Covenantal Confession of Christ W. H. Chellis Jes…
Covenantal Confession of Christ
W. H. Chellis
Jesus Christ is King of Kings and Lord of Lords (Rev. 17:14; 19:16). This is a fact clearly revealed in the Bible, yet widely ignored even within the conservative evangelical and reformed churches. Last month we introduced the outlines of the National Confessional application of Christ’s social kingship. We now begin a closer examination of the four pillars of the National Confessional position. This month we focus on the covenantal confession of Christ. The Testimony of the Reformed Presbyterian Church affirms the duty of nations to make a covenantal confession of Jesus Christ:
“Every nation ought to recognize the Divine institution of civil government, the sovereignty of God exercised by Jesus Christ, and its duty to rule the civil affairs of men in accordance with the will of God. It should enter into covenant with Christ and serve to advance His Kingdom on earth (Testimony Chapter 23:4).”
As Christ’s Kingship is universal (Matt. 28:18; Eph. 1:17-23), so recognition of His reign should also be universal. All men, in their individual capacity as well as is their social relationships, must confess the name of Jesus and submit to His gracious reign.
Disciple the Nations
At His ascension, Jesus Christ declared:
“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all
that I have commanded you.”
By this Great Commission, Jesus Christ sent forth His Church to offer Jesus Christ and His gospel of grace to all men from all nations. The ethnic monopoly of physical Israel was broken (Gal. 3:28). The Church of Christ would be an international and catholic body encompassing a multitude from every tribe, tongue, and nation. Yet, the Church’s evangelistic and discipleship goals must not end with the conversion of isolated individuals. Man is a social creator, a political animal. Indeed, close exegetical inspection of the Great Commission informs us of the church’s duty to make disciples of the nations themselves.
In the context of twenty-first century Western political thought, the idea of turning nations into disciples of Jesus Christ sounds implausible. Modern thought, rooted in enlightenment liberalism, looks upon the individual as the basic unit of social and political life. Our political discourse is saturated with catchphrases like “individual rights†and “individual choice.†Families, communities, and nations are considered as nothing more than the aggregate of all the individuals who consent to belong to the larger unit. In the context of modernist liberalism, the whole is definitely less than the sum of all its parts. Thus, we hear of individual Christians, of Christian radio, of Christian music, but rarely of a Christian community or nation. It is not surprising, therefore, to find that the modern church has allowed its cultural and political prejudices to interpret Jesus’ Great Commission. The social Kingship of Christ has been replaced by the quest for a “personal relationship with Jesus.â€
Unlike modernist liberalism, biblical ethics does not define the individual as the basic unit of social and political life. Rather, along with the broader pre-modern political tradition, biblical ethics establishes the foundation of social and political life upon the family. Accordingly, the family in its corporate capacity is the “little platoon†of society in both Church and State. Here the whole is greater then the sum of its parts.
Although American evangelicals feel comfortable encouraging others to “focus on the familyâ€, I suspect that readers of a Baptist persuasion are feeling a bit uncomfortable. While Baptist, Methodist, and neo-evangelical theology tends to borrow its working assumptions from enlightenment liberalism, biblical Christianity roots its assumptions in the Scriptures. As a matter of biblical command, Christ has commissioned His Church to make disciples of the nations (not from the nations). Yet, it is at this point that even Reformed Christians may become visibly uncomfortable. Christ did not commission His Church to make disciples of all families but all nations. What could this mean?
From Family to Nation
To answer the question we must begin with the Greek word ethnos which our English versions translate nations. The Greek word ethnos refers to a people defined by blood, land, history, and language. Its horizon is larger than the modern concept of the [nuclear] family but not exactly the same as the equally modern concept of the nation-state. Of course, by way of application to our present situation neither the family nor the nation-state is excluded. For the Hebrews, the gentile and pagan peoples are referred to as the goy, while in Classical Greek thought “nations†outside ones own city-state are defined as ethnos or barbaros (barbarians). Both the Hebrew goy and the Greek ethnos suggest “otherness.†Here we find no universal brotherhood of men, no citizenship of the world, but rather the love of localism, peculiarity, and a delight in ones self-identification with an organic reality marked by location, heritage and faith (three concepts damned by modernist orthodoxy). It is this threefold unity that provides the foundational premise of a nation.
The idea of ethnos builds upon the foundation of family. The progression moves organically forward from family to tribe to ethnos (nation). Thus, to understand the Great Commission we must understand that far from being a collection of atomistic individuals randomly bouncing off each other in the daily hubbub of life, a nation has an organic and corporate unity. It is a people who share a commonality of location, heritage, and faith. This unity, although rooted in blood and soil, transcends tribal patriarchy as peoples bind themselves together in greater covenantal unity. The great English Statesman and political thinker Edmund Burke refers to this mysterious bond suggesting:
“As the ends of such a partnership cannot be obtained in many generations, it becomes a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born. Each contract of each particular state is but a clause in the great primeval contract of eternal society, linking the lower with the higher natures, connecting the visible and the invisible world, according to a fixed compact sanctioned by the inviolable oath which holds all physical and all moral natures, each in their appointed places.[i]”
Our older theologians, such as William Symington and David Scott, are less poetic but make the same point by referring to nations as “moral persons.†By “moral person†we mean that the nation as a whole bears the corporate responsibility for its moral judgments and is capable of entering into a covenantal relationships. Such relationships might be expressed in relationship to its citizens (as in a written Constitution or a Bill of Rights) or in relationship to other nations (as in peace treaty or declaration of war) or in relationship to God (as in the submission of the nations of Christendom to Christ).
A nation’s organic law is its constitution. Constitutions may be either written (as is the case of the United States) or unwritten (as is the case of England). No nation is without a constitution, for organic law flows from historical experience. The voice of the nation speaks through its constitutional and legal establishments and documents. Therefore, it is the testimony of the Reformed Presbyterian Church that all nations must be organically conformed to the revealed will of Jesus Christ in submission to His Kingly authority.
Corporate Solidarity
Practical politics destroys individualistic notions of citizenship. Contrary to the assertions of President Bush with regard to Iraq, wars are not only waged against ruling regimes but against the people of a nation. This is the horrible truth of war, especially in the modern world. Yet, we must note a sense of biblical justice to this reality. If a nation has an organic unity, then there exists solidarity of responsibility between a nation and its citizens. Indeed, the citizen bears the guilt of the nations and the nation shares the guilt of its citizens. Thus, Israel suffered for the sins of Achen (Joshua 7) and even faithful Israelites like Daniel suffered the burden of captivity. Men are individuals, but not only individuals. They are social beings with covenantal obligations to family, community, and nation. Christianity does not destroy these obligations but perfects them.
The Reformed Presbyterian Church attempted to separate the organic unity between corporate sin and individual responsibility through their practice of political dissent. The attempt was unfruitful. One is not exempt from national guilt by simply renouncing the privileges of citizenship. Covenantal solidarity cannot be broken while enjoying the blessings of citizenship. Rather, we must accept the awful reality of our guilt, as Americans, for national sins such as murder (abortion), greed (consumerism and materialism) and lust (do I need to give examples). We must own these sins, confess them, and like Abraham contending for the city of Sodom, seek the peace and prosperity of the land in which we live and thrive.
Therefore, the national confessional position of the Reformed Presbyterian Church stands upon both the classical and biblical idea of “nations,†demanding not only the conversion of individuals within the nations, but also the corporate conversion of the nations themselves.
[i] Burke, Edmund, Reflections on the Revolution in France, Select Works of Edmund Burke: Vol. 2, Liberty Fund: Indianapolis, 1999, pg. 193.
MarkPele
August 9th, 2006 at 5:39 pm
Wow! Amen!
Let me ask a clarification, though. You use the following to describe the individual…
Men are individuals, but not only individuals. They are social beings with covenantal obligations to family, community, and nation. Christianity does not destroy these obligations but perfects them.
I think I agree wholeheartedly. How does one understand this statement in light of your assertion that the family is the fundamental unit of both church and state?
W.H. Chellis
August 9th, 2006 at 7:11 pm
Good question.
In my defense of biblical communitarianism, I do not wish to be understood as denying the unique dignity of each individual as a bearer of God’s image.
Ultimately, in the act of redemption, it is in the heart of the individual that God’s works His effective grace.
Yet, the individual is a social creature and community is his proper environment. Obviously, the most basic political, social, commmunitarian unit is the natural bond of blood.
Just as the family is the natural foundation for broader political unity, so God has established the family as the foundation for the church as well. The covenant runs through family.
Thus, the family is a little kingdom and a little church (although not independent in its soverignty from either).
MarkPele
August 10th, 2006 at 3:00 pm
I think that you can only make these generalizations by blurring and redefining some of these terms.
Christ gave the church the keys of the kingdom. The church has the authority and responsibility to seek the eternal. This happens through three areas: Corporate Worship/preaching, doctrine and discipline, all with an eternal focus.
Now, we look at the family and church. The family has no additional rights compared to the individual in corporate worship, doctrine or discipline.
The covenantal promises for the family are given to the family, and the church merely acknowledges that. So, baptism is a covenantal sign that is tied to the relationship of a believer with those under him/her. It is not tied to headship of necessity, because children of a believing wife and unbelieving husband are still under covenant blessing.
What I discipline my children for, while both temporal and eternal is not somehow subordinate to the state and church. If that were the case, my children could appeal my discipline to the higher courts. “I appeal to the state to decide whether this spanking is justified.” — No! The father is completely authoritative in this regard. However, his actions may put him in violation of the law or the church, but that is not an appeal, it’s a separate issue.
The same applies to the doctrine I teach my family. God directly commands fathers to teach their children. He did not tell David to tell the fathers to teach their children. God addressed fathers directly. Now, that is not to say that I can teach my kids that it is right to rob convenience stores, or that I can teach my kids that it’s their good works that get them eternal life. While I have the right to teach my children, teaching those things puts me in violation of my covenant with the state and church, so my family rightfully should seek out the proper authorities to correct me.
As I have said before, the family has its own authority, and the church and state in dealing with individuals must respect that authority.
D Hart
August 11th, 2006 at 11:42 am
Whose nation? Which kingdom?
In general I like Bill’s localism, organicism and all that traditionalist conservative stuff. But I have two questions?
First, is the U.S. a nation like the one he describes, that is, as a people, ethnoi, an organic community? Has it ever been? If it isn’t, then maybe it doesn’t need to be in covenant with Christ. Maybe it can’t even be in such a covenant because it is not familial. In which Christ would still be lord of the U.S. in the same way that he lord over my car repair shop.
Second, what is this kingdom of Christ Bill talks about? Assumed but not answered is the idea that nations advance or comprise the kingdom of Christ. Not so according to the Westminster Confession. The kingdom of Christ is the visible church. So why do we expect nation-states to be like the church? (I think I know the answer. It has something to do with not getting over Israel. But I try to keep these thoughts to myself on this blog.)
Christina Hitchcock
August 17th, 2006 at 9:50 pm
I’m very sorry — I’m new to this blog and I believe I posted a comment on this essay in the wrong place. I’ll send it again here, just in case. My apologies for the mix-up.
W.H. Chellis writes, on this blog and in the Covenanter Witness,
“Unlike modernist liberalism, biblical ethics does not define the individual as the basic unit of social and political life. Rather, along with the broader pre-modern political tradition, biblical ethics establishes the foundation of social and political life upon the family. Accordingly, the family in its corporate capacity is the “little platoon†of society in both Church and State. Here the whole is greater then the sum of its parts.”
Biblical ethics certainly does not
define the individual as the basic unit of society, but it also does not define the family as the basic unit of the family. This is a common mistake of modern American evangelicals, yet one that does not take seriously the primacy of the Church. I’d like some New Testament evidence that the family is the basis for either social or political life.
Chellis also contends that no one talks about a Christian nation anymore. Actually, we talk about it all the time. It’s called the Church.
Christina
W.H. Chellis
August 19th, 2006 at 7:50 pm
Darryl,
I will grant what the Westminster Confession of Faith teaches, the Kingdom is found on earth within the visible Church.
Of course, this does not really solve the problem. Families are not the kingdom of God (the Church is) yet they are very much connected to it right?
Now, I will answer your very good questions but first please answer two of mine:
1. If America were such a nation, would you grant that what I have said about nations is biblically justified?
2. Was Rome a nation is 314 AD/ and or was England a nation in 1797 (the year Edmund Burke passed into glory)?
D Hart
August 25th, 2006 at 7:29 am
I hope the suspense has been building. On the point about families, I’d say they are not the kingdom of Christ, though some families are in the kingdom. Marriages among unbelievers are not illegitimate, and Christians want to encourage such marriages for all sorts of reasons, thus making marriage good, but not holy. The same, as I’ve suggested several times here, applies to states.
Now to the real questions:
1) Bill writes: “a nation has an organic and corporate unity. It is a people who share a commonality of location, heritage, and faith. This unity, although rooted in blood and soil, transcends tribal patriarchy as peoples bind themselves together in greater covenantal unity.” So if America were like this, could it legally or constitutionally affirm the Lordship of Christ?
The answer would seem to be yes. But I am very uncomfortable with the civil religion implied by this construction, as if a people is known for their nationality and their faith. The organicism of Bill’s construction of a nation implies a fusion of the swords, so that a Christian nation would make war in the name of its creed. But if the nation has an identity that is not coterminus with Christianity, if it is American but only demographically Christian, then its international relations might be carried out on less confessional grounds. And that is a blessing because I do not believe that Christianity should be identified with the policies of a nation. I would think Covenanters, having received treatment that was motivated by such identification, would know that.
2) This is a much easier question. Rome was an empire. England was an empire. Worse, England screwed the Scottish Presbyterians in its imperial ambitions.
W.H. Chellis
August 25th, 2006 at 9:53 am
Darryl,
Good, and I would say that nations are not the kingdom of God but some nations are in it. Or, at least, are subservient to it.
One of the important discussions that needs to take places is how Protestants went from defending the idea that the visible church should be a geographic reality to an donatistic “gathered church” vision.
It seems that our preoccupation with the “gathered church” is another indication of how we blur the distinction between the visible and invisible church. I think more likely is that the gathered church system is more conducive to individualism and consummerism.
Now, you suggest that Christianity should not be the “identified with policies of a nation.” I have a hard time understanding how you can believe this. I think we differ because you are reading Christianity as soteriology but I am looking at it as a religion of nature and grace. Both God’s justice and mercy are dispensed by the King of Kings. The Bible never calls your auto mechanic God’s minister for good (Romans 13).
A nation stands upon justice and the laws and mores that codify that justice. Should we look for a standard other than that employed by the King of Kings.
Can a social order rest on a foundation without divine approval? With what would we replace it? J.S. Mill utilitarianism? Comte’s postivism? As Russell Kirk notes, all civil governments are religious establishments. This is inescable.
Also, I think you are mistaken on the nature of nations because you undervalue the role of the cult in relationship to culture. As Voegelin, Dawson, and others have shown, the origin of civilization is to be found in small bands of worshipping peoples.
Of course both were Empires. So is 21 Century America. But where they nations as well? Burke thought England was in 1790 and I would not want to be in the uncomfortable situation of having to disagree.
Anonymous
August 27th, 2006 at 3:16 pm
Given the centrality of the word, “confessionalism,” to this blog, you might be interested in how the word is typically used in political science. For example see this website on Lebanon’s Confessionalism.
http://www.usip.org/pubs/usipeace_briefings/2006/0330_lebanon_confessionalism.html#1
Katsu
August 27th, 2006 at 8:14 pm
Bill,
Have you had a time to read
Dr. Peter Lillback’s *George Washington’s Sacred Fire*?
I haven’t.
But it is interesting to
see that WTS (Chestnut Hill,
PA) is now promoting this
book on their seminary web site,
when someone like Dr. D. James
Kennedy has a high view of Thomas
Jefferson as “a Christian”.
I wonder if our Reformed brethren
are a bit too naive in terms of political philosophy.
Pro Rege,
Katsu
Chris
August 30th, 2006 at 7:02 pm
Lillback’s book is reportedly over 1200 pages long, who indeed has time to read it?
Dr. Lillback is the president of WTS. I’ve yet to see a scholarly review, and have only seen mentions of it on Religious Right sites.
I share Katsu’s concern about it and welcome feedback from anyone more familiar with its contents. Conservative revisionism (meaning in this context politically motivated revision at variance with the facts) is no better than the liberal variety. I hope that’s not what’s going on in this case, especially given the testimony of many of Washington’s contemporaries that his religious views were much closer to J. Adams, Jefferson and Franklin than to S. Adams and Patrick Henry.
D Hart
September 3rd, 2006 at 4:50 pm
It has struck me for some time that Russell Kirk’s and T. S. Eliot’s idea that cult is the basis of culture will not work historically for Christianity. (I try to flesh this out in the conclusion of A Secular Faith, due out in a month or so.) Ironically, these writer generally criticize the Lockean idea of the state of nature, as if somehow we can find a time when individuals banded together in a social contract and formed civil society. They argue that this state of nature is an abstraction that makes no historical sense because it never existed. I think Eliot and Kirk are right in their critique of the state of nature.
But their argument about cult and culture rests on an abstraction similar to that of Locke’s, as if there was a state of Christian civilization, when Christianity became the basis for culture in the West. In fact, Christianity took root on top of other cultures, which were products of other, non-Christian cults, and the interaction of these religions and cults became the West or Western Civiliztion. But Christianity itself was not the basis for a Christian culture. Christianity as a culture has never existed. There is no Christian language, food, economic system, form of work. Instead, Christians were hyphenated people, Christian-Greeks, Christian-Romans, Christian-Celts. This was the case historically, but I think it is also the norm since after Israel the church is a landless people, existing within the cultures of other peoples, carving out both a separate cultic existence and participating in a common (with non-Christians) cultural existence.
If this is right, I think it has implications for politics. Other polities exist as God-ordained authorities to which Christians submit and with which they cooperate. But because Christianity doesn’t have a distinct culture or polity (except for the church’s polity and own separate authority, it is wrong in my opinion to speak of a Christian politics or a Christian culture.
The work of Meredith Kline is very good on this understanding of the difference between Israel and the church, and Ken Myers works this out well in the arena of culture in his book, All God’s Children and Blue Suede Shoes.
W.H. Chellis
September 6th, 2006 at 10:24 am
No one questions that the Christian West has classical roots. The West stands upon the tradition that includes Greek and Roman foundation.
Of course, this does not destroy the cult and culture thesis. Rather, it raises the question of the cultic roots of Greek and Roman culture. This is where we find that pagan Greek and pagan Rome were rooted in the cult and developed into cultures.
Now these pagan cults were not Christian but they were feeling around in the darkness trying to satisfy the seed of religion found in their hearts.
Distorted nature was transformed by grace when, in the fulness of time, Jesus Christ came, revealled truth, and purchased salvation.
Roman order, rooted in the pagan cult, now faced competition. The darkness was overcome by the light. Christian converts lived lives as Christians. Their Christian worship bound them together as a community in need of new traditions and ways of life. This lead to the development of a Christian order (actually a plethora of Christian orders/cultures) in the peculiar soils of Europe/America.
No one is saying that the Bible presents “a Christian culture” but that when a people are Christian they will lead lives that conform to biblical norms and that they will develop traditions and a culture that reflects their Christian faith.
Thus, Christian culture will not always look the same in all places and at all times. Rather, it will grow out of the historic experince of peoples who have committed themeselves and their posterity to Christ.
Grace does not destroy but perfects nature.
D Hart
September 6th, 2006 at 3:28 pm
“Grace does not destroy but perfects nature.”
Ah there’s the rub. What if nature isn’t perfectable this side of glory? What if grace and nature are in tension (not anti-thetical but surely accomplishing distinct ends with distinct means)? If you really think that grace perfects nature, then we may have finally arrived at the chief difference (at least for me). I don’t think Calvinism is compatible with that construction of grace and nature (H. Richard Niebuhr didn’t think so), nor am I sure about Augustinianism.
Of course, Aquinas is. And that is why so many Protestant conservatives convert to Rome. But if the purpose of grace isn’t to improve this world but to preserve a remnant for the next, then the idea of perfecting nature is dubious.
Christina Hitchcock
September 8th, 2006 at 4:14 pm
Mr. Chellis writes, “Unlike modernist liberalism, biblical ethics does not define the individual as the basic unit of social and political life. Rather, along with the broader pre-modern political tradition, biblical ethics establishes the foundation of social and political life upon the family.”
While I agree that biblical ethics do not define the individual as the basic unit of social and political life, I must disagree with the idea that biblical ethics establishe the foundation of social and political life upon the family.
It is common for modern evangelicals to assume that the family is the primary focus of Christian life and fellowship, but the New Testament clearly teaches otherwise. Jesus may in fact divide families. Our loyalty is to him above and before all others. His kingdom is not a group of biologically related people, but of spiritually related people all born of the same Spirit. This is why Paul says in I Corinthians 7 that it is better not to marry. Not because he thinks marriage and the family are bad (of course they’re not!) but because he recognizes that God’s Kingdom is in no way dependent upon the family and in fact will far outlive the family in the way that we know and understand it now. Jesus himself says there will be no giving or taking in marriage in the resurrection.
This common and constant emphasis on the family as the primary domain of God’s work in the world is not only inconsistent with the New Testament, it also degrades and belittles the Church, which is where God has said he is working, speaking, and moving.
We do hear of a Christian community or nation all the time. It’s called the Church.
Christina