A Concern About Infant
Inclusion in the Covenant of Grace
I have posted this in order to keep straight some heretical teaching in
comparison to the Reformed Doctrine on the issues of infants.
The
New Catechism on Infant Inclusion in the Covenant
A Short Defense Against the heresy of the Auburn Four
and the heretical Theology of the New Perspective
by Dr. C. Matthew McMahon
I
received an email from a concerned brother that the
New
Catechism on Infant Inclusion in the Covenant I have posted
here may have “connotations” of the Auburn Four’s theology.
I want to express a deep concern here.
The Auburn Four’s Theology is heretical.
If they do not repent of it, they will be damned for believing
it. I repudiate their
“works salvation.” The
New Catechism I have out, though, in no way represents or purports the
same ideas as the Auburn Four.
It
should also be noted that my good brother who emailed me is a Baptist,
and that already creates some tension on doctrinal differences around
this subject as well. But I love him nonetheless.
Brian
Schwertly has summarized the Auburn Four position in six points:
1.
The Auburn system perverts the doctrine of the atonement by
rendering the blood of Christ non-efficacious in most cases and by
separating the foundation or ground of salvation (the active and passive
obedience of Jesus) from its application. Further, a number of
statements at the Auburn conference can only be interpreted as a denial
of justification alone.
2.
The Auburn speakers repeatedly violate standard orthodox
principles of biblical interpretation.
3.
The Auburn paradigm destroys the biblical understanding of
assurance by placing man's hope in a baptism that
"regenerates" but does not really save anyone unless they
receive the additional gift of perseverance.
4.
The Auburn "theologians" adhere to a non-Reformed
(i.e., Lutheran—high church Episcopalian style) understanding of
baptism. These men would say that they totally reject an ex opere
operato understanding of the sacraments. Nevertheless, their
position places them squarely in the Romish camp because they repeatedly
assert that baptism is efficacious apart from faith.
5.
The Auburn theology rejects the orthodox distinction between the
visible and invisible church in favor of the idea that everyone baptized
is saved, forgiven, elect, and united to Christ; but many of the loved,
forgiven saints end up in the pit of hell because they are not given the
gift of perseverance.
6.
The Auburn paradigm makes continued faithfulness to the covenant
an instrument of justification along with faith.
According
to the Auburn theology, people who are baptized and united to Christ are
forgiven and loved by Him even though they are not elect and fall away.
Another feature of the Auburn theology that perverts the doctrine
of the atonement is the idea that non-elect people who are baptized are
said to have their sins forgiven even though they do not persevere and
thus go to hell. Baptismal regeneration is one of the pillars of the whole
Auburn system.
Doug
Wilson writes: "But the Reformed have their own set of problems
here.” Doug Wilson, Reformed Is Not Enough: Recovering the Objectivity
of the Covenant (Moscow, ID: Canon Press, 2002), 132.
Wilson
is acting and teaching in contrary to the Reformed view.
That is why he is partaking in a “new” perspective.
He is teaching something different than Reformed orthodoxy and
reinterpreting the Westminster Confession of Faith as a Roman Catholic
document by inserting new meaning.
This
heretical view is complete nonsense, and it has absolutely nothing
to do with the New
Catechism I have posted.
My
good brother who emailed me posted these statements that seemed similar
to the ones on the New Catechism. He thought I should be concerned:
1.
“Following the Biblical model, it seems that we must view
fellow church members as elect and regenerate and, at the same time,
hold before them the dangers of falling away.”
2.
“This covenant is made with believers and their children.”
3.
”When someone is united to the Church by baptism, he is
incorporated into Christ and into His body; he becomes bone of Christ's
bone and flesh of His flesh (Eph. 5:30). Until and unless that person
breaks covenant, he is reckoned among God's elect and regenerate
saints.”
4.
”Once baptized, an individual may be truly called a
"Christian" because he is a member of the household of faith
and the body of Christ.“
Though
these seem as though they are similar, the context of their theological
stance is quite different – i.e. heretical.
Let me explain.
Statement
one is an orthodox statement taken by itself.
Every church views their fellow church members as elect and
regenerate, otherwise they would not allow them in their church as
members. Baptists and
Presbyterians agree on this. Presbyterianism
makes a distinction between the visible and invisible church so that the
unregenerate who covenant with the church actually do not partake of the
benefits of election as the Covenant of Grace is only efficacious with
the elect alone (See the last 5 questions of my Catechism).
However, the Auburn Four believe them to be SAVED NO MATTER WHAT
because of their baptism. They
believe in baptismal regeneration.
That makes this first statement quite different in one
perspective than the Reformed Position.
Statement
2 is correct as well. Baptists disagree, and Presbyterians, again, see a two-fold
division between the invisible and visible church. There is no problem here.
The Auburn Four, though, believe their children are in the
Covenant of Grace efficaciously, not presumptively. Quotes below demonstrate they reject presumptive regeneration
(the Reformed and Calvinist view).
Statement
3 does not mean that they presume the person to be in fellowship, but
that they actually are partakers of the covenant of grace = they are
accounted, or reckoned righteous by their baptism, and further works
along the way. This is
contrary to anything in the New Catechism.
Statement
4 seems to be what is said in the Catechism, but the term “truly” is
the giveaway. Presuming a
Christian and making a judgment call that they are in fact TRULY a
Christian are two completely different things.
The Auburn Four, and likeminded heretics, are purporting a
salvation by works Gospel, and have gone back to Rome.
From the historical quotes alone that I pose after the Catechism,
it should be readily apparent that I do not hold their views and that I
am being consistent with historical Calvinism.
Here
are some of the quotes on the new perspective as well as on the Auburn
Four’s theology:
“...covenantal
nomism is the view that one’s place in God’s plan is established on
the basis of the covenant and that the covenant requires as the proper
response of man his obedience to its commandments, while providing means
of atonement for transgression … Obedience maintains one’s position
in the covenant, but it does not earn God’s grace as such …
Righteousness in Judaism is a term which implies the maintenance of
status among the group of the elect” (Sanders, Paul, 75, 420, 544,
quoted in J. Dunn, ‘The New Perspective on Paul’ in Jesus, Paul and
the Law, 186).
In
talking of ‘being justified’ here [i.e., Gal. 2:15,16] Paul is not
thinking of a distinctively initiatory act of God.
God’s justification is not his act in first making his covenant
with Israel, or in initially accepting someone into the covenant people.
God’s justification is rather God’s acknowledgement that
someone is in the covenant – whether that is an initial
acknowledgement, or a repeated action of God (God’s saving acts), or
his final vindication of his people… ‘To be justified’ in Paul
cannot, therefore, be treated simply as an entry or initiation formula;
nor is it possible to draw a clear line of distinction between Paul’s
usage and the typically Jewish covenant usage.
(J. Dunn, Jesus,
Paul and the Law, 190).
In
his summary chapter on justification in What St. Paul Really Said,
Wright says: “Justification… is not a matter of how someone enters
the community of the true people of God, but of how you tell who belongs
to that community… ‘Justification’
in the first century was not about how someone might establish a
relationship with God… It was not so much about ‘getting in,’ or
indeed about ‘staying in,’ as about ‘how you could tell who was
in.’ In standard
Christian theological language, it wasn’t so much about so
harmartiology as about ecclesiology; not so much about salvation as
about the church (p. 119, author’s italics).”
"But
we also know from our Bibles that there is only one church, one Lord,
one faith, one baptism. So we've got two churches with two different
rosters of names.... Now if you've got two churches existing at the same
time with different names on their membership rolls, the question that
comes up, and it may not come up consciously, but the question is: which
one is the real church?" (Doug Wilson, "Visible and Invisible
Church Revisited," tape 2).
When
we say visible and invisible, we divide into categories, visible is down
here [i.e., on earth] and invisible is an ethereal church in the
heavenlies [i.e., in heaven]. We create an ontological [i.e.,
self-contained or totally separate] division between visible down here
and invisible in heaven" ("Visible and Invisible Church
Revisited," tape 2)
"How
could you know you are in Him? God gave you the seal and sign of
baptism. He gave you that rite that brought you into Christ and you can
look and you can trust that God's promises are objective" (John
Barach, "Covenant and Election," tape 6).[
"The
Bible doesn't know about a distinction between being internally in the
covenant and really in the covenant, and being only externally in the
covenant, just being in the sphere of the covenant. The Bible speaks
about reality, the efficacy of baptism" (John Barach,
"Covenant History,"
"Raise
your right hand if you knew that the Westminster Confession taught
baptismal regeneration.... Baptism means that the one baptized has a
sign and seal of the covenant of grace, the one baptized has been
grafted into Christ, he has the sign and seal of regeneration,
forgiveness of sins, and the obligation to walk in newness of
life." Doug Wilson, Reformed Is Not Enough (Moscow, ID: Canon
Press, 2002), 103.
"Traditionally,
the Reformed have said, we have to view our children as presumptively
elect or presumptively regenerate, and therefore, Christian, if we are
willing to take the Scriptures as face value, there is no presumption
necessary. Just take the Bible. And this is true, of course, because by
the baptism, by baptism the Spirit joins us to Christ since he is the
elect one and the Church is the elect people, we are joined to his body.
We therefore are elect. Since he is the justified one, we are justified
in him. Since he is the beloved one, we are beloved in him. Since he was
saved from his sin in death...so are we" (Steve Wilkins,
"Halfway Covenant," tape 11).
"The
Bible teaches us that baptism unites us [Wilkins believes that baptism
is efficacious to everyone baptized] to Christ and by his, and to his
body the power of the spirit. By one spirit we were all baptized into
one body whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free, we've all been
made to drink of one Spirit. Paul says that at baptism you are clothed
with Christ Jesus. For as many of you as are baptized into Christ, have
put on Christ. Union with Christ is a real, vital blessed union. The
clothes make the man. With our union with Christ, we have all spiritual
blessings. Union with Christ is union with the church, his body"
(Steve Wilkins, "Halfway Covenant," tape 11).
In
light of the above atrocity to sound doctrine, here are some points to
consider:
1)
The New Catechism
on Infant Inclusion in the Covenant does not teach baptismal
regeneration. That is
heresy. Reformed Theology teaches that the benefits of the covenant
of grace are only efficaciously conferred by the Holy Spirit to the
elect. End of story.
2)
At the same time that the benefits of the Covenant of Grace are
only efficaciously conferred by the Holy Spirit to the elect,
Genesis 17 is plain that Abraham presumed God’s salvation on Isaac
before he was ever born. That
was based on promise, not circumcision. That was by faith in the
Word, not by works in circumcision.
3)
Circumcision and baptism do not save. Period.
They are outward signs that are efficacious only for the elect.
4)
Christian parents do not know who the elect are.
In view of this, instead of resting on pessimism, they rest on
the hope of the promises to their children.
The New Catechism on Infant Inclusion in the Covenant
presumes children are saved, as Abraham did, but do not know whether
they will be.
5)
The New Catechism
on Infant Inclusion in the Covenant does not teach that infants
of believers are infallibly saved.
Hopefully
this will keep things in perspective.
Sometimes the truth mixed with error is harder to discern and
takes time to weed out. The
New Catechism on Infant Inclusion in the Covenant purports the
Reformed Position that was held formally from the time of the Reformation,
up and through English Puritanism, and by the Princeton Divines.
AMEN. |