- 6 -History of the changeover to the Unfallen Nature
position
From
its earliest days, the Seventh-day Adventist Church has taught that,
when God partook of humanity, He took, not the perfect, sinless nature
of man before the fall, but the fallen, sinful, offending, weakened,
degenerated nature of man after the fall of Adam. The
inclinations and tendencies to sin that are in fallen man's flesh were
in His flesh; but that, by complete dependence upon His Father, His mind
held its integrity and never by a shadow of a thought responded to the
weakness or sinful cravings of the flesh. This
view of Christ's human nature in no way denied or contradicted the
Church's stand on the complete Deity and absolute sinlessness of Jesus
Christ. As
late as 1949, this was the accepted teaching of the Church as
presented in denominationally published lesson quarterlies, books, and
periodicals. But,
during the fifteen-year period between 1940 and 1955, the words,
"sinful" and "fallen," with reference to Christ's
human nature were largely eliminated from denominationally published
materials. Since
1952, phrases such as "sinless human nature," "nature of
Adam before the fall," and "human nature defiled" have
taken the place of the former terminology. These phrases are interpreted
to mean that the human nature of Christ was "sinful,"
"fallen," or "degenerated," only in the sense of
weakness and frailty of the physical organism. It is said that these
weaknesses and frailties of the physical organism were not innately and
intrinsically a part of Christ's human body but were borne
vicariously. Let
us now consider, in more detail, the history of the changeover in the
doctrine of the human nature of Christ in the Seventh-day Adventist
Church. IN THE 19TH CENTURYThis
great truth about the human nature of Christ was shared by the pioneer
writers in the Advent movement. Here are a few examples, penned by some
of the leading men in our church: "[Jesus]
was made in all things like unto those whom He came to save. . In all
points He was made like His brethren. . And what the Law could not do,
Christ came in the likeness of sinful flesh to do . . By His life He has
shown that sin in the flesh is condemned, and He has destroyed it, for
in Him the body of sin is destroyed . . He has taken away this sinful
nature, taken it upon Himself that we might be delivered from
!t." E. J. Waggoner. General Conference Bulletin, 1891. "The
garment was woven in Jesus, in the same flesh that you and I have, for
He took part of the same flesh and blood that we have. . In my flesh;
it was my flesh that He had, It was your flesh that He had, . The
Lord Jesus Christ, who came and stood where I stand, in the flesh in
which I live," A. T. Jones, General Conference-Bulletin 1893 "Christ
came the first time, clothed with humanity, taking not upon Himself
the nature of angels, but the seed of Abraham, that He might be made,
like ourselves, subject to temptation, pain, and death, that by His
connection with humanity He might sympathize with His fallen
creatures," S, H. Haskell. Bible Echo, March 15, 1889. "Very
few of us realize how nearly the Divine nature approached the human in
the person of Jesus of Nazareth. More properly speaking, it is
impossible for us even to conceive of the infinite condescension that
was necessary in order that the Son of God, the associate of the
Father, should appear in mortal flesh and participate in human
experiences, with all their trials and weaknesses. . But 'He was tempted
in all points like as we are': consequently He must have partaken of our
nature. Should any think this expression too strong, let them read verse
16 of Hebrews 2: 'For verily He took not on Him the nature of angels;
but. He took on Him the seed of Abraham' . . His faultless life under
those circumstances becomes a constant reprover of our sins as well as
an encouragement to our weakness." G. C. Tenney, editorial,
Bible Echo, April 15, 1889. "By
partaking of our nature, His human arm encircles the fallen
race." Stephen Haskell, Bible Echo, February 15, 1892. "He
took upon Him sinful flesh to suffer and die for guilty man. "A.
W. Semmens, Bible Echo, April 15, 1892. "But
if He [Christ] comes no nearer to us than in sinless nature, that is a
long way off . . It is true He is holy; He is altogether holy. But His
holiness is not that kind that makes Him afraid to be in company with
people who are not holy, for fear He will get His holiness
spoiled." A. T. Jones, General Conference Bulletin, 1895. "The
second Adam came not at the point where the first Adam stood when he
failed, but at the point at which mankind stood at the end of four
thousand years of degeneracy. "A. T. Jones, Review, February 18,
1896. "So
you see that what the Scripture states very plainly is that Jesus Christ
had exactly the same flesh that we bear—flesh of sin, flesh in which
we sin; flesh, however, in which He did not sin. But He bore our sins in
that flesh of sin. And what flesh could He take but the flesh of the
time? Not only that, but it was the very flesh He designed to take;
because, you see, the problem was to help man out of the difficulty into
which he had fallen, and man is a free moral agent. He must be helped as
a free moral agent. Christ's work must be, not to destroy him, not to
create a new race, but...to recreate man, to.. restore him in the image
of God." W. W. Prescott, Bible Echo, January 6, 1896. In
the section, just below, we will quote more extensively from that sermon
by W. W. Prescott. "He
did not come to this world and take upon Himself Adam's condition, but
He stepped down lower, to meet man as he is, weakened by sin, polluted
in his own iniquity. " Stephen Haskell, Signs, April 2, 1896. "Infinitely
superior in every respect to Boaz, yet He stooped to marry the lost
race. " E. Farnsworth, Signs, May 6, 1897. "[Waggoner:]
We begin with the ninth verse: 'We
see Jesus.' Where are we looking? "[Voice:]
To man in his fallen state. "[Waggoner:]
Yes, our gaze is directed to man's first dominion; as we look, we see
him fail, and still looking, we see Jesus taking man's fallen condition.
" E. J. Waggoner, General Conference Bulletin, 1897. "He
brought divinity from the courts of glory into fallen humanity.
"S. N. Haskell, Signs, January 17, 1900. And
that this is likeness to man as He is in His flesh, sinful nature, and
not as He was in His original [heavenly] sinless nature, is made certain
by the Word: 'We see Jesus who was made a little lower than the angels,
for the suffering of death.' Therefore, as man is since he became
subject to death; this is what we see Jesus to be, in His place, as
man." A. T. Jones, Consecrated Way to Christian Perfection. "Moreover,
the fact that Christ took upon Himself the flesh, not of a sinless
being, but of sinful man; that is, the flesh which He assumed and all
the weaknesses and sinful tendencies to which fallen nature is subject,
is shown by the statement that He 'was made of the seed of David
according to the flesh.' " E. J. Waggoner, Christ and His
Righteousness, 27. Many,
many more examples could be cited! (Later in this present book, we will
document the change that later occurred in Bible Readings.) On
Sunday evening, October 31, 1895, W. W. Prescott preached a powerful
sermon on the nature of Christ, at the Armadale camp meeting, in
Victoria, Australia. It contained 25 statements, that Christ took our
nature in His birth and life on this planet. 1\vice in that sermon,
Prescott stated that Christ did not take the unfallen nature of Adam. Ellen
White was present and heard that sermon; and, in eight manuscripts and
letters, soon after expressed grateful appreciation for that lecture
(MS 19,23,47, and 52, 1895; and Letter 25,32,83, and 84, 1895). It was
only a couple months later that she wrote that letter to W. L. H. Baker,
which we will discuss shortly, reproving him for teaching that Christ
had sinned. Prescott's
sermon was printed in the January 6 and 13, 1896, issues of the Bible
Echo (our Australian journal). Here are portions of that History of the
Changeover sermon. You will see why she valued it so highly: "That
through death, being made subject to death, 'taking upon Him the flesh
of sin, He might, by His dying, destroy him that had the power of death
[Heb. 2: 16, quoted] . . So you see that what the Scripture states very
plainly is that Jesus Christ had exactly the same flesh that we
bear—flesh of sin, flesh in which we sin, flesh, however, in which He
did not sin, but He bore our sins in that flesh of sin. Do not set this
point aside. . "God
made man a little lower than the angels, but man fell much lower by
his sin. Now he is far separated from God; but he is to be brought back
again. Jesus Christ came for that work: and in order to do it, He came,
not where man was before he fell, but where man was after he fell. .
Jesus Christ comes right down to where he is, and meets him there. He
takes his flesh and becomes a brother to him. Jesus Christ is a brother
to us in the flesh; He was born into the family. . "He
came and took the flesh of sin that this family had brought upon itself
by sin, and wrought out salvation for them, condemning sin in the flesh.
. To redeem man from the place into which he had fallen, Jesus Christ
comes, and takes the very flesh now borne by humanity; He comes in
sinful flesh, and takes the case where Adam tried it and failed. . "Christ
came, and after a forty days' fast the devil tempted Him to use His
divine power to feed Himself. And notice, it was in sinful flesh that He
was tempted, not the flesh in which Adam fell. This is wondrous truth,
but I am wondrously glad that it is so. It follows at once that by
birth, by being born into the same family, Jesus Christ is my brother
in the flesh, 'for which cause He is not ashamed to call them brethren'
(Heb. 2: 11). He has come into the family, identified Himself with the
family, is both father of the family and brother of the family. As
father of the family, He stands for the family. He came to redeem the
family, condemning sin in the flesh, uniting divinity with flesh of sin.
. " 'For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men,
the man Christ Jesus' (1 Tim. 2:5). There is a man in heaven now, the
man Christ Jesus, bearing our human nature; but it is no longer a
flesh of sin; it is glorified. Having come here and lived in a flesh
of sin, He died; and in that He died, He died unto sin; and in that He
lives, He lives unto God. When He died, He freed Himself from the flesh
of sin, and He was raised glorified. . Jesus Christ, our own brother,
the man Christ Jesus, is in heaven, living to make intercession for us "This
union of the divine and the human has brought Jesus Christ very near to
us. There is not one too low down for Christ to be there with him. He
identified Himself completely with this human family. . One version
reads, 'Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these My
little brothers, ye have done it unto Me.' Christ looks upon everyone of
the human family as His. When humanity suffers, he suffers. He is
humanity; He has joined Himself to this family. . Jesus
Christ thus united Himself with the human family, that He might be with
us by being in us, just as God was with Him by being in Him. The very
purpose of His work was that He might be in us, and that, as He
represented the Father, so the children, the Father, and the Elder
Brother might be united in Him. . "
'Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world' (Matt. 28:20).
By being in us, He is with us alway, and that this might be possible,
that He might be in us, He came and took our flesh. This also is the way
in which the holiness of Jesus works. He had a holiness that enabled
Him to come and dwell in sinful flesh, and help sinful flesh by His
presence in it; and that is what He did, so that when He was raised from
the dead, He was glorified. His purpose was that having purified sinful
flesh by His indwelling presence, He might now come and purify
sinful flesh in us, and glorify us. He 'shall change our Vile body. that
it may be fashioned like unto His glorious body, according to the
working whereby He is able even to subdue all things unto Himself'
(Phil. 3:21) . . "Let
us enter into the experience that God has given Jesus Christ to us to
dwell in our sinful flesh, to work out in our sinful flesh what He
worked out when He was here. He came and lived here that we might
through Him reflect the image of God. This is the very heart of Christianity
. . "By
following where He leads, we shall know what Christian experience is,
and what it is to dwell in the light of His presence. I tell you, this
is a wondrous truth. Human language cannot put more into human thought
or language than is said in these words: 'The Word became flesh, and
dwelt among us,' This is our salvation. . Nothing short of it will meet
what we have to meet, the world, the flesh, and the devil. But He that
is for us is mightier than he that is against us. Let us have in our
daily lives Jesus Christ, 'the Word' that 'became flesh,' "W. W.
Prescott, Sermon given October 31, 1895; printed in Bible Echo, January
6, 13, 1896. "Therefore,
just as certainly as we see Jesus lower than the angels, unto the
suffering of death, so certainly it is by this demonstration that, as
man, Jesus took the nature of man as he is since death entered: and not
the nature of man as he was before He became subject to
death." A. T. Jones, General Conference Bulletin, 1895. E.
J. Waggoner wrote, "Here is the same mystery as that the Son of
God should die. The spotless Lamb of God, who knew no sin, was made to
be sin. Sinless, yet not only counted as a sinner, but actually taking
upon Himself sinful nature. "E. J. Waggoner. Christ and His
Righteousness. 27-28 (1890). "When
sin entered, death came; so when man sinned, death came upon him. God
stayed with him; therefore, in that He stayed with man. although man
had sinned, God took upon Himself sinful flesh. And so He took upon
Himself death, for death had passed upon all the world. "General
Conference Bulletin, "Studies in the Book of Hebrews"
(Series by E. J. Waggoner. No. 4. Lincoln. Nebraska, 1897), 45.
"Christ taking fallen, sinful humanity upon "The
fact that He came in fallen humanity is an evidence of God's presence
and His presence to give life." Op. cit., 46. FIRST HALF OF THE 20TH CENTURY Here
are a few examples: "Over
a period of years this view of Christ's human nature continued to reach
the majority of church members through the medium of the Sabbath School
Lesson quarterlies. Sample quotations are given below. "Many
hold that from the nature of Christ it was impossible for Satan's
temptations to weaken or overthrow Him. Then Christ could not have been
placed in Adam's position. to go over the ground where Adam stumbled and
fell; He could not have gained the victory that Adam failed to gain. If
man has in any sense a more trying conflict to endure than had Christ.
then Christ is not able to succor him when tempted. Christ took humanity
with all its liabilities. He took the nature of man, capable of yielding
to temptation; and. with the same aid that man may obtain, He withstood
the temptations of Satan and conquered the same as we may conquer . .
He assumed human nature. being the infirmities and degeneracy of the
race. It is not true that humanity has trials to bear which the Son of
God has not experience." International Sabbath School Quarterly,
"The Spirit of Sacrifice" a special testimony (Senior
Division, No. 41, Third Quarter. 1905, Oakland: Pacific Press Publishing
Association), 89. Jesus
was God acting in sinful flesh on behalf of the sinner. He made
Himself one with humanity. "International Sabbath School
Quarterly. "Baptism and Temptation of Jesus, " Senior
Division, No. 56, Second Quarter, 1909, Pacific Press, 20. "By
assuming sinful flesh, and voluntarily making Himself dependent upon His
Father to keep Him from sin while He was in the world, Jesus not only
set the example for all Christians, but also made it possible for Him
to minister for sinful flesh the gift of His own Spirit and the power
for obedience to the will of God. "International Sabbath School
Quarterly, "The Incarnation and the Priesthood" (Senior
Division, No. 71, First Quarter. 1913. Pacific Press). 15. "That
Son took the flesh of sinful man, and overcame where man failed,
overthrew sin in the flesh. . "International Sabbath School
Quarterly, "The Flesh and the Spirit" (Senior Division, No.
75. First Quarter, 1914, Pacific Press), 16. "Christ
assumed, not the original unfallen, but our fallen humanity. In this
second experiment. He stood not precisely where Adam before Him had,
but as has already been said, with intense odds against Him.
."International Sabbath School Quarterly. "The Purpose of
the Incarnation" (Senior Division. No.103. First Quarter. 1921),
248-249. As
the Son of man, He accepted the limitations and conditions of our
common humanity." International Sabbath School Quarterly,
"The Last Adam" (Senior Division. No.105. Third Quarter. 1921.
Pacific Press). 3. "Christ
took upon Himself the infirmities and sins of the flesh. . but to every
sin He died, every lust He crucified, every selfish desire He denied
Himself—and all for our sakes." International Sabbath School
Quarterly, "The Godly Life" (Senior Division, No. 112, Second
Quarter, 1923, Pacific Press), 22. In
1924, Southern Publishing Association published a book by our
evangelist, Carlyle B. Haynes, in which (on pages 80, 83) he unequivocally
states that as a people we believe and teach that Christ took sinful.
fallen flesh. He points out that there really was no need for Christ to
come at all unless He was to take such flesh. Through
the efforts of colporteur evangelists, this Seventh-day Adventist
teaching regarding Christ's human nature entered thousands of non-Adventist
homes tucked between the covers of Bible Readings for the Home Circle.
This book, under the heading, A Sinless Life," contained the
following note: ..
'In His humanity Christ partook of our sinful. fallen nature. If not,
then He was not 'made like unto His brethren,' was not 'in all points
tempted like as we are,' did not overcome as we have to overcome, and is
not, therefore, the complete and perfect Saviour man needs and must have
to be saved. . On His human side, from His very conception He was
begotten and born of the Spirit." Bible Readings For the Home,
Review and Herald, 174 (1942). It
was apparently with a similar view of Christ's sinful flesh but sinless
life that L. A. Wilcox wrote in the Signs of the Times in 1927: He came
where I was, He stood in my place. In His veins was the incubus of a
tainted heredity like a caged lion ever seeking to break forth and
destroy. For four thousand years the race had been deteriorating in
physical strength, in mental power, and in moral worth: and Christ took
upon Him the infirmities of humanity at its worst." Llewellen
Wilcox, Signs of the Times, March, 1927. "In
every temptation that assails, it is strength to know that just such a
temptation in all its overwhelming force attacked Him in unexpected
times and ways; and that, with equal tendencies toward evil, in spite of
bad blood and inherited meanness, by the same power to which I have
access, He conquered." Ibid. Like A. T. Jones and others, even
while expressing this view of Christ's humanity, Elder Wilcox believed
in the perfect sinlessness of Jesus Christ. (See Walter R. Martin, The
Truth about Seventh-day Adventists [Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing
House, 1960],8687. "
'Seventh-day Adventists teach that, like all mankind, Christ was born
with a 'sinful nature.' " This plainly indicates 'that His heart,
too, was 'deceitful above all things and desperately wicked.' In harmony
with this, they also teach 'that Christ might have failed while on His
mission to earth as man's Saviour that He came into the world at the
risk of failure and eternal loss,' But the Bible repeatedly states that
Christ was holy, that 'He knew no sin,' and that He would 'not fail nor
be discouraged,' "Frances D. Nichol, Answers to Objections,
Review and Herald, 1952,389. In
part, the author replied that the "distinguishing mark of fallen
mankind (that is, a deceitful heart or mind) is not necessarily
involved in the possession of a human nature that is capable of
sin" (op. cit., 392). He cites as an example, Adam, who as a
human being was capable of sin but who did not sin until he exercised
his will in the wrong direction. "In
other words, Adventists believe that Christ, the 'last Adam,' possessed
on His human side, a nature like that of the 'first man Adam,' a
nature free from every defiling taint of sin, but capable of responding
to sin, and that nature was handicapped by the debilitating effects of
four thousand years of sin's inroads on man's body and nervous system
and environment," Ibid.. 393. In
1950, Southern Publishing Association printed the book, Drama of the
Ages. Authored by the General Conference president, William Branson,
this book was distributed and sold all over the English-speaking
world. On page 70 of this missionary book, Branson wrote that Christ
"had taken upon Himself the nature of fallen man."
STEP
ONE:
THE
CHANGE IN BIBLE READINGS
On
page 174 of the 1915 edition of Bible Readings, a note was added to the
chapter, A Sinless Life." which clearly stated that Christ took
our nature. But
in the late 1940s, the decision was made to revise Bible Readings. On
pages 143-144 of the 1949 edition, that note was changed to a different
one which downplayed the idea that Christ took our nature. It questioned
"how far that 'likeness' (to sinful flesh) goes." So,
in this new edition the statement, which had circulated with the book
for thirty years, was omitted because "it was recognized as being
out of harmony with our true position" (Roy A. Anderson.
"Human- Not Carnal"; The Ministry, September. 14, 1946). It
was replaced by the following statement: "Jesus
Christ is both Son of God and Son of man. As a member of the human
family 'it behoved Him to be made like unto His brethren' in the
likeness of sinful flesh.' Just how far that 'likeness' goes is a
mystery of the incarnation which men have never been able to solve. .
"Bible Readings (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald Publishing
Association, 1949). 143. In
that same September 1956, Ministry magazine article. Anderson discussed
the revision in Bible Readings, and gave the reason why the change had
been made—because non-Adventists did not like it! "In
fact, this particular point in Adventist theology had drawn severe
censure from many outstanding Biblical scholars both inside and outside
our ranks. "Ibid. R.
A. Anderson went on to state that the idea that on His human side Christ
partook of man's sinful, fallen nature was eliminated because it did not
represent our "true position" (see Ministry. September 1956.
12-14). Although
that statement had first appeared in Bible Readings in 1915. we have
observed that it correctly represented our "true position,"
held down through the years from the time of our earliest pioneers. In
addition, the terms "sinful nature" and "fallen
nature" were repeatedly in the writings of Ellen G. White. (For
your information, in our own edition of Bible Readings, initially
released in the late 1980s, we included that 1915 note in the chapter.
"A Sinless Life." This happens to be the lowest-cost Bible
Readings available anywhere. And is also the first Bible Readings in
history to include a Scripture Index—which the book has always
obviously needed. The main print size is also slightly larger than the
$50 colporteur edition!)
STEP TWO: THE EVANGELICAL CONFERENCES The present author's review of the Evangelical Conferences and their aftermath (The Beginning of the End-Part 1-18 [DH-101-118]) is the most extensive analysis of the subject available anywhere. (At the present time, it is included as Section 2 in our Doctrinal History Tractbook.) As
Walter Martin and Donald Barnhouse later wrote in Evangelical magazines.
the conferences (many of which were held at our General Conference
building in Washington. D.C.) began when Martin, a Baptist writer,
approached our leaders and told them he was going to write an in-depth
book, exposing the doctrinal errors of our denomination. As
he later wrote, they entered into a series of discussions with him that
lasted two years, during which they vigorously denied that the
Adventist denomination still held to earlier doctrines which the
Evangelicals did not like. It was obvious that the men on the other side
of the table were determined to gain acceptance by Protestants! "There
were eighteen conferences, lasting one to three days and usually with
three sessions a day. These were held periodically, in Washington,
D.C., Reading [Pa.]. Philadelphia, and New York City over a period of
eighteen months.," L. E. Froom, Movement of Destiny. 477. The
two men in charge of what became a doctrinal sellout were Leroy Edwin
Froom and Roy Allen Anderson. Martin would come to the meetings with
questions to be answered; and. in collaboration with Anderson. Froom
would write those answers. Anderson's key work was keeping Reuben
Figuhr, the General Conference president, contented with the progress
of the conferences. Froom
later described the first conference: "The first conference with
Martin and Cannon [Dr. George Cannon. Greek professor at a college in
the Hudson Valley of New York], followed by others, took place in an
available office at our General Conference headquarters, in Takoma
Park, Washington, D.C. Martin came armed with a formidable list of
definitely hostile and slanted questions, most of them drawn from
well-known critics of Seventh-day Adventists among them the
inevitable Canright, on down to the late defector, E. B.
Jones." Op. cit, 479. The
outcome of the Evangelical Conferences and the book which, in agreement
with Martin, the Review published radically altered church doctrine
for all time to come. That
book, Seventh-day Adventists Answer Questions on Doctrine (commonly
referred to as Questions on Doctrine), undermined our historic
teaching on the atonement, the nature of Christ, and several other
points. (For
an in-depth analysis of these matters, we refer you to our two books,
Doctrine Tractbook and Doctrinal History Tractbook, which contain all
the relevant material.) "On
a [Martin's] second visit [to the General Conference], he was presented
with scores of pages of detailed theological answers to his questions.
Immediately it was perceived that the Adventists were strenuously
denying certain doctrinal positions which had been previously attributed
to them. . "He
pointed out to them that in their bookstore adjoining the building
[The ABC on Carroll Avenue] in which these meetings were taking place, a
certain volume published by them and written by one of their ministers
categorically stated the contrary to what they were now asserting. The
leaders sent for the book, discovered that Mr. Martin was correct, and
immediately brought this fact to the attention of the General
conference officers, that this situation might be remedied and such
publications be corrected. "This
same procedure was repeated regarding the nature of Christ while in
the flesh which the majority of the denomination has always held to be
sinless. holy, and perfect despite the fact that certain of their
writers have occasionally gotten into print with contrary views completely
repugnant to the church at large. They further explained to Mr. Martin
that they had among their number certain members of their 'lunatic
fringe' even as there are similar wild-eyed irresponsibles in every
field of fundamental Christianity. This action of the Seventh-day
Adventists was indicative of similar steps that were taken
subsequently." Donald Grey Barnhouse, Are Seventh-day
Adventists Christians? A New Look at Seventh-day Adventists, Eternity
magazine. September. 1956. Barnhouse
had founded Eternity magazine, which had proven to be a very successful
interdenominational publishing venture. His organization had
sponsored Martin's talks with the Adventists. In September 1956, this
(in their own words) "bombshell article" came off the presses.
Fortunately for our leaders, few of our people ever heard about it. Both
Barnhouse and Martin wrote articles in it, exposing the Adventist doctrinal
sellout, and promising that the Adventists planned to publish a book,
which would discuss their new doctrinal positions. In
the above quoted statement, you will note that our leaders used a
confusion of terms to get their point across. They told Martin that our
people always believed Christ was sinless, which is true. But they said
it in such a way that Martin believed they said that Christ had a
sinless nature. Martin, who had a powerful mind, was a fast reader,
had something of a photographic memory, and had scanned through many of
our books, including those by Ellen White. Our
men assured him that statements about a "sinful nature" or
"fallen nature" would henceforth not be found in our new
publications. And
this was done. In the years since the mid-1950s, "sinful
nature" has seldom if ever appeared in our journals and new
books. At the same time, terms such as Adam's nature" and
"sinless nature" have appeared more frequently.
STEP
THREE:
THE
MINISTRY MAGAZINE ARTICLES As
head of the Ministerial Association, R. A. Anderson was
editorin—chief of Ministry magazine, which is published for our
ministers and workers, worldwide. In
1956 and 1957. a series of articles, intended to soften the blow for
the changeover, were released. Here are some examples: "Christ
did indeed partake of our nature, our human nature with all its physical
limitations, but not of our carnal nature with all its lustful
corruptions. "His
was not a corrupt, carnal nature. When He took upon Him sinless human
nature. He did not cease to be God, for He was God manifest in the
flesh! "Roy A. Anderson, "Human. Not Carnal." Ministry
magazine, September 1956. "He
was indeed a man, but withal He was God manifested in the flesh. True,
He took our human nature, that is, our physical form, but He did not
possess our sinful propensities." R. A. Anderson, "God With
Us." Ministry. April, 1957. "When
God became man He partook of the same moral nature that Adam possessed
before the fall. Adam was created holy, and so was Christ. for He
became the second Adam. "R. A. Anderson. "Human. Not
Carnal." ibid. "When
the incarnate God broke into human history and became one with the race.
it is our understanding that He possessed the sinlessness of the
nature with which Adam was created in Eden. "R. A. Anderson.
"God with Us, " ibid, These
quotations, illustrating a comparatively recent emphasis upon the
perfection and
"sinlessness"
of Christ's human nature, present a striking contrast to earlier
statements on this subject. For example, the Sabbath School lesson for
May 17, 1913, entitled, "God Manifest in the Flesh," quoted a
Roman Catholic statement; and, then, stated unequivocally that it was
erroneous: "God
the Son. by assuming this perfect human nature, which He took from the
blessed virgin. was born in the flesh , "Catholic Belief, 208. "Thus
by shutting Christ away from the same flesh and blood which we have
(compare Heb. 2: 14), modern Babylon really denies the vital truth of
Christianity. although pretending to teach it. Such is the mystery of
iniquity," International Sabbath School Quarterly, "God
Manifested in the Flesh" (Senior Division, No. 72, Second Quarter,
Oakland: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1913), 26. "By
its dogma concerning the immaculate conception of the virgin Mary, the
Roman Catholic Church gives to the Son of God in the incarnation a
'perfect human nature: and thereby separates Him from those He came to
save. "This
denial of the perfect union of Christ with sinful flesh opens the way
for a series of subsidiary mediators whose duty it is to bring the
sinner into saving touch with Christ." International Sabbath
School Quarterly, "The Incarnation and the Priesthood"
(Senior Division. No. 71, First Quarter, Oakland: Pacific Press
Publishing Association, 1913), 14. The
belief that Christ had the "sinless" human nature of Adam
before the fall rather than the "sinful" nature of fallen man
is clearly expressed in an article in a Ministry magazine article,
entitled, "The Immaculate Christ. " "Before
Adam fell, he was pure and clean, without taint of sin. He possessed
human nature, undefiled, as God created it. When Jesus, 'the second
man: 'the last Adam' (1 Cor. 15:4547), came. in addition to His divine
nature. He also possessed human nature. undefiled, as
God
originally created it." Eamest W. Cox. "The Immaculate
Christ," Ministry, December, 1957. 10, From
1955 to 1958, the present writer attended our Seminary which at that
time was next door to the General Conference building. where many of the
Evangelical Conferences were held. We were beginning to hear hints of
the doctrinal changeover in the classes; and, outside of class, students
were quietly discussing the matter. When
the "bombshell" Eternity article came out. as well as the 1956
and 1957 Ministry magazine articles, everyone—students and faculty
were
quietly sending for copies, The present writer argued many times with
Edward Heppenstall in various classes over some of these changes, but
to no avail. STEP FOUR: QUESTIONS ON DOCTRINE Leroy
Edwin Froom (18901974) was held in the highest respect at the General
Conference. As their in-house theologian and church historian, he
had produced the 4-volume Faith of Our Fathers and the 2-volume
Conditionalist Faith of Our Fathers. During and following the Evangelical
Conferences, which on the Adventist side Froom led out in, Walter Martin
also viewed him with the highest respect. especially since it was
obvious that Froom, the pivotal Adventist leader in the talks, went out
of his way to doctor our teachings so they would be received by the
Evangelicals. As
part of the agreement. Martin's forthcoming book, The Truth about
Seventh-day Adventists, exonerating us as "Christians,"
was to be released at the same time as a book published by the Review,
titled Seventh-day Adventists Answer Questions on Doctrine. When
Questions on Doctrine was released in 1957, Roy Anderson, who was
extremely influential, arranged for thousands of free copies to be
mailed to every Christian college and seminary in the world.
Multiplied thousands of free copies were also mailed to various
denominational
headquarters, leaders, and local pastors. The cost of all this
(Questions on Doctrine was a full-size, cloth-bound book) was
immense, For many more details, see the author's documentary on the
Evangelical Conferences, The Beginning of the End, now in our
Doctrinal History Tractbook. "Many
thousands of copies have been placed with clergymen and theology
teachers not of our faith in a few instances thousands in a single
conference. And they have had their wholesome effect. Its total
circulation by 1970 had exceeded 138,OOO."L. E. Froom, Movement
of Destiny, 489. In
Questions on Doctrine, Froom (the author of the book) very skillfully
explained away the fact that Ellen White used the words,
"sinful," "fallen," and "deteriorated"
human nature" in referring to Christ: "It
could hardly be construed, however, from the record of either Isaiah or
Matthew, that Jesus was diseased or that He experienced frailties to
which our fallen human nature is heir. But He did bear all this. Could
it not be that He bore this vicariously also, just as He bore the sins
of the whole world? "These
weaknesses, frailties, infirmities. failings are things which we, with
our sinful, fallen natures, have to bear. To us they are natural,
inherent; but when He bore them, He took them not as something innately
His, but He bore them as our substitute. He bore them in His perfect,
sinless nature. Again, we remark, Christ bore all this vicariously, just
as vicariously He bore the iniquities of us all. "It
is in this sense that all should understand the writings of Ellen G.
White when she refers occasionally to sinful, fallen, and deteriorated
human nature." Op. cit.. 59-60.. Froom
here puts words in the mouth of Ellen White, trying to make her say that
Christ did not take our nature, but that He only took it "vicariously"
as our "substitute." The dictionary defines vicarious as
"experienced or enjoyed by imaginary sharing in the experience of
another." Anyone
acquainted with L. E. Froom's writings knew he was a master of
vocabulary. Here is a companion statement in that book: ':All
that Jesus took, all that He bore, whether the burden and penalty of our
iniquities, or the diseases and frailties of our human nature all was
taken and borne vicariously. Just as bearing vicariously the sins of the
whole world did not taint His perfect, sinless soul, neither did bearing
the diseases and frailties of our fallen nature taint Him in the
slightest degree with the corrupting influences of sin." Op.
cit.. 61-62. The
following passage from the book clearly teaches the error that Christ
took an immaculate nature rather than the nature you and I inherit: "Although
born in the flesh. He was nevertheless God. and was exempt from the
inherited
passions and pollutions that corrupt the natural descendants of Adam. He
was 'without sin,' not only in His outward conduct, but in His very
nature. [He was] sinless in His life and in His nature," Op.
cit.. 383. Of
course, we all believe that Christ never sinned. But, in the above
passage, Froom says that Christ inherited none of the negative factors
which we inherit. From
the beginning, the two books (Martin's and ours) were to be released
simultaneously, and to be sold in each other's bookstores. But this did
not happen. After ours was released, extensive revisions were on Martin's
book; it was not published until three years later ( 1960). Because it
contained so many attacks on Adventists, our ABCs refused to carry it. STEP
FIVE:
FROOM'S
MOVEMENT OF DESTINY As
Leroy Edwin Froom neared the end of his life, he wrote a book reviewing
doctrinal changes in our denomination. In view of the very serious
changes which have occurred, the book, Movement of Destiny, could well
have been called "Destiny of a Movement." Published
in 1971 (Froom died in 1974, at the age of 84), the book uses the same
wordy style found in Questions on Doctrine and his Faith of our Fathers
books. The
first chapter of Movement of Destiny is remarkable in the way it hints
at so much. Froom was obviously quite pleased with his central role, and
he wanted the reader to recognize the pivotal nature of his
activities. He said he could not write the book until enough people had
died off. The book culminated in a defense of the Evangelical
Conferences, the "grand results" they produced. Froom
said he was thankful that all his research resulted in opportunities
to lecture before various Protestant and Catholic groups; so they
could recognize that we were, indeed, Christians, sharing similar
beliefs. "The
church groups included Episcopalian, Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist,
Reformed, Congregationist, United Brethren, and even Pentecostal and
Unitarian faiths as well as an organization of converted Roman
Catholic priests. So I write from personal knowledge, for I spoke to
each of these groups. "Universities
such as Marburg (Germany), Rutgers (N.J.), and Pittsburg (Pa.) extended
unusual invitations, with gratifying results from
the
presentation opportunities, with question periods. And following these
came various dialogues with Roman Catholic student priests but groups
and individual which were highly fruitful and refreshingly frank. In
one instance the contact was with thirty-eight student priests-in-training
for the Catholic University of America, in Washington, D.C.an hour
for presentation, and an hour for questions. Out of this, smaller
follow-up groups of five to eight. Later, I was privileged to address
a class of graduate students at the same 'Catholic .': on the same theme.
"L. E. Froom, Movement of Destiny, 466. Elsewhere
in the book, Froom says that Martin initially complained about four
heretical notions; and Froom set to work to clarify these:
"According
to Martin, the four leading charges commonly brought against Adventism,
dealt with in his article [in a Protestant journal], were: "( 1)
that the atonement of Christ was not completed upon the cross; (2) that
salvation is the result of grace plus the works of the law; (3) that the
Lord Jesus Christ was not a created being, not from all eternity; (4)
and that He partook of man's sinful fallen nature at the incarnation.'
"Op. cit., 473. It
is true that a few of our 19th century writers advocated Arianism
(point 3, above), but the other positions are solid Adventism! Yet Froom
set to work to change our historic beliefs on each and every one of
them. He
succeeded so well, that Martin later wrote, in an Evangelical journal,
as quoted below by Froom in his book: "Since
there is no conceivable doctrinal ground, in the light of verifiable
evidence where the fundamental tenets of the historic Gospel are
concerned for refusing that outstretched hand. I for one encourage the
extension of our hand which will usher in an new era of understanding
and spiritual growth among the Church which is Christ's body.
"Walter Martin, quoted in L. E. Froom, Movement oj Destiny.
475. Froom's
book, Movement of Destiny. gave added respectability to the doctrinal
changes. in the eyes of many of our church leaders and pastors. Yet he
chopped up and twisted Spirit of Prophecy quotations, in order to
support his contention that Ellen White agreed with his version of the
human nature of Christ. See Doctrinal Fraud (FF-26. now in our
Doctrinal History Tractbook) for more on this. Here is a sample: "
'The reader has now observed that the paragraph
[in Movement of Destiny] opens with a title line: 'Took Sinless Nature
of Adam before Fall. ' This heading is followed by nineteen statements
purporting to support its conclusion. Within each statement is a tiny
quotation fragment from Ellen White. "
'But as Ellen White wrote these quotations, not a single one of them
says that Christ took the nature of Adam before the fall, and some of
them say exactly the opposite! . . Three fragments are all taken from
the same paragraph in Ellen White's writings. . [which] opens with the
unequivocal statement that Christ took the fallen nature of man!'
"Ralph Larson, Documentary Fraud, FF-26. p. 2, now in
Doctrinal History Tractbook. So
much for the scholarship of Dr. Froom.
STEP
SIX: JOHNSSON AND THE REVIEW When,
in the early 1980s, William Johnsson began as editor-in-chief of the
Adventist Review, major changeovers began to occur in our denominational
paper. Among
other changes, articles began appearing which recommended erroneous
doctrines and lowered standards. Photographs and drawings were printed
which would never have been seen in the Review in earlier decades. Among
the changes which occurred were articles advocating the pre-fall
nature of Christ. One example of this was an article in the June 30,
1983, issue, authored by Norman Gulley. Gulley
stated that "the church has never taken a stand for or against one
or the other" of the two positions on the human nature of Christ.
You will recall, earlier in this present book, we quoted Morris Venden's
statement in Insight. that the fallen nature of Christ concept
dovetailed with that of the idea that sin was transgression of the law,
and that we can overcome sin in our lives now. Venden said that he
believed that sin is only a broken relationship with God. In
his Review article, Gulley took this same position, saying that the
definition of sin "is not so much a breaking of the law as it is a
broken relationship that leads to lawbreaking." Thus
both men switch cause and effect. The Bible says that sin is the
transgression of the law (1 John 3:4). That is the cause. The Bible also
says that the effect of sin is the broken relationship. "But
your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and your sins
have hid His face from you, that He will not hear. "Isaiah 59:2. It
is bad enough that doctrinal errors are printed in the pages of
"the good old Review." But, to make matters worse, no articles
advocating the truth were printed! STEP SEVEN: THE 1983 GULLEY QUARTERLY AND BOOK The senior Sabbath School
Quarterly for the First Quarter of 1983 was entitled Christ's All-atoning
Sacrifice. The lesson-help book which accompanied it bore the name,
Christ Our Substitute. Both
were written by Norman R. Gulley, a religion teacher at Southern College
(now Southern University), in Collegedale, Tennessee. In
an attempt to placate both sides while insidiously instilling error,
Gulley taught that Christ had Adam's pre-fall nature, combined with
our post-fall physical infirmities. "Christ
took the spiritual nature of man before the fall, and the physical
nature of man after the fall. "N. R. Gulley, Christ Our
Substitute,
33. If
that is true, then He did not really take our nature. Repeatedly, the
Bible and Spirit of Prophecy said that Christ took our nature, and
that it was a "fallen" nature; yet, in that nature, He
resisted
temptation and sin. When the nature of Christ is referred to in
Scripture, it is moral issues which are dwelt upon, not physical
flaws. Then
Gulley uses another new theology argument: If Christ had really taken
our nature, He would have fallen into sin, since it is impossible for
mankind to stop sinning even with God's help! "He
[Christ] had to identify Himself with us as far as His saving mission
made it necessary. But He could not go beyond the requirements of His
mission or He would have needed a Saviour Himself, and therefore His
mission would have been a failure." Op. cit, 38. The
idea here was to "somehow save us," without Himself being
caught by Satan. Of
course, the truth is that, if it is impossible to stop sinning, even
with God's help, then the law of God cannot be kept and Satan is
right in the great controversy after all! In
support of his position, Gulley quotes a long (long!) list of pagans
(Ovid, Euripides, Senaeca, Epictetus, etc.), Catholics (Augustine,
Methodius, etc.), and Protestants (Hort, Moule,
Barth,
Barclay, Schweitzer, etc. (see pages 4851). Then
Gulley uses still another "proof," that Christ could only save
us by not taking our nature; he says that Christ lived 2,000 years
before
our time, and human nature then would not have been adequate to save us
today! "If
Jesus lived four thousand years after Adam, we live two thousand years
farther down the line. Surely we have a much harder time than
Jesus." Op. cit. 52. Can
you imagine such trite being printed on the presses of the Review &
Herald and sold through Adventist bookstores as truth! Gulley
caps his arguments for error, by declaring that we have Original Sin
and Christ did not! "In
fact, we do not have to do anything wrong to become sinners. We are born
that way. But Jesus was born sinless." Op. cit. 53. Original
Sin is the error invented by the licentious "Saint"
Augustine. He was so vile, that, by his own admission, he could not stop
living with women he was not married to. So he devised the
"Original Sin" teaching, to explain why he could still go to
heaven. (Because he taught strict submission to Rome, the Vatican later
made him a saint.)
STEP
EIGHT: THE BOOK, SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTISTS BELIEVE The
book, Questions on Doctrine, went out of print in 1980. In March 1983.
Walter Martin gave a lecture at Napa, California. in which he announced
that he had written letters to our leaders in Takoma Park, threatening
to negatively revise his book, The Truth about Seventh-day Adventists,
if we did not reprint Questions on Doctrine or issue a new book, to take
its place, which also had the same doctrinal changes. Martin was very
blunt and forceful about this. The present writer reprinted sizeable
portions of that lecture, and also noted this: "
'He [Martin] said that if Seventh-day Adventists continued to
believe they are 'the remnant church,' that Christ did not have a
sinless nature. and that the atonement was not finished at the cross.
. they will be classed with the cults. "[He said] that Reuben
Figuhr and the Holy Spirit had transformed the church. . they will have
so much to lose if they do not take the correct position. as stated in
Questions on Doctrine. "
'[He said,] 'We must fight for our Seventh day Adventist brethren,
that the church will take the right position. Questions on Doctrine has
been suppressed, and now voices are teaching heresy which the church
originally repudiated. This must be remedied. Adventism is answerable
to the authority of the Word of God, not to those who would perpetuate
heresy' . . "
'He stated that he had submitted a list of questions to the General
Conference, to be answered by the hierarchy, and not the 'lunatic
fringe,' so that he will know what information to put in his forthcoming
book and tapes,' "The Beginning of the End, Part 18, and
Doctrinal
History Tractbook. The
brethren at world headquarters set to work to please Martin; and, in
1988, a new Adventist doctrinal book. entitled Seventh-day Adventists
Believe, rolled off the presses, It
is highly unfortunate that we have had only two official doctrinal books
in our history and both were written to please Walter Martin and the
evangelicals! Chapter 4, in this new doctrinal book, dealt with the human nature of Christ. A strong attempt was made to please all sides, but the erroneous view was still stated. This
is understandable, since its primary author was Norman Gulley, who wrote
the infamous 1983 Gulley Quarterly and the accompanying book. Christ
Our Substitute, By his own admission, he believes in a pre-fall nature
of Christ. "Jesus
Christ took upon Himself our nature with all its liabilities, but He was
free from hereditary corruption. "Seventh-day Adventists
Believe. 49/1:4 (page 49, column 1, paragraph 4). "He
possessed the essential characteristics of human nature," Op.
cit., 46/1:3. "Christ's
humanity was not Adamic humanity, that is. the humanity of Adam before
the fall, nor fallen humanity; that is. in every respect the humanity
of Adam after the fall. It was not the Adamic, because it had the
innocent
infirmities of the fallen, It was not the fallen, because it had never
descended into moral impurity. It was. therefore. most literally our
humanity, but without sin," Op. cit., 47/1:4-47/ 2:0. The
above statement cleverly sidesteps the key issue in the nature of Christ
controversy. It does this by equating "fallen nature" with
actual sinning. Two
pages later, another clever statement is made. which says that Christ
took our "fallen" nature but then denies that He did:
"The
Bible portrays Jesus' humanity as sinless. His birth was
supernatural He was conceived by the Holy Spirit. As a newborn baby
He was described as 'that Holy One,' He took the nature of man in its
fallen state [that is. He took our fallen nature], bearing the
consequences
of sin, not its sinfulness [that is, He did not take our fallen nature].
He was one with the human race, except in sin. "Op. cit., 49/
1:1-2. The
new theology can be subtle in the extreme. They will not come out and
say the truth about the human nature of Christ, but they fear to
pronounce the error. They talk about the actions of Jesus as though
they were the nature of Jesus.
The
November 5, 1992, issue of Adventist Review contained a 16-page
booklet, entitled Issues: The Seventh-day Adventist Church and
Certain Private Ministries. Within
a few months, a full-sized purple-cover book, with the same title,
was printed and widely sold. (We will here refer to it simply as
Issues.) Having
changed our doctrinal beliefs nearly 30 years before, during the
Evangelical Conferences, leadership now asked that those pleading
for a return to historic beliefs should be tolerant. The reason given
was that the denomination has never decided what it believes on those
points! "In
other words, be tolerant on those points
that
the church has left open. "Issues, 16. "Neither has the
church ever 'formally' adopted a position on perfection and the precise
nature of human obedience." Issues, 47. "One side stresses
Jesus' role as our sinless substitute, arguing that His nature was like
Adam's before the fall. The other stresses Jesus' role as our example,
arguing that He came in the 'likeness of sinful flesh' with a nature
like Adam's after the fall.. "But
the significant point for the discussion here is: Adventists have never
'formally' adopted a position on the question of just how Jesus' nature
compared with Adam's and with ours. Neither has the church ever
'formally' adopted a position on perfection and the precise nature of
human obedience," Op. cit., 46-47. "[The
independent group] holds certain views on the human nature of Christ,
the nature of sin, and sanctification, These issues have never been
settled among Christians, much less among Seventh-day Adventists. . "There
is no way that the SDA Church can work with such an independent group.
if it cannot lay aside these positions that they have made so central
to their work and mission. "Over-specificity
in the content of faith [ie., consistently adhering to our historic
beliefs] and a rigid church structure [i.e.. asking that only
beliefs and not errors be presented to our people] reduce the
possibility for healthy dissent and for creative
innovation." Op. cit.. 45. "[The church should] resist any
attempt by one segment of the church to impose its views on the
rest."Op. cit.. 50. Yet,
at the same time, only erroneous portrayals of these controverted
doctrines are presented in our denominational papers and at camp
meetings. As
to what these disputed teachings might be, the full-size Issues book
made very clear. The book reproved Independent Ministries for teaching
the truth about the nature of Christ, the continuing atonement, etc.
And the book did more; it boldly proclaimed error as orthodox! What
have we come to, when our leaders dare to do this? On
pages 114-130 we find the only explanatory in-depth doctrinal
studies in the entire book, Issues. It is a reprint form of what our
leaders considered to be a landmark series of doctrinal studies printed
the year before in the Adventist Review. Since
they consider it important, and since
it
is the single doctrinal series in Issues, it deserves
our careful attention.
And
when we do so, we find it is almost entirely
focused on denying one special doctrine:
the
great truth that Christ took our nature. Why
is this done? Because they realize that this is the foundation upon
which all the others are built: the nature of sin, the nature of man,
the nature of the atonement, and the nature of salvation, This
series, consisting of six articles originally printed in the Review
between January 18 to February 22, 1990, was reprinted in Issues.
Part
I, entitled "Pressing Together," is an appeal for all sides to
unite in one position doctrinally. "A
meeting of minds on this question can bring us together as a
church." Norman Gulley,
"Pressing Together," Adventist Review, January 18, 1990,
8-10; reprinted in Issues, 114.
Part
2 is on the nature of sin. It teaches Augustine's Original Sin heresy,
and defines the nature of sin as being separation from God,
Gulley
states our historic position on the nature of man, in regard to sin: "Early
Adventists considered the first death as being a result of Adam's sin,
and the second death the result of personal sin. In other words, the
first death is merely the consequence of not the penalty for Adam's
sin." Norman Gulley, "In Every Way but One, " Review,
January 25, 1990, quoted in Issues, 117. Then
Gulley goes on to expound Augustine's horrible theory: that everyone is
born an evil criminal, to be condemned to hellfire because of something
he did not do: "Are
infants sinners at birth because of their inheritance from Adam?".
. We are born sinful and subject to death prior to lawbreaking. If a
baby dies a few hours or days after birth, it is still subject to the
second death the condemnation death even though it has never
broken any commandment." Op. cit.. 117-118. In
the above passage, Gulley says that what we inherit at birth will cause
us to burn in hellfire. That is not true! It is what we think, speak,
and do that results in sin. "It
is the disobedience of Adam that constitutes a person a sinner, and
not merely his own acts of sin (disobedience)." Op. cit., 118
[parenthesis
his). But
God's Word says it differently: "Our only definition of sin is that given in the Word of God; it is 'the transgression of the law: "Great Controversy, 493. Gulley's
concept, which is Augustine's Original Sin theory, is cited as the
basis for the theory that Christ could not have taken our nature.
Instead,
Christ is said to have had an alternate type of immaculate conception. "So
if every man is born a sinner (i.e.., a fallen being, separated from
God needing salvation) as the result of Adam's sin, how then could
Christ enter the race through a human mother and yet be sinless? The
immaculate conception of Catholicism sidesteps this question by making
Mary unaffected by Adam's sin. Rather than this immaculate conception.
it is the miraculous conception:' Op. cit., 119 [italics his]. As
do most new theologians, Gulley plays with words in order to confuse.
What he is obviously saying, in the above paragraph, is that the
Catholic teaching is that Christ's mother had an
immaculate
conception, whereas Gulley is teaching that Christ had His own
immaculate conception. Of course, the end result would be the same:
Both Gulley and Rome teach that Christ had an immaculate conception
[i.e., He had a sinless nature]. Both
concepts are based on the same error: Christ could not be born with our
nature, but had to be different than us. As Gulley explains it:
"He
[Christ] did not have 'sinful flesh.' Thus He neither was a sinner by
nature nor a sinner by acts. He was a total Substitute." Ibid. Thus,
by the early 1990s, we find this totally erroneous, Catholic-based
article featured in the Adventist Review and, later, in the book,
Issues. But, through it all, not one article was printed on
denominational presses, advocating the other, the true side that
Christ took our very nature; and, in it, He overcame the devil and now
gives us power to do the same. Gulley
is quite unashamed that he is teaching Original Sin in this article,
for he uses those words several times.
In
Part 3 in the Review series, also reprinted in Issues, Gulley began by
reiterating the conclusion of his previous article. "Thus
far we have seen that His unique sinless human nature made it possible
for Him to be our substitute. We shall see that the same unique nature
qualified Him to be our example." Norman Gulley, ':Jesus Our
Example,"
Review, February 1,1990,19, quoted in Issues, 120. In
this article, Gulley attempts to show that Christ could still be our
example, even though He was not like us; that is, did not take our
nature.
One cannot but wonder how Gulley intends to do that. Here is the strange
logic he uses: "Clearly
Jesus did not have a sinful nature; He had no sinful passions or any
taint of sin. By contrast, all the rest of us are born into the world
with these liabilities. On the surface, at least, this looks like a huge
advantage for Christ, and calls into question His ability to be our
example.
"Ibid. First,
Gulley explains that Christ did not come into this world to overcome in
our place, but in unfallen Adam's place! How is that for original
thinking! "Satan
had charged God with Adam's sin. . The Creator became a created being.
Jesus came as the second Adam sinless, to show that
Satan's
charge was false. Adam need not have sinned. Like Adam, He had nothing
sinful within to respond to Satan's temptations, but He could be tempted
from an appeal to use His sinless passions and drives in an unlawful
way. He withstood the tempter." Op. cit., 120-121. In
other words, Christ did not come to be our "substitute," but
unfallen Adam's "substitute"! Such foolish logic is all the
more remarkable, in view of the fact that Gulley's key phrase, which in
1983 he used as the title of his book, is "Christ Our
Substitute." But, following Gulley's logic, Christ is not our
substitute! Christ is only unfallen Adam's substitute. Even
worse is Gulley's effort to twist the charges of Satan against God as
only concerning the fall of Adam! Following
this, Gulley declares that the immaculately born Christ, with His
pre-fall nature, is our example, because He kept the law. Obviously,
his statement is pointless. How would Christ's sinless obedience,
wrought out in a nature which supposedly cannot sin, be an example to us
in natures which can? And this Gulley admits: "Because
His humanity was sinless, Jesus could not experience the inner sinful
urgings of sinful humans. But it was necessary that He, as our example,
experience an equivalency in intensity while remaining a sinless human.
"Op. cit., 121. Gulley
then claims that Christ reached "the lowest depths" and
suffered as we do at one time in His life: during the last part of the
40day fast in the wilderness! According to Gulley, at that one time,
and no other, Christ suffered as we do. But
Scripture says it differently: (1) Christ took our nature, the nature of
Abraham's descendants; (2) and in our nature was tempted "in all
points like as we"; (3) yet without ever yielding to sin; (4) so we
can come to Him for help in every time of need (Heb. 2:10-18;
4:15-16). In
these words, Gulley describes the one time Christ suffered
"equivalent" to us: "To
be hungry was not a sin; it was a proper desire. But through a 40-day
intensification, His gnawing hunger became equivalent to the worst
sinful drives ever experienced by humans. "Ibid. "The
human became so emaciated and stressed out, through a nearly six-week
fast, that His consuming passion to eat became equivalent to sinful
passions of men." Op. cit., 122. Second,
Gulley uses the shop-worn argument History of the Changeover
that.
throughout His earthly life. the only real temptation He faced was to
use His divine power to help Himself! What kind of useful example is
that to us? None at all. "He
had received honor in the heavenly courts. and was familiar with
absolute power. It was as difficult for Him to keep the level of
humanity as it is for men to rise above the low level of their depraved
natures. and be partakers of the divine nature." Op. cit.. 122. "Can
we understand His supreme struggle? Never! But we must try to grasp its
depths. He had exercised absolute power from eternity! This power He had
by nature; it was inherent. If we grumble about our inheritance by
nature. think of His. If we say we have habits that bind us. think of
His a habit with eternal use back of it! Can you get any greater urge
than that? Our habits, measured by His, are but drops of water compared
to a shore-less sea. He knows the human struggle in temptations because
His were infinitely greater. and precisely because of His unique divine
nature rather than from an identical human nature." Ibid. Gulley
summarizes the terrible "weight" that was on Christ: "What
an inexplicable intensification this staggering load brought to the
agonizing struggle of the emaciated One! In view of this unparalleled
experience, can anyone question the genuineness of His example? No!
His temptations were infinitely harder than man's!" Ibid.
In
Part 4 of this Review series, Gulley once
again
reiterates that Christ had a sinless nature. "Sin. whether in His
nature or in act. would
have
disqualified Him from being our substitute. For He would have needed a
substitute Himself." Norman Gulley, "Jesus Our Substitute,"
Review, February 8. 1990.8; in Issues. 123. The
primary objective of this entire series of articles has been to prove
that Christ had a sinless human nature. He recognizes it to be the
foundation stone. under-girding the entire plan of salvation. Yet,
shrewdly. Gulley, speaking directly to those who maintain the other (the
Scriptural) view, declares that they should not be concerned about
what nature Christ had, It really does not matter. "Nowhere
do inspired sources make the birth of Christ as prominent as His death.
. Should not those who are preoccupied with His birth take pause and
look beyond to the cross?" Ibid.
But.
having said that, Gulley himself keeps coming back to the nature of
Christ. "Some
believe that Jesus had to be exactly like us in fallen nature in order
to span the gulf gouged out by sin. Yet even that identity has a
qualification for none other comes into the world 'born of God:
"Ibid. Gulley
next twists the meaning of Romans 8:3. "Just
as that brazen serpent only looked like a serpent. so the sinless Jesus
only took the 'likeness of sinful flesh: "Op. cit., 124
[italics
his]. Yet
both the Bible and Spirit of Prophecy clearly support the position that
Christ took our nature; He did not just make-believe take it. Jesus
was not a mirage while in the flesh! He was a real flesh-and-blood
man. He became like us, is what God's Word says.
The
final two articles in this doctrinal series mention the error of
"the finished work at the cross; but, in general, they are more
inspirational than doctrinal.
The
evidence presented in this study indicates that, from its earliest years
until the late 1940s, the Seventh-day Adventist Church: (1) has always
upheld the Deity of God in human flesh fully God and fully man, (2)
has always been in close agreement in regard to the sinlessness of
Christ, and (3) has consistently taught that Christ was in every sense
sinless. Under
threats and strong duress from Walter Martin. from 1954 to 1957. our
leaders agreed to make definite changes. These changes were printed in
the first official doctrinal book in our history. The
1960s and 1970s constituted a time of adaptation to the changes. The
work of retraining our pastors in retreats went on quietly. Our future
leaders were being initiated into new teachings in the colleges. During
the 1980s as the apostasy grew, strong pleas for patience and toleration
for other views were frequently heard. During
the 1990s, those advocating the errors about sin, the nature of
Christ, the atonement. and salvation were solidly in control; and
there is intolerance for those pleading for a return to historic
beliefs. Only
God can change the situation, and He will do it when it becomes illegal
to be a Sabbath keeper. Then the faithful, gathered in little companies
here and there, will go out and preach the identifying truth of
Revelation 14:6-12 (the Third
Angel's Message) everywhere. May we be faithful to the end. Obedience by
faith, in Christ, to the Bible and Spirit of Prophecy is what we need
today. May we not forsake our post of duty. In His strength,
we can remain true to the end. |