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A Bridge Too Far Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith I want to start with Acts 20:28-30. These words, of course, are part of Paul's farewell address to the elders of the church at Ephesus, but what he tells those elders stands by example as a sound instruction and a vital warning to you, and to me, and to all true pastors everywhere, because our duty, like these elders in Ephesus, is to be shepherds to the flock of God. Our task is simple: to lead, feed, and protect the church. Here is how Paul says it in Acts 20:28-30: Be on guard for yourselves and for all the flock, among which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to shepherd the church of God which He purchased with His own blood. 29 "I know that after my departure savage wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock; 30 and from among your own selves men will arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away the disciples after them. Now, the imagery of sheep and flocks and folds and shepherds is of course one of the most common ways Scripture portrays the people of God. And that is a rich metaphor, including all the necessary elements of pastoral care—feeding, leading, guiding, and guarding. But surely you notice in that Acts 20 passage that Paul's central concern in first-century Ephesus was the duty of guarding the flock from wolves—savage wolves, as he describes them. And this is not talking only about overtly cultish false teachers, like Mormons and Jehovah's witnesses. Paul very pointedly and emphatically says he knows (and I gather he could foresee this by some infallible apostolic gift of prophesy) he knows that threats will arise from within the very body of men he was speaking to. These were the Ephesian elders!—seemingly good, orthodox, spiritually-qualified men, but evidently some of them were Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith secretly harboring heretical beliefs. And they were just waiting for Paul to move on so that they could begin teaching their own ideas. Paul says the elders collectively were to be on guard and remain vigilant against this serious danger of false teaching that would come from within their own ranks. Now, may I point out something that ought to be obvious? You can't maintain that kind of vigilance (which is to say you cannot be a faithful pastor) if your primary concern is large-scale bridgebuilding. If it is your goal to forge a public show of solidarity with as many characters as possible in the current evangelical menagerie. In fact, I would say that if you are more consumed with the goal of seeking fellowship across denominational and confessional boundaries than with the task of protecting the flock over whom God has given you oversight, you might need to rethink your priorities in a more biblical light. My session is titled "A Bridge Too Far: Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith." It is my conviction that most evangelicals and even many younger fundamentalists are far too concerned about building bridges and forging coalitions and not concerned enough about defending the faith and guarding the boundaries of our fellowship. That's not a popular or politically-correct position, I know. But I believe it's biblical. I see lots of biblical imperatives that echo what Paul said in Acts 20 and nothing anywhere that talks about finding common ground with the circumcision party or contextualizing our message to make it more appealing to people who were being influenced by incipient gnostic philosophies. Now there are a host of questions we would need to raise and deal with in order to do full justice to this whole subject—like What determines the boundaries and who guards them? Are the boundaries flexible, and if so, how much? How do we keep the lines of demarcation clear and secure—free from the encroachment of enemies on the outside, and protected from those on the inside who constantly want to redefine every standard or break down every barrier? 18 A Bridge Too Far Obviously, we don't have time to explore all of those questions here. I've dealt with some of those issues in other places (and frequently at my blog), so this message is really intended only as an abbreviated introduction to a much larger set of issues. But I am excited about this whole topic, and especially excited to see conservative evangelicals and sober-minded fundamentalists jointly asking these and similar questions—because we're talking about issues that have divided fundamentalists and evangelicals for almost a century, and the answers to those questions have become even more complicated and confusing in these postmodern times. Now again: my position is that defending the faith and guarding the boundaries of Christian fellowship is more vital (and more biblical) and more noble task than forging political or ecumenical alliances across denominational lines. I realize that is an unpopular position, and just hearing it makes some people angry. To a large degree that's because postmodern values have dethroned biblical virtues and replaced them with nice-sounding substitutes like diversity, tolerance, epistemological humility, vulnerability, uncertainty, and whatnot. The idea of "boundaries" frankly doesn't sound very nice to postmodern ears. Boundaries? You mean you want to build walls to exclude people who don't see eye to eye with you on doctrine? You're going to make dogma a test of fellowship? You want a closed circle around your faith community that relegates different beliefs to the outside? Don't you care about diversity? That's a common attitude these days, and even among supposedly conservative evangelicals, there seems to be a lot of stress on bridge-building, cooperation, co-belligerency, and the forging of alliances. There is almost no interest in or tolerance for the task of guarding boundaries. We're conditioned by our culture to cringe at language like that. Today's stylish evangelicals likewise try very hard to discourage us from even thinking in such terms. There's an intriguing article at The Gospel Coalition website that came out in the aftermath of the recent controversy over James MacDonald's Elephant Room conference. This document is 19 Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith jointly authored by D. A. Carson and Tim Keller, and it's titled "Reflections on Confessionalism, Boundaries, and Discipline." Here's an excerpt: From the beginning [The Gospel Coalition] has distinguished between a boundary-bounded set and a center-bounded set. In the former, you establish boundaries to determine who is "in" and who is "outside" the set—whether the set of true believers, or the set of faithful Presbyterians, or the set of evangelicals, or any other set. For the boundary to have any hope of doing its job, it has to be well defined. If the definitions are sloppy, the boundary keeps getting pushed farther and farther out. . . . [and after giving some examples, the document sums up the point by saying:] in boundary-bounded sets, the attempt is made to provide a boundary that defines who is "in" and who is "out"— and there is usually quite a bit of pressure to keep expanding that boundary, with the result that it easily becomes painfully porous, even meaningless. They seem to be suggesting that well-defined boundaries are impossible (or at least impractical), and whoever the designated boundary-keepers are, they always keep expanding the boundaries. And let's be honest: in 20th century evangelicalism, that was absolutely true, and it has been a huge problem. The de facto boundary-keepers in the evangelical realm are institutions like schools and seminaries, most of whom are infected with a pathological craving for academic prestige. And then you've got Christianity Today magazine, which suffers from the same craving for worldly recognition and accolades. And CT also—like any magazine—has a rather self-serving agenda to expand its constituency as much as possible in order to increase the pool of subscribers. So their definition of evangelicalism gradually expands. And it finally got so expansive that when CT's 50th anniversary came around, they published an article noting how difficult it is these days 18 A Bridge Too Far to define the expression evangelical—but, they said, they believe the dominant characteristic of evangelicalism is "diversity." That's hardly an honest idea of what the term has historically stood for, but that's how Christianity Today sees it. So, if we assume the same philosophy that has guided evangelical (and especially neo-evangelical) trends for the past half-century or more, I think we have to concede at least this much of the Keller-Carson argument: boundaries per se aren't sufficient to safeguard the purity of biblical fellowship and historic evangelical convictions. Keller and Carson then propose an alternative: Let's try to forge a league of like-minded evangelicals who are held together in a different way. Let's form a coalition that functions as a centerbounded set. Here's how Carson and Keller say it: Center-bounded sets don't worry too much about who is "in" and "out" at the periphery. Instead, there is a robust definition at the center. . . . [In The Gospel Coalition, it is an officially designated conclave of council members who affirm the "definition"— basically an abbreviated confession of faith with doctrines that are deemed essential. And theoretically, at least, as far as the Council is concerned, Carson and Keller say,] There we expect unreserved commitment to these foundation documents. As for others, we often have to explain that people cannot "join" the Coalition. Individuals and churches may choose to identify themselves with us and use the thousands of resources on our site, but Council members do not fall into paroxysms of doubt as to whether or not this individual or that church truly belongs to TGC: we are not a denomination, and we do not have the resources to engage in the kind of vetting at the periphery that a boundary-bounded set demands. At the margins there are many who love part of what we stand for and not other parts. They too are welcome to use our material. At the center, however, we expect robust allegiance. . . . at the center there is unqualified accountability. 19 Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith Now I don't know about you, but to me it sounds as if the real difference between a boundary-bounded set and a center-bounded set is that the confessional boundaries in this center-bounded set are drawn around a much smaller body—an elite group (the Council). The idea seems to be that if we're drawn together by common convictions at the center, that will be sufficient to hold a movement or institution together and keep everything else on target. As long as the center holds, we won't worry about the boundaries. Now I come from a line of Oklahoman cattlemen, and some very similar issues came into play on my great-grandfather's ranch. It's true that a large water tank and several bales of hay at the center of the ranch will pull the herd together. But trust me: if you don't also have fences with cattle guards at the open gates, the cows will very quickly wander out onto the interstate, and somebody's going to get hurt. And besides that, the larger your herd, the more work you have to do to maintain the fences. And let's not forget that the biblical metaphor for the church is a flock of sheep, not a herd of cattle. When you're dealing with sheep, the need for a sturdy sheepfold with a narrow door and a secure perimeter is even greater not only to keep the sheep on the ranch, but also for their protection against predators. Secure, clearly defined, carefully-defended boundaries are essential, not only to keep the lambs from wandering away at night; more importantly, it makes it harder for predators to get at the sheep. The Carson-Keller approach seems to suggest that if the elite shepherds agree to stay together at the center, then the flock will naturally be drawn to them and will therefore be sufficiently safe. I'm concerned about what that means for lambs that are prone to wander—which, by the way, includes every lamb I have ever encountered. Now think this through with me: In an organization or movement operating as a center-bounded set, rank-and-file participants and hangers-on at the periphery are free to teach or represent whatever ideas they choose. And yet as long as they aren't part of the central council, they can still remain in fellowship 18 A Bridge Too Far with the group, unchallenged and unmolested by anyone in the group, because technically, the group isn't offering them any kind of formal membership. The central council does encourage and even solicit their fellowship and participation, but since there are no formal members in the group outside the elite council (and therefore no membership requirements), they figure they can avoid the nasty problems of discipline or ecclesiastical separation in the larger movement. In the words of Carson and Keller, they "don't worry too much about who is 'in' and 'out' at the periphery." Now it should not be necessary to explain to people who frequent the Sharper Iron blog or participate in the Standpoint Conference why that's a Really Bad Idea and will ultimately prove to be an unworkable philosophy. Put the center-set philosophy into practice and frankly, it looks very much like the same approach that has been followed in microcosm by almost every American seminary that ever drifted away from its original doctrinal moorings, starting with America's first actual seminary, Andover Seminary. Andover was founded in 1807 because Harvard College had been infiltrated with socinianism. Harvard had put a Unitarian on their faculty, and evangelicals pulled out in obedience to 2 John 10 (and several similar commands in Scripture). They launched Andover to train pastors for biblical ministry. The Andover faculty were criticized for their separatism. This was a breach of academic freedom. They were being intellectually naive, allowing old-school doctrinal standards rather than the latest "scholarship" to determine what they taught. They were derided as unsophisticated and backward, and those criticisms stung. And almost immediately, Andover began to compromise—refusing to guard the boundaries that were set up to define the seminary at its founding. In the name of academic freedom, they adopted a policy that frankly looks and feels very much like Carson and Keller's center-set philosophy. Within half a century, Andover followed Harvard's drift, and by the end of the century, liberalism became so much a fixture at Andover that starting in 1908, Andover seminary and Harvard's 19 Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith divinity school shared the same campus. Today both schools are hotbeds of the rankest kinds of Socinianism. Other evangelical seminaries have had similarly short shelflives—and the classic example in the 20th century was Fuller Theological Seminary. (And of course Fuller was by no means the only example). How does this happen? It's not because these institutions are founded without boundaries, but because the boundaries are not carefully maintained and defended. Enemies chip away at the underpinnings of the boundaries, and if they manage to breach the perimeter at any point, everything is up for grabs in very short order. It should be obvious that clear, well-defended boundaries are vitally important. But this is not a popular idea in a culture conditioned to think values like openness and bridge-building and unfettered liberty are inherently virtuous, and there's something oppressive and heavy-handed in securing our borders. That's exactly the same mentality that makes our politicians think there's something unsavory about requiring proof of citizenship before we let someone vote in our elections. It's the same mind-set that tells us "undocumented worker" is a nicer term than "illegal alien." It's one of the most pervasive dogmas of postmodernity. This is vital to see: the reason so many evangelical institutions drift into liberalism is not because their position isn't defined by any boundaries; it's not usually because their doctrinal statements are not sound enough or clear enough. It is because the boundaries are simply not defended diligently enough. I've lectured elsewhere on how fundamentalism managed to make a mess of its own movement, starting almost as soon as the movement was launched, in the early part of the 20th century. But the fundamentalists didn't get everything wrong. They were right to insist that we ought to contend earnestly for the core truths of Christianity. I'll go further: we ought to be prepared if necessary to sacrifice our lives rather than deny those truths. That kind of commitment to the essential doctrines of the Christian faith is the central fundamentalist idea, and it is also one 18 A Bridge Too Far of the defining principles that distinguishes authentic faith from the false and temporary varieties of belief. Now: I'm intrigued by one of the arguments made in the early paragraphs of the Carson-Keller article. This comment comes right after they define what they mean by the term "boundary-bounded sets." (That sounds like a horrible solecism, but I think we get the sense of it.) In the process of explaining why they think it's better to nail down the center than to defend the outer perimeter, they say this: Sometimes this [boundary-bounded] way of thinking leads to hopelessly bad questions such as "What is the least I must believe in order to be called an evangelical?"—the answer to which often generates reductionistic approaches to evangelism and horribly emaciated lowest-common-denominator versions of the gospel. I certainly share their disdain for reductionistic evangelicalism. But it seems to me that their idea of center-bounded fellowship is even more prone to reductionism. What are the fewest points of doctrine we can put at the center and regard as essential? Can we expand our constituency and strengthen our coalition by reducing the size and complexity of our statement of faith—by consigning more things to the category of secondary matters? You could see that very tendency at work more than 15 years ago when Chuck Colson published his book The Body—in which he insisted that the Apostles' Creed is a sufficient statement of essential Christianity and any doctrine not expressly named in the Apostles' Creed should be regarded as secondary. That, of course, would relegate virtually every key point of soteriology to the realm of non-essentials, starting with the doctrine of justification by faith and the principle of sola fide. That in turn would mean that the Protestant Reformation was much ado over almost nothing. (Which, I think, is what Colson himself thought.) But Colson's proposal is a very popular idea—sort of a clumsy application of the view C. S. Lewis took in Mere Christianity. 19 Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith But it quickly gets worse, because in postmodern times, even something as historic as the Trinitarianism of the Apostles' Creed is subjected to each individual's personal re-interpretation. The Gospel Coalition is less than a decade old, and already the definition at its center has been put to the test in a major way by one of its own council members. James MacDonald has over the past two years invited several speakers whose commitment to the center-set doctrines of The Gospel Coalition is questionable—most notably, T. D. Jakes, who not only has substituted prosperity teaching in place of the true gospel—Christ crucified; he also balks at giving an unqualified affirmation of historic Trinitarian doctrine. And in fact both his theological background and his most recent statements on the issue give reason to suspect that he actually holds to a slightly modified brand of modalism. I know for a fact that most of the men on The Gospel Coalition council were deeply troubled by MacDonald's position on this, and he ultimately resigned from The Gospel Coalition, apparently under pressure. But the matter was handled as quietly as possible, with a careful veneer of public affirmation all around. It was clear that the Council regarded the necessity of even that much discipline as a distasteful necessity which they did not care to discuss candidly and openly. This idea that bridge-building is always good and boundarydefending is an unsavory—almost shameful—thing is quite out of harmony with what we see in the Scriptures. It was certainly a good thing for the Galatians that Paul did not take that attitude when Peter needed to be confronted about his compromise with the Judaizers. Indeed, much of Paul's public ministry was devoted to the defense of the faith against agents of Satan who came disguised as angels of light. At no time did Paul propose any effort to build bridges or establish collegial relations with any false teacher. His own ministry was a reflection of what he urged those Ephesian elders to do: "Be on guard." I love what Paul told Titus about these "unruly and vain talkers and deceivers, [e]specially they of the circumcision." Find common ground with them? Build 18 A Bridge Too Far bridges of collegiality and mutual respect and try to win them over by being winsome? No: "[Their] mouths must be stopped." So there is a place for clear, well-defended boundaries that eliminate wolves and other threats to the flock. Now, because most of you are fundamentalists, let me give the balance: Unity within the flock is likewise vital. Jesus prayed for unity in John 17—and he had in mind not merely a deeply spiritual but somehow invisible brand of unity. He said a public display of our unity in Him and our mutual love for one another was the single most powerful apologetic for the gospel. That puts a premium on true, spiritual unity. I love the idea of gospel unity—unity built on a gospel foundation. In that regard I wholeheartedly support the stated aims of both The Gospel Coalition and Together for the Gospel. I'm grateful that they have focused so much attention on the gospel, and I'm profoundly thankful for the work they have done to stress and clarify core gospel truths—many of which are precisely the doctrines that (5 or 6 years ago) were under heavy assault by the Emergent fad and in the writings of people like Brian McLaren and Steve Chalke. I agree, of course, that the gospel perfectly sums up the core truths that bind together all who are truly in Christ. But the success or failure of gospel-centered fellowship still hinges on our understanding of and commitment to a true, unadulterated, biblical understanding of the gospel. We know from both Scripture and the hard-fought lessons of church history that not everyone who says he is committed to the gospel really is. Not everyone who claims to stand with us in affirming gospel truth is really interested in doing the work of the Great Commission. Not everyone who signs an evangelical confession of faith actually preaches the gospel. And when you have organizations as large and as successful as Together for the Gospel and The Gospel Coalition, there will always be lots of people who don't really agree with the original goals of the movement but who nevertheless want to 19 Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith identify with it so that they can influence the multitudes who are drawn to the movement. And the consequence of that reality is this: If we truly want to stand together for the gospel, we have to be willing to defend the gospel. Earnestly contending for the faith is a duty just as needful and just as urgent as the need for unity among authentic believers. And the two aren't mutually exclusive—they aim at precisely the same goal: "that [we] all speak the same thing, and that there be no divisions among [us]; but that [we] be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment." That's 1 Corinthians 1:10, and it describes a kind of unity that is possible only when the boundaries of our fellowship are carefully guarded to keep out wolves and interlopers, and when we are well-taught in all the essential doctrines of the faith once delivered to the saints. In other words, the only true unity we share is rooted in a common commitment to these core truths which are embodied in the gospel. Once you grasp that, I think you'll see that the common notion of unity is exactly backward. We don't achieve unity by setting aside doctrine—we achieve unity by striving for a common understanding of truth, starting with the things Scripture tells us are "of first importance." Striving? Contending? Isn't conflict like that inherently hostile to the biblical idea of unity? Not at all. Paul urged the Philippians to pursue unity by "standing firm in one spirit, with one mind striving side by side for the faith of the gospel." That's Philippians 1:27, and the very next verse says "not [to be] frightened in anything by your opponents." So the context is clear: Paul is urging them to strive together for the gospel in the face of opposition. And the opponents he is talking about include both worldlings who simply hate truth, and false teachers who disguise their contempt for truth in some kind of angelic costume. Paul is saying the same thing Jude was saying when he instructed the recipients of his epistle "to contend [earnestly] for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints." You may be thinking all of that sounds suspiciously like an echo of old-school fundamentalism. I'll acknowledge: that's true to a degree. Again, I don't think the fundamentalists were wrong about 18 A Bridge Too Far everything. Let me reiterate something I said last March at the Shepherds' Conference: The idea that originally gave birth to the fundamentalist movement was a valid principle. Perhaps it would be accurate to say it is a vital principle. It is a biblical principle. It is a principle that doesn't deserve to be written off in the sneering way some postmodern evangelicals like to do. It is a simple (and to my mind incontrovertible) biblical principle. It's this: If a doctrine or point of truth is essential to Christianity, then it's worth fighting for. If there is a doctrine or a proposition that is so indispensable to our faith that you cannot deny it without fatally undermining the foundations of biblical Christianity, then it is the bounden duty of every true believer to stand with other believers and defend that doctrine against any idea or person who attacks it. We have a responsibility that we cannot righteously shirk to "contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all handed down to the saints." I think it's clear from that text and its context that what Jude expects us to defend are the core doctrines of gospel truth. In other words, if the gospel is the foundation of our unity—if the gospel is the truth that binds all Christians together—then that very same body of truth must be defended vigorously—earnestly—when it comes under attack. And that's true whether the attack comes from overtly hostile enemies, or by subversion from within. In other words, the gospel is not only the ground on which we unite with our fellow believers; it is also the ground we must earnestly defend against false teachers. You cannot achieve true unity unless you vigorously pursue both of those goals. For those who acknowledge the authority of Scripture, that principle is incontrovertible. It's clear from numerous passages of Scripture that the central details of gospel truth do indeed rise to that level of supreme importance. The apostle John wrote his second epistle in part to deal with some sort of proto-gnostic error regarding the Incarnation of Christ—practically the first detail of the gospel story. 19 Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith Specifically, someone was teaching that there is no reasonable and logical way to affirm both the deity and the humanity of Christ. This was some incipient form of Docetic gnosticism. The gurus of that idea were teaching that Christ's body could not possibly have been real. He was God, they said, but He didn't truly and literally come "in the flesh." They were denying the true humanity of Christ—denying the Incarnation. Now, John is frequently called "The apostle of love." In fact, the first half of his second epistle is a strong exhortation to love. So it is extremely significant that the apostle had zero scruples when it came to pointing out and condemning the purveyors of a lie that undermined a fundamental doctrine like the incarnation. Verse 7: "Many deceivers have gone out into the world, those who do not confess the coming of Jesus Christ in the flesh. Such a one is the deceiver and the antichrist." So it's clear (isn't it?) that the apostle John did not recognize these truth-twisting teachers as authentic Christians. Notice that he says there were "many" of them. but the popularity of their teaching did not sway him. The fact that they claimed to be committed to the gospel did not sway him. They might have even been teaching that salvation was by grace through faith in Christ. But they denied that Christ was truly human, and their teaching therefore was a denial of a cardinal doctrine— the truth that "there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." So John says, Don't embrace them in the circle of your fellowship. Don't pretend they are true believers. They aren't. Verse 9, the person who "does not abide in the teaching of Christ, does not have God" at all. That is definitive. It could not possibly be more unequivocal. John, the apostle of love, rejects them completely. He does not want other Christians to extend any brotherly encouragement or cordial recognition to these false teachers. In fact, he goes on to say that it would be a serious sin to do that. Understand: this is not the spirit of Boanerges speaking. This is John, the apostle of love, writing as the mature elder statesman in the church. And these are "not . . . words which man's wisdom teaches but [an inspired truth] which the Holy Spirit teaches." 18 A Bridge Too Far As devoted as the apostle John was to the principle of love and unity IN the faith, he emphatically did not believe Christians have any obligation to pursue unity everyone who professes to be a Christian. He doesn't tell the apostolic church to embrace everyone who comes in Jesus name. He doesn't want believers to show hospitality to these heretics under the rubric of unity, or loving one another, or fulfilling the wish Jesus prayed for in John 17:23: "so that the world may know" that we love one another. Instead, John goes on to say in 2 John 10-11: "If anyone comes to you and does not bring this teaching, do not receive him into your house or give him any greeting, for whoever greets him takes part in his wicked works." This is the very same apostle who recorded the words of Jesus' prayer for unity in John 17. But does he leave any doubt about what he might think of, say, Mormon-evangelical dialogues? Do you think he would have welcomed a proposal to sponsor a conversation with these quasi-Trinitarian gnostics to try to find common ground or make common cause with them? That kind of ecumenical solidarity was the last thing John wanted. He wanted unity among those who are committed to the gospel. And one of the reasons they needed to be united was so that they could stand together and oppose every threat of twisted teaching, such as the error these early gnostics were peddling. Now, remember: these gnostic guys were in error on the hypostatic union. That's a point of doctrine many people today would insist must be a secondary truth because it's so technical, and it requires so much mental discipline and verbal dexterity to understand and teach the doctrine of the incarnation correctly. After all, there's mystery inherent in the biblical doctrine of the Godhead. Is this a doctrine anyone really needs to be anathematized over? The apostle John says emphatically: yes it is. It is a matter of essential importance. The apostle Paul draws a similar line in the sand when he deals with the doctrine of justification by faith. At the start of his epistle to the Galatians, before he has even begun to refute the Judaizers' errors, he issues a double curse against these legalists and anyone else like them who would tamper with the gospel 19 Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith message enough to change the fundamental nature of it. And get this: No one—neither Paul himself nor the highest angel in heaven—is exempt from this curse. Galatians 1:8-9: "Even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed. As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed." Peter had similarly unfriendly words about gospel-corrupters. In 2 Peter 2:12-14, Peter called them "irrational animals, creatures of instinct, born to be caught and destroyed, blaspheming about matters of which they are ignorant, [and he said they]will . . . be destroyed in their destruction, suffering wrong as the wage for their wrongdoing. [He further said of them that] . . . They are blots and blemishes . . . [with] eyes full of adultery [and] hearts trained in greed. [He sums it all up with a fairly harsh epithet:] Accursed children." So all the major apostles understood that there must be clear lines of demarcation between authentic biblical Christianity and the wolves and false teachers who want to be admitted into the fold. All of them recognized that certain teachers would come in the name of Christ who must not under any circumstances be welcomed by the church. In other words, the question of who is "in" and who is "out" is a vital and legitimate question. That was one of Paul's main points in his charge to the Ephesian elders in Acts 20. His closing imperative in verse 31 is "be on the alert." For a pastor to abdicate that duty is in my view the worst kind of spiritual malfeasance. But there are lots of pastors these days who are deliberately derelict in that duty. Read the letters from Christ to the church in Revelation 2 and 3, if you want to see what Jesus thinks of that kind of negligence. When it comes to defending the gospel, we need to think both . . . and instead of either . . . or. Let's keep as close as 18 A Bridge Too Far possible to the center, but let's erect some clear and effective boundaries as well. You cannot automatically forge bonds of fellowship with everyone who puts his signature on a sound and biblical statement of evangelical conviction. We must not only affirm the truth but also proclaim it. And we must not only proclaim it but also defend it. That is the true, biblical prescription for unity. In the shorthand language of that 2nd epistle of John, our unity is the fruit of "love in truth, . . . [and it extends to]all who know the truth, because of the truth that abides in us and will be with us forever." Now you might be wondering why I would give a message like this to the Standpoint Conference. After all, most of you are fundamentalists, or men with strong fundamentalist backgrounds. You've been part of a movement that has always stressed purity of doctrine, defense of the faith, and separatism. But let's be candid: fundamentalists have not always done those things well. There are plenty of self-styled fundamentalists who could not even give a coherent account of anything truly fundamental. I gave a lengthy analysis of fundamentalism's failure about seven years ago, and it was thoroughly dissected at the time on the Sharper Iron blog, so I won't reiterate it all here. But I have noticed a trend: It seems to me that there is an extraordinarily high percentage of people who have been raised in fundamentalist churches who see the problems with the movement and then become so disillusioned that they overthrow everything that has any hint of a fundamentalist fragrance attached to it—and often they end up throwing out the original fundamentalist principle in the process. Their disillusionment with a corrupt movement causes them to discard a perfectly valid and biblical principle. My whole argument in this message is that you must not do that. The basic idea that gave birth to fundamentalism is a biblical precept: We need to be on guard, because there are savage wolves trying desperately to get into the flock and do what wolves do. 19 Guarding the Boundaries of the Faith Bridge-building is not a particularly constructive or helpful enterprise when so many savage wolves are afoot. And if you want graphic proof of that, just observe the aftermath of neoevangelicalism in the second half of the 20th century. The enormity of the fundamentalist disaster pales by comparison to the meltdown of true evangelical conviction among Christianity Today-style evangelicals. What we need is a new blend of fundamentalist courage and evangelical conviction. We need to revive and retain the historic biblical principles that gave rise to both movements, while emphatically renouncing the pragmatic errors that brought about the demise of those movements. I believe there is a remnant of sound and solid (and courageous) biblical Christians—thousands of knees that have not bowed to Baal. And just as importantly, they have not knuckled under to the fads of popular religion. That remnant needs to find a stronger voice and take a stronger stand against the drift of both the evangelical and fundamentalist mainstreams. Many of you men are in a position to lead the way on that, and I encourage you to do that. "[Do] not shrink from declaring . . . the whole counsel of God." "Pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the church of God." "Be alert." And above all, "do not be ashamed . . . but share in suffering for the gospel by the power of God." 18