Backgrounds of the Restoration Movement: Baptism, Primitivism, and Heresy, Part 2

passioncartoonThis brings us to the famous Lunenburg letter correspondence.

Some of Campbell’s early writing often seems to suggest that he considered baptism essential to salvation. And this was conventional wisdom within much of the Movement.

However, Stone had never considered baptism essential, considering receipt of the Spirit, as evidenced by a reformed life, a truer test of salvation. Nonetheless, he practiced baptism.

Campbell’s views became much clearer in a series of articles in response to the so-called Lunenburg Letter written in 1837. When asked whether there are Christians among the “sects” or denominations, Campbell was glad to answer–

In reply to this conscientious sister, I observe, that if there be no Christians in the Protestant sects, there are certainly none among the Romanists, none among the Jews, Turks, Pagans; and therefore no Christians in the world except ourselves, or such of us as keep, or strive to keep, all the commandments of Jesus. Therefore, for many centuries there has been no church of Christ, no Christians in the world; and the promises concerning the everlasting kingdom of Messiah have failed, and the gates of hell have prevailed against his church! This cannot be; and therefore there are Christians among the sects.

But who is a Christian? I answer, Every one that believes in his heart that Jesus of Nazareth is the Messiah, the son of God; repents of his sins, and obeys him in all things according to his measure of knowledge of his will. …

I cannot, therefore, make any one duty the standard of Christian state or character, not even immersion into the name of the father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and in my heart regard all that have been sprinkled in infancy without their own knowledge and consent, as aliens from Christ and the well-grounded hope of heaven. …

There is no occasion, then, for making immersion, on a profession of faith, absolutely essential to a Christian–though it may be greatly essential to his sanctification and comfort. … But he that thence infers that none are Christians but the immersed, as greatly errs as he who affirms that none are alive but those of clear and full vision.

Campbell taught baptism much as we teach it today, but refused to make it an absolute necessity. Rather, it would be sufficient that a believer obeys the command as well as he knows to do. A genuine Christian could not refuse baptism once he learns of the command, but his salvation is not dependent on being correctly instructed.

Not surprisingly, this response was highly controversial and led to many protests, but Campbell was initially quite adamant on this point.

Now the nice point of opinion on which some brethren differ is this: Can a person who simply, not perversely, mistakes the outward baptism, have the inward? We all agree that he who willfully or negligently perverts the outward cannot have the inward. But can he who, through a simple mistake, involving no perversity of mind, has misapprehended the outward baptism, yet submitting to it according to his view of it, have the inward baptism which changes his state and has praise of God, though not of all men? is the precise question. To which I answer, that, in my opinion, it is possible. Farther than this I do not affirm.

My reasons for this opinion are various; two of which we have only time and space to offer at this time. Of seven difficulties it is the least; two of these seven, which, on a contrary hypothesis would occur, are insuperable:–The promises concerning an everlasting Christian church have failed; and then it would follow that not a few of the brightest names on earth of the last three hundred years should have to be regarded as subjects of the kingdom of Satan!!

If baptism as practiced by the Restoration Movement (and taught in the Bible) is essential, Campbell says, then for hundreds of years there have been no Christians and the church was absent from the earth, despite God’s promise of an everlasting church. And many great men of faith would have to be considered lost in their sins.

However, Campbell retreated somewhat from this position, in a third article. I quote the whole thing, as long as it is, because both sides of the progressive/conservative split have been guilty of pulling parts of this text out of context to make Campbell fit their preferred result.

The gist of Campbell’s article is that (1) yes, there are Christians among the unimmersed but (2) no, they are not members of the visible kingdom of God, but (3) they will be with us in heaven. I can’t say I find that a particularly sensible conclusion, but it’s what the man said.

JUDGING from numerous letters received at this office, my reply to the sister from Lunenburg has given some pain to our brethren, and some pleasure to our sectarian friends. The builders up of the parties tauntingly say to our brethren, “Then we are as safe as you,” and “You are coming over to us, having now conceded the greatest of all points—viz. that immersion is not essential to a Christian.” Some of our brethren seem to think that we have neutralized much that has been said on the importance of baptism for remission, and disarmed them of much of their artillery against the ignorance, error, and indifference of the times upon the whole subject of Christian duty and Christian privilege.

My views of Opinionism forbid me to dogmatize or to labor to establish my own opinion, and therefore I hope to be excused for not publishing a hundred letters for and against said opinion. Only one point of importance would be gained by publishing such a correspondence; and I almost regret that we have not a volume to spare for it. It would indeed fully open the eyes of the community to the fact that there are but few “Campbellites” in the country. Too many of my correspondents, however, seem to me to have written rather to show that they are not “Campbellites,” than to show that my opinion is false and unfounded.

While, then, I have no wish to dogmatize, and feel to obligation to contend for the opinion itself, I judge myself in duty bound to attempt—

1st. To defend myself from the charge of inconsistency.
2nd. To defend the opinion from the sectarian application of it.
3rd. To offer some reasons for delivering such an opinion at this time.

I. With all despatch, then, I hasten to show that I have neither conceded nor surrendered any thing for which I ever contended; but that one the contrary, the opinion now expressed, whether true or false, is one that I have always avowed. (Footnote in original reads: It is with us as old as baptism for the remission of sins, and this is at least as old as the “Christian Baptist.” Read the first two numbers of that work.)

1. Let me ask, in the first place, what could mean all that we have written upon the union of Christians on apostolic grounds, had we taught that all Christians in the world were already united in our own community?

2. And in the second place, why should we so often have quoted and applied to apostate Christendom what the Spirit saith to saints in Babylon—“Come out of her, my people, that you partake not of her sins, and that you receive not of her plagues”—had we imagined that the Lord had no people beyond the pale of our communion!

3. But let him that yet doubts, read the following passages from the Christian Baptist, April, 1825:–“I have no idea of seeing, nor wish to see, the sects unite in one grand army. This would be dangerous to our liberties and laws. For this the Saviour did not pray. It is only the disciples dispersed among them that reason and benevolence would call out of them,” &c. &c. This looks very like our present opinion of Christians among the sects!!! 2d ed. Bethany, p. 85.

4. Again, speaking of purity of speech in order to the union of Christians, we say, “None of you [Christians] have ever yet attempted to show how Christians can be united on your principles. You have often showed how they may be divided, and how each party may hold its own, but while you pray for the visible unity of the disciples, and advocate their visible disunity, we cannot understand you.” March 1827, vol. 4.

5. Various essays and letters on “Christian union” from our correspondents, are given to our readers with our approbation [approval]; from one of which we quote these words:–“I suppose all agree that among Christians of every name there are disciples of Jesus Christ, accepted of God in him, real members of his body, branches in the true vine, and therefore all one in Christ.” October, 1826, vol. 4, p. 53.

6. In a letter to Spencer Clack, August, 1826, I have said, “As to what you say concerning the evils of division among Christians, I have nothing to object. I sincerely deplore every division, and every sectarian feeling which now exists; and if I thought there was any man on this continent who would go farther than I to heal all divisions and to unite all Christians on constitutional grounds, I would travel on foot a hundred miles to see him and confess my faults to him.” vol. 5, p. 15.

7. On the evening before my departure to debate with Mr. Owen, vol. 6, p. 239, April 6, 1829, in alluding to that crisis, I say—“I rejoice to know and feel that I have the good wishes, the prayers, and the hopes of myriads of Christians in all denominations.” So speak the pages of the Christian Baptist on many occasions. (Original footnote states: “Let the curious reader consult the essays on Christian Union in the Christian Baptist, so far as I have approbated them, especially my replies to an Independent Baptist.”)

8. The views of the Millennial Harbinger on this subject are condensed in a work called “Christianity Restored,” or, as we have designated it, “A Connected View of the Principles,” &c. “of the Foundation on which all Christians may form one communion.” (See its title-page!!)

9. In that volume there is a long article on the foundation of Christian union, showing how the Christians among the sects may be united. We refer to the whole of this article from page 101 to 128, as the most unequivocal proof of our views of Christians among the sects. Indeed we say (page 102) of our own community, that it is a nucleus around which may one day congregate all the children of God. In that article we wax bolder and bolder, and ask, (page 121,) “Will sects every cease? Will a time ever come when all disciples will unite under one Lord, in one faith, in one immersion? Will divisions ever be healed? Will strife ever cease among the saints on earth?”

10. But in the last place in the first Extra on Baptism for Remission of Sins, we exclude from the pale of Christianity of the Pedobaptists, none but such of them as “wilfully neglect this salvation, and who, having the opportunity to be immersed for the remissions of sins, wilfully neglect or refuse”—“of such,” indeed, but of none others, we say, “We have as little hope for them as they have for all who refuse salvation on their own terms of the gospel.” 1st Extra, 1st ed. p. 53.

With these ten evidences or arguments, I now put it to the candor of those who accuse us of inconsistency or change of views, whether they have not most evidently misrepresented us. Were it necessary we could easily swell these ten into a hundred.

II. We shall now attempt to defend this opinion from the sectarian application of it:–

1. It affords them too much joy for the consolation which it brings; because it imparts no certainty of pardon or salvation to any particular unbaptized person whatsoever.

In reference to this opinion, all the unimmersed are to be ranged in two classes;–those who neither know nor care for this opinion, and those who know it and rejoice in it. It will require but a moment’s reflection to perceive that those who care nothing for this opinion will not rejoice it nor abuse it; and that those who would, for their own sake, rejoice in it are not included in it. He that rejoices in such an opinion, for his own sake, has had the subject under consideration; and it is a thousand chances to one that he is obstinately or willingly in error on the subject; and, therefore, in the very terms of the opinion, he is precluded from any interest in it. His joy, indeed, is strong presumptive evidence against him; because it is proof that he is one sided in his feelings, which no upright mind can be—at least such a mind as is contemplated in the opinion; for it respects only those who have not had any debate with themselves upon the subject, and have, without any examination or leaning, supposed themselves to have been baptized.

In no case, indeed, can there be the same certainty (all things else being equal) that he who was sprinkled, poured, or immersed on some other person’s faith; or that he who was sprinkled, or poured on his own faith, shall be saved, as there is that he that first believes and is then, on his own confession, immersed, shall be saved. In the former case, at best, we have only the fallible inference or opinion of man; while in the latter we have the sure and unerring promise of our Saviour and Judge. It cannot be too emphatically stated that he that rejoices for his own sake, that he may be accepted by the Lord on his infant or adult pouring or sprinkling, because of his dislike to, or prejudice against believer’s immersion, gives unequivocal evidence of the want of state of mind which is contemplated in the opinion expressed; and has proved himself to be a seeker of his own will and pleasure, rather than rejoicing in the will and pleasure of God; and for such persons we can have no favorable opinion.

2. But that the aforesaid opinion does not disarm us of our arguments against ignorance, error and indifference, is evident; because it assumes that the person in question is acting up to the full measure of his knowledge upon the subject, and that he has not been negligent, according to his opportunities, to ascertain the will of his Master; for in the very terms of the opinion he is not justified, but self-condemned, who only doubts, or is not fully persuaded that his baptism is apostolic and divine.

3. To admit that there may be Christians among the sects, does not derogate from the value or importance of baptism for the remission of sins, any more than it derogates from the superior value and excellency of the Christian Institution to admit that salvation was possible to the Jews and Patriarchs without the knowledge and experience of all the developments of the New Testament. For besides the Christian disposition, state and character, there are the Christian privileges. Now, in our judgment, there is not on a earth a person who can have as full an assurance of justification or of remission of sins, as the person who has believed, confessed his faith, and been intelligently buried and raised with the Lord; and therefore the present salvation never can be so fully enjoyed, all things else being equal, by the unimmersed as by the immersed.

4. Again, as every sect agrees, that a person immersed on a confession of his faith is truly baptized, and only a part of Christendom admits the possibility of any other action as baptism: for the sake of union among Christians, it may be easily shown to the duty of all believers to be immersed, if for no other reason that that of honoring the divine institution and opining a way for the union and co-operation of all Christians. Besides, immersion gives a constitutional right of citizenship in the universal kingdom of Jesus; whereas with our opponents, themselves being judges, their “baptism” gives the rights of citizenship only in some provinces of that kingdom. For as far as baptism is concerned, the Greek, the Roman, the English, the Lutheran, the Calvinian, the Arminian, the Baptist communities will receive the immersed; while only a part of Christendom will acknowledge the sprinkled or the poured. Therefore, our opinion militates not against the value of baptism in any sense.

5. In the last place, to be satisfied with any thing that will just do in religion, is neither the Christian disposition nor character; and not to desire to know and do the whole will of God, places the individual out of the latitude and longitude of the opinion which we have advanced. These things being so, then we ask, wherein does the avowal of such an opinion disarm us of arguments for professor or profane, on the value of the baptism in the Christian Institution; or the importance and necessity of separating one’s self from all that will not keep the commandments of Jesus; and of submitting without delay to the requisitions of the illustrious Prophet whom the Almighty Father has commanded all men to obey?

III. In the third and last place, we offer some reasons for delivering such an opinion at this time:–

1. We were solicited by a sister to explain a saying quoted from the current volume of this work, concerning finding “Christians in all Protestant parties.” She proposed a list of questions, involving, as she supposed, either insuperable difficulties or strong objections to that saying; and because she well knew what answers I would have given to all her queries, I answered them not: but attended to the difficulty which I imagined she felt in the aforesaid saying.

2. But we had still more urgent reasons than the difficulties of this sister to express such an opinion:–Some of our brethren were too much addicted to denouncing the sects and representing them en masse as wholly aliens from the possibility of salvation—as wholly antichristian and corrupt. Now as the Lord says of Babylon, “Come out of her, my people,” I felt constrained to rebuke them over the shoulders of this inquisitive lady. These very zealous brethren gave countenance to the popular clamor that we make baptism a saviour, or a passport to heaven, disparaging all the private and social virtues of the professing public. Now as they were propounding their opinions to others, I intended to bring them to the proper medium by propounding an opinion to them in terms as strong and as pungent as their own.

The case is this: When I see a person who would die for Christ whose brotherly kindness, sympathy, and active benevolence know no bounds but his circumstances; whose seat in the Christian assembly is never empty; whose inward piety and devotion are attested by punctual obedience to every known duty; whose family is educated in the fear of the Lord; whose constant companion is the Bible: I say, when I see such a one ranked among the heathen men and publicans, because he never happened to inquire, but always took it for granted that he had been scripturally baptized; and that, too, by one greatly destitute for all these public and private virtues, whose chief or exclusive recommendation is that he has been immersed, and that he holds a scriptural theory of the gospel: I feel no disposition to flatter such a one; but rather to disabuse him or his error. And while I would not lead the most excellent professor in any sect to disparage the least of all the commandments of Jesus, I would say to my immersed brother as Paul said to his Jewish brother who gloried in a system which he did not adorn: “Sir, will not his uncircumcision, or unbaptism, be counted to him for baptism? and will he not condemn you, who, though having the literal and true baptism, yet dost transgress or neglect the statutes of your King?”

3. We have a third reason: We have been always accused of aspiring to build up and head a party, while in truth we have always been forced to occupy the ground on which we now stand. I have for one or two years past labored to annul this impression, which I know is more secretly and generally bandied about than one in a hundred of our brethren may suspect. On this account I consented the more readily to defend Protestantism; and I have, in ways more than I shall now state, endeavored to show the Protestant public that it is with the greatest reluctance we are compelled to stand aloof from them—that they are the cause of this great “schism,” as they call it, and not we.

Now, with this exposition in mind, let us examine the meaning of the alleged concession. And first let me ask, What could induce us to make it at this crisis? or, I should more correctly say, to repeat it so strongly?

No one will say our opponents have compelled us by force of argument to make it. Themselves being judges, we have lost nothing in argument. All agree that the “concession” was uncalled for—a perfect free-will offering.

Neither can they say that we envy their standing, or would wish to occupy their ground; because, to say nothing of our having the pure original gospel institutions among us, regarding us merely as a new sect like themselves, we have no reason to wish to be with them, inasmuch as we have the best proselyting system in Christendom. Faith, repentance, and baptism for the remission of sins, with all the promises of the Christian adoption and the heavenly calling to those who thus put on Christ, is incomparably in advance of the sectarian altar and the straw—the mourning bench, the anxious seat, and all the other paraphernalia of modern proselytism. That it is so practically, as well as theoretically, appears from the fact of its unprecedented advances upon the most discerning and devout portions of the Protestant parties. No existing party in this or the father-lands has so steadily and rapidly advanced as that now advocating the religion of the New Testament. It has been successfully plead within a few years in almost every state and territory in this great confederacy, and even in foreign countries.

All agree, for a thousand experiments prove it, that all that is wanting is a competent number of intelligent and consistent proclaimers, to its general, if not universal triumph, over all opposing systems. We have lost much, indeed, by the folly, hypocrisy, and wickedness of many pretenders, and by the imprudence and precipitancy of some good brethren: yet from year to year it bears up and advances with increasing prosperity, as the present season very satisfactorily attests.

Do we, then, seek to make and lead a large exclusive sect or party? Have we not the means! Why then concede any thing—even the bare possibility of salvation in any other party, if actuated by such fleshly and selfish considerations? With all these facts and reasonings fresh in our view, I ask, Is not such a concession—such a free-will offering, at such a time, the most satisfactory and unanswerable refutation that could be given to the calumny that we seek the glory of building a new sect in religion? If, then, as some of our opponents say, we have made a new and an unexpected concession in their favor, we have done it at such a time, in such circumstances, and with such prospects before us, as ought (we think) henceforth to silence their imputations and reproaches on the ground of selfish or partisan views and feelings.

Some of our fellow-laborers seem to forget that approaches are more in the spirit and style of the Saviour, than reproaches. We have proved to our entire satisfaction, that having obtained a favorable hearing, a conciliatory, meek, and benevolent attitude is not only the most comely and Christian-like, but the most successful. Many of the Protestant teachers and their communities are much better disposed to us than formerly, and I calculate the day is not far distant when many of them will unite with us. They must certainly come over to us whenever they come to the Bible alone. Baptists and Pedobaptists are daily feeling more and more the need of reform, and our views are certainly imbuing the public mind more and more every year.

But to conclude, our brethren of Eastern Virginia have been the occasion at least of eliciting at this time so strong an expression of our opinion; and we have now many letters from that region for one from any other quarter on the aforesaid opinion. Had not some of them greatly and unreasonably abused the sects, or countenanced, aided, and abetted them that did so, and had not a few in some other regions made Christianity to turn more upon immersion than upon universal holiness, in all probability I would have answered the sister from Lunenburg in the following manner and style:–

The name Christian is now current in four significations:–

1. The ancient primitive and apostolic import simply indicates followers of Christ. With a strict regard to its original and scriptural meaning, my favorite and oft repeated definition is, A Christian is one that habitually believes all that Christ says, and habitually does all that he bids him.

2. But its national and very popular sense implies no more than a professor of Christianity. Thus we have the Christian nations, as well as the Pagan and Mahometan nations; the Christian sects as well as the sects political and philosophical.

3. But as soon as controversies arose about the ways and means of putting on Christ or making a profession of his religion, in a new and special or appropriated sense, “a Christian” means one who first believes that Jesus is the Christ, repents of his sins, is then immersed on confession into Christ’s death, and thenceforth continues in the Christian faith and practice.

4. But there yet remains the sense in which I used the term in the obnoxious phrase first quoted by our sister of Lunenburg. As in the judgment of many, some make the profession right and live wrong; while others make the profession wrong, but live right; so they have adopted this style—“I don’t know what he believes, nor how he was baptized, but I know he is a Christian.” Thus Adam Clarke quotes some poet:

“You different sects who all declare,
“Lo! Christ is here, and Christ is there!
“Your stronger proofs divinely give,
“And show me where the Christians live!”

Now in this acceptation of the word, I think there are many, in most Protestant parties, whose errors and mistakes I hope the Lord will forgive; and although they should not enter into all the blessings of the kingdom on earth, I do fondly expect they may participate in the resurrection of the just.

The words Jew, Israel, circumcision, disciple, are used in the same manner, even in the sacred writings: “They are not all Israel that are Israel”—“An Israelite indeed”—“The true circumcision”—“A Jew inwardly and outwardly”—“Then are you my disciples indeed,” &c.

I am glad to see our brethren so jealous of a correct style—so discriminating, and so independent. They are fast approaching the habit of calling Bible things by Bible names. They only misunderstood me as using the term in its strictest biblical import, while in the case before us I used it in its best modern acceptation.

I could as easily at first as at last have given this reply to our sister’s queries- but I thought the times required something else—and I was not mistaken. I have no doubt but it will yet appear to all that I have pursued in this the more useful and salutary course.

Our Eastern brethren were indeed, I opine, hasty and precipitate enough in expressing themselves—almost indeed before they had time to hear and consider the whole matter. I wish they had been as prompt on another occasion, and I should not have been addressed on this subject by the worthy sister so often named. But we are all learning and progressing towards perfection. If any of them, and not all, wish their communications to appear in this work, accompanied with a few pertinent remarks, I am in duty bound, according to my plan, to publish some of them.

I do not indeed blame them altogether for being prompt; for I had rather be an hour too soon as half an hour too late; yet I think some resolutions which I have received, were, upon the whole, rather premature.

May the Lord bless all the holy brethren, and give them understanding in all things.

(emphasis added). The full text of Campbell’s Lunenburg articles may be found here. It’s fascinating reading. For our present purposes, it’s enough to note that Campbell certainly didn’t agree with either the view that only those baptized as believers by immersion are saved, nor that there’s no need to invite the unimmersed to be baptized. And in that respect, he and I are in agreement. On the other hand, I can’t find any justification for treating people who’ve been saved, who’ve received the Spirit, and who will be with us in heaven as strangers to the Kingdom.

My views are laid out in detail in Born of Water.

About Jay F Guin

My name is Jay Guin, and I’m a retired elder. I wrote The Holy Spirit and Revolutionary Grace about 18 years ago. I’ve spoken at the Pepperdine, Lipscomb, ACU, Harding, and Tulsa lectureships and at ElderLink. My wife’s name is Denise, and I have four sons, Chris, Jonathan, Tyler, and Philip. I have two grandchildren. And I practice law.
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12 Responses to Backgrounds of the Restoration Movement: Baptism, Primitivism, and Heresy, Part 2

  1. Randall says:

    Leroy Garrett comments on this letter and John Mark Hicks has made reference to it as well. (I am sure there are many other that also address the topic.) It is a shame so few on the CofC are even aware of the letter. Brother Garrett and JMH assert the letter was written by a woman associated with John Thomas – JMH can give you her name.

    John Thomas was heterodox on several basic doctrines of the Christian faith and per Wiki "John Thomas believed that scripture, as God's word, did not sustain a multiplicity of differing beliefs, and challenged the leaders to continue with the process of restoring first century Christian beliefs and correct interpretation through a process of debate." He asserted that ONLY those immersed were saved and per Wiki "…he was baptised twice[12], the second time after renouncing the beliefs he previously held. … It was this renunciation of his former beliefs that eventually led to him being disfellowshipped by the Restoration Movement. "

    Garrett suggests that Campbell had a significant unity movement on his hands (that he wanted to protect) and wanted the controversy to die down but it seems John Thomas did not. Thomas eventually left the Stone Campbell movement and become the founder of the Christadelpians (brothers in Christ). I think he was forced into choosing a name by the US government in order to gain conscientious objector status. If you Google christidelphians you will be able to learn more about him/them – try this site: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christadelphians

  2. Royce says:

    Jay,

    I completely agree with your last paragraph. And, I agree with Campbell. I don't agree with those who make bapitsm the rigid test of salvation.

    Campbell is right that the gates of hell had prevailed if there were no Christians in the world from the 1st century up the early 1800's. In fact, by most of the traditionalists' teaching on salvation and baptism Campbell himself was not a Christian before he was immersed.

    The Restoration Movement was for many years exclusive to the United States. Is there any question that God had a people in other parts of the world while the Restoration fathers were calling for the unity of believers in America?

    I fear for those whose sectarianism has led them to trust church affiliation and or baptism instead of Christ alone for justification.

    Thanks for all the hard work you do to present these profitable posts.

    Royce

  3. adam davis says:

    excellent post, I must admit, I only really read half of it, then saw how long it was and skimmed through the rest. Campbell reflects what I've come to believe over the past few years. For example. . .

    "In reply to this conscientious sister, I observe, that if there be no Christians in the Protestant sects, there are certainly none among the Romanists, none among the Jews, Turks, Pagans; and therefore no Christians in the world except ourselves, or such of us as keep, or strive to keep, all the commandments of Jesus. Therefore, for many centuries there has been no church of Christ, no Christians in the world; and the promises concerning the everlasting kingdom of Messiah have failed, and the gates of hell have prevailed against his church! This cannot be; and therefore there are Christians among the sects.

    But who is a Christian? I answer, Every one that believes in his heart that Jesus of Nazareth is the Messiah, the son of God; repents of his sins, and obeys him in all things according to his measure of knowledge of his will. …

    I cannot, therefore, make any one duty the standard of Christian state or character, not even immersion into the name of the father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit"

    I agree.

    In working with those in the Restoration movement fellowship/s who would disagree, including people in my own family. The first thing they must be convinced of is that all who have been immersed, regardless of denominational affiliation, regardless of their understanding of baptism have been "baptized into Christ" They have to realize that sectarianism is our doing and not God's. They have to see them as brethren first before they'll consider what they believe. This step itself can be really difficult depending on how deeply indoctrinated into the sectarianism and legalism of the extreme-"conservative" wing of CofC they are.

    Secondly, once they realize all who have been immersed, then you can start working toward showing them that those "pious unimmersed" are saved too by grace through faith. Again, Campbell himself said. . .

    "I cannot, therefore, make any one duty the standard of Christian state or character"

    And also. . .

    "These very zealous brethren gave countenance to the popular clamor that we make baptism a saviour, or a passport to heaven, disparaging all the private and social virtues of the professing public"

    This is true. Many in Churches of Christ have an idol, and that idol is baptism, that and their "pattern." They get together and worship these two gods they have made for themselves every Sunday and Wednesday.

    What may be the hardest thing to convince a "hard-liner" of is that it's not the act [of baptism] that saves, but faith in Jesus Christ. Baptism itself is a faith-based response to the saving work of Christ done at the cross. But once they are convinced that's it's not the act that saves, then they will be open to accepting the unimmersed as brethren, however, still encourage them to fulfill Christ's command to be baptized in the right mode.

    I believe it is very wise to use Campbell's own words when discussing these things with hardline "Campbelites." In the "conservative" wing of Churches of Christ, Alexander Campbel is revered almost the same way Roman Catholics revere the pope. To question Alexander Campbell is to question God Himself with this faction has been my observance. This over-exhaltation can be used to an advantage as it's great to meet people where they are.

    P.S. What is ironic is that their own "pope" condemns their actions and attitudes. Again, Campbell says, in his definition of heresy [paraphrase], that to impose one's opinions on people [i.e. You can't use the instrument] is heresy.

  4. Todd Collier says:

    Love the material but very much doubt its effect on the ongoing debate. Among the sects ours is unique in being able to completely ignore its own history.

    I was raised in the churches of west Tennessee and Mississippi and other than bristlng when we were called "Campbellites" the names of these men never came up, nor did their teaching.

    So many of us fail to realize the great gulf that exists between our educated academics in the larger urban churches and the memberships of the more rural congregations who came of age in the last century. (Rural does not mean uneducated, but it does represent a very different view of life and "religion.")

  5. Dan Smith says:

    Jay, you ended with, "On the other hand, I can’t find any justification for treating people who’ve been saved, who’ve received the Spirit, and who will be with us in heaven as strangers to the Kingdom."

    It sounds like you expect us to KNOW who is saved — something known only by God; know who has received the HS — which in NT was evidenced by miracles ONLY; and who will get to heaven — again something only known by God.

    I am so very thankful that neither you nor I need to make such judgments. We can GUESS, therefore offer the Gospel to them, but it is just that — a guess.

  6. Jay Guin says:

    Randall,

    Thanks for the additional information.

    I can't say how shocked I was when I first learned of the Lunenburg letter correspondence (I've gotten over it 🙂 ). And I continue to be shocked at how severely people still take passages out of context in order to force Campbell into their preconceptions.

    I'm thrilled that the internet makes it easy to look these things up for yourself.

  7. Jay Guin says:

    Ironic that publications such as the Gospel Advocate extol Campbell and then announce doctrines that damn him — as though he were an enemy of God. I mean, by current GA teaching, Campbell's baptism was ineffective and he's roasting in hell.

  8. Jay Guin says:

    Todd,

    My experience is much the same. All I learned about Campbell growing up and while attending Lipscomb is that I'm not a "Campbellite"! I lived in Sewell Hall, dated a girl living at Fanning Hall, all on the campus of David Lipscomb College, and graduated having no idea who these people were.

    The one thing I knew is we students were banned from growing beards even though Lipscomb had a full beard.

    However, conservative publications, such as the Gospel Advocate, have recently taken to honoring our spiritual ancestors, such as Campbell and Stone, which I hope opens up the dialogue a bit.

  9. Jay Guin says:

    I don't recall the early church having much problem distinguishing the saved from the lost. 1 John is an epistle written to tell us how to know that we are saved. See my posts at What the Bible actually says about apostasy: 1 John and Walking in the Light, Chapters 1 – 2, by Jay Guin and What the Bible actually says about apostasy: 1 John and Walking in the Light, Chapters 3 – 5, by Jay Guin.

    And I question the theory that the presence of the Spirit is shown solely through miracles. It’s also shown through gifts (1 Cor 12, Rom 12, Eph 4) and fruit of the Spirit (Gal 5).

    And it’s shown by circumcised hearts. What the Bible actually says about apostasy: The Spirit’s work in the Christian, by Jay Guin

    We don’t have perfect knowledge of who is lost or saved, as some will fool us and some will appear spiritually dead when they are only in need of spiritual CPR. But we’ll get it right most of the time — otherwise how do we know who is qualified to be an elder or a minister? How do we know whom to convert?

  10. Dan,
    I don’t presume to speak for Jay, but I took it as he was speaking along the lines of Gal. 5.22-23 – Fruits of the Spirit are very visible and can be known.

    Jay,
    One question: when do you sleep? Keep up the good work.

    Because of Christ,
    Steve Valentine

  11. Ken says:

    I seem to recall reading of a Baptist preacher in the late 1800s and early 1900s trying to get Fanning Yater Tant to debate the subject of the Scripturalness (using CoC standards) of Campbell's baptism. I don't remember if the offer was ever accepted.

  12. Nick Gill says:

    They will know you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.

    No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God lives in us, and his love is perfected in us; by this we know that we abide in Him and He in us, because He has given us of his Spirit.

    Sounds like a pretty straight-forward message, Dan.

    And Jay, I'm not sold that AC is saying that the unimmersed are "strangers from the kingdom." I think he's pretty clearly (well, as clearly as a Campbell could say) saying that the fullness of the blessings of the kingdom come to the immersed. How can that be? Because, as AC wrote, the *promise* of salvation, clearly-stated by Jesus and the apostles from the earliest days of the church, is to the immersed believer. Confidence is a blessing of the kingdom, that confidence wherewith one may point to the "word of the Lord" and say, "This is the promise of God."

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