drafted confessions of faith that received the assent of the whole
church, not merely the teachers.
Today, we are faced with similar challenges even within
evangelicalism. On one hand, there is the tendency to say, as Luther
characterized the problem, "I go to church, hear what my priest says,
and him I believe." Calvin complained to Cardinal Sadoleto that the
sermons before the Reformation were part trivial pursuit, part
story-telling. Today, this same process of "dumbing down" has meant that
we are, in George Gallup's words, "a nation of biblical illiterates."
Perhaps we have a high view of the Bible's inspiration: 80% of adult
Americans believe that the Bible is the literal or inspired Word of God.
But 30% of the teenagers who attend church regularly do not even know
why Easter is celebrated. "The decline in Bible reading," says Gallup,
"is due in part to the widely held conviction that the Bible is
inaccessible, and to less emphasis on religious training in the
churches." Just as Rome's infallibility rested on the belief that the
Bible itself was difficult, obscure, and confusing, so today people want
the "net breakdown" from the professionals: what does it mean for me
and how will it help me and make me happy? But those who read the Bible
for more than devotional meditations know how clear it is--at least on
the main points it addresses--and how it ends up making religion less
confusing and obscure. Again today, the Bible--especially in mainline
Protestant churches--is a mysterious book that can only be understood by
a small cadre of biblical scholars who are "in the know."
But we have the other side, too. There is a popular trend in many
"evangelical" churches to emphasize direct communication with the Holy
Spirit apart from the Word. In these circles, tradition and the teaching
ministry of the church through the ages are not only treated as
fallible (as the reformers believed), but as objects of mockery. The
sentiments of Thomas Muntzer, who complained that Luther was "one of our
scribes who wants to send the Holy Ghost off to college," would find a
prime-time spot on the nation's leading evangelical radio and television
broadcasts. Calvin said of these folks, "When the fanatics boast
extravagantly of the Spirit, the tendency is always to bury the Word of
God so they may make room for their own falsehoods."
Christianity is not a spirituality, but a religion. Wade Clark Roof
and other sociologists have pointed out that evangelicals today are
indistinguishable from the general cultural trends, especially when it
comes to preferring to think of their relationship to God more in terms
of an experience than in terms of a relationship that is mediated
through words. Ours is a visual or image-based society, much like the
Middle Ages, and yet Christianity can only flourish through words,
ideas, beliefs, announcements, arguments. There can be no communication
with God apart from the written and living Word. Everything in the
Christian faith depends on the spoken and written Word delivered by God
to us through the prophets and apostles.
Further, sola Scriptura meant that the Word of God was sufficient.
Although Rome believed it was infallible, the official theology was
shaped more by the insights of Plato and Aristotle than by Scripture.
Similarly today, psychology threatens to reshape the understanding of
the self, as even in the evangelical pulpit sin becomes "addiction"; the
Fall as an event is replaced with one's "victim" status; salvation is
increasingly communicated as mental health, peace of mind, and
self-esteem, and my personal happiness and self-fulfillment are
center-stage rather than God's holiness and mercy, justice and love,
glory and compassion. Does the Bible define the human problem and its
solution? Or when we really want facts, do we turn somewhere else, to a
modern secular authority who will really carry weight in my sermon? Of
course, the Bible will be cited to bolster the argument. Political
ideology, sociology, marketing, and other secular "authorities" must
never be allowed priority in answering questions the Bible addresses.
That is, in part, what this affirmation means, and evangelicals today
seem as confused on this point as was the medieval church.
Solus Christus: Our Only Mediator
In the Middle Ages, the minister was seen as having a special relationship with God, as he mediated God's grace and forgiveness through the sacraments. But there were other challenges. We often think of our own age as unique, with its pluralism and the advent of so many religions. But not too long before the Reformation, the Renaissance thinker Petrarch was calling for an Age of the Spirit in which all religions would be united. Many Renaissance minds were convinced that there was a saving revelation of God in nature and that, therefore, Christ was not the only way. The fascination with pagan philosophy encouraged the idea that natural religion offered a great deal--indeed, even salvation--to those who did not know Christ.
The Reformation was, more than anything else, an assault on faith in
humanity, and a defense of the idea that God alone reveals Himself and
saves us. We do not find Him; He finds us. That emphasis was the cause
of the cry, "Christ alone!" Jesus was the only way of knowing what God
is really like, the only way of entering into a relationship with Him as
father instead of judge, and the only way of being saved from His
wrath.
Today, once more, this affirmation is in trouble. According to
University of Virginia sociologist James Hunter, 35% of evangelical
seminarians deny that faith in Christ is absolutely necessary. According
to George Barna, that is the same figure for conservative, evangelical
Protestants in America: "God will save all good people when they die,
regardless of whether they've trusted in Christ," they agreed.
Eighty-five percent of American adults believe that they will stand
before God to be judged. They believe in hell, but only 11% think they
might go there. R.C. Sproul observed that to the degree that people
think they are good enough to pass divine inspection, and are oblivious
to the holiness of God, to that extent they will not see Christ as
necessary. That is why over one-fourth of the "born again" evangelicals
surveyed agreed with a statement that one would think might raise red
flags even for those who might agree with the same thing more subtly
put: "If a person is good, or does enough good things for others during
life, they will earn a place in Heaven." Furthermore, when asked whether
they agreed with the following statement: "Christians, Jews, Muslims,
Buddhists, and others all pray to the same God, even though they use
different names for that God," two-thirds of the evangelicals didn't
find that objectionable. Barna observes "how little difference there is
between the responses of those who regularly attend church services and
those who are unchurched." One respondent, an Independent
Fundamentalist, said, "What is important in their case is that they have
conformed to the law of God as they know it in their hearts."
But this cultural influence toward relativism is not only apparent in
the masses; it is self-consciously asserted by some of evangelicalism's
own teachers. Clark Pinnock states, "The Bible does not teach that one
must confess the name of Jesus Christ to be saved. The issue God cares
about is the direction of the heart, not the content of their theology."
For those of us who have some inkling of the direction of their heart
(see Jer 17:9), that might not be as comforting as Pinnock assumes.
To say solus Christus does not mean that we do not believe in the
Father or the Spirit, but it does insist that Christ is the only
incarnate self-revelation of God and redeemer of humanity. The Holy
Spirit does not draw attention to himself, but leads us to Christ, in
whom we find our peace with God.
Sola Gratia: Our Only Method
The reason we must stay with the Scriptures is because it is the only place where we are told that we are saved by the unprovoked and undeserved acceptance of God. In "The Sound of Music," Maria (Julie Andrews), bewildered by the captain's sudden attraction to her, rhapsodizes, "Nothing comes from nothing, nothing ever could. So somewhere in my youth or childhood, I must have done something good." Deep down, human nature is convinced that there is a way for us to save ourselves. We may indeed require divine assistance. Perhaps God will have to show us the way, or even send a messenger to lead us back, but we can actually follow the plan and pull it off.
The Law is in us by nature. We were born with a conscience that tells
us that we are condemned by that Law, but our reason concludes
immediately that the answer to that self-condemnation is to do better
next time. But the Gospel is not in nature. It is not lodged somewhere
in our heart, our mind, our will, or our emotions. It is an announcement
that comes to us as foolishness and our first response, like that of
Sarah, is to laugh. The story is told of a man who fell off a cliff, but
on his way down managed to grab a branch. He broke his fall and saved
his life, but before long he realized that he could not pull himself
back up onto the ledge. Finally, he called out, "Is there anyone up
there who can help me?" To his surprise, a voice boomed back, "I am here
and I can help you, but first you're going to have to let go of that
branch." Thinking for a moment about his options, the man looked back up
and shot back, "Is there anyone else up there who can help me?" We are
looking for someone to save us by helping us save ourselves. But the Law
tells us that even our best works are like filthy rags; the Gospel
tells us that it is something in God and his character (kindness,
goodness, mercy, compassion) and not something in us (a good will, a
decision, an act, an open heart, etc.) that saves us.
Many in the medieval church believed that God saved by grace, but
they also believed that their own free will and cooperation with grace
was "their part" in salvation. The popular medieval phrase was, "God
will not deny his grace to those who do what they can." Today's version,
of course, is, "God helps those who help themselves." Over half the
evangelicals surveyed thought this was a direct biblical quotation and
84% thought that it was a biblical idea, that percentage rising with
church attendance at evangelical churches.
On the eve of the Reformation a number of church leaders, including
bishops and archbishops, had been complaining of creeping Pelagianism (a
heresy that denies original sin and the absolute need for grace).
Nevertheless, that heresy was never tolerated in its full expression.
However, today it is tolerated and even promoted in liberal
Protestantism generally, and even in many evangelical circles.
In Pelagianism, Adam's sin is not imputed to us, nor is Christ's
righteousness. Adam is a bad example, not the representative in whom we
stand guilty. Similarly, Christ is a good example, not the
representative in whom we stand righteous. How much of our preaching
centers on following Christ--as important as that is--rather than on his
person and work? How often do we hear about his work in us compared to
his work for us?
Charles Finney, the revivalist of the last century, is a patron saint
for most evangelicals. And yet, he denied original sin, the
substitutionary atonement, justification, and the need for regeneration
by the Holy Spirit. In short, Finney was a Pelagian. This belief in
human nature, so prominent in the Enlightenment, wrecked the evangelical
doctrine of grace among the older evangelical Protestant denominations
(now called "mainline"), and we see where that has taken them. And yet,
conservative evangelicals are heading down the same path and have had
this human-centered, works-centered emphasis for some time.
The statistics bear us out here, unfortunately, and again the leaders
help substantiate the error. Norman Geisler writes, "God would save all
men if he could. He will save the greatest number actually achievable
without violating their free will."
Sola Fide: Our Only Means
The reformers said that it is not enough to say that we are saved by grace alone, for even many medieval scholars held that view, including Luther's own mentor. Rome viewed grace more as a substance than as an attitude of favor on God's part. In other words, grace was like water poured into the soul. It assisted the believer in his growth toward salvation. The purpose of grace was to transform a sinner into a saint, a bad person into a good person, a rebel into an obedient son or daughter.
The reformers searched the Scriptures and found a missing ingredient
in the medieval notion of grace. To be sure, there were many passages
that spoke of grace transforming us and conforming us to the image of
Christ. But there were other passages, too, that used a Greek word that
meant "to declare righteous," not "to make righteous." The problem was,
the Latin Bible everyone was using mistranslated the former and combined
the two Greek words into one. Erasmus and other Renaissance humanists
"laid the egg that Luther hatched" by cleaning up the translation
mistakes.
According to Scripture, God declares a person righteous before that
person actually begins to become righteous. Therefore, the declaration
is not in response to any spiritual or moral advances within the
individual, but is an imputation of the perfect righteousness that God
immediately requires of everyone who is united to Christ by faith alone.
When a person trusts Christ, that very moment he or she is clothed in
his perfect holiness, so that even though the believer is still sinful,
he or she is judged by God as blameless.
This apostolic doctrine, proclaimed to Abraham and his offspring, has
fallen on hard times again in church history. Not only do most
Christians today not hear about the doctrine of justification by grace
alone through faith alone, many cannot even define it. Although
justification is the doctrine by which, according to the evangelical
reformers "the church stands or falls," it has been challenged. Finney
openly declared, "The doctrine of an imputed righteousness is another
gospel. For sinners to be forensically pronounced just is impossible and
absurd. The doctrine of an imputed righteousness is founded on a most
false and nonsensical assumption, representing the atonement, rather
than the sinner's own obedience, as the ground of his justification,
which has been a sad occasion of stumbling to many."
In our own time, Clark Pinnock wonders why we cannot even embrace the notion of purgatory in Protestant churches:
I cannot deny that most believers end their earthly lives imperfectly
sanctified and far from complete. [Most? How about all!] I cannot deny
the wisdom in possibly giving them an opportunity to close the gap and
grow to maturity after death. Obviously, evangelicals have not thought
this question out. [We have: It was called The Reformation.] It seems to
me that we already have the possibility of a doctrine of purgatory. Our
Wesleyan and Arminian thinking may need to be extended in this
direction. Is a doctrine of purgatory not required by our doctrine of
holiness?
Russell Spittler, a Pentecostal theologian at Fuller Seminary,
reflects on Luther's phrase concerning justification: simul iustus et
peccator, (simultaneously just and sinner): "But can it really be
true--saint and sinner simultaneously? I wish it were so. Is this
correct: 'I don't need to work at becoming. I'm already declared to be
holy.' No sweat needed? It looks wrong to me. I hear moral demands in
Scripture. Simul iustus et peccator? I hope it's true! I simply fear
it's not."
The Wesleyan emphasis has always been a challenge to the evangelical
faith on this point, although in his best moments Wesley insisted on
this heart of the Gospel. To the extent that the consensus-builders and
institutional abbots of the evangelical monasteries have attempted to
incorporate Arminianism under the label "evangelical," to that extent,
it seems to me, it ceases to be evangelical indeed.
Soli Deo Gloria: Our Only Ambition
The world is full of ambitious people. But Paul said, "It has always been my ambition to preach the Gospel where Christ was not known." (Rom 15:20). Since God has spoken so clearly and saved so finally, the believer is free to worship, serve, and glorify God and to enjoy him forever, beginning now. What is the ambition of the evangelical movement? Is it to please God or to please men?
Is our happiness and joy found in God or in someone or something
else? Is our worship entertainment or worship? Is God's glory or our
self-fulfillment the goal of our lives? Do we see God's grace as the
only basis for our salvation, or are we still seeking some of the credit
for ourselves? These questions reveal a glaring human-centeredness in
the evangelical churches and the general witness of our day.
Robert Schuller actually says that the Reformation "erred because it
was God-centered rather than man-centered," and Yale's George Lindbeck
observes how quickly evangelical theology accepted this new gospel: "In
the fifties, it took liberals to accept Norman Vincent Peale, but as the
case of Robert Schuller indicates, today professed conservatives eat it
up."
Many historians look back to the Reformation and wonder at its
far-reaching influences in transforming culture. The work ethic, public
education, civic and economic betterment, a revival of music, the arts,
and a sense of all life being related somehow to God and his glory:
These effects cause historians to observe with a sense of irony how a
theology of sin and grace, the sovereignty of God over the helplessness
of human beings, and an emphasis on salvation by grace apart from works,
could be the catalyst for such energetic moral transformation. The
reformers did not set out to launch a political or moral campaign, but
they proved that when we put the Gospel first and give voice to the
Word, the effects inevitably follow.
How can we expect the world to take God and his glory seriously if
the church does not? The Reformation slogan Soli Deo Gloria was carved
into the organ at Bach's church in Leipzig and the composer signed his
works with its initials. It's inscribed over taverns and music halls in
old sections of Heidelberg and Amsterdam, a lasting tribute to a time
when the fragrance of God's goodness seemed to fill the air. It was not a
golden age, but it was an amazing recovery of God-centered faith and
practice. Columbia University professor Eugene Rice offers a fitting
conclusion:
All the more, the Reformation's views of God and humanity measure the
gulf between the secular imagination of the twentieth century and the
sixteenth century's intoxication with the majesty of God. We can
exercise only historical sympathy to try to understand how it was that
the most brilliant intelligences of an entire epoch found a total, a
supreme liberty in abandoning human weakness to the omnipotence of God.
Soli Deo Gloria! Ad mejorem Dei gloriam.
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