The Anarchists Is a Case Study in the Decadence of Autonomy
Written by David L. Bahnsen |
Wednesday, October 5, 2022
It is easy to watch a series like this and suspect the modern anarchy movement guilty of a flawed or miscalculated sociology. But I am sad to say, sadder after watching this series, that it is not a particular sociology that is at the root of this tragedy. That could conceivably be re-engineered. Rather, it is a moral pathology that hated a loving Lawgiver who alone holds the key to our escape from bondage.
I have a reasonably high tolerance for uncomfortable television and movies, maybe a higher tolerance than I should, but the first thing I would say about the HBO Max series The Anarchists is that it is not for the faint of heart. In this case, though, the tough stomach required is not due to excessive violence, cringey sexual content, or other common factors in objectionable material. The series is tough to watch because it directly touches on elements of human depravity that are unpleasant to engage. It shines a light on a certain darkness that can creep over the human soul that is more than I bargained for when deciding to watch the documentary. And yet, out of the very depressing reality that the series covers, a lesson is to be discovered of profound importance for the intellectually curious and morally rooted.
The Anarchists is a look behind the scenes at a group of American-born anarchists who took refuge together in Acapulco, Mexico, leaving behind their careers and domestic roots for a life committed to autonomy. Eventually, select members of these anarchistic refugees start an annual conference called Anarchapulco. The documentary covers the rise and fall of the conference, dovetailed with the rise and fall of this community. The gripping drama that is both tangential to and at the root of this group’s implosion is the murder of a drug-dealing fugitive member of their community, and the eventual suicide of the PTSD-suffering veteran widely believed to have been complicit in the murder.
The tensions are heightened by the sensational real-life drama that defined this community—murder, drugs, inordinate alcohol consumption, scandal, fraud, corruption, violence, lawbreaking, and all the rest. Yet the filmmakers include some modest level of the philosophy of anarchism to seep through as well, allowing the leaders of the movement to state their case for a society disconnected from rules, norms, and institutions.
The filming of this sect could ideally have led to a provocative documentary on an iconoclastic group of intellectually eccentric adults. Perhaps the filmmakers (and the subjects of the documentary themselves) could have crafted a series that evaluated the pros and cons of anarcho-capitalistic thinking, countercultural philosophy, and the capacity for human autonomy unhindered by the laws of nature and the laws of men. But alas, like the philosophy of anarchism itself, such a documentary was doomed from the beginning, assured only of ending in the chaos and despair this series had to highlight. Missing from the Acapulco anarchy movement was a framework for liberty rooted in morality and ordered love. Ultimately, what was palpably present in the Acapulco anarchy movement was the fate of all human autonomy untethered from the law of God and awareness of the basic human condition.
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The 2 Sets of Circumstances that Make Us Pray Desperately
He is ready to help us when we are feeling too small or when we are feeling too big. But let’s also recognize this: The help He offers is not to get us out of either situation. It’s not necessarily to fix our troubling circumstances, nor is it to elevate us out of our current situation. It is rather the form us into the image of Jesus using both circumstances.
Then they came to Jericho. As Jesus and his disciples, together with a large crowd, were leaving the city, a blind man, Bartimaeus (which means “son of Timaeus”), was sitting by the roadside begging. When he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to shout, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!”
Many rebuked him and told him to be quiet, but he shouted all the more, “Son of David, have mercy on me!” (Mark 10:46-48).
It’s a simple prayer. One of the simplest in the whole Bible, and yet we shouldn’t make the mistake of equating its simplicity with its fervency. A lifetime of pain and hardship is crammed into these few words. There are no flowery phrases and beautiful appeals here – only urgency. Desperation. Need.
And don’t we know what that feels like? Surely we do – to be in the midst of a situation when all the words have run out; when emotions are stretched to their limit; when we find ourselves acutely aware of our need; and when the only prayer we can squeak is something like what Bartimaeus kept disruptively repeating here:
“Help me.”
While the circumstances that prompt desperate prayers like that are varied, they all have a couple of characteristics in common, namely:We realize that we cannot do or be or feel what a situation demands on our own, and…
We need someone outside of ourselves to come to our aid.In other words, prayers like these are born when we see, in combination, the situation confronting us and our own weakness in the midst of it. Again, the circumstances that bring about these realizations are many and varied, but perhaps we could group those circumstances into two main categories. The first one won’t surprise you, but perhaps the second one will:
1. Category 1: When the circumstances are too big.
This is the unsurprising category. Sometimes the circumstances in front of us are just too big.
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Sin and Sanctification According to TE Johnson
Written by Albert D. Taglieri |
Monday, December 27, 2021
TE Johnson’s written words in the SJC report describing his doctrines of sin and sanctification pose concerns. The proposed doctrine of sin flattens distinctions, and in so doing it fails to properly identify internal actual sins. This leads, consequently, to the doctrine of a faulty understanding of sanctification, which is stripped of both the hope and the expectation of changed desires and affections. And it from these doctrinal formulations that his underlying paradigm of “care” is grounded and found wanting.Introduction
In recent days, TE Greg Johnson has released his new book, Still Time to Care, about homosexuality in the church. In the wake of his new paradigm of “care,” it is worth looking at the theology behind this paradigm, which can be found in his own words, within the report that the PCA’s Standing Judicial Commission (SJC) released. The SJC voted to uphold Missouri Presbytery’s ruling that “TE Johnson’s ‘explanations’ on the four allegations were ‘satisfactory.’” (SJC, 28:5-6). In this article I will analyze TE Johnson’s written words in the report and raise several precise concerns about the doctrines of sin and sanctification which he proposes, and which lie behind his new book.
This is a doctrinal analysis and does not intend to address or call into question TE Johnson’s Christian witness or experience. From his words, I am confident that TE Johnson loves our Lord and desires earnestly to serve him. However, there are serious theological concerns that appear contrary to the Westminster Standards.
First, TE Johnson flattens three important distinctions in the doctrine of sin. He merges 1) the actual/original distinction; 2) the external/internal distinction; and 3) the commission/omission distinction, as if they were different names for the same thing. This results in a subtle equivocation in the definition of “sin,” allowing TE Johnson to assert without apparent internal contradiction that homosexual attraction both is and is not sin, and implicitly denying that “internal sins” are “actual sins.”
Second and consequently, TE Johnson’s doctrine of sanctification suffers by denying that sanctification is comprehensive and ordinary. These denials are intertwined: he calls sanctification ordinary but denies that the ordinariness of it applies to the whole man, including the affections. In the realm of affections, while TE Johnson admits the possibility of sanctification, he denies that it is ordinary or expected. In doing so, he reduces the ordinary experience of sanctification to the external, repeating the pharisaical error. Additionally, TE Johnson’s explanation of the means of grace in sanctification leaves significant ambiguities about the work of the Spirit. The omission of the principle means of grace, in favor of man’s action, in his description of mortification suggests a tendency towards externalizing the process of sanctification.
The Doctrine of Sin
TE Johnson has done an admirable job in his goal to avoid the error of Pelagianism, which argues that original sin is not sin, and thus not worthy of God’s punishment. Throughout his written word, he emphasizes that original sin is, as our confession states, “truly and properly sin” (Westminster Confession of Faith (WCF) 6.5). However, whether TE Johnson teaches that original sin is or is not properly called “sin” is not the question. The question is under what category TE Johnson places homosexual attraction within the overarching category of “sin.” Does TE Johnson teach that homosexual attraction is original sin or actual sin? Here, his writing makes plain that he considers homosexual attraction to be in the category of original sin rather than actual sin.
TE Johnson states: “An internal sexual or romantic pull toward anyone God has not given me…[is] a motion of the internal corruption that remains in the believer throughout this life…This temptation is ‘original corruption’ and is ‘properly called sin,’ even when it does not lead to ‘actual sin” (SJC, 14:1-10).
TE Johnson correctly rejects the Pelagian error (that original sin is not sin), but also incorrectly categorizes homosexual attraction as original sin. This is a confusion of the original/actual distinction with the internal/external distinction, treating “internal” and “original” as if they were synonymous. The Reformed tradition has always realized that sins do not need to break into external action to be actual sins, but that internal “motions” such as thoughts, desires, etc., are also actual sins when they transgress God’s law. Thus, Christ speaks of the experience of lust (or as TE Johnson characterizes: an internal sexual or romantic pull), as being equivalent to the commission of adultery. Westminster Larger Catechism (WLC) 149 asks whether any man is able perfectly to keep the commandments of God, to which it answers: “No man is able, either of himself, or by any grace received in this life, perfectly to keep the commandments of God; but doth daily break them in thought, word, and deed” [emphasis added].
Because thoughts are defined in both Scripture and the Westminster Standards as sin, we cannot make, as TE Johnson does, the distinction between original and actual sins to consist in the absence or presence of the volition (involuntary acts are still acts), nor can we see actual sin as limited to only external action. In fact, WLC 151 elaborates, declaring that transgressions are still actual sin, even when “only conceived in the heart,” and are merely aggravated when they “break forth in words and actions.”
TE Johnson then proceeds to merge into the two already collapsed distinctions the third, treating “omission” as another name for “original,” and “commission” as another name for “actual.” He states that “We are culpable both for what we do (transgression) and also for what we are (any lack of conformity unto)” (SJC, 15:27-28). The sentence without the parentheses is an excellent statement of the orthodox understanding of original sin. However, the parentheses are concerned, insofar as they borrow language from WLC 24’s definition of sin, with pairing “transgression” with actual sin, and “want of conformity” with original sin. The “want of conformity,” however, includes actual sins and is not identical to the category of original sin. It instead describes sins of omission, as opposed to those of commission. “Want of conformity” is not synonymous with original sin (although it may be said to include it).
Reformed theology sees three different, although interrelated, distinctions. There are 6 different categories, with overlaps. Preserving these, we confess that the experience of lust is an actual sin. By contrast, TE Johnson’s written word treats each of these distinctions as merely a different name for the same thing: the two categories of “original/internal/omission” and “actual/external/commission.” Through this flattening, he places lust into the category of original rather than actual sin.
A further comment demonstrates the subtlety of TE Johnson’s doctrine of sin. Continuing from the previously quoted section, he writes: “I use the phrase ‘a sin’ in its vernacular sense as a synonym for ‘actual sin.’ When speaking of the motions of original corruption, I am more likely to speak of ‘indwelling sin.’ Temptations are ‘of sin’ in that they are ‘motions of’ original sin/internal corruption” (SJC, 15:30-33). He clarifies elsewhere: “Same-sex attraction is part of our ‘original corruption’—specifically the part about being ‘inclined to all evil’” (SJC, 20:44-45).
The first quote explains why TE Johnson previously spoke of same-sex attraction (SSA) as “of sin” but not “a sin.” Both quotes show that TE Johnson has self-consciously placed it in the category of original sin.[1] While he is correct to continue affirming its culpability, he is incorrect in his categorization of it. Despite this, his definitions provide an interesting case study, and I believe that proceeding from his definitions should properly end up affirming that it is an actual sin.
TE Johnson, both in the quoted section, and WCF in 6.5, distinguishes between original sin as the corruption of nature and its motions. The motions of original sin are not original sin. This is why the Confession in that place states concerning original sin that “both itself, and all the motions thereof, are truly and properly sin.” In fact, as already quoted, TE Johnson correctly affirms a distinction between what we do, being actual sin, and what we are, being original sin. I propose the following syllogism:
Major Premise: A motion of the corrupt nature is what the corrupt nature does.Minor Premise: But the corrupt nature is what I am.Conclusion: Therefore, a motion of the corrupt nature is what I do.
Thus, a motion of the corrupt nature is actual sin but not original sin. It is an event not a substance. Therefore, the experience of SSA, as with any other experience of lust, is “a sin,” and not merely “of sin.” It is instructive at this point to refer to Vermigli’s work on original sin. He teaches that, “The apostle uses the term sin to mean more than just original sin. The term encompasses all kinds of vices that flow from original sin.”[2] Vermigli disagrees with TE Johnson, declaring that “vices” (which are internal, particular, and habitual—what TE Johnson refers to as the motions of the corrupt nature) are actual sins rather than original sin.
Another concern about TE Johnson’s doctrine of sin should be noted, as it is a relatively common understanding in the evangelical world. TE Johnson states about his experience: “I look away when tempted. I don’t take that second glance” (SJC, 18:13-18). As with all who experience lust, TE Johnson’s resistance to sinful desires is commendable. A minor clarification is required though: what about the first glance? Is the first glance a sin? Or is the second glance alone when it becomes a sin? The popular evangelical perspective is that the first glance is not sin, but it becomes sin only when it is lingered on, or becomes a second glance – that is, when it obtains the conscious consent of the will. But second glance ethics is not Reformed ethics. Jesus’ statement in Matthew 5 does not characterize looks by quantity or sequence. Our Lord condemns all lustful looks without qualification. Instead, a second glance, or a “continuance” of sin, is merely an aggravation of sin, as WLC 151 helpfully delineates. TE Johnson’s perspective is unclear, but the point is worthy of noting, as the ambiguity suggests that his doctrine may categorize the first glance as original sin, contrary to the Word.
The Doctrine of Sanctification
TE Johnson’s testimony and description of his experience seeking sanctification demonstrates that he has a godly desire for the elimination of sin. Despite this earnest desire, there remain theological concerns in his doctrine of sanctification, in no small part due to the previous concerns stated about his doctrine of sin. Several aspects are intertwined, and will be addressed in sequence: ordinariness, scope, and means. The doctrine which TE Johnson’s written words propose are those where change is unexpected internally, and ordinarily limited to externals. His description of the means of sanctification contains notable omissions, and tendencies to external procedures.
It is important to acknowledge at the outset that TE Johnson does acknowledge that sanctification is progressive. He declares his full agreement with WCF 13.1 and is careful to guard the truth that after regeneration indwelling sin does remain. However, the question at hand is not the presence of any progress, but the nature of that progress. Statements about sanctification–orthodox in isolation–are transformed in the context of TE Johnson’s doctrine of sin, to mean something different than the Confession intended. A few quotes suffice to demonstrate the first concern: that TE Johnson’s doctrine affirms that internal change is not ordinary by stating that the lack of change is ordinary:
“Longtime Harvest USA director Tim Geiger has stated that he has also never seen same-sex attraction go away—in himself or in anyone else. I suspect there are cases out there. But ordinarily this is a lifetime struggle” [emphasis added], (SJC, 19:14-16).
“It is possible for God to reduce homoerotic temptation from the inclinations and desires of a believer…But struggle against sexual temptation is typically lifelong” (SJC, 19:30-38).
TE Johnson’s own experience includes some measure of change – he says that he has “found the frequency of these distractions is lessened through the decades” (SJC, 19:33-34). Yet tension appears between his experience and his doctrine. He suggests that change is not ordinary, but then he affirms the reality of some change. While, I do not wish to characterize his experience, only his doctrine’ his doctrine lacks an internal dimension of “progress” in “progressive sanctification.” While it is true that the war against sin is lifelong (the lifelong nature of fighting sin is not merely ordinary – it is universal), it is also true that progress and change are also ordinary and to be expected, and that the war with “sin” in the abstract is distinct from the battle with this or that particular sin. The “rare” possibility of change should not be set in opposition to lifelong battle, as though the existence of the lifelong battle removed change from the domain of the ordinary. By using contrasts and repeated use of “but,” TE Johnson’s doctrine gives the appearance of acknowledging the possibility of progress, but then voiding it of power by declaring it extraordinary.
This says nothing about the speed of such progress or change. It may be slowly realized, and for many it is. And yet, there remains the expectation—the hope. John Owen quotes Habakkuk 2:3, applying the sureness of God’s promises to sanctification: “For the vision is yet for an appointed time; But at the end it will speak, and it will not lie. Though it tarries, wait for it; Because it will surely come, It will not tarry.” One could add to this the declaration of Psalm 5, that we “wait expectantly” or “eagerly watch.” Owen relates sanctification to faith, “If, then, thou canst raise up thy heart to a settled expectation of relief from Jesus Christ…thy soul shall be satisfied, he will assuredly deliver thee; he will slay the lust, and thy latter end shall be peace. Only look for it at his hand; expect when and how he will do it.”[3] Perhaps, instead of TE Johnson’s suggested opposition, “possible change but typically a lifelong struggle,” we should say that there is the “expectation of change, realized progressively in battle until death.”
The exercise of faith, expecting Christ’s grace in sanctification, is one of the means of sanctification. The suggestion that a lack of change (or a minimal change) throughout the Christian’s life is ordinary, is therefore directly contrary, and even harmful, to God’s appointed means of sanctification. TE Johnson correctly says, “It is possible,” but does not move to the promise that God is not only able but also willing. As Gurnall stated: “The very considering God to be God, supposeth him almighty to pardon … is some relief. But then to consider it as almighty power in bond and covenant to pardon, this is more” [emphasis added].[4] The same applies to sanctification – God is not only able but willing. 1 Thessalonians 4 describes sanctification as the will of God; and Philippians 2 is stronger: he is not only able, and not only willing, but actively working in us to accomplish it. He is able. He is willing. And he is doing! Let us say with the Psalmist, “Oh, that men would give thanks to the Lord for His goodness, And for His wonderful works to the children of men!” (Psalm 107:8).
Another point of concern is TE Johnson’s focus on the externality of sanctification, limiting its scope. This follows from his doctrine of sin, where he understands vices to be of original sin, instead of actual sins. In fact, this is merely a deepening of the previous aspect of ordinariness discussed above, which should not be separated from it. He correctly writes quoting WCF 6.5, that, “This corruption of nature, during this life, doth remain in those that are regenerated” (SJC, 19:9-10). Yet, when internal actual sins are improperly placed into the category of original sin, this necessarily leads to a change of sanctification’s focus into the external, and correspondingly an expectation of no (or minimal) internal change. Sanctification takes the shape of diminishing sinful (external) acts, not killing sinful desires.
Sanctification, however, extends to the whole being. While imperfect, sanctification is “in the whole man” (WCF 13:2), and to reiterate the point of expectation, “doth overcome” in the whole man (WCF 13.3). 2 Corinthians 5:17 declares that in Christ “old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.” We have newness not only in external actions, but also in our internal affections.
TE Johnson, in limiting actual sin to sins located primarily in the volition, also limits sanctification to the domain of the volition, and casts it out of the affections. He subtly achieves this limit in a change of vocabulary when the SJC inquires “Is homosexuality a heinous sin?” by answering with, “homosexual immorality” and “heterosexual immorality” are subsets of the broader “sexual immorality” (SJC, 26:32-27:5). In fact, he tells us that, “[I]f a minister instead engages in actual gay sex or actual slander, then Paul’s logic would seem to indicate that such a minister is unfit for office. And much more seriously, without particular repentance, they have no basis for an assurance of salvation” [emphasis added], (SJC, 24:25-29).
By referring to only “actual gay sex” in his discussion of the sanctified character, he has explicitly limited the scope of ordinary sanctification to actions and not desires. We understand from Scripture though, that the external action is to be merely the expression of the already changed internal character. Otherwise, one may honor God with his actions, and yet his heart may remain far from him.
When TE Johnson writes that, “We don’t judge by what sinful temptation a minister experiences in his hearts so much as by what he does with that temptation. Does he proactively mortify his sin?” (SJC, 25:15-17); this is an incredibly helpful statement. With this we heartily agree – the presence of temptation is common to believers and will be until death when sanctification is complete. However, the response of mortification which TE Johnson describes, appears incomplete if he limits it to the externals of whether a man “consistently if imperfectly does what God wants (and not what indwelling sin wants)” (SJC, 25:21-22).
This is certainly an important part of sanctification, but is not the full extent of sanctification, for sanctification occurs not merely in the actions, but in the desires as well. While sanctification remains progressive we yet affirm with Morton Smith, that in it “Every act or function of our moral and spiritual being is brought into this operation of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit engages man’s consciousness, understanding, felling, will, conscience, and every aspect of our personality” (emphasis added)[5]
Another concern about TE Johnson’s doctrine of sanctification concerns what is mainly an ambiguity. Following the external focus of sanctification’s effects, the means which TE Johnson describes also tend toward externality. We agree that mortification is the proper response, but it is worth hearing how he describes mortification: “I meet with an elder weekly for accountability. I avoid unmonitored internet connections. I invest in Christian friendships in which I am known. I have Covenant Eyes on my phone. That experience is required of any Christian man walking in repentance. Being same-sex attracted does not increase my struggle against sexual temptation, per se” (SJC, 18:14-18).
This looks suspiciously like checkbox ethics, as if the stated procedures are the proper mode and method of mortification. He declares explicitly that such things are “required of any Christian man walking in repentance.” While these things are certainly helpful, good, and useful, it seems difficult to argue that Covenant Eyes is a divinely appointed means of grace. Instead, John Owen, after 13 chapters of preparation, tells us that mortification consists of acting in faith on Christ. Since sanctification is “the work of God’s grace” (WLC 75) through the Spirit, the means are primarily spiritual. TE Johnson omits from his description of what mortification looks like, any discussion of Christ’s “ordinances; especially the word, sacraments, and prayer; all which are made effectual to the elect for their salvation” (WLC 154) by the work of the Holy Spirit.
To pursue “Spirit-empowered victory” over sin is to use the divinely appointed means for that end. If every time TE Johnson describes mortification in his responses, he omits these means in favor of self-action (SJC 25:24-42), or means unknown until the modern era (e.g., Covenant Eyes), it is reasonable to be concerned that his doctrine might induce others to look in the wrong place for sanctification.
John Webster reminds all of us that while sanctification is a process in which we are active, God is the primary agent: “There is no point at which God’s action retires in favor of human undertakings…our making of a culture is as it were our inhabiting of a space in which we have been set, acting out roles and fulfilling tasks to which we have been appointed, and doing so with an energy which is God’s own gift.”[6]
The means of grace are instruments in God’s hands, not ours. We approach God through them, in dependence upon him – not them. Mortification is not routine human practice, but the Holy Spirit acting through means which God has appointed.[7] I would encourage TE Johnson to resolve the ambiguity of his statements on mortification, and to be certain that his doctrine emphasizes these truths and directs believers to the primary means of grace. Does “care” look like pointing people to hope, through the Spirit working by the means of grace? Or does it consist in pointing people to other practices, not ordained by God as means of grace, so that they will gain psychological comfort in the absence of hope?
Conclusion
TE Johnson’s written words in the SJC report describing his doctrines of sin and sanctification pose concerns. The proposed doctrine of sin flattens distinctions, and in so doing it fails to properly identify internal actual sins. This leads, consequently, to the doctrine of a faulty understanding of sanctification, which is stripped of both the hope and the expectation of changed desires and affections. And it from these doctrinal formulations that his underlying paradigm of “care” is grounded and found wanting.
Albert D. Taglieri is a member of First Presbyterian Church of Gulfport, Miss.[1] This is concerning given that the first allegation includes this exact charge.
[2] Peter Martyr Vermigli, On Original Sin, 85.
[3] John Owen, Works of John Owen, 6:80.
[4] William Gurnall, The Christian in Complete Armour, 35.
[5] Morton H. Smith, Systematic Theology, 2:490.
[6] John Webster, The Culture of Theology, 54.
[7] A helpful article, which describes a lengthy list of divinely appointed means of grace, may be found here: https://journal.rpts.edu/2020/10/02/how-sanctification-works-the-westminster-assembly-and-progressive-sanctification/ -
You Become What You Watch
Your future is not determined because of your past. You will become that which captures your attention. Is your attention set on the things of God, you will look like God. Is your attention captured by your family, you will probably love them well. Your attention is valuable and it is transformative. Don’t waste it. Where do you spend your attention? That is what you will become. The focus of your attention is transforming you.
We have a tendency to focus on all the things in life that happen or exist outside of our control. You can’t control the weather, you can’t control other people, you can’t even control when your hair turns gray or turns loose. You did not choose where you would be born or to whom. You had not part to play in your genetic make-up or your siblings or even your kindergarten teacher. You do not control the drivers in the other lane or the barista taking forever to make your black coffee.
But, it turns out, none of those things matter as much about who you become as you might think. The things outside of our control are more excuses than they are causes. The things I cannot control become perfect excuses for my bad behavior or my lack of commitment or initiative.
How do I know?
I am often tempted to blame my kids for my short temper or slow drivers for making me late or even others around me for distracting me from the task I need to accomplish.
I can be an expert excuse-maker.
But I have great news. The things outside of your control are not the most important things in your life. The things outside of your control do not have to be the most formative things in your life.
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