It is a great honour and pleasure, being invited to contribute a few guest blog posts to The Sola Panel in advance of my forthcoming visit to Australia. Given the fact that a fool is generally known by his much speaking, I have decided to focus my posts on what I know best—church history, but not in some tedious here-are-a-few-names-and-dates-manner; rather, I want to argue for the importance of church history as a vital discipline for theological education, both in seminary training and in the day-to-day life of the church. Those who do not know history may not be quite as doomed to repeat its mistakes as the famous proverb would imply, but understanding how it can be useful might yet help one or two of us to avoid some embarrassing potholes, or it may just save us from having to reinvent the wheel all over again, fun as such reinvention undoubtedly is (once watching the grass grow and the paint dry has lost its appeal, that is).
In this vein, church history can serve the church in a manner similar to the way in which criminal profilers serve the police force. Even though they stretch the imagination somewhat, I am sure most of us occasionally enjoy those TV dramas where some person with a PhD in criminal psychology is able to work out from the scatter formation of sweet wrappers found at a crime scene that the culprit is a man in his 40s with a limp in his left leg, bad breath and a dysfunctional relationship with his mother. How does he achieve such a startling feat? Because he knows the pattern: he’s seen it all before, and, for him, this is just same old same old.
This points to one of the primary purposes of church history as an important area of study for pastors, teachers and anyone who holds any position of responsibility within the church: there are few errors or heresies around today that do not have clear parallels and antecedents in church history. Open theism, with its denial of God’s comprehensive knowledge of the future? Think 17th-century Socinianism. Mormonism, with its denial of the full deity of the Lord Jesus Christ? Think fourth-century Arianism. Modern denials of penal substitutionary atonement? Think 17th-century Socinianism and 18th-century Unitarianism. The only difference, sadly, is that the heretical arguments of earlier generations were, on the whole, far more sophisticated than their modern-day counterparts. It’s almost enough to make one nostalgic. Forget rock music and movie stars; today, it seems that heretics are not what they used to be.
In this context, church history can be a great timesaver. The Bible itself demonstrates time and again that historical ignorance goes hand in hand with moral and theological disaster. The book of Judges is one long litany of periods of forgetfulness and decline, punctuated by the occasional flash of remembrance and salvation. The church forgets her past to her peril. The easiest way to spot a heretic, a charlatan or a theological scoundrel is to know what such a person looks like, and church history is like one giant book of theologically criminal mug shots.
Furthermore, however, church history does not just provide profiles of heresies and heretics; it also offers fruitful avenues of response. One of the great evangelical myths is that tradition, and traditional theological formulations, need always be set against biblical exegesis. As if earlier generations did no biblical exegesis! Such an attitude is not only condescending and filled with chronological snobbery, it is also patently untrue. Too often it also indicates a subtle anti-theological agenda that wishes to downplay or minimize the role of systematic theology in the church’s witness over the years. Such an approach overturns, in the process, a pretty universal, almost two-millennia consensus on the importance of systematic theology as a discipline, and it does that by, ironically, sidestepping, rather than engaging with, the exegesis on which such was built. Creeds, confessions and theological doctrines were developed in the context of churchly exegesis of Scripture. One may disagree with a particular doctrine on exegetical grounds, but rare is the doctrine that can be dismissed because its author did no exegesis.
Thus, church history offers not simply a set of heretical mug shots, it also open up heretical positions to vigorous scrutiny, and allows us to learn from both the heretics themselves and those who responded to them. Want to know why Arianism is biblically inadequate? Then start by reading its most fearsome and brilliant opponents, like Athanasius and the Cappadocian Fathers. Want to know what the practical results of the denial of penal substitution are? Well, on the positive side, look at defences of the doctrine by the great orthodox thinkers of the 17th century, and on the negative, look at Unitarian preaching in the 18th century.
Of course, the alternative is that we simply throw history away and start from scratch every Sunday or every time we open a new book touting the latest theological breakthrough. There is nothing like reading modern theology without any historical context to make us prey for any doctrinal cowboy or know-nothing who rides into town. Evacuate Christianity of its history and you leave a dangerous vacuum that can be filled with any old nonsense. As the quotation from George Orwell on my office coffee mug says, “The past was erased, the erasure was forgotten, the lie became truth”.
I wonder whythere are few errors or heresies around today that do not have clear parallels and antecedents in church history?
Which are the newer heresies, and what do they tell us about our own Zeitgeist? Or is modern heresy the monopoly of a few notorious clerics who can safely be ignored by us, just as they are feted-and-promptly-ignored by the rest of the world?
What a great challenge, Carl! Recently, I did a Master’s subject on the doctrine of Cranmer, which combined church history with systematic theology. I just loved this course, and it helped inform many current debates and heresies concerning the means of salvation, church and the sacraments.
Thanks for your very timely challenge.
Thanks for the post Carl – a really good challenge. It intersects with what I’ve been writing about lately – the need for pastors to be reading and engaging with literature. It seems to me one of the great advantages of reading church history (apart from the great points you make) is that it gets pastors reading! Church history is exciting stuff. As well as being useful for thinking through current issues etc, its really engaging.
It is great to hear historical theology defended!
However, as one who has been accused (by association) of Arianism, I am aware of the abuses to which history may be put. In the wrong hands, historical theology can be a blunt instrument with which you can batter your opponents heads in. Throw around words like ‘Arian’ or ‘Socinian’ without due care, and you have tarred your opponent with a nasty brush.
For that reason, I would be wary of the ‘criminal profiling’ analogy – especially when the criminal profiler is self-appointed!
Hi Michael,
What’s wrong with the criminal profiling analogy. If the heretics were biblically wrong and studying them helps us to see the patterns repeated, then the analogy fits. Like anything in life, it’s possible to take “good” things and use them sinfully. But isn’t the problem in your case that people misunderstood the history or misapplied it to you rather than that the process was in and of itself flawed?
Well – I guess so long as the criminal profiler is accountable to the court of law, all is fine. But as a signed up Sydney Anglican, I stand accused of Arianism (as I suppose you are too) in several international scholarly publications. It’s a hard accusation to shake – a nasty piece of guilt by association. So, speaking as the criminal in the analogy, rather than the profiler, i can’t say I like it one bit!
Yep, I too would be accused of Arianism in said publications. And I’m none too happy about it either. I guess I’m just suggesting that the answer isn’t to declare the practice of profiling illegitimate but rather to be a better profiler.
The problem isn’t the profiling so much as asking ‘who’s the judge?’
But I wouldn’t want to take away from Trueman’s point about the value of history and the amnesia of contemporary evangelicalism.
Hi Mike,
How well do you think that Moore teaches church history?
As a B&M student, I missed out on the usual church history subjects. But from the comments of my classmates, I got the impression that they felt that 2nd year church history (Reformation) was better taught than early church history in first year.
I suspect that partly this was due to greater familiarity with the subject matter on my classmates’ part. But I also got the impression that people struggled to understand how everything fitted together. At least in 2004, it seemed that the subject could have done with more structure, and fewer lecturers.
Just to say thanks to all who have commented. As Mariah Carey `doesn’t do stairs’ so I don’t do `threads’ (unlike Mariah, I don’t do ghastly Jackson Memorials either—truly, God has been good to me) but I’ll try to respond privately to as many comments as I can. Again, thanks for the kind and stimulating responses
HUZZAH! HUZZAH! HUZZAH! Well said! Well said! HEAR HEAR! HEAR HEAR!
I love Church History. It is a great tool that aids us in critiquing our culture and ‘church culture’. I love church History at College so much that I failed it 1st year so I could do it again!!!(I did fail it but not for that reason).
What I realised is how much owe to men like Luther, Ridley, Latimer, Augustine, Tertullian, Calvin, Cranmer. I also realised how I have bits of them theologically in me and did not even know it until I studied church history. And also to avoid the mistakes of the theological boofheads (who probably did not start out that way) was a very helpful thing.
So when it comes to Church History and the study of it I say “Huzzah!”
This was so good. Intellectually and spiritually entertaining!
It seems one of the main heresies that the enemy loves is evolution. (better yet, believers who spiritualize Darwinism).