Especially many millennials, but even more than that, don't like actual Christianity. They want to fit into the world. They want to live like they want. In other words, they don't want repentance, or actual Jesus. Jesus always submitted to the Father, and that's what Christianity looks like, submission. The Father was well-pleased with the Son, because the Son was doing what He wanted. Many, however, don't want to change to be like Jesus Christ, but they still want to credit for doing so. What do they do? What I've noticed for my entire life, revealing itself in many different forms and by different names, is changing the grace of God. I've talked about it for a long time.
How can someone just turn from biblical Christianity by doing what Jude wrote, turning the grace of God into lasciviousness? That's in the Bible. People turn the grace of God into lasciviousness. That is not the grace of God. It's lasciviousness. Paul in Galatians calls it using grace as an occasion to the flesh. I've written a lot in the past about evangelicalism doing this. It's now also all over the place among independent fundamental Baptists. Evangelicals and these professing Baptists have merged now.
So how, the question in the first sentence of the last paragraph? They are not grounded in what the Bible says about grace and then they are allured or deceived by false teachers, which is what Peter talks about in 2 Peter 2. If someone is really saved, he won't be pulled into this false teaching. He will reject it. If he sticks with this teaching and practice, he is indicating that the actual grace of God is foreign to him and he doesn't believe in the actual Jesus Christ of the Bible, but an idolatrous one of which he approves.
Somebody that I love very dearly has gotten messed up with a crowd of professing Christians, evangelicals, one of which, a major one, David Brady, is on staff at Andy Stanley's church. Brady grew up in an independent Baptist church, and has left independent Baptist fundamentalism. I left fundamentalism as I've told in a long series that I wrote here on the blog, and that's because New Testament Christianity isn't represented by fundamentalism.
Brady, who is on staff at Northpoint in Atlanta, gave a podcast interview. I knew he was influencing this person I love dearly, so I listened for evaluation with an open mind. I always want to be open minded. I wanted to understand where Brady was coming from, also to get an understanding of what was influencing this one I love dearly. I found that it's just a repackaged perversion of the grace of God. He really, really likes his version of grace, which I think agrees with what Andy Stanley would say it is. Andy Stanley is a dangerous false teacher that is fooling many people with many, helping lead evangelicalism into apostasy.
I could have just ignored this not unique perversion of the gospel and the grace of God for the rest of my life. It isn't affecting our church at all, but it is affecting this person I love dearly, who lives elsewhere, so I am going to write about it now. In his "testimony," Brady said he was saved when he was fifteen years of age at the IFB church, and he knew that grace was about salvation, but after he was saved, he found out that grace there at his church, despite there being a lot of great Christians there who loved the Lord, wasn't for after salvation, but about rules, essentially keeping rules. This rang a bell with what I've heard from this person I love dearly. I could say that I get it now.
People who love the world, which you can't if you love God (1 John 2:15-17), will sometimes look for justification of their love for the world. This cheap grace, actually not even grace at all, they think vindicates their love for the world. All of the worldliness is apparently just covered under grace. If one says anything about a pagan, worldly, godless, profane, or fleshly act, he's an agent against the grace of God, which just covers for everything. This truly is grace as a "get-out-jail-free-card." This corruption of grace has existed obviously at the time of the writing of the New Testament, but I've seen various permutations of it with different names and labels in my thirty plus years of pastoring. Many, many books are written about it.
David Brady said that he almost abandoned Christianity, but then someone gave him a book by Tullian Tchividjian, called, Jesus Plus Nothing. At the time he was a student at Bob Jones University. I listened to everything this young man said, and it wasn't new, what he reported to have picked up from Tchividjian. One of the words he used was "performancism," a particular word I had not heard before, but it's not a surprising one. Another couple of words that he used again and again were "scandalous grace."
Does "scandalous grace" sound right to you? It isn't in the Bible, and I had never heard it. It reminded me some of John Piper's "Christian hedonism." That doesn't sound like it could be right either, but the two are similar in that they both arrest one's attention, because both sound wrong. Without further explanation, they couldn't be right. Brady explained scandalous grace by giving an example.
Someone "sleeps with someone." Brady didn't use either the word fornication or adultery. The next morning that person who just slept with someone needs to be thinking that he is exactly the same before God as he was before he fornicated (my word). That's how this fornicator, according to Brady, needs to look at the grace of God. This is why it is "scandalous." Instead, someone should ask if this is a person who has never been converted, and if he professes faith, how this even squares with the grace of God, rather than giving credit to "scandalous grace." With that illustration, I understood the attraction of this particular view of grace, which again, isn't new. This is also what Peter describes in 2 Peter 2 (v. 19):
While they promise them liberty, they themselves are the servants of corruption: for of whom a man is overcome, of the same is he brought in bondage.
He promises liberty to those who are servants of corruption and they are brought into bondage with this teaching. In Peter's description, it is the way to apostasy.
There is no way that someone could teach the above view of the grace of God and be preaching a true gospel. It is a rejection of lordship and repentance. It is not a biblical or historical position on sanctification. It is not the same Jesus as the Jesus of the Bible. It is a different Jesus. It is not biblical belief either. It is a placebo faith and grace and all the components of the gospel. It neither saves nor sanctifies.
I'm not the only one who rejects the Tchividjian presentation of sanctification, which didn't work for himself, if you read his bio at Wikipedia. Dan Phillips, who despite taking a looser view of grace than I do, still writes the following about Tchividjian's position from the perspective of this particular book of his, even before Tchividjian had to quit pastoring:
Tullian Tchividjian, now a pastor, admits to having been such an incorrigible 16yo that his father actually booted him out of the house. But Tchividjian continued on a rebellious, ruinous path... and his father fully subsidized it. At one point, after Tchividjian had screwed up a job and lied to his father about what had happened, dad gave him a blank check, no questions asked. Though Tchividjian took advantage of that check, it didn't stop there. Tullian snuck into the family home and committed repeated acts of theft and felony, stealing dad's checks and forging his signature. Dad (a clinical psychologist, or so I read) was aware of his son's crimes, and let him go on (you'll pardon me) unchecked and unconfronted.
But see: it had a happy ending. By all accounts, Tchividjian's now converted, is a good guy and a celebrated and well-positioned preacher of wide renown. So we know it was the right thing to do. Right?
In proof and as a capper, Tchividjian quotes a bunch of directly-relevant Scriptures counseling Christian parents to handle rebellious, criminal dependents in just exactly this manner.
No, I'm kidding. Tchividjian doesn't do anything like that. What he does instead is quote Steve Brown, whose rather appalling teachings about "grace" I've examined at great length elsewhere.
But it's a feel-good story, and anyone who disagrees can only be cast as a legalist and anti-grace and a hater and a good-story-spoiler and all those awful things. Besides, it's at The Gospel Coalition, so it has to be all right, right? They're all sound there. Right?
Tchividjian's book Jesus + Nothing = Everything received a fair bit of friendly critical pushback, most of which centered around accusations that it fell short of Biblically relating the indicative to the imperative. . . .
It is tough critiquing an article like this, as the critics of Tchividjian's book clearly struggled in their criticisms. How do you criticize such a piece, without sounding as if you're criticizing grace — even though it may be a "you keep using that word" situation. If writers or speakers can just say words like "grace" and "love," and let our imaginations roam free, this is what we're likely to come up with.
Phillips has written another about Tchividjian, that is worth reading (here). Jeremiah Johnson and Wayne de Villiers also skewer the false teaching of Tchividjian (here, here) [also this]. In an interview celebrating his fiftieth anniversary of pastoring, John MacArthur speaks with Phil Johnson about Tchividjian:
PHIL: There are some small ones. And as you said, the issue of – it’s antinomianism, we call the no-lordship view. But it’s antinomianism. And that has resurfaced in recent years through like the writings of Tullian Tchividjian who’s a Presbyterian, and some other surprising places that a similar kind of antinomianism has cropped up again. So it’s not as big an issue as it used to be, but it is an ongoing controversy.
JOHN: Well, I would say it doesn’t have the doctrinal defense that it once had at a high level. But antinomianism, or no-lordship salvation, just the idea that you can ask Jesus to be your Savior, and save you from hell, come live in your life, and then go live any way you want, that’s always going to be around; and that’s what antinomianism is. It’s an overstatement of grace. And that’s why somebody like Tullian Tchividjian, everything he talks about is built around the word “grace.” It’s grace, grace. It’s just drowning in grace as if you could do anything and be anything and you’re still under grace. It’s almost like God celebrates your sin because it lets Him put His grace on display. That’s always going to be around, because it’s just inherent in religious people to want a kind of religion that allows for them to sin the way they want to sin.
PHIL: Right. And to be clear, that’s a twisting of grace.
JOHN: Totally.
PHIL: That’s what Paul said, people twist the concept of grace to accommodate their own –
JOHN: And everybody that I’ve personally sort of interacted with through the years who is a strong advocate of an antinomian view or a no-lordship view, if you get behind the curtain you’re going to find it’s a theology that accommodates their life. And they have an affection for sin, and they want to hold onto that and hold onto what they think is salvation at the same time; and that’s an accommodating idea.
This teaching presents a false gospel. It should be rejected as a false gospel. Paul in Galatians 1:6-9 says that if anyone preaches another gospel than what he preached, let that person be accursed. This is a false gospel equal to what Paul reveals in Galatians 1.
More to Come
Agreed. A shame-gospel is no gospel at all. Lascivious grace is no grace at all. Antinomianism raises its ugly head again. Romans 3:4a says, "God forbid: yea, let God be true, but every man a liar;..." This article does not speak well of Tchividjian and everyone who goes along with his contorted doctrine of sanctification. God's word should not be avoided, even if we have to conclude that all others like them are not saved - or even at best, we stand in doubt of their profession of faith.
ReplyDeleteThanks Bill.
ReplyDeleteMr. Brandenburg,
ReplyDelete'All of the worldliness is apparently just covered under grace. If one says anything about a pagan, worldly, godless, profane, or fleshly act, he's an agent against the grace of God, which just covers for everything. This truly is grace as a "get-out-jail-free-card."'
I too, have someone I love dearly who is expressing this view of grace as well. They (anonymous "they", not choose-your-own-sex "they") would deny it of course. I don't know how to bring them to their senses. Any exhortation to holy living is "pietism". The interesting thing to me is this is being fueled by "Calvinism". The Old Calvinism never would have countenanced this sort of living. Anyway, I have tried to show this person that grace should lead directly to holy living, not to libertine living.
Titus 2:11-12 For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men, 12 Teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world;"
Chris L
Hi Chris,
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure that it's going to be the path of the one whom I love, but I think your use of Titus 2 is a good one, in its context as a right view of grace. As a Presbyterian Tchividjian, was a Calvinist, but I'm not sure Andy Stanley is. I don't know that it is peculiar to Calvinism, but it does fit with New Calvinism in a very inconsistent way. I don't think it is inconsistent from where Stanley comes from, especially if you read what his dad wrote about eternal security. Some of it can be fueled by a way to evangelize, where this presentation of grace is alluring in a fleshly way for people racked with guilt over sin, they are given this placebo or salve and in accepting, then also think they're saved. More people are saved, akin to praying the prayer, and may or may not live the Christian life. Those who expose Tchividjian have called it hypergrace. It's not grace at all, but they have to give some kind of title.
Thanks for your comment.
Chris,
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry about this one you love. It's painful and frustrating. I'm sure it's why Peter in 2 Peter was warning them to bring things into remembrance. Saved people will keep bringing things into remembrance, and they need to be adding to their faith, or they'll be these apostates in 2 Peter 2.
Hey Kent,
ReplyDeleteJust was able to read your post. Thank you for depicting accurately what I said on this podcast interview. I don't feel like you misconstrued my testimony in your description - so thank you for that, sincerely.
However, in the spirit of Matthew 18, I'm open to a discussion about our doctrinal disagreements in a private conversation. My cell is 219-331-4864, should you ever be interested in a proper verbal discourse.
Sincerely,
David Brady
Hi David,
ReplyDeleteI'm happy to hear that I wasn't misrepresenting your conversation, because I was trying not to, and that can be difficult when one is summing up what someone says, or at least uses words that can be misconstrued. I did a couple of other things too, for anyone reading, that I do all the time here, that is, I linked to the actual interview, so that if someone thought I was misrepresenting, he could just listen to the interview. That takes longer, but it would give more information if someone wanted, where he could hear coming directly from your mouth in answer to questions from a sympathetic interviewer. I would, of course, not be sympathetic if I were interviewing you, and I would be pushing back in a number of ways, using scripture, because there were things said in the interview that would be a concern to me, that I didn't even mention. If I got that detailed, I might want to transcribe, which I often do here. Again, thank you for recognizing that and noticing. I'm not against you, David. I love you and I'm for you.
As to your second paragraph, you seem to intimate, if I don't have you wrong, that I've violated Matthew 18 with you, because I took this public. Matthew 18 specificially is for personal offense. Read the verse. Now there is a textual variant that does change the meaning of the word that I've pointed out in the past. Notice in Matthew 18:15, in the TR/KJV, "against thee," and then in the CT/NASV, etc., it leaves "against thee" out. This is not a sin against me. This is public false teaching. I didn't confront Albert Mohler or Phil Johnson or Mark Dever personally in my evaluation of their very public panel discussion at the Shepherds Conference. It was public. I'm also not confronting Tullian Tchvidjian in private either.
I'm writing the above second paragraph to answer this intimation that Matthew 18 should have been applied. I've written books. I don't expect people who confront the material to come to me one-on-one first. As long as they do what I did to you, represent me accurately, that's something I would want or should expect if someone is being fair or kind.
I think what you said is very dangerous, a false view, an unscriptural view, and a non-historical view of salvation and sanctification. I had read it before, but never interacted on my blog, because it never got on my radar like it does now. I remember when its language was becoming a fad, preaching the gospel to yourself.
I remember when the controversy arose and there was a lot of talk about this view of sanctification in evangelical and even fundamentalist circles. When I listened to you and then read more, it doesn't sound much different, like a variety, of what revivalist IFB actually say, the free grace branch of revivalism. It's not exactly the same, but the theological aspect sounds the same, sort of like Hyles/Hybels are to me the same in their church methods, this sounds like something at its root that is not different than some of what you were already associated with in Indiana that misrepresents the grace of God. I actually don't think it is depending on God, but on a different type of flesh, what I've called left-winged legalism. This comes out in things in your interview too if I transcribed. I expect God's grace to change people, while this other view expects it to swallow up sin like a garbage can -- to put it in broad terms.
(Continued in Next Comment)
(Continuation of last comment)
ReplyDeleteI would love to talk to you directly and will. However, just for ground rules, I would want it to be scriptural, not saying that you would not, I don't know. In other words, we won't have a mediator, so my grounds for a conversation are that we respect scripture but we don't have to respect seat-of-the-pants human philosophy or psychobabble. I heard some of that in your interview without push back. Those moments stuck out to me, and I felt sad for you, that your view of Christianity had turned so subjective. That's also very prevalent in the IFB associations from which you come, and also inbred there.
Thanks for commenting, David. I'm not going to talk about the one I love and what this means to this person, but I would in private. Be glad to. Thank you.
For the record,
ReplyDeleteI called the number and left a message.