Category Archives: Culture

Monumental Myth

Have you heard? Kirk Cameron is starring in the upcoming documentary “Monumental: In Search of America’s National Treasure” which opens in select theaters March 27th.

I truly like Kirk Cameron, even though I disagree with many of his positions. I recognize that the Lord is able to use all of us, despite our sappy Left Behind performances and our support of some really terrible theology. But really, I do like Kirk Cameron.

As a teacher, I know the great responsibility I have to teach the truth. I know that I have got it wrong before. I know that somewhere I’m getting it wrong now. And odds are that I will get it wrong in the future. I think that describes us all. Regardless, we must do our best to pursue truth and walk in it as best we understand it. I believe that Kirk is doing that.

It’s clear to me that Kirk loves the Lord and is passionate about others coming to faith in Christ. I don’t doubt that at all. I rejoice in his testimony. I don’t have to agree with his evangelism style or his decision to play Buck Williams in a movie that propagates an idea foreign to the NT. The Lord has used him to build the kingdom.

For that I’m thankful. He’s a brother in Christ.

Having said that, I’m convinced that he sincerely believes what he is promoting in his upcoming pseudo-documentary. I suspect that it is one more revisionist plug from Christian fundamentalists during an election year.

I hope I’m wrong, but by the looks of things, it’s more of the same.

I wish Kirk would come and sit in on my Christian History class. I would love to introduce him to the historical context of the 17th and 18th century British movements leading up to the early colonial period, and subsequent American Revolution. I would like to present my case that the founding fathers were not seeking to establish a Christian nation. This is most clearly evidenced by an absence of any reference to Jesus in the founding documents, and the Treaty of Tripoli, which sets forth that the U.S. was not in any sense founded on the Christian religion.

Were some of the early leaders Christian? Well, sure. They were white weren’t they? There wasn’t much else those days for white Westerners. It can hardly be denied that some of them were simply nominal Christians—carrying on their religion like a family tradition. Thanks to Constantine in the 4th century, Europe had considered itself “Christian” for about 1400 hundred years—even during the Crusades, Inquisitions, and the drowning of Anabaptists. [Insert sarcasm now] So yeah, they were “Christian” alright… every single one of them.

Deism was the new way to be fashionable as a Westerner during the Enlightenment of the 17th and 18th centuries. Deism holds a belief in a “Creator” or “nature’s God” who rarely intervenes in human affairs, though he might show up to bless nationalistic endeavors. Deism was a growing religious philosophy that believed that miracles would violate nature (hence, “supernatural”). Therefore, deists believed that miracles are not possible. They also rejected divine revelation. Deists believed that the Bible should merely be used to further lawful societies and to encourage some level of morality within the culture.

I’m not going to discuss each founding father here, but I should mention a few key fathers. George Washington was a freemason and a deist. He wouldn’t take communion with his wife. We have no correspondence of him mentioning Jesus or faith in Christ. John Adams spoke harshly at times about Christianity and religion in general in his private correspondence. He was a Christian Unitarian that believed the church service was good for everyone because it promoted morals and values among the masses.

Yes, there’s ample evidence that John Jay was an evangelical Christian. He actually tried to keep Catholics from holding office. And Patrick Henry was indeed vocal about his Christian faith as the leader of independence in Virginia. Nevertheless, we should not be so quick to conclude what we hope or wish to be true because of a few that were more vocal about their faith. Politicians do this all the time today. Do you still believe that Bill Clinton is a Southern Baptist?

Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson were deists. Franklin admits it in his writings, when he wasn’t drunk or inventing something. Jefferson went so far to deny the divinity of Christ. He even created his own compilation of Jesus’ life from the gospels, which he entitled, “The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth.” He removed all evidence of the “supernatural” for a presentation of Jesus as a good moral teacher who is only to be admired, not worshipped. Rationalism at its finest!

Let’s be clear about this. The founding fathers sought to establish a nation free from big government, burdensome taxes, and state-sponsored religion. Religious nation? I’ll grant that much. Christian nation? Huh, what’s that? The major shapers of America concluded that it’s not even possible.

What about the pilgrims you say? Oh, you mean the glorified stories of the Puritan fundamentalists? Well, you see, they wanted to enforce OT laws and create model theocratic cities. They are the ones who first hijacked the “city on a hill” language that Jesus used to describe the church. Instead, they used it to describe their new theocratic societies in America (e.g. Massachusetts Bay Colony led by William Bradford).

The Puritans claimed that America was the new Israel, the Indians were the savage Canaanites, and that God had given them the command to kill in his name. Many politicians throughout the years have used this sort of religious rhetoric to pander to fundamentalist evangelicals who still embrace the Christian nation myth. It’s also great for demonizing your enemies and gaining support for the expansion of empire when “God is on our side!”

Except for the fundamentalist Puritans, the rest of the colonialists acknowledged that the “Christian” state had been a total disaster in Europe. Roger Williams, who began the first Baptist church on American soil, rejected the theocratic view of the Calvinistic pilgrims, detested the idea of a Christian nation, and argued for religious liberty and separation of church and state–an idea that the Anabaptists had been ruthlessly persecuted for a century earlier. It finally caught on!

What you have here are Christian revisionists trying to build a case for an American Christian heritage based off of a glorified retelling of the pilgrim landing and the Puritan idea, singling out a few lone patriots who said some things about Jesus, the vague deistic references to God in founding documents, and the celebration of biblical virtues that even the atheists in that day advocated.

A person has to ignore the larger social, economic, political, and religious climate of early North American colonialism to advance the Christian nation myth.

So, if you want to “go back to the beginning” and find a nation embracing biblical morals and values, you will find some of that for sure. But if your eyes are wide open, you’re also going to find war, lies, greed, genocide, slavery, witch trials, and manifest destiny.

If you’re honest, you will, much like Pliny the Roman historian, seek to dig up the glorious past of Rome in order to inspire the citizens of the day to embrace moral reform, only to discover that the history of empire is a bloody shame. There is no glorious past.

Where are the likes of Roger Williams today? Where are those Baptists? It’s hard to find them in 2012. For many Baptists today, and plenty other evangelical groups, will likely support the monumental myth that is promoted in this film. Kirk’s new movie will be more fodder for the Christian fundamentalists among us who refuse to listen to the real historians telling them it just ain’t so, and to Jesus’ words that still read “my kingdom is not of this world” (Jn 18:36).

D.D. Flowers, 2012.

Suggested Reading:

“Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong” by James W. Loewen; “Was America Founded As a Christian Nation: A Historical Introduction” by John Fea; “Founding Faith: How Our Founding Fathers Forged a Radical New Approach to Religious Liberty” by Steven Waldman; “Revolution Within the Revolution: The First Amendment in Historical Context 1612-1789” by William Estep; “A People’s History of the United States: 1492 to Present” by Howard Zinn; “The Myth of a Christian Nation: How the Quest for Politics is Destroying the Church” by Gregory Boyd; “Resident Aliens” by Stanley Hauerwas


Christian Gnosticism in the Pastorals?

It was largely the work of Rudolf Bultmann in his Theology of the New Testament (1951) that first set out to determine the extent to which the Christian Gospel unfolded by way of Gnostic terminology in order to refute the dangerous fast-growing heresy later to be known as Christian Gnosticism.[1] Bultmann’s reconstruction of early Christianity has been severely attacked and criticized relentlessly in the last fifty years.

Many scholars have abandoned this Hellenistic reading of the New Testament. However, there are certain signs that interest of this Gnostic presupposition is on the rebound.[2]

I believe that the New Testament was in fact written in the context of various Jewish fringe groups that were syncretistic by their nature. It would the appear that second century Christian Gnosticism was born out of a fusing together of a wide array of Jewish religious beliefs with other emerging Hellenistic philosophical ideas.

Although a systematic Gnosticism did not arise until the second century, as William Barclay has written: “The basic ideas of Gnosticism were there in the atmosphere which surrounded the early Church, even in the days of Paul.”[3] Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to uncover any evidence that may exist for an early Christian Gnosticism being addressed specifically by Paul within the New Testament letters to Timothy and Titus.

GNOSTIC CHRISTIANITY
A Synopsis of Origin and Belief

It is necessary to begin this presentation of the evidence with what the student can know about the origins of Gnosticism before turning to what is certain about the fully developed Christian Gnosticism in the second century AD. Then after having explored Gnosticism in its infancy and examined it in full expression, the reader will be more apt to determine what level of Gnosticism is being combated in the first century Pauline texts.

This paper will begin by briefly summarizing Gnostic origin and belief in order that the reader will be familiar with the rhetoric and historical traditions of Gnosticism.

Pheme Perkins says: “The history of both Gnosticism and Christianity begins in the margins of Judaism, among persons whom might be called ‘Jews’ by some and ‘non-Jews’ by others.”[4] Perkins believes a simple division of “Jewish” and “non-Jewish” is not representative of the pluralistic society of Paul’s day. Instead, the world in which Gnosticism was born was one of religious syncretism. This means that determining clear lines of religious belief was often next to impossible.

Perkins mentions Gnostic origins and the New Testament in the following:

Even though Nag Hammadi texts are not evidence for a pre-Christian Gnosticism in the same sense in which the Dead Sea Scrolls provide evidence for messianic expectations in a Jewish sect prior to the emergence of Christianity, it is no longer possible to account for everything in the second-century Gnostic writings as derived from Christianity. They provide a different constellation of traditions from the remarkably varied religious landscape of the first and second centuries. New Testament writings are evidently neither advocating Gnostic ideas nor combating the formal systems that would emerge in the second century. But the religious currents that appear in the Gnostic writings are also part of the environment of the New Testament.[5 

Perkins proposes that the formation of Gnostic mythology first begins in a Jewish context within a Hellenized culture during the first century BC.[6] N.T. Wright suspects the same: “There may have been some before the time of Jesus who claimed to posses a special ‘gnosis,’ a knowledge which set them aside from ordinary folk and marked them out for a heavenly destiny.”[7] Many scholars have acknowledged the evidence for this found in Paul’s letters (e.g. 1 Cor. 8:1-4; Col. 2:6-22).

The second century Apologists’ view of the origins of Gnosticism lay with Simon Magus in Samaria (Acts 8). However, Magus may only mark a turning point whereby Christian teaching was merged with Gnostic myths, thus birthing a Christian Gnosticism.

This is because Samaritan belief and practice cannot account for the bitterness directed at the Creator God of the Old Testament. Perkins states that “periodized salvation history, interest in cosmology, the origins of humanity, myths of the rebellious angels” did not derive from the second century interaction between Gnostic teachers and orthodox Christian apologists.[8] Therefore, the origins of Gnostic thought precede Christianity.

It is most likely that Gnosticism grew out of the Hellenizing of Judaism in the early centuries BC. There are elements of Gnosticism that are similar to Neo-pythagoreanism and Middle Platonism—a revival of Platonism from the first century BC to the second century AD. It was Plato that coined the word gnostikos (related to ‘gnosis’) and it continued to be used philosophically to refer to intellectual knowledge.[9]

Among these ideas, the student must also consider the impact of Stoicism and Epicurean philosophical ideas. All of these Greek ideas fused together with elements of Judaism will eventually threaten the new radical first century sect that proclaimed Jesus Messiah.

Second Century Christian Gnosticism

Helmut Koester has written: “The history of Gnosticism in its early stages during the period of early Christianity cannot be identified with the history of a tangible sociological phenomenon.”[10] The Gnostic teachers, like other teachers in the Hellenistic world, combined religious, mythological, and philosophical ideas each with their own unique spin.

There was no uniform Gnostic system.

However, as previously stated, the second century apologists believed Gnosticism could be traced back to Simon Magus in Samaria.  Even though Gnosticism was a scattered variety, its characteristic features were well known by those church fathers that were schooled in Greek ideas and religious syncretism. The leading apologists were: Irenaeus, Ignatius, Justin Martyr, and Clement.

Among the leading Gnostics were: Basildes, Carpocrates, Cerinthus, and Valentinus. Valentinus held the most attractive and better known systems of Gnostic thought. For the sake of argument it is best that the student be aware of the most basic teachings that all Gnostic sects shared in common. This will help in bridging the gulf between Gnostic origins and the systematic Christian Gnosticism in the second century.

Gnostics believed the material world was not created by the Father of Jesus, but rather a Demiurge (lesser deity) created all things material and therefore all matter was considered evil. The God of the Old Testament was considered to be this Demiurge. Marcion, a Gnostic heretic who first formulated his own canon of Scripture, is best known for teaching against Yahweh of the Old Testament.  It was likely due to the heretical teachings and efforts of Marcion that the early church was intentional in establishing an official canon of the New Testament books.[11]

The Gnostics taught that the God of the Old Testament was evil. The serpent in the Garden of Eden is therefore seen as a liberator of humankind by giving them secret knowledge (gnosis) of their own divinity. Since the Creator is evil, his creation is also evil.  Therefore, flesh is inherently corrupt. This caused the ultimate God, the Father of Jesus, to have pity on humans and send them his Gnostic Son to be savior. Those known as Docetists taught that Jesus had the illusion of flesh. Others said the body of Jesus was merely possessed by the Son upon a Gnostic baptism and abandoned him at crucifixion.[12]

Since the Gnostics thought the flesh was evil and of no consequence, they naturally rejected the Christian teaching of the physical resurrection of the body. This played out ethically in two extremes: liberty and legalism.

It was not until the discovery of the Nag Hammadi documents in 1945 that Gnostic studies were greatly advanced. Before that time, scholars were dependant upon the writings of the early apologists to understand their Gnostic opponent. The Coptic manuscripts date from the mid-fourth century and contain writings that were originally in Greek. Those portions date as early as the second and third centuries.

The Gnostic writings have helped scholars understand the “inner religious spirit”[13] of Gnosticism as a developed rival system of belief in contrast to orthodox Christianity in the second century.

THE LETTERS TO TIMOTHY AND TITUS
Authorship and Date

Did the apostle Paul write the letters to Timothy and Titus? Contemporary critical scholars insist that someone other than Paul wrote the letters to Timothy and Titus as late as the early second century.[14] Donald Guthrie says, “those who deny Pauline authorship must at once accept these epistles as pseudonymous.” And Guthrie believes there is not “impressive evidence” for an early Christian practice of this.[15] There has been considerable debate over Pauline authorship for the following reasons.

Historically there has been difficulty in fitting the letters into the Acts account. P.N. Harrison has postulated a second Roman imprisonment and an extended journey that would allow Paul time to write before being executed in 67-68 AD. F.C. Baur suggested that the epistles were a work of fiction in order to do some good in the name of Paul.[16]

Furthermore, due to the genuine nature of the letters, some believe that a later admirer of Paul collected his notes and incorporated them into letters to preserve them. This view would account for the linguistic problems in the letters. There are a large number of words in the letters not found in the rest of the Pauline corpus.

It is also believed that there are echoes of Pauline theology, but an absence of characteristic Pauline doctrines. Some scholars believe that terms like “the faith” and “sound teaching” suggest a later fixed tradition. Along with the concern of doctrine, comes a claim that the letters reflect a more institutional form of the church.[17]

If critical scholars are correct, it must be concluded that an admirer of Paul is responsible for the composition of the letters and the instruction reflects the church situation in the early second century. I’m not willing to concede with this reasoning and therefore I disagree with the contemporary critics of the letters to Timothy and Titus.

Historically it is possible that the mission accounts contain gaps.[18] Paul mentions activities and events that Luke was unaware or simply did not know about (2 Cor. 11:23-29). Luke is known to give sweeping summary statements that open up possibilities for Pauline activity (Acts 20:1-3). Literary concerns should also be reexamined.

Even the undisputed letters of Paul are not uniform in style. Is it possible that several minds (or hands for that matter) were involved in the process of letter writing (e.g. amanuensis)? [19] There is good evidence that the letters to Timothy and Titus were accepted by Clement (c.95) and Ignatius (c.115) attesting to first century Pauline authorship.[20]

Finally, do the letters to Timothy and Titus reflect an organized second century church? Robert Banks says all too often the differences between Timothy and Titus to other letters of Paul have been exaggerated.[21] For example, Paul still continues to speak in familial terms and uses language of function rather than office (1 Tim. 3:1). There is no teaching of a monarchial bishop that was so emphasized in the second century.

Occasion and Purpose

If the reader accepts Pauline authorship, then the purpose of these three epistles is self-evident. In contrast to Paul’s letters written to churches, these three epistles are addressed to individuals.

It was not until D.N. Berdot (1703) and Paul Anton (1726) that the epistles were designated as “Pastoral” to describe them.[22] This is a bit misleading since the letters are apparently written to co-workers of Paul who are following in his footsteps of apostolic ministry to the Gentiles.

The letters to Timothy were likely written in the early or middle 60’s. The letter to Titus may have been written in the late 50’s.[23]

As the reader will learn in the upcoming section, the letters to Timothy and Titus address similar issues. In 1 Timothy and Titus the apostle Paul gives his young co-workers instructions for dealing with their respective churches and the issues that have presented themselves there.

Paul’s primary concern in both 1 Timothy and Titus is false teachers and the nature of their doctrines. He will also address church leadership in the middle of his instructions on handling those who have “wandered from the faith.” Paul addresses false teaching once again in 2 Timothy, but this time Paul is writing from prison and he is more or less “handing the baton” off to Timothy.

The letters to Timothy and Titus are intimate correspondence sent from Paul to men who have been called to do the work of an apostle—that work requires preparedness “in season and out of season” to correct and rebuke with great patience (2 Tim. 4:2).  Assuming Pauline authorship and a first century context for the epistles, the investigation into the evidence of early Christian Gnosticism within those letters can now begin.

EVIDENCE OF EARLY CHRISTIAN GNOSTICISM
The Letters to Timothy

Paul instructed Timothy to “stay there in Ephesus so that you may command certain men not to teach false doctrines any longer nor to devote themselves to myths and endless genealogies” (1 Tim. 1:3-4). A few verses later (v.7), Paul describes these men as wanting to be “teachers of the law” but in the end they only teach false doctrines and stir up controversy.

Gordon Fee is convinced that “myths and genealogies” does not fit within Gnosticism and is instead solely reflective of Hellenistic Judaism.[24] It is true that genealogies played an important role in determining a person’s family or tribe and their rights by birth, but Paul couples this with “myths” that undoubtedly link this heresy to something more than quarrels over the Jewish family tree (2 Tim. 4:4).

Perkins draws attention to Sethian myth that emerged sometime in the late first century: “At the early stage Sethian mythology includes the concept of a preexistent redeemer associated with Seth, identification with a heavenly Wisdom figure, the origins of evil as a result of the ignorant creator and his offspring.”[25]

Gnosticism taught “myths” in order to describe the families of aeons that separated God from the evil physical world.[26] Gnostics created myths and genealogies in order to make sense of the evil created world so that a person could then climb the spiritual ladder of gnosis to reach the divine. The Gnostic must ascend the many emanations of God with a very special sort of knowledge—a knowledge of the highest caliber.

Paul tells Timothy to “fight the good fight” and to hold on to “faith and a good conscience” because some have “shipwrecked their faith” (1 Tim. 1:18-19). Then Paul names Hymenaeus and Alexander as the culprits. Hymenaeus is mentioned again in 2 Tim. 2:17 along with Philetus as having taught that the resurrection has already happened.

It is believed that Alexander may have moved on after the first letter to Timothy.[27] He is later described as having done Paul “a great deal of harm” and the Lord knows what he has done (2 Tim. 4:14).

As for Hymenaeus and his new partner Philetus, their denial of a future bodily resurrection may be the strongest evidence for an incipient Gnosticism at work in the first century. There is clearly a misunderstanding of resurrection. Towner suggests that it is merely confusion with the tension of the “already” but “not yet” aspect of salvation,[28] but further examination of the letters indicate something more is at work.

In 1 Tim. 2:3-4, Paul declares, “This is right and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires everyone to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth” (NRSV). The language Paul uses here seems to speak to the beginnings of Gnostic tendencies within Jewish fringe groups. First, Paul repeats “our Savior” and “all men” throughout the letters to speak against any form of elitism as it pertains to salvation.

More to the point, Paul uses “knowledge of the truth” (2 Tim. 2:25; Titus 1:1) to seemingly contrast a gnosis of lies (1 Tim. 1:10, 4:2; Titus 1:12).  Paul says, “For this I was appointed a herald and an apostle (I am telling the truth, I am not lying), a teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth” (1 Tim. 2:7).

Paul may have in mind those in Ephesus who were challenging his apostolic authority.[29] There could also be much more being implied here. Paul is a teacher of the “true faith to the Gentiles” and not the Hellenized elitist version of faith within Judaism. There is reason to suspect elements of Gnosticism within his words to Timothy. It is highly unlikely that Paul would need to convince Timothy of this truth by saying “I am not lying.” Paul’s Gospel belongs to Gentiles more than some secret gnosis of lies sent out from the syncretistic false teachers claiming they have the edge on truth.

In 1 Tim. 3:16, Paul recites what appears to be an early creed or hymn:

“Beyond all question, the mystery of godliness is great: He appeared in a body, was  vindicated by the Spirit, was seen by angels, was preached among the nations, was believed on in the world, was taken up in glory” (NIV, emphasis mine).

Towner says that Paul’s statement “the mystery of godliness is great” is an echo of the city’s cry, “Great is Artemis of the Ephesians” (Acts 19:26, 34).[30] It is interesting that the hymn is concerned with Christ’s resurrected body and mentions the Spirit, angels, the nations believing on Christ in the world, and that Christ was taken up into glory.

All of these speak against an elitist Jewish fringe group with Gnostic tendencies. Within Gnosticism, resurrection is denied, angels are really demons, Gnostic spirits bring salvation, and only a select group is able to tap into the gnosis of a spiritual other-world.[31]

In 1 Tim. 4:1-10, there continues to be ample evidence of a Jewish-Gnostic asceticism that Paul says are due to some who have followed “deceiving spirits and things taught by demons” (v.1). They forbid marriage, abstain from certain foods, and in response Paul says, “everything God created is good” (v.4). There is a Jewish flavor to all of this, but yet there still remains a more than Jewish atmosphere to the things that Paul describes. It was the Gnostics that taught a strict dualism and asceticism as they rejected the material world.

One again Paul says, “Have nothing to do with godless myths and old wives’ tales” (v.7). Some women were apparently being idle and “going from house to house” stirring up trouble (1 Tim. 5:13). In 2 Tim. 3:6, Paul says the false teachers found women (particularly widows) as easy targets for their gnosis of lies.

These false teachers embraced what Paul called a “false” knowledge and have “wandered from the faith” (1 Tim. 6:20-21). There were even some who were peddling their doctrines for cash (1 Tim. 6:5). Here is how Paul describes them to Timothy: they are devoted to myths and genealogies (1 Tim. 1:4, 4:7; 2 Tim. 4:4), desire to be teachers of the law (1 Tim. 1:7), ungodly and hypocritical liars (1 Tim. 1:10; 4:2), consciences are seared (1 Tim. 4:2); teachers of strict asceticism (1 Tim. 4:3-4); elitists (1 Tim. 2:3-4; 4:10); conceited and controversial (6:4); and obtaining a false knowledge (6:20). Paul urges Timothy to devote himself to the public reading, teaching, and preaching of Scripture in response to these false doctrines (1 Tim. 4:13).

Paul says, “All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness” (2 Tim. 3:16 NIV). He is told to “gently instruct, in the hope that God will give them a change of heart leading them to a knowledge of the truth” for they have been taken captive to the devil (2 Tim. 25-26).

Timothy is commanded to rebuke these teachers in love from a pure heart with a good conscience (1 Tim. 1:3-5). Paul is confident that these false teachers and their doctrines will not triumph (2 Tim. 3:9).

The Letter to Titus

Paul writes to Titus in Crete (1:5, 12). He begins his letter to Titus by declaring that he is an apostle of Jesus Christ for the sake of the “knowledge of the truth” and a “knowledge resting on the hope of eternal life” (v.1-2). Paul is saying that real gnosis belongs to the God who alone is aionios (eternal). The Gospel does not offer an intellectual creed or a way of life for the spiritual elite. Paul says that God chose to reveal his truth as it was promised before time began. As Paul will make clear in this letter, God’s salvation has come to “all men” (2:11).

Part of the reason Paul sent Titus to Crete was to “straighten out what was left unfinished” (1:5 NIV). He gives a brief description similar to the qualifications of an elder given to Timothy and proceeds to warn Titus of those of the “circumcision group” (1:10).  Titus is commanded to “rebuke them sharply” and ignore those who are distracted by “Jewish myths” (1:13). These “Jewish myths” do in fact identify these false teachers in Crete as Jewish to some degree. Just how Jewish they are is debatable. Towner seems to think that it is likely that Jewish-Christian opponents were creating doctrine based on OT heroes and using them against Paul in some way.[32]

Whatever their teachings were, they were not a part of mainstream Judaism.

The false teachers described in Titus would certainly appear to be more Jewish than those mentioned in the letters to Timothy. A major difference with the teachers in Crete is their licentious behavior. Paul says that their “minds and consciences are corrupted” and that believers should reject their “worldly passions” (1:15-16; 2:11-12). Once again, Paul tells Titus to avoid “arguments and quarrels about the law” (3:9). There is unquestionably a greater Jewish brand of heresy that Paul is addressing in Crete.

CONCLUSION—THE EVIDENCE DEMANDS A VERDICT

W. Schmithals is best known for his belief that the letters to Timothy and Titus were written at the beginning of the second century.[33] He proposed that the vocabulary in the letters were so distinctively Gnostic that they simply could not have been written by Paul in the first century.

I believe that the epistles do in fact include Gnostic terminology, but the systematic Gnosticism of the second century is just not in play in Timothy and Titus. Paul is not even able to give the heretical teaching a name, as other NT authors have done (Rev. 2:6,15). Paul’s inability to give this heresy a name does not rule out Gnosticism, it actually confirms an incipient Christian Gnosticism starting to vie for the hearts and minds of believers.

As one author has written: “1 Timothy probably represents an early stage in the emergence, identification, and rejection of the Gnostic viewpoint.”[34]

It is likely that Gnosticism is not the only heresy threatening the early Christian communities, but there is strong evidence that it is certainly one of them. Even in Titus, which is more Jewish than anything else, the heresy seems to come from “Gnosticizing Judaists”[35] who were masquerading as genuine Christians.

There is reason to believe that an incipient Gnosticism was clutching to the back of Christianity due to its explosive growth.

Bultmann elaborates on this:

At first, Gnosticism probably penetrated into the Christian congregations mostly through the medium of a Hellenistic Judaism that was itself in the grip of syncretism. The Gnostic Spirit-enthusiasts whom Paul opposes at Corinth are of Jewish origin (2 Cor. 11:22). Whether the false teachings advanced in Colossae are also derived from a syncretistic Judaism, is not certain (cf. Col. 2:11,14 and espec. 2:16). But in the case of the pastorals it is probably a Jewish-Christian Gnosticism that is involved.[36]

Philip Lee in his book Against the Protestant Gnostics writes: “The syncretism of Gnosticism was purposeful.”[37] This syncretism of religious and philosophical ideas would make it very difficult to give any heresy a name—just as the Romans confused Christianity with all manner of fringe cults in the middle of the first century. It was only a matter of time before Christianity would stand alone as a separate religious movement.

It will continue to be a matter of scholarly debate on how much Gnosticism influenced Christian vernacular. Some even today would like to say that Paul was himself a Gnostic that inspired the likes of Valentinus.[38] Folks like Elaine Pagels have helped to bring about a revival of Gnosticism, not only within scholarly circles, but in pop-culture as well. [39] The world of evangelical Christianity is indebted to those serious scholars who have taken the time to refute the Gnostic dreamers still among us today.

The letters to Timothy and Titus still speak to those Gnostics who will listen.

In Gnosticism we see the intellectualism, the intellectual arrogance, the fables and genealogies, the asceticism and the immorality, the refusal to contemplate the possibility of a bodily resurrection, which are all part and parcel of the heresy against which the Pastoral Epistles were written.[40]

D.D. Flowers, 2011.


[1] Rudolf Bultmann, Theology of the New Testament. Trans. Kendrick Grobel (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1951), 164.

[2] N.T. Wright, The New Testament and the People of God, Vol. 1: Christian Origins and the Question of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992), 156.

[3] William Barclay, The Letters to Timothy, Titus and Philemon. The Daily Study Bible Series (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1960), 11.

[4] Pheme Perkins, Gnosticism and the New Testament (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1993), 49.

[5] Ibid, 4.

[6] Perkins, Gnosticism and the New Testament, 29.

[7] Wright, The New Testament and the People of God, 155.

[8] Perkins, Gnosticism and the New Testament, 39.

[9] Everett Ferguson, Backgrounds of Early Christianity, 3d ed. (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2003), 300-301.

[10] Helmut Koester, History and Literature of Early Christianity, Vol. 2: Introduction to the New Testament (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1982), 207.

[11] F.F. Bruce, The Canon of Scripture (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1988), 134-144.

[12] David W. Bercot, A Dictionary of Early Christian Beliefs (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 1998), 305.

[13] Ferguson, Backgrounds of Early Christianity, 306.

[14] D.A. Carson and Douglas J. Moo, An Introduction to the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2005), 555.

[15] Donald Guthrie, New Testament Introduction, Rev. ed. (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1990), 607-608.

[16] Ibid, 614.

[17] Charles B. Cousar, The Letters of Paul (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1996), 177.

[18] Philip H. Towner, The Letters to Timothy and Titus. The New International Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2006.), 22.

[19] Michael J. Gorman, Apostle of the Crucified Lord: A Theological Introduction to Paul and His Letters (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2004), 536.

[20] Towner, The Letters to Timothy and Titus, 24.

[21] Robert Banks, Paul’s Idea of Community, Rev. ed. (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1994), 197-198.

[22] Donald Guthrie, The Pastoral Epistles, Rev. ed. Tyndale New Testament Commentaries (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1990), 17.

[23] Carson, An Introduction to the New Testament, 571-582.

[24]  Gordon D. Fee, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus. New International Commentary (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 1988), 41.

[25] Perkins, Gnosticism and the New Testament, 46.

[26] William D. Mounce, Pastoral Epistles. Word Biblical Commentary (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2000), lxxi.

[27] Towner, The Letters to Timothy and Titus, 630-631.

[28] Ibid, 528.

[29] Ralph Earle, “1 & 2 Timothy.” The Expositor’s Bible Commentary. ed. Frank E. Gaebelein, 341-418. Vol. 11 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1981), 359.

[30] Towner, The Letters to Timothy and Titus, 277.

[31] Perkins, Gnosticism and the New Testament, 16-17.

[32] Towner, The Letters to Timothy and Titus, 705.

[33] Walter Schmithals, “The Corpus Paulinum and Gnosis.” The New Testament and Gnosis. ed. Logan and Wedderburn, 107-124. Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1983.

[34] Robert A. Spivey and D. Moody Smith, Jr., Anatomy of the New Testament: A Guide to Its Structure and Meaning, 2d. ed. (New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1974), 394-395.

[35] Edmond D. Hiebert, “Titus.” The Expositor’s Bible Commentary. ed. Frank E. Gaebelein, 421-449. Vol. 11 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1981), 432.

[36] Bultmann, Theology of the New Testament, 171.

[37] Philip J. Lee, Against the Protestant Gnostics (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1987), 41.

[38] Stephan A. Hoeller, Gnosticism: New Light on the Ancient Tradition of Inner Knowing. (Wheaton: First Quest, 2002), 112.

[39] Elaine Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels. New York: Vintage Books, 1989.

[40] Barclay, The Letters to Timothy, Titus and Philemon, 10.


A Shift in My Ecclesiology

I recently revealed that I’m experiencing a shift in my ecclesiology. For the sake of clarification, I do still agree with much of what Sparks, Nee, Viola, and others have written about Christ in “organic” community. I don’t want anyone to think I believe a little institutionalism is cool or that the church is nebulous in nature. I think both miss the mark for Christian community.

As for the nebulous church idea, I really appreciate the work of Wayne Jacobsen, but his view of community is a bit loosey goosey for me. Knowing Christ in community requires people in committed relationships—that’s the very nature of a worshipping “community.”

I agree that the church should function as an organism in its familial context. But I also think it’s possible that it can at times look like an organization–depending on the season and the context of the church. That’s the great thing about an organism. It can do that. Nevertheless, it will always adhere to Christ in community, regardless of the changes in culture and context.

That means that I don’t think it is possible to fully know Christ in community when the center of church life is a one-hour weekly service (or Sunday school) where only a few function and there is little interaction among the saints. That isn’t to say larger gatherings with music and teaching are off limits to us. That would be prohibiting something that can and does edify folks. I have heard this time and again, “We miss the music and teaching.” I hear a longing to receive these gifts.

The problem for a lot of “organic” church folks is that’s all they had ever experienced. After having experienced face-to-face community, it’s easy to then voice criticisms of the large corporate gatherings. In some minds there was abuse there in that setting, therefore, everything that resembles that sort of thing should be rejected. I have also met folks who have experienced pain and abuse in small groups and house churches. So they run to the isolated pew or leave the church altogether. It’s all reactionary thinking.

Constantine did not invent large gatherings involving worship and teaching. The Jews, and later Jewish Christians, were doing that in the synagogues long before the great dragon polluted the church and set a full-blown priesthood in place to rule over church services.

No matter what order you adopt, some great stuff can happen in a larger setting, but the rubber hits the road in the face-to-face community. Unfortunately, most folks view church life as a teaching time or two during the week, not a shared life together in and outside church meetings.

What I intended to communicate in my last post is that I am disassociating myself with a strict order and calling for a redefining (or clarification) of the NT pattern, which is Christ alone. The church is free to edify and structure their life together any way they choose. As long as “Christ in community” (which at the heart means every-member functioning) is being known in their practice, not just in rhetoric and theory, there is freedom to allow the Spirit to mold that local ekklesia into a unique vessel for God’s glory.

If a church chooses to have a larger worship and teaching time for the exercise of those gifts, an event that the early church was likely not able to do on a regular basis, that’s awesome! But I believe this should only be seen as the dessert, not the main course—a great thing, but not the main thing. Discipleship plays out in relationships through Christian community.

The challenge is building a church life centered upon Christ in community, not upon a one-hour service. I may write on this later, because I think there are things that a church could do to see to it that the body of believers steers away from taking on the trappings of an institution that works only to maintain its overhead. That’s where my thoughts are currently going.

I suppose I’m exploring the many ways Christ can be experienced in community apart from a rigid order or trying to reduplicate the same context and experience of the first-century church. That might be easier for Christians in Mexico or China to relate to in their political and cultural context, but most folks in the US know a different context.

That’s not me shirking the NT pattern of church life, that’s me seeking to uphold it in the pattern of Christ.

Therefore, we should not envision any set order for any church. The Spirit will shape every community of believers each according to their gifts and context—always at the same time holding them to the pattern of Christ. The Lord sees in color, not in black and white. And the Lord may show us colors we have never seen before if we are open to receiving them with joy.

It’s not about finding the right church order or the secrets of the first church for a new book. It’s simply about learning to appreciate the many ways God is able to work his power through faithful followers of Christ.

D.D. Flowers, 2011.


1 Cor 14:26 Descriptive or Prescriptive?

I have been known as a proponent of “organic” church life for several years now. Due to the confusion over this now popular nuanced term (cp. Sparks, Cole, & Viola’s usage), I have decided to stop using it when describing the sort of church life that is to be enjoyed by all Christian communities in every cultural context until Christ returns.

It’s just not worth having to respond to all of the questioners with, “Well, what I mean by it is…” It was helpful (at least to me) for a while, but not so much anymore. I do still use it when I’m among close friends, but other than that it only becomes one more obstacle in communication.

I must admit that over the last year or so I have been led to believe that some dear saints run the risk of promoting organic church life at the expense of Christ and unity among all believers—as well as promoting Christ while attached to a specific church model (though they would claim they are not promoting a model) or even a “no order at all” approach.

The first group is likely not aware that they have bound Christ to a rigid church order. And the later group, while talking a lot about Christ, is mostly concerned with maintaining no set order in their meetings. No order has become their order. They will do nothing that even comes close to resembling organized Christianity (a person standing to deliver a message longer than 10-15 minutes is definitely out!).

If that fellowship doesn’t change its reactionary thinking, it will eventually meet its demise. Hopefully, there will be enough folks who grow tired of just chatting about Jesus over coffee for a couple hours a week to bring about a healthy change.

I found that it is possible to begin with a new vision of Christ in community, only later to gravitate toward an “us vs. them” mentality. Of course, it might have always been a mix of both—some days more of this, other days more of the other. I have become sensitive to those thoughts of mine that set myself above another person that clearly loves Jesus, but is just currently being faithful to Christ in a different setting.

Christ in Community

Looking back over the last several years of study, reflection, and experience, I’m convinced that the NT reveals some basic principles concerning church life that can be summed up like this: Everything should look like Christ and build up the saints (Eph 4:16; 1 Jn 2:6).

Beyond that, there is no church law. There is no restrictive law that says, “You can’t do that!” Nor is there the libertarian law that says, “Anything goes!” The law is Christ… Christ in community.

Regardless of what side of the church fence you’re on (organized or organic), you may think my “no law” declaration needs a qualifier. Well, I just don’t think so. Anything beyond “Christ in community” leads to divisions among us, and becomes self-righteousness dressed in the garb of the centrality and supremacy of Christ. It’s time we stop it.

“Christ in community” does involve what some have called a NT pattern. But let’s be clear, the principles of that pattern are known only in an examination of the person and work of Christ. Failing to closely examine and take serious the life and teachings of Christ is something that both institutional and organic churches do regularly.

Both groups have isolated and eisegeted (read things into) certain texts to promote their church order, all the while neglecting the life and teachings of Jesus, the very center of our faith.

For example, when his disciples were arguing over who would be greatest in the kingdom, Jesus made it very clear that true leadership was not reflected in the “top-down” hierarchal leadership seen with the politicians and corporations of the world (Mk 10:35-45; Jn 13). No, you can’t have a nation of priests when one person, other than Jesus himself, gets to be the “high” priest and the inheritor of special treatment, and regular monetary blessings.

Therefore, a prime example of the Jesus prescription—the one that goes to the heart of what’s wrong with organized religion—is that anything that doesn’t look like servant-leadership, or creates an unhealthy dependence upon one human priest, leads to spiritual paralysis in the body of Christ.

Whatever each local ekklesia decides about the role and function of pastor/teachers today, our conclusions should always be based upon the example of Christ and what he said about leadership. Church practice should always reflect the person and work of Christ among his first disciples.

Paul in Community?

What about Paul, you ask? Well, what about Paul? Paul’s idea of community comes by merely expounding upon Christ. Therefore, viewing anything Paul says as a rigid “prescriptive” order for the church in every age, when Paul is merely describing a communal life that flows out of Christ, is to put forth a law other than Christ himself.

Jesus is the only prescription for the church in every age.

That isn’t to say that Paul can’t tell us anything about church order in the 21st century. By no means! Instead, it means that Paul should be read as an apostle who guides each church to creatively adhere to the life and teachings of Jesus in their own unique context.

In 1 Corinthians 12-14, Paul addresses the believers at Corinth concerning their disorderly meetings. If the saints in Corinth were not squabbling over spiritual gifts, we likely would not even have Paul saying anything about order for the church. So notice, the pattern is given in a context of disorder and division over the way things ought to be done.

What then shall we say, brothers and sisters? When you come together, each of you has a hymn, or a word of instruction, a revelation, a tongue or an interpretation. Everything must be done so that the church may be built up.  1 Cor 14:26 NIV

The pattern here is not that all these things, and nothing else, should happen in a church meeting. It’s simply what was happening in Corinth at this moment in time. Paul was not intending to say that every church meeting for all time should always look like what is described here (i.e. every single meeting should always and forever be open-participatory).

No, the pattern for every generation is always and only Christ.

So, what does Christ look like in this particular gathering? He looks like ordered sharing, not disrespectful neglect of others and their gifts (14:27-33). It’s this open-participatory meeting, and only this type of meeting, that we hear Paul addressing with his guidance.

We should not gather from the NT that there is never a place for a meeting set aside to hear a teacher. Paul’s concern in this open meeting is that Christ would not have chaos and disrespect of others when meeting in such an intimate familial setting. I imagine that he might have said something similar in spirit if there was a church who opted to have teaching times in a larger setting. He apparently was cool with this sort of thing when he held his own “apostolic meetings” (Acts 20:7).

There is no church manual that prescribes the activity and function of church meetings. Even if you were to gather up all of the “one another” verses of the NT, you are still not given a rigid order of how things must be done in a church meeting. To force that upon the NT is not only promoting an agenda, it undermines the only prescription, which is Christ.

Biblical scholar and “house church” attendee, Robert Banks, writes:

“The basic principle that Paul lays down for the conduct of the church is that all things should be done for edification. Only when a contribution has this as its object should it be exercised” (Paul’s Idea of Community, 100).

Jesus (and Paul) leaves a great deal of freedom to all local churches. However, that freedom will in the long run never undermine Christ expressed throughout the entire priesthood of believers over the many seasons of the church.

D.D. Flowers, 2011.