2008April17, Thursday

Can’t Tell an Infralapsarian from an Amyraldian

Posted in My Life, Theology at 10:09 by Trey Austin

Well, on Tuesday, Dr. White addressed me and some of the people i know on his Dividing Line program. Once again, he did so dismissively and derisively. Apparently, from what he said on his show, he has lots of people whom he loves and gets along with, in spite of the fact that he doesn’t see eye-to-eye with them—but i and my friends who do emphasize a more balanced Calvinism than the Owenists are not among them. From what Dr. White said, the qualification for such respect is to be on the inside of his loop over at AOmin and directly supporting what he does in whatever fashion. That’s fine.

One thing he did do was derisively to refer to me (the one whose blog he quoted last week), and others who agree with me in a general way on some particular issues, as being “Amyraldians.” He also says that we have a “hobby horse” that we ride. Now, some of you might not understand all that, but one reason is that David (“Flynn” on many mail and chat groups) has made it an emphasis of his to bring to the attention of the Reformed world that the idea of what constitutes true and proper Calvinism is itself imbalanced in lots of ways, judging from the writings of the early Reformers and other Reformed writers down through the years. Many of us, who agree with David in this respect, also emphasize the issue from time to time (some of us more than others). But the truth is, and I hope David won’t take this the wrong way, but David is a nobody. In fact, he’s more of a nobody than i am—and i’m a nobody. As the Reformed world goes, i am an ordained Minister of Word and Sacrament (ordained in the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church and serving in the Presbyterian Church in America, with my membership being in Westminster Presbytery), but David is just a fellow with access to lots of original source documents to look stuff up. On his blog, David does, however, quote lots and lots and lots of folks, Calvin in particular, about lots of issues: God’s love, God’s will, God’s goodness, God’s grace, God’s hatred, Christ’s atoning work (and various passages of Scripture that are controversial on this front), the well-meant offer, the efficacy of the sacraments, &c.; so to be fair, David has lots of things he emphasizes, not just one. However, David does have one particular thing he quotes lots of is about the nature of Christ’s atonement and how it relates to all men.

Now, i know that it is not popular to focus on this issue, and most Calvinists are perfectly content to answer the question “For whom did Christ die?” in a very direct way: “The elect alone”—and never want to qualify that at all, because, in their minds, it’s as simple as that. For a time, i actually held that point of view, myself—in fact, the article that convinced me of this initially was James White’s “Was Anyone Saved at the Cross?” However, when i began to read the Reformers beyond the scholastic Puritans (White made the Puritan John Owen’s famous “Trilemma” the centerpiece of his article), and when i saw that they answered this question differently than i clearly did, i wanted to know why they gave much more qualified answers than we often hear on the floor of our presbytery meetings to ordinands and candidates for licensure. Come to find out, the Reformed world is bigger than Reformed Baptists on one side and Reformed Presbyterians on the other, with the only thing separating them being the nature and purpose of the sacraments. No, there is a great breadth in the way many Reformers answer lots of questions about lots of things, from the nature of the Covenants, the nature of the sacraments, the nature of the Church, the nature of epistemology, and yes, even the nature of Christ’s atonement—those for whom it was made, different senses in its being offered, different purposes it serves for different people, and all kinds of other issues—and beyond.

So, here’s the rub: when we start talking about the way Christ’s atoning work relates not just to the elect, as those whom God intends to save, but also to the non-elect, whom he does not intend to save, does that then make us Amyraldians? Well, that seems to be James White’s answer (though, he himself admitted in the article i mentioned above that he once considered himself a “four-point” Calvinist), and he paints the so-called “Ponterites” (in which he includes me) as being Amyraldians, or four-point Calvinists. A couple of things i will say in this regard.

First, i do not use the five points of TULIP to describe my Reformed views. I used to, but you will never find me referring to it in any way, either in sermons, teaching, or conversations, unless i am directly asked, and even when i explain them generally, i demur from being a person who holds them hard and fast as a standard for anything. I believe the TULIP is unhelpful, unweildy, imbalanced, and overly simplistic—and while simplistic is just what many people want today, i’m not one of them.

Second, even if a person rejects the idea of particular atonement altogether and has a full-blown general atonement (Note: i do not hold to general atonement in any sense) along with some view of unconditional election, that doesn’t necessarily make a person an Amyraldian. Amyraldianism or Amyraldism (here again, people have tried to over-simplify it, but such an attempt is improper) is a system of theology otherwise known as “Post-Redemptionism,” because in their scheme, God’s election of some to be saved didn’t take place before all other decrees (like Supralapsarianism), nor after the decrees to create and to allow the fall (like Infralapsarianism), but after the decree to send Christ to redeem the sinful world (again, “Post-Redemptionism”), and only because God saw that sinful men wouldn’t, of themselves, choose to come to Christ as the redeemer. Yes, this is the discussion of Supralapsiarianism, Infralapsarianism, and related issues (on a completely unrelated topic, my first successful googlewhack was “Infralapsarian handbell,” [no quotes]; i don’t think it’s still one, but it was my first successful try). Amyraldism, though, fits into this discussion, even though most Reformed scholars (at least more recent ones) don’t include it there. Now, the point is that there is a logic to the order of decrees, and we want to see what Scripture implies systematically spelled out in these orderings of God’s decrees. (For a basic primer on the issue, see Phillip Johnson’s “Notes on Supralapsarianism & Infralapsarianism”.)

So, if we’re to be accurate in using these terms, true Amyraldism isn’t only about whether Christ died for all (i.e., just bare “four-point Calvinism”); it is about the whole theological framework that makes that true. Amyraldism is a school of theology holding one particular position among all the various other positions on ordered decretalism. Ordered decretalism is that discussion everyone acts like is so useless, but their answers to it determine lots of things they presuppose without ever knowing it. I am decidedly Infralapsarian in my views, but Amyraldism has its own distinct ordering of decrees that makes the equal applicability of Christ’s atonement logical in their schema (i.e., hypothetical universalism). As an Infralapsarian, i don’t hold to that view, as i don’t hold that Christ’s atonement is *EQUALLY* applicable to all men (i.e., it is more applicable to the elect as those to whom God intended to apply it savingly, but it is also applicable, but not in the same way, to the non-elect, as those to whom God offers salvation in Christ, gives all good things in life, gives the common operations of the Spirit, &c.). I understand the logic behind Amyraldism, just as i understand the logic behind Supralapsarianism, but i reject both for the point in between. So, yes, i am going to see things differently than Supralapsarians, who by and large see that Christ’s atonement has only to do with the elect and none others (i.e., the strict particularism, affirming that Christ died for no one but the elect in any sense at all, tends to go along with Supralapsarianism, not categorically, but as a general rule), and that’s because i affirm that Christ’s atonement does have something to do with the non-elect. But my affirmation of that doesn’t make me an Amyraldian; it just makes me a consistent Infralapsarian.

So we have three views within the broader Reformed world with regard to ordered decretalism: Supralapsarians, Infralapsarians, and Amyraldians. These various views generally have three different ways of understanding how the atoning work of Christ relates to the world of lost sinners. Supralapsarians generally say it only applies to the elect in any sense, Amyraldians generally say that it applies to all men equally, and Infralapsarians say generally that it applies to all men, but especially and most directly to the elect (i.e., not equally to all men).

There are lots of folks who don’t want to come down on the matter one way or another. R. L. Dabney was one of those. David Ponter is also one. But like Dabney, while not taking a side on the issue, i see Ponter’s views as aligning most closely with Infralapsarianism, not with Amyraldism.

So, i hope that Dr. White and his friends (one whom he mentioned being “TurretinFan”) would recognize these distinctions in theological views and attempt to be more accurate in their references in the future. And since TurretinFan has such a penchant for the Larger Catechism, i’m sure he won’t mind living up to the duties required in and staying away from the sins forbidden in the ninth commandment as explicated in the WLC:

Question 145: What are the sins forbidden in the ninth commandment?
Answer: The sins forbidden in the ninth commandment are, all prejudicing the truth, and the good name of our neighbors, as well as our own, especially in public judicature; giving false evidence, suborning false witnesses, wittingly appearing and pleading for an evil cause, outfacing and overbearing the truth; passing unjust sentence, calling evil good, and good evil; rewarding the wicked according to the work of the righteous, and the righteous according to the work of the wicked; forgery, concealing the truth, undue silence in a just cause, and holding our peace when iniquity calls for either a reproof from ourselves, or complaint to others; speaking the truth unseasonably, or maliciously to a wrong end, or perverting it to a wrong meaning, or in doubtful and equivocal expressions, to the prejudice of truth or justice; speaking untruth, lying, slandering, backbiting, detracting, tale bearing, whispering, scoffing, reviling, rash, harsh, and partial censuring; misconstructing intentions, words, and actions; flattering, vainglorious boasting, thinking or speaking too highly or too meanly of ourselves or others; denying the gifts and graces of God; aggravating smaller faults; hiding, excusing, or extenuating of sins, when called to a free confession; unnecessary discovering of infirmities; raising false rumors, receiving and countenancing evil reports, and stopping our ears against just defense; evil suspicion; envying or grieving at the deserved credit of any, endeavoring or desiring to impair it, rejoicing in their disgrace and infamy; scornful contempt, fond admiration; breach of lawful promises; neglecting such things as are of good report, and practicing, or not avoiding ourselves, or not hindering: What we can in others, such things as procure an ill name.

While i would love to be one of the people Dr. White respects and regards with fondness as he does some others, i doubt i ever will be. That’s fine. I certainly won’t lose any sleep over it. I will say for the record, though, that, in spite of his misrepresentation and derision of me, in spite of his seeming inability or unwillingness to qualify an answer about God’s desire to save all men (which question in the debate with Mr. Gregg i had nothing to do with asking, nor did any person whom i know, to my knowledge), and in spite of his favoring of people who also relish the opportunity to run me and those with whom i agree down, i still respect Dr. White as a gifted leader in Christ’s Church, as an able defender of the faith, and most of all, as a brother in Christ whom i love dearly and want to see succeed in all that he does for the Kingdom.

2008April14, Monday

When Ad Hominem Arguments Go Wild!

Posted in Current Events, My Life, Theology at 13:13 by Trey Austin

Fifth, i have been accused of engaging in ad hominem attacks upon James White. This i have yet to see substantiated. I criticized his actions as a person. Is that an ad hominem? I don’t believe so. If you want to see an ad hominem attack, take a look over here, where the anonymous “TurretinFan” opens another invective post by saying, “Tony Byrne (aka Ynottony) comrade-in-arms of Trey Austin and another of David Ponter’s band of Quasi-Amyraldians…” Talk about ad hominem! In fact, he not only attacks Tony, David, and myself as “Quasi-Amyraldians” (the ad hominem itself, since he’s trying to prejudice his audience against anything we say with regard to the sufficiency of Christ’s atonement by labeling us as “Quasi-Amyraldians”), he also is engaging in guilt-by-association fallacy, by saying that Tony’s views are less than reliable because he is friends and in agreement with David Ponter.

Yes, i called James White condescending, hateful, and uncharitable (Note: i am from South Carolina, and i fear that my use of the word “hateful” in a manner i am used to doing may be misleading to some; understand, i am not saying that James White actually hates anyone, and i can’t, since i can’t know his heart. What i am saying is what i have always understood the word “hateful” to mean, that James White is being just plain mean). But those weren’t attacks to prove that James White’s arguments about something are wrong (that’s what an ad hominem actually is); they were actual criticisms of his actions that displayed those tendencies. If criticizing and rebuking an action that someone engages in is an ad hominem, then every rebuke that i give as a pastor is an ad hominem attack. But that can’t be, and no reasonable person would see that as such.

The problem really is that James White is unwilling or unable to hear anyone who criticizes his actions or attitude. I have seen several people attempt to do it over the years—emails made public, posts on the AOmin forum, or even calls into the internet show—, and yet in every case, White brushes the comment asside dismissively. He is either unwilling or unable to hear criticism from others about his public actions. Now, on the one hand, i understand that he is a public figure, and if he took every one seriously, what he does would never get done; he could probably make a full-time job of answering critiques. But i’m not talking about crazy accusations that he is denying the Gospel, denying free will, or anything like it; i’m talking about hearing accusations from fellow Reformed believers that would help him better do what he does to God’s glory and to the help and edification of sinners and believers of all walks of life.

So, i don’t believe i’ve engaged in ad hominem attacks of James White. I believe all i have done is criticize him and his actions. I would like someone to show me how that fits into the definition of ad hominem without making any and every attempt to correct or rebuke someone an ad hominem.

Personal Contact Required?

Posted in My Life, Theology at 13:09 by Trey Austin

Fourth, i have been accused of violating the requirements of Matthew 18 if indeed i desired to critique my brother. Peter Pike (though he has retracted his claim, somewhat) said that Paul went to Peter personally as he indicated in Galatians. A couple of things should be said here. Firstly, i am critiquing a public figure for public action. That in and of itself shows that i am not required to go privately (which seemed to be the implication of the word “personally” that Pike used) to a person in order to critique him. Secondly, as i read Paul’s account in Galatians of his confrontation of Peter, it doesn’t seem to me that he took Peter off to the side and whispered his concern in his ear. The general tenor of what Paul said seems to have been that when Paul saw Peter acting in a way that undermined the Gospel (Note: i don’t believe that White is acting in a way that undermines the Gospel, necessarily), he opposed him “to his face,” going so far as to say (Gal. 2:14, ESV), “But when I saw that their conduct was not in step with the truth of the gospel, I said to Cephas before them all, ‘If you, though a Jew, live like a Gentile and not like a Jew, how can you force the Gentiles to live like Jews?'” It seems that Paul made a point of making his rebuke public, precisely because the actions of such a prominent man in Christ’s Church were leading good men astray (Note: i do believe that White’s actions are leading good men astray). So, such a criticism of me, i believe, is unfounded. But even if that were required, the same thing was accomplished anyway, since Dr. White was the first to read and respond to my post.

What seems inconsistent to me, though, is that the claim still stood even while Dr. White railed against me on his internet radio program. So, somehow, i was wrong to criticize his own actions in public (which, i don’t think i was), but he was right to deride me and hold me out to scorn (something i never did on my short post last week). That just doesn’t compute. Anyone who thinks that is perfectly consistent shows that he simply is given to agreement with a person because of predisposition, and not because he’s an objective judge of facts.

Obligation to Critique Someone Else?

Posted in My Life, Theology at 12:53 by Trey Austin

Second, i was criticized for failing to criticize anyone other than Dr. White. I, apparently, haven’t “lifted a finger on [my] blog” (so says Gene Bridges) to help the High Calvinists in their railing against other Christians and their various non-Reformed views or against non-Christians on their non-Christian views. Well, i’m very sorry, but i didn’t get the memo about the compulsary use of my blog for so-called “internet apologetics.” In fact, having taken part in several forums devoted to internet apologetics, i have been increasingly convinced that it is a useless exercise that simply balkanizes positions rather than leading to understanding and mutual love. Now, i’m not saying that anyone who feels called to do it shouldn’t do it—your conscience is your own and, so long as you don’t overtly sin, you are free to do whatever you desire—I’m just saying that i don’t care for it, and i don’t feel compelled to engage in it.

My calling is to minister to God’s people in the Church. That’s what i was ordained in Christ’s Church, by a presbytery of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, in order to do. I obviously don’t use the internet for what some people do. My use of it primarily is for helping to learn and grow in my understanding of the faith and to help edify and encourage other Christians. My ministry takes place where i live and work (a challenging ministry it is, too, since practically everyone in the town in which i live is a Free Will Baptist, Old Regular Baptist, Pentecostal, or Primitive Baptist, or some other kind of Arminian or Hyper-Calvinist, baptistic Christians), not on some interenet forum, my blog, or anywhere else of the like. So, for your information, though i haven’t put it on display for my peers to fawn over (which, i’m beginning to think is the only reason some people have blogs), i put my faith and my theological emphases into practice all the time–yet for some reason, it’s being questioned, because i haven’t devoted my blog to the use which others have chosen for their own. Here again is that same attitude: if you don’t do it like i do, you’re wrong.

Yet, none of this changes the fact that my criticism of some Reformed theologians (in this case, James White) is warranted. I am reminded of what happened to me when i got in trouble as a child. I would always protest that my sister was just as guilty, either for doing some other thing or for doing the same thing. But as my father always pointed out, regardless of what my sister did, it didn’t change what i did. So, yes, i could criticize Mr. Gregg for his views and behavior in the debate i was referring to, but i chose not to. That’s my prerogative.

The reason i chose not to is because i believe we need to get our own Reformed House in order. We can’t ignore all the clutter and problems that characterize the Reformed faith as it stands today and simply point the finger at someone else. That’s been one tactic used by many Calvinists over the years, and we see where it has gotten us: just more in-fighting over lots of issues and no resolution of any of them. And, for that matter, the reason i have taken note of this thing that happened between White and Gregg (what Peter Pike made note of in his comment on my original post) is not because i want to inject myself into something that isn’t my business (as if a public debate can be classified a private matter between two people, to begin with), but because the way people act who are the spokespeople for a certain point of view has a bearing on how people perceive all of the people who are part of that larger group. In other words, James White’s actions in a debate on Calvinism give an impression to those listening from the other point of view that has an affect on how they relate to every other Calvinist they will ever come into contact with.

So, yes, it *IS* my business, and the business of every other Calvinist, how James White acts and how he displays a less than charitable attitude or a theological eccintricity that he presents as *THE* Reformed view, because, for good or for bad, many people will see that, recognize it as someone negative, as i do, and judge all Calvinists on that basis. And, too, since this was a public debate and not a private offense, it is the proper province of all who heard it to comment on. Also important to note is that my post isn’t directly responding to anything in particular about the debate between White and Gregg; that’s what got me thinking about it, but i am not referencing the particulars of that debate. All i’m doing in this regard is noting a critique of my brother and allowing other people to help me refine my point of view.

The Reformed View, Redivivus

Posted in My Life, Theology at 12:46 by Trey Austin

First, i have been criticized for claiming that James White’s view is not “the Reformed view.” My dear brother, TurretinFan (whoever he is), made that the heart of his critique of me. At least Peter Pike, who commented on TurretinFan’s post and on my own, actually read what i wrote with something like an intention to understand what i was actually saying, and so he saw that my point was not that my own view is only Reformed view and Jame’s White’s isn’t. That’s precisely what i was objecting to!

When White debates election, Calvinism, or any related topics, he speaks of the Reformed view or the Reformed perspective as if there is only one! That’s just the point: there isn’t only one, on practically every issue within the Reformed world. As i point out in my post that TurretinFan linked, there is more than one way to flesh out what “limited atonement” actually is (contrary to the claims of the High Calvinists), but the same is true of those who have a different view of the free offer, the covenants, baptism, God’s love for all men, God’s will, etc, etc., etc. My problem is with those who speak that way is that they have taken one strain of Reformed thought (almost to a man, scholastic Puritanism) and hold it out as if it’s the only view that qualifies as “Reformed.”

Well, not everyone who is a Calvinist thinks Ames’s or Owen’s views are helpful, either in fleshing out the doctrine of the atonement or in how to respond to Arminians, nor does everyone who is a Calvinist believe that the only thing we can call “the will of God” or that is “his desire” is that which comes to pass. But those disagreements don’t make us not Reformed–and it certainly doesn’t make us Amyraldian. There is great breadth and variety within the Reformed world, not one view on practically any subject that can qualify as *THE* Reformed view (please note the italics of the word “the” in the title of my original post, which TurretinFan apparently didn’t).

It is important to distinguish between what is Reformed and what is right. There are views that are wrong that are within the pale of Reformed thought, but their being within the braoder Reformed camp doesn’t make them right, especially since not all views which fit within it, especially ones that contradict one another, can be right at the same time. So, understand, i’m arguing not that White’s view is not Reformed, nor am i arguing that it’s biblically wrong (though, i think it is), i am arguing that it’s only one among many Reformed views on the issue of God’s will concerning the salvation of the non-elect.

Sic’d and Sir’d

Posted in My Life, Theology at 12:43 by Trey Austin

Well, it’s been some kind of firestorm since i posted my post. Bloggers have responded; James White himself has sarcastically and condescendingly derided me on his internet radio show (Note to Dr. White: when responding to a critique from a brother, it’s a good idea not to engage in the very thing that is being critiqued!); i have received the most comments i have ever received for a single post. Now, i don’t know what happened at Dr. White’s behest—though, his internet broadcast certainly was nothing more than an invitation to his sycophants to flood the blogosphere with responses. It is always a priviledge to be referred to as “Sir” from James White. If you don’t know, that’s his way of maintaining a modicum of respectability and courteousness toward the person to whom he is speaking while treating him like you treat your tennis shoes when you’re trying to get the dog crap you just stepped in out of the grooves. Notice that Dr. White never refers to any other Christian with whom he has major disagrement as “brother.” That says a good bit in itself, and it goes to what i was saying in my original post.

So, in the spirit of defending myself (and i hope to do so without being rude or invective about it), i am writing another post, dealing this time with some of the comments Dr. White made on my blog and the comments others have made on their blogs or in the last post here. So you know, i don’t know why i haven’t received any ping-backs for them, but there were two blogs (that i know about) which directly linked to my blog and responded to what i said. You can find those here (Triablogue) and here (TurretinFan) and here (Tartanarmy).

What will follow is a series of posts that respond to various accusations and claims made against me. I decided to split them up instead of making on massive post, which was getting far too unweildy to post on a blog.

2008March24, Monday

Death and Taxes and Other Stuff

Posted in My Life at 11:36 by Trey Austin

Well, it’s been a little while since i have posted anything. I have been a bit busy with other things and have just neglected the blog here. A couple of folks in my congregation had family members die. I didn’t conduct the funerals, but i went and visited with the families for support. The funerals were interesting. When i think of a funeral, i think of a worship service. No matter what happens, it is always appropriate to worship the Lord who gives and takes away. However, these funerals were largely simply a chance to praise either the person who died, or for the preacher conducting to talk about his own experiences with his family and death. It was rather strange. No congregational participation at all in either one. No order of service. Just a preacher reading the obituary, a special music by singer/singers, and that same preacher preaching about all the great things that the person did and what an impact he had on his family, friends and community, and then shouting about how wonderful it is to be able to shout, because this person went to heaven (or how he can’t preach the person into heaven or hell–but that was only because the person wasn’t a believer). Of course, the problem is that the service is worship of the person and not of God in any sense. Well, it’s the way it’s done here, i suppose. The good thing is that most of the folks in my congregation know how very misguided and useless all that really is. That is something to be thankful for.

During Holy Week, because we have no kind of services to commemorate those events of Christ’s life, i went down to see my family. As all visits with family are, it wasn’t a vacation. The primary purpose was really to help them do their taxes and to prepare to do ours (we all use one tax program, so we don’t have to pay for it more than once!). Angela and i were preparing to get our own done once we got back home, but while we were there, we found out that our son doesn’t even have a birth certificate, let alone a Social Security Number with which we can claim him as a dependent. What a mess. More idiocy at some level of government. The paperwork was filed, but somewhere in Columbia it got lost. Now we are patiently waiting for it now that we refiled for all of it, and we have to see whether we’ll have to file an extension in order to get them in on time.

Meanwhile, i have been working little by little on my landscaping. I have ordered lots of plants that will be delivered sometime in the next few weeks. I just need to get all my dirt spread out and the beds prepared. They are almost done, and i am looking forward to having something other than a bunch of mud holes in the front yard here at the manse. I had posted some “before” pictures. I’ll be sure to link those when i post the “after” pictures.

2008February11, Monday

Thinking, On My Birthday

Posted in My Life, Random Thoughts at 13:30 by Trey Austin

Yesterday, i welcomed a new child—not a natural child from my own flesh, but a spiritual child over which i have spiritual care, born to a couple in my congregation. Today, i celebrate my own birthday. Yet, in contemplating the beginning of a new life, so welcomed and loved by everyone in our congregation, and in embarking on the thirtieth year of my own life, i can’t help but think of those children whose parents didn’t love them and cherish their entrance into the world the way my parents did.

This is a very sad report of such circumstances in our world today. There was a time when Christians were at the forefront of rescuing such unwanted children born in their communities. In Roman society, such unwanted children were “exposed” (i.e., to the elements) by being left out in the gutters of the streets or dumped in the garbage heaps of the cities. This invariably would lead to the child’s death by exposure to the elements or by dehidration/starvation. Christians would go around, collect these children, and adopt them into their homes and churches, teaching them to trust in Christ and live different lives in response to God’s grace offered in the Lord Jesus. It is interesting that this kindness shown to small children was turned into false accusation of cannibalism by non-Christians. Many of the very people who would so heartlessly throw unwanted children out into the streets or landfills would then turn around and audaciously accuse Christians, who sought to rescue those children, of eating the children, because the Pagans conflated what few things that they knew about Christian worship and practice (i.e., the story of the Nativity of Christ [this child, whom Christians regard as their Savior, born into a feeding trough], the celebration of the Eucharist of Christ [Christ having given his body to eat and his blood to drink], and Christians taking these abandoned children into their homes).

I read an article recently about strange names that some saints in the early Church had received. Some of the stranger ones were rather vulgar names that apparently were monuments to their having been plucked up from sure death after being cast out as unwanted children. I remember one in particular was a diminutive version a very expressive word in Greek, politely translated into English as “Little Piece of Garbage,” but more expressively and bluntly translated “Little Shit.” No doubt, his testimony was that, as an infant, he was cast out with the trash but rescued by Christians and adopted into their homes. For whatever reason, they either gave themselves these disparaging names or received them from their adoptive parents, most probably with a view to being a perpetual reminder of where they came from, always knowing that whatever would come of their lives would be always owing to God’s grace and power so evidently at work.

Unfortunately, in the modern day, the horrendous act of abortion is hidden from the sensitive eyes of the public, keeping them from seeing exactly what they are perpetuating in their advocacy for a mother’s “choice” to murder her unborn child. And even worse, it prevents Christians from being able to do what they were so quick and anxious to do in earlier times: to help save these unwanted children who are born to unloving and uncaring parents—many of which, today, are born alive and viable in botched abortion attempts. It is astounding that “civilized” and “enlightened” societies such as ours doesn’t do more to ensure that where life is it would be preserved at all costs.

Even as i thank the Lord for my life, and the lives of all my children (both natural and spiritual), and so recognize the love and grace that we all have received from God through the agency of our families and the Church, i pray that God would remove the monstrosity of infanticide (both within the womb and without) from our world forever.

2008January19, Saturday

Federal What?

Posted in My Life, The Church at 10:37 by Trey Austin

I got a call Wednesday evening from Ligonier Ministries. I had previously been a supporter of Ligonier (it is one of those ministries that has enough of an ecclesiastical connection that i don’t have the qualms with it i do about parachurch ministries, which i refuse to support in any fashion), having once received Tabletalk Magazine and, at one point, the monthly sermon. So, they were calling to ask me if i would consider supporting again.

They had called last spring, too. I told the guy last year that i was unsure if i could continue my support of Ligonier because of that fall 2006 article they published in Tabletalk by Clark, which so clearly distorted and skewed the issues concerning the Federal Vision. (Please Note: i am not a Federal Visionist, but i also don’t believe that the Federal Vision is some heretical sect to be shunned and excised from our ecclesiastical institutions.) Well, he told me last year that he would forward my concerns to RC (i know! my personal message to RC Sproul—are you impressed?) and they’d send me a special backage of samples of Tabletalk and tapes. Well, when it got here, it was a few old issues of Tabletalk, a tape about Christology, and a form letter from RC about how they’re trying to advance Reformed teaching through Ligonier. Big whoop. Suffice to say, it didn’t inspire me to pull my checkbook out and put Ligonier Ministries on the dotted line.

Well, Wednesday’s call was the follow-up for that call months ago. He said that his notes showed my concern about Ligonier’s stance on the Federal Vision. I could hardly believe my ears when this caller (a man who sounded at least my age if not older) responded with this question: “You mean our view of government? Separation of Church and State, or something like that?” Um, no.

Of course i told him that since they had last called, RC royally stuck his foot in his mouth by saying what he said on the floor of 2007 GA. As a result, i told him, i won’t be able to support Ligonier anymore, unless something drastically changes. I don’t have enough money (nor do i have a low enough view of the Church) to give my money to a ministry that is perpetuating the division rather than trying to heal it. I’ll save my money for ministries (of the Church) that do seek for Christian unity and not further schism.

2008January18, Friday

What I’ve Been Up To

Posted in My Life at 22:27 by Trey Austin

It’s been over a week since i’ve posted now. I’ve just been busy with other things.

Last week, we were down in Greer, SC, where my parents live. We visited there not just to see my parents; we were there to have Will checked up by the midwife as well. He’s getting big. He’s now 15 lbs and 26 inches long. He’s a hog for three months, if you ask me. I actually wasn’t up to going and staying down there for five days, but i did anyway. I only could do that because i spent most of my time there working on what i’d normally have done at home, including getting my sermon done for this past Sunday and getting my report ready for presbytery (i’m on the Court Records Committee), which met Saturday.

Presbytery was long. I still have problems with the way things go on in our presbytery. Westminster Presbytery still has a requirement that the presbytery reject from membership anyone who has any other view of creation than 24/6, which excludes any view of longer-than-normal days of creation, Framework, or any other view that is accepted in almost any other PCA presbytery (and my own “home” denomination, the ARP Church as well). There was some debate over that Saturday, because there is a former licentiate in our presbytery (who, i believe, is a Minister in another presbytery) who was to serve as stated supply at a congregation no without a pastor (they had intended on calling him as pastor, but that was a deal-breaker because of this issue as well). He had formerly held to a 24/6 view, but has since modified his view, only in that he doesn’t say categorically that the days in Genesis 1 were 24 hours long. As a result in this small modification in his view, WP will no longer allow him to minister within their bounds—though, a stop-gap measure was approved, that he would continue to act as supply pastor until the spring meeting, and that the session of the congregation he is preaching at would either find someone else as stated supply or call a qualified person, but even that measure didn’t pass without a couple of people making known their intention to file a protest against the decision, because they said it violated the BCO’s provision that only licensed men can preach regularly within the bounds of a presbytery. The discrepancy, though, was over whether it applied to licentiates as well as ministers, or whether it only applies to ministers. What a fiasco. It was obvious to me that the statement needed to be revised, but when i propsed a motion to assemble a committee to re-examine the position paper that adopted views on several issues and, if they deemed necessary, to revise it, a great majority of the men in WP acted as though i was trying to tear the presbytery apart, because, they claimed, that provision is the only thing holding our fragile presbytery together. I suppose in a presbytery where orthodoxy is viewed as so narrow that hardly any dissenting voice is allowed to be heard (every minister in WP with an exception to the Confession and other constitutional documents is forbidden by the presbytery from teaching or otherwise advocating their views; e.g., my views that the office of deacon should be open to women and that not all images of Christ are inherently idolatrous) is always just one step away from dissolution. How sad. One would have thought that the change in makeup of the presbytery over the years (some of the more extreme members of WP have moved on, most of them out of the PCA) would have done something to turn that fractious tenor around, but i suppose it hasn’t.

Otherwise, i’ve been continuing the same old same-old. Thinking, wishing, hoping, and praying.

I got the DVD of the Federal Vision conference at Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary (incidentally, the building they’re renovating is the old Taylors school that my grandmother went to when she was a child). I’m planning on watching Guy Waters and Joey Pipa critique the Federal Vision whatever-you-call-it. I’m actually planning on going to lunch to discuss it with a friend of mine in the presbytery, who also got a copy of it. We’re both pretty much on the fence, but he’s much more suspicious and worried about the FV than i am. I’m hoping we’ll have further respectful and helpful conversations like the ones we already have.

On a very positive note, potty-training of our daughter seems to be going quite well. She’s basically trained except for using pull-ups or diapers when she has to sit in the car for an extended period of time, or when she naps in the afternoon and sleeps at night. However, she has had a penchant, lately, for writing on everything—the floor, the table, the bedsheets, &c.—and smearing soap and lotion on every possible surface she can find. Spanking works, but it takes a while to modify behavior on a longterm basis.

More later. Working on sermon.

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