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2008-11-20 12:24Z

What is the New Theology Part 10:
The Gospel: Does it include justification only, or does it include both justification and sanctification?

Authored by Pr. Larry Kirkpatrick and published on GreatControversy.org on October 22, 2004


The New Theology artificially limits the gospel to only justification, understood as a counted righteousness that has no functional connection with the one who is counted as righteous. Sanctification, the making-holy of a believer, is held by such to be only the fruit of the gospel, not a necessary part of salvation. Now, a few quotations from the wild. First, from Desmond Ford:

Traditionally, Adventists have erroneously placed sanctification within the scope of the Pauline ‘righteousness by faith.’ It is now time for a clear change to be made to correct that error. We should follow the decision made at Palmdale Conference, which I attended in the 1970s and which was written up in the Review as concluding that righteousness by faith meant justification only, though sanctification was always its fruit. This will safeguard the precious doctrine of Christian assurance.1
Another recent quote shows how this is presented in today’s Adventist Review.

An independent ministry published a while back a special issue of its flagship magazine.… To my dispirited disappointment, its definition of the everlasting gospel was that ‘every man, woman, and child must die daily. We must surrender our will moment by moment to God—the heart united with His heart, the mind united with His mind—only then can we think the thoughts and live the life of Jesus.’
Here we are in the twenty-first century—more than 113 years after 1888—and this is how some still define the everlasting gospel? Isn’t the everlasting gospel the good news that Jesus, the God-man, lived a life of perfect obedience to the law and then died as my substitute in order that I, by faith, can claim His perfect righteousness as my own, a righteousness that comes only by faith in His righteousness—a righteousness credited to me apart from ‘the works of the law.’
Through the power of God’s Spirit a believer can, indeed, die to self daily and, indeed, think the thoughts and live the life of Jesus. That’s good news too. But the moment these internal actions become conditions for justification, the moment they become the means by which a person is saved, the good news gets blunted—like with a sledgehammer.
Although the magazine’s editors would be shocked to realize it, its theology is just like Roman Catholicism.… Notice how humanistic, how sinner-centered, this understanding of the gospel is. We must die daily, we must surrender our will, we must do this, we must do that.2

Did you notice? The author rejects any conditions for salvation. According to him, justification stands alone with no conditions, no necessity for any internal saving work. The New Theology teaches that the gospel only includes justification. Sanctification is effectively excluded.

When sanctification is excluded from the gospel, obedience is excluded. When the significance of obedience is excluded, the significance of disobedience is excluded. When disobedience is excluded, dealing with sin is excluded. Thus the gospel becomes news, not of deliverance, but of continued bondage.

Talk about blunting the gospel!

As someone pointed out not long ago, some who have been most eloquent in preaching (apparently) “the cross” have, in recent years, left the denomination, even on occasion carrying their entire congregation out along with them. If legalism has killed its thousands, antinomianism has killed its ten thousands. Ought we not then ask ourselves just which cross they were, in fact, preaching? Was it the cross of Christ, or of antichrist?

We all do realize, do we not, that antichrist has a cross too? His cross is one we can bear without being converted. It is one we can bear and then persuade ourself that in our preferred world, we are good, upstanding, religious, spiritual people. Most fascinating is that in the New Theology this cross substitutes a false Christ, a false Spirit, and false gospel. What is it that falsifies this gospel? Not its pious sounding words, or apparent Christ-centeredness; but its external-to-us-ness. Meanwhile the true gospel cannot be kept out of us or apart from us when we embrace it.

Now the God of peace, that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, Make you perfect in every good work to do His will, working in you that which is well pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen (Hebrews 13:20-21).

Notice that as the author of Hebrews focuses on the death and resurrection of Christ, he speaks of our being made perfect through the blood of the covenant. But perfect in a manner entirely external to us? No, for the word is “make you perfect in every good work to do His will.” There is no hint here that justification is kept apart as some obscure legal declaration that saves. Where is this perfecting that Paul links to the death and resurrection of Christ? “Working in you that which is well pleasing in His sight” (emphasis added) It is indeed “through Jesus Christ,” but it is all one garment, both, Christ’s work outside of us on the cross and His work inside of us through the Holy Spirit. Add this passage to verse 12, earlier in this chapter, which says:

Wherefore Jesus also, that He might sanctify the people with His own blood, suffered without the gate (Hebrews 13:21).

Jesus’ death was not merely to count His people holy but to make His people holy. This and so many other texts could be offered to show that it is indeed perilous to commit the error of trying to define minutely the fine points of distinction between justification and sanctification (The Faith I Live By, p. 116).

How is it that the view excluding sanctification from the gospel is antagonistic to the core of Adventism? It makes sin a light matter. It changes what we think the “cure” of salvation is. It changes what we think the problem is. It changes what we understand God’s mission for us personally and as an end-time people to be. It obsoletes the message that takes sin seriously, so seriously that God proposes to seal His people and change their character to the likeness of the divine character. GCO

NEXT: What is the New Theology Part 11: 1844/Heavenly Sanctuary/Investigative Judgment: Does it Really Matter?

Endnotes

  1. Desmond Ford, Interview by Adventist Today,
    http://www.atoday.com/resources/FordInterview-Part3.html, accessed August 26, 2004, 9:50 a.m. PDT.
  2. Clifford Goldstein, Adventist Review, November 22, 2001.

The above material is an extract from the projected 2005 book, Simply Seventh-day Adventism, by Pr. Larry Kirkpatrick, to be published by GreatControversy.org.

© 2004 by GreatControversy.org. GCO grants permission to individuals, wholeheartedly encouraging them to copy and reproduce documents and files appearing on this site, in an unaltered state, and for non-commercial use, unless otherwise noted. All other rights reserved. Other groups or entities wishing to reproduce these materials are encouraged to contact us with reproduction requests.

Pastor Larry Kirkpatrick is an ordained minister of the gospel. Since 1994 he has served in the American Southwest as pastor to several churches. He received his Batchelor of Arts in Religion from Southern Adventist University in 1994 and a Master of Divinity from Andrews University in 1999 with specialization in Adventist Studies. While in Michigan he was employed by the General Conference at the White Estate Berrien Springs branch office. Each year he fills speaking engagements in North America and sometimes overseas. Pr. Kirkpatrick has been involved in youth ministry including the General Youth Conference and other initiatives. He is author of the 2003 book Real Grace for Real People and 2005’s Cleanse and Close: Last Generation Theology in 14 Points. As a Seventh-day Adventist minister, he pioneered internet ministry, launching GreatControversy.org in 1997. He also serves as Pastor of the Mentone Church of Seventh-day Adventists, located near Loma Linda, California. Larry is married to Pamela. The couple presently live in Highland, California along with their children, Etienne and Melinda, and are actively involved in foster parenting.