“Increasingly, it is becoming necessary for a man to decide whether he is going to stand or not to stand for the Lord Jesus Christ as He is presented to us in the Word of God.”
Not An Easy Life
“You will have a battle when you go forth as ministers into the church. The church is now in a period of deadly conflict. The redemptive religion known as Christianity is contending, in our own Presbyterian Church and in all the larger churches in the world, against a totally alien type of religion. As always, the enemy conceals his most dangerous assaults under pious phrases and half truths. The shibboleths of the adversary have sometimes a very deceptive sound.
‘Let us propagate Christianity,’ the adversary says, ‘but let us not always be engaged in arguing in defense of it; let us make our preaching positive, and not negative; let us avoid controversy; let us hold to a person and not to a dogma; let us drop small doctrinal differences and seek the unity of the Church of Christ; let us drop doctrinal accretions and interpret Christ for ourselves; let us look for our knowledge of Christ, not to ancient books, but to the living Christ in our hearts; let us not impose Western creed on the Eastern mind; let us be tolerant of opposing views.’
“Such are some of the shibboleths of that agnostic Modernism which is the deadliest enemy of the Christian religion today. They deceive some of God’s people some of the time; they are heard sometimes from the lips of good Christian people, who have not the slightest inkling of what they mean. But their true meaning, to thinking men, is becoming increasingly clear. Increasingly, it is becoming necessary for a man to decide whether he is going to stand or not to stand for the Lord Jesus Christ as He is presented to us in the Word of God.
“If you decide to stand for Christ, you will not have an easy life in the ministry. Of course, you may try to evade the conflict. All men will speak well of you if, after preaching no matter how unpopular a Gospel on Sunday, you will only vote against the Gospel in the councils of the Church the next day; you will graciously be permitted to believe in supernatural Christianity all you please if you will only make common cause with its opponents. Such is the program that will win the flavor of the Church. A man may believe what he pleases, provided he does not believe anything strongly enough to risk his life on it and fight for it.”
—Dr. J. Gresham Machen, to the students at Princeton Theological Seminary on 10 March 1929, shortly before he left the USA Church. Reprinted in The Presbyterian Journal, volume 36, May 4, 1977, page 12.
COMMENT:
Our co-author on this blog, Rev. David T. Myers, adds this note late today:
“It was a point of identification to realize that my father, David K. Myers, no doubt heard Dr. Machen in March of 1929 as Dad was in the Senior class of Princeton Theological Seminary that spring. Of course, Dad would spend the next three years in Edinburgh, Scotland studying for his doctorate, and in the process meet the Scottish gal who became my mother eight years later. But in that later time period, he would be tried by his presbytery for support of the Independent Board, win his case before them, but have the PCUSA synod reverse this decision, and the General Assembly in 1936 confirm that deposition. All that Dr. Machen said that day in chapel in 1929 came true for one David K. Myers! Thanks for including it, brother, as it brought back from the past my memories of the stand for the faith of my father in trying days.”
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