{"id":23015,"date":"2024-10-21T22:40:28","date_gmt":"2024-10-21T22:40:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/?p=23015"},"modified":"2024-10-21T22:40:55","modified_gmt":"2024-10-21T22:40:55","slug":"the-dangers-of-associations-and-mission-boards","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/2024\/10\/the-dangers-of-associations-and-mission-boards\/","title":{"rendered":"The Dangers Of Associations And Mission Boards"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Gospel Standard 1841:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\u201cForeign Missions.\u201d A tract bearing [this] title, and dated &#8220;Chatteris Committee, Oct. 6, 1840, \u201chas been forwarded to us, by a correspondent, for an opinion of it in our pages. It is not indeed our usual practice to travel out of our road to pronounce a judgment on works not sent to us expressly for review, but we feel ourselves justified in this particular instance in departing from our accustomed rule. Our wide circulation amongst the living family, and, we trust we may add, our influence amongst them, have put us into a position which we did not occupy at the outset. If the Lord has set us upon a watch tower, if He has given us all any measure of spiritual discernment, or endowed us with any portion of divine faithfulness, we are called upon by this very position that we are placed in, trying and difficult as it is, to stand forth to oppose error, as well as to defend truth. The children of God are a scattered family, generally very poor and unlearned, and always much despised and hated, but never more so than when mixed up with churches that have a form of godliness, but deny the power thereof. Many inwardly possessed of the fear of God are weak in judgment and deficient in spiritual discernment, easily browbeaten and trodden under foot by presumptuous boasters; and being lean, and broken, and sick, and diseased, are thrust at with side and shoulder, and pushed with the horns of the fat and strong cattle, whom the Lord has promised to feed with judgment. (Ezek. 34:16-22) If to such staggering in the wilderness we can be &#8220;instead of eyes,&#8221; (Num. 10:3I) and if any measure be instrumental in delivering them from legal taskmasters, we shall cheerfully bear the scourge of the tongue that the lords over God&#8217;s heritage will surely smite us with. For the sake then of the living children, we drop the following remarks respecting the tract entitled &#8220;Foreign Missions,&#8221; which, we understand, has been very widely diffused through the Particular Baptist churches in the counties of Huntingdon, Cambridge, Bedford, &amp;c.<\/p>\n<p>But the very nature of an association such as this tract has sprung from, first demands our attention.<\/p>\n<p>We would ask, then, what scriptural precept or precedent there is for a number of ministers to unite in forming an association of this nature? The Lord, indeed, sent out the seventy, two and two (Luke 10:1); Paul and Barnabas are separated by the Holy Ghost, to labour together in the work to which He had called them (Acts 13:2); and the Apostle speaks of his &#8220;fellow-labourers,&#8221; and &#8220;fellow-helpers.&#8221; (1 &#8216;I&#8217;hess. 3:2; Phil. 4:3; 2 Cor. 8:23) But these co-labourers widely differed from a body of associated ministers furnished with a committee, a president, a chairman, &amp;c. Such associations, therefore, having no precept nor precedent for their formation in the word of God, we are bound to reject them as unscriptural.<\/p>\n<p>But there are positive evils in these associated bodies which arise from their very nature. Union is strength. The sticks that, singly, are easily broken, united into a bundle, receive and confer strength from the union.<\/p>\n<p>This is the secret of all confederacies, political or religious. But what strength is thus gained? Spiritual strength that is made perfect in weakness? Ah no. The very strength grained from union precludes this; for if spiritual strength be made perfect in weakness, and can only be made known in weakness, then all strength gained by union is a departure from that weakness in which alone divine strength is made perfect. All such strength is, therefore, carnal strength, and, as such, involves a departure from Gospel principles.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>But this strength thus gained must be employed against somewhat; for it cannot lie idle. This Joint-stock Company must work their capital. The power thus gained by the ministers is employed and worked against the people, and chiefly against God&#8217;s people. Such has been, from earliest times the effect of power grasped by ministers. It was the first step in the Primitive church to Popery; it is the grand means for holding together the body of the Wesleyans; and it is now the chief instrument in the counties of Suffolk, Essex, Cambridge, Huntingdon, &amp;c., to stifle experimental truth, and bind heavy chains upon the gospel. Its effect is this. A creed is drawn up, or tacitly assented to by all the ministers of the association; they, naturally, preach for one another; and their pulpits are open only to the associated ministers, or to those who come with their countenance, or with their shibboleth. A strong party is formed in the churches by the admission of members saturated with similar views. The living family form a small, despised, browbeaten minority. The leading members of the churches work with the ministers, and all opposition is silenced and put down. Thus, under the noxious shade of these tall interlaced trees, all truth dwindles and dies. The living family are starved, honest men gagged, the faithful witnesses for truth excluded, and a dense crop of weeds grows up under the protecting shadow of the association. The ministers, having no divine acquaintance with the Gospel, gradually depart from the letter of truth, some minister of more talent or more craft, more plausibility or more tact than the rest, leading them forward, like the belwether, into error, until, emboldened by numbers, and mutually encouraged by companionship in belief, the association lands in barefaced Arminianism, like the Midland Association, or into Socinianism, like the old Presbyterians, the constitution of whose church, though in somewhat a different manner, was an associated one.<\/p>\n<p>We would say, then, to all the people of God who have ears to hear, resist where you can, and where you cannot, flee out of Associations. Whatever be their professed object, and this, all in the case of \u201cForeign Missions,&#8221; may be put forward with no such apparent and possibly not real design, but, whatever be their proposed object, their termination will be to enslave and fetter you. Like the woodman in the fable, who asked permission of the trees to take a handle to his axe, with which, when granted, he cut the whole forest down; so will these associated ministers, who now ask you to unite in forming a society, cut down your liberties with the handle that you are asked to give them. It is but throwing the net further to catch a few more fish; it is but getting a few more sticks to make the united bundle stronger.<\/p>\n<p>But is not the object of this meditated society so pure and excellent, as to warrant the employment of all the machinery it can set in motion? And if this object is not attainable by any other means, why should those who have it at heart hesitate to employ the instrumentality of an organised society? But its object will be best explained in the words of the tract:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;The design of this address will be at once understood when it is stated, it may be viewed as another and final effort to effect the formation of a Foreign Missionary Society, for the purpose of diffusing the light of salvation among the heathen.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The main object of the address is to prove, that to the church is committed the duty of promulgating the Gospel. The following extract contains the pith of the address:\u2014<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe therefore confidently submit our opinion, that the duty arising from the trust reposed in the church is twofold, namely, to defend the purity and to dispense the doctrine, of salvation to the whole world. It is the important business of the church to defend the gospel, and not only to defend but to diffuse it; and not only to diffuse it, but to diffuse it in a pure state.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;And for these objects she is to employ her resources; for these ends she is to originate and set in motion such measures, as in the nature of things, and in subordination to the will of God, the word of Christ, and the witness of the Holy Spirit shall tend to the furtherance and accomplishment of the Saviour&#8217;s commission. She is thus exalted in the midst of the earth; established on the top of the mountains. Her elevation is divine. She is the consecrated medium of divine agency; and bears the impressions of a divine stamp. She is a divine result; and is unto God for a name, and for a praise, and for a glory in the earth.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Her very duties are her honour, the immediate end of her being and life. Nor can she neglect them without deep dishonour to herself, and insult to her Lord. That very moment she fails in the execution of her trust, that very moment she commences a fatal descent. Her brilliancy declines; the glory of the Lord departs; and Ichabod maybe inscribed upon the posts of her doors.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Serious and humbling as these facts are, we cannot but inquire, though it be with fear and trembling,\u2014Have the societies, composing that part of the Christian church to which we belong, done their duty? Have they fulfilled their obligations? Have they\u2014or to speak more directly home\u2014have we faithfully and righteously discharged our trust? Have we used all our talents for the honour of him who gave them? Is it evident that we have acted in accordance with the benevolent spirit of christianity, the genius of the dispensation under which we live, and the design of that trust which the commission to preach the gospel has lodged in the bosom of the church?<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe venture to inquire yet further\u2014if it be not too apparent that notwithstanding the keenness with which we have defended the doctrines of sovereign grace those very doctrines have been either implicitly or avowedly repudiated by many of our church? We have looked upon ourselves as being set for the defence of the gospel; and so we are; but this is only a profile view of the case, and leaves out just one half of the truth, and by consequence, just one half of our duty. For we are not only to guard the gospel, but to give it; not only to define it, but to diffuse it; not only to protect it, but to propagate it. We must sow, as well as sift, and distribute as well as divide. It is not enough that we act as conservators, we must appear in the character of benefactors also. The lands upon which are seen the implements of moral culture are not sufficient; we must fence off more of the barren heath\u2014enclose more of the old common. The gospel is aggressive as well as progressive; and it will not suffice that we retain our conquests. The dominions of Christ are to be enlarged, and we must make war with all the world.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Let us then understand our true character, and know our true position. Are we rivers, as well as resevoirs? Benefactors, as well as beneficiaries? Do we fertilize as well as fence? and give as well as guard? If not, we are in a wrong position; we are occupying untenable ground.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>We should almost think, from the tenor of the language here employed, that the Church has been promoted into the place of the Holy Spirit. \u201cSeparate me,&#8221; said that heavenly Teacher, &#8220;Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them.&#8221; &#8220;So they, being sent forth by the Holy Ghost, departed unto Seleucia.&#8221; (Acts 13:2-4)<\/p>\n<p>This is different language from that of the tract, &#8220;Let us then understand our true character, and, know our true position. Are we rivers as well as resevoirs, benefactors as well as beneficiaries? Do we fertilize as well as fence, and give as well as guard?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In our humble opinion, Messrs. Associated Ministers, you are neither one or the other; neither \u201crivers nor reservoirs.\u201d Give you cannot, and guard you do not. You neither sow nor sift, for you have neither seed basket nor sieve. You neither distribute nor divide; for though you may distribute doctrines, you cannot distribute the power of vital godliness; and though you may divide and sub-divide your sermons, you cannot rightly divide the word of truth. You neither fertilize nor fence; for did you possess the former, it would be beyond your power to communicate it to others; and as to the latter, you never yet set up a hedge which a hypocrite could not leap over.<\/p>\n<p>Space will not now permit us to touch upon the subject of missions to the heathen. Our objections are not to the gospel being preached among them but to the instruments employed\u2014the men who send them, and the men who are sent. Are the senders men who know and love the truth? Is their ministry received by, or acceptable to, the living family of God? Does the Holy Ghost anoint them or their message with dew, savour, or power? Do they bear scriptural marks of being not only commissioned to preach the gospel themselves, but of being authorised by the Holy Ghost to send out others to preach the gospel also? Let their opposition and enmity to men of truth furnish the answer. Let their expressed or generally understood determination to keep out of their pulpits such men as Gadsby, Warburton, &amp;c., testify what is their real spirit, and what their professed love to the gospel.<\/p>\n<p>And will not the men sent be similar to the senders! Will those who take their stand upon doctrines and doctrines only, who make oneness in sentiment the bases of union, send men who will contend for an expertmental religion? The choice of missionaries, the judgment of their qualifications, and the whole management of affairs will centre in the Committee of the Association. Will the sons do better than their fathers? Will the grafts bear better fruit than the tree from which they are cut?<\/p>\n<p>We know, then, who the missionaries will be even before the Society is formed. We can predict from the features of the parents what will be the countenance of the children, before the progeny comes into existence. The die is too deeply and legibly cut for us to doubt what will be the impress upon the coin. The opinions of the constituents are too well known for us to be ignorant of their representatives. &#8220;Without all contradiction the less is blessed of the better;\u201d (Heb. 7:7) and the sender will not pronounce his blessing on the sent, if better than himself.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>We therefore strenuously advise the living family of God to stand aloof from the Association. \u201cWhatever is not of faith is sin,&#8221; and we feel confident that no well-taught children of God can join themselves to such things in faith.<\/p>\n<p>Were all other evidence wanting that this movement was not of God, the very language employed in this carefully and elaborately written tract would sufficiently prove it.<\/p>\n<p>We think we never read a tract where death was more visibly stamped in every sentence. It is not badly written, as far as natural ability is concerned, but every line smells of the tomb. We cannot trace one footstep of the blessed Spirit; and indeed, the whole appeal is addressed to human exertion and founded on duty. Did the grave-clothes of Lazarus smell of the sepulcher more than the following expressions? \u201cThese brilliant prophecies;\u201d \u201cthe Gospel, its magna charta;\u201d \u201cthe imperial mandate;\u201d \u201cthe order issued by Christ constitutes an important document;\u201d \u201cthe commission sheds a smiling aspects over the habitable parts of the earth;\u201d \u201cthe order we are now examining presents the following interesting form;\u201d \u201cin the following splendid passage;\u201d \u201cthe Church is a divine result;\u201d \u201cthe benevolent spirit of Christianity;\u201d \u201cthe genius of the dispensation under which we live;\u201d \u201cfour counties only are visited by the dew and sunlight of Missionary exertion;\u201d \u201cchurch of elevated views.\u201d The whole tract is a most labored attempt to reason out the duty of the Church to propagate the Gospel, and, viewed as a piece of argumentative writing, though sadly overlaid with the tawdry ornaments of a meretricious rhetoric, it is not deficient in strength. But savour, power, unction, and feeling, are no more to be found in it than dew upon Mount Gilboa, or mercy from the law of Moses.<\/p>\n<p>We will, therefore, dismiss it with the following extract, calling attention to the absurdity, both naturally and spiritually, of the last sentence, an impossibility in nature and an impossibility in grace.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;What therefore we propose, as a basis of union, are the doctrines of sovereign grace, as summarily comprehended in what are called the five points; namely, eternal and unconditional election\u2014particular redemption by the substitutionary work and sufferings of Christ\u2014the total depravity of human nature-effectual vocation\u2014and the final perseverance of the saints. These doctrines we propose exhibiting through the medium of specific invitations to human sinners, the ordinances of the Lord&#8217;s house, and the practical duties of Christian life.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAnd we submit that a Society thus constituted, differs widely and essentially\u2014theologically considered\u2014from all other existing Societies which have for their object the diffusion of gospel light in the dark countries of heathen gentileism. It contains all the essential elements of gospel truth,\u2014it elevates a theological standard around which all our Churches may consistently rally,\u2014unfurls a banner under which they may cheerfully unite, and proposes an object in which they may cordially agree.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;A theological system like this will be a centralizing point; because all our Churches will see in its theory the constituents of their own; and all may entertain reserved opinions upon miscellaneous subjects. It will resemble a ledger, containing certain entries, but allowing various private memoranda; or a human skeleton, containing all the solids, the interstices of which\u2014when nothing better can be obtained\u2014may be filled up by the floating atoms of a delirious speculation or a prosing curiosity.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Could it be possible for a human skeleton, containing all the solids, to have the interstices filled lip by floating atoms of what should not be there. it would be a mass of disease and death, and have no more life in it naturally, than the Association has spiritually. The skeleton of dry doctrines may have &#8220;its interstices filled with the floating atoms of a delirious speculation or a prosing curiosity,&#8221; but such a monster is unknown in the kingdom of nature and in the kingdom of grace.<\/p>\n<div class=\"simplefavorite-button\" data-postid=\"23015\" data-siteid=\"1\" data-groupid=\"1\" data-favoritecount=\"0\" style=\"box-shadow:none;-webkit-box-shadow:none;-moz-box-shadow:none;\"><div class=\"bookmark-off\"><\/div><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u201cForeign Missions.\u201d A tract bearing [this] title, and dated &#8220;Chatteris Committee, Oct. 6, 1840, \u201chas been forwarded to us, by a correspondent, for an opinion of it in our pages. It is not indeed our usual practice to travel out of our road to pronounce a judgment on works not sent to us expressly for review, but we feel ourselves justified in this particular instance in departing from our accustomed rule. Our wide circulation amongst the living family, and, we trust we may add, our influence amongst them, have put us into a position which we did not occupy at the outset. If the Lord has set us upon a watch tower, if He has given us all any measure of spiritual discernment, or endowed us with any portion of divine faithfulness, we are called upon by this very position that we are placed in, trying and difficult as it is, to stand forth to oppose error, as well as to defend truth. The children of God are a scattered family, generally very poor and unlearned, and always much despised and hated, but never more so than when mixed up with churches that have a form of godliness, but deny the power thereof. Many inwardly possessed of the fear of God are weak in judgment and deficient in spiritual discernment, easily browbeaten and trodden under foot by presumptuous boasters; and being lean, and broken, and sick, and diseased, are thrust at with side and shoulder, and pushed with the horns of the fat and strong cattle, whom the Lord has promised to feed with judgment. (Ezek. 34:16-22) If to such staggering in the wilderness we can be &#8220;instead of eyes,&#8221; (Num. 10:3I) and if any measure be instrumental in delivering them from legal taskmasters, we shall cheerfully bear the scourge of the tongue that the lords over God&#8217;s heritage will surely smite us with. For the sake then of the living children, we drop the following remarks respecting the tract entitled &#8220;Foreign Missions,&#8221; which, we understand, has been very widely diffused through the Particular Baptist churches in the counties of Huntingdon, Cambridge, Bedford, &#038;c.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":51,"featured_media":13413,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_vp_format_video_url":"","_vp_image_focal_point":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[1168],"tags":[1224,1201,1202],"class_list":["post-23015","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-joseph-philpot","tag-evangelism","tag-fullerism","tag-hyper-calvinism"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/23015","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/51"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=23015"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/23015\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":23017,"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/23015\/revisions\/23017"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/13413"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=23015"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=23015"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.baptists.net\/history\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=23015"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}