The Christian
faith did not start with our contemporary generations. God did not
take a vacation when John laid down his pen at the end of
Revelation. True, God’s biblical revelation ceased and therefore
the Bible is not to be added to nor subtracted from. But God
continues to work down through the history of the church. He
enables leaders to continue to define, refine, and clarify direct
and indirect teachings from the written word of the Old and New
Testaments.
I try to read
church history on a regular basis because I have found that if we
take the time to learn about our roots, we spend less time
fighting the crisis fires that spring up today. These “fires”
include questions such as: Is Jesus God? What’s wrong with open
theism, or liberation theology, or the development of the cults?
We could even include issues like worship, the sacraments and the
global missions movement as further examples. There is too much at
stake for us to neglect reading what those who have gone before us
have to say. That would be as wrong as to say that God is not
working among us today to give us further understanding of his
truth. In this book, Homes states he is attempting to show “that
theology, at least, by being attentive to its own tradition, can
teach by example...”
While the Bible
is the inspired Word of God, theology is our attempt to understand
that written word’s theology. Theology, therefore, is our
attempt to express our understanding of biblical truth plus
general revelation. Though there have been common threads that
weave the different times in history together like a tapestry, we
need to understand why and what went into the expression of that
theology by the different church leaders. Holmes makes a clear
case that if we are to study theology we have to have some
understanding of theology’s tradition.
It sounds very
good and pious to say, “I just read the Bible and don’t bother
with tradition.” However, you will not understand the Bible
apart from its history and tradition. Also, trying to read and
study the Bible in a historical vacuum will undoubtedly lead you
to some strange conclusions, e.g. the cults.
A statement in
the book illustrates the author’s point in a clear way,
“Calvin, although committed to the principle of sola
scripture, none the less thought it important to stand within
tradition of the Church. It is not just that Calvin owes much
(indeed, more than is often recognised) to the immediately
preceding theological tradition, although he does; the relevant
point is that both the Institutes and in other places, he
devotes considerable energy demonstrating the positions the
Reformers are urging against the Roman Catholic Church are in fact
more faithful to the Christian tradition than the Roman
alternatives…”
If we could
understand the issues over which Calvin and the Anabaptist
differed, then we could understand more of 21st
Christendom. Holmes points out the big difference between the
Anabaptist’s focus on "refounding" the church while
Calvin’s emphasis was on "reforming" the church. They
also held different views of the Eucharist. While tradition must
never be elevated to the place of Scripture as the final rule of
faith and practice, the church always “‘Reformed and being
reformed’ [is] a slogan that indicates the constant desire of
the Reformed Churches to seek further reformation from God.”
I could site many
examples from the book of how knowing, studying, and appreciating
tradition, in its proper place, is a key to the church’s
understanding of itself and its role today. There is a chapter
entitled “Calvin Against the Calvinists” that is worth the
price of the book. Holmes develops the idea and gives examples of
how the followers of Calvin “hardened and systematized his
theology.” That is one of the reasons I believe it is important
for us to read and study John Calvin today. He predated what we
call modernism, with its enlightenment and Scottish Realism
schools of thought, which attempted to make Calvinism appear to be
something different than Calvin. Hence, Calvin often said and
practiced that where Scripture stops, we stop. Therefore,
everything may not be carried to its logical conclusion, as many
of his successors attempted to do with their theology.
You will also
enjoy the chapter, “Strange Voices: Edwards on the Will.”
Holmes points out that we can do theology today with the attitude,
“I will read those like Calvin and Edward and appreciate them in
their context and time, but they do not speak to me today.” Or,
we can read and learn how they developed their theology and be
helped with our tasks today, not by simply restating what they
said, but by using their teachings to clarify our theology.
I would say that
Holmes’ basic thesis is that we need to listen to the past. When
we study theology we always ask, what is the basis of authority?
Holmes reminds us that four things are usually used to answer that
question, and in this order: The Scriptures as our authority,
tradition, reason and experience. But Holmes says that we are
better off to maintain in doing theology, we need to hear the
teaching of Scripture as our basis authority but “we could not
hear the teaching of Scripture aright without listening to the
tradition, but this does not of itself ascribe any authority to
the voices of tradition, it just insists that they are necessary
guides to enable us to hear the words that are authoritative in
the Scriptures.” In all of this, we must be sensitive to and
submissive to the Holy Spirit guiding and opening our
understanding to God’s Word today.
As
people of the Word, Christians have a great legacy and we must
have much respect for the past. This book reminds us of that
importance. Knowing, reading, and carefully studying the masters
who have gone before us are necessary if we are to understand our
situation today. There is no doubt that theology “is an
irreducibly communal task.” Both pastors and teachers would
benefit from this book.
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