Between Two Worlds: A Mix of Theology, Philosophy, Politics, and Culture



Thursday, August 09, 2007

Grudem Response to Piper

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From Wayne Grudem (posted with permission):

Dear John,

Thank you for the kind, gracious spirit in your response!

And thank you for your friendship, which has meant so much to me for so many years.

And thank you for helping me to think more clearly about the details of what I have written. You write so persuasively! In fact, last night I printed out what I had written and your response, and gave it to Margaret, and before we went to bed Margaret informed me with a smile, “I agree with John.” Now what can I say to that??

Nevertheless, here are some responses:

(1) I do not see denial of church membership as “virtually the same as excommunication,” nor do any of the Baptist churches known to me.

Non-members who are clearly believers in Jesus Christ are welcomed as believers into many aspects of fellowship. They share in the Lord’s Supper together with members (in all but a very few of the most strict Baptist churches). They participate freely in worship and prayer and fellowship. Sometimes a Baptist church will even have a Bible-believing Presbyterian or Episcopalian or Methodist or Lutheran pastor preach as a guest from the pulpit. That is far from “excommunication”!

And in varying degrees (in different churches) non-members are encouraged to minister to others in the church – they can become active members of home fellowship groups (and in some churches, such as my own Scottsdale Bible Church, they can lead such groups). They can become (in various churches) members of the choir or worship team, youth group workers, ushers, greeters, and so forth. These all give visible signs of treating this unbaptized person as a brother or sister in Christ. (I realize that Baptist churches and denominations have varieties of allowed participation in such things, but they all allow some measure of participation and treat unbaptized Christians as Christians.)

And surely a Baptist church would not give notice to the whole church that the unbaptized non-member should be “treated as an unbeliever from now on,” which would be done in the case of church discipline and excommunication. All these examples show that Baptist churches do not consider the refusal of membership to be equivalent to, or anything even similar to, excommunication. So I am not persuaded by that part of your thoughtful response to me.

(2) But there is a still a clear difference between members and non-members. Unbaptized believers are not members, so they cannot be elders or church officers. They cannot speak or vote at church business meetings. In other words, they can have no formal, recognized part in determining the ongoing policies and teachings of the church. And there will be other activities that each church decides, for various reasons, to restrict to members. There is considerable freedom for churches to decide what they think is wise in this area, in my opinion. And I have seen considerable variety in the Baptist and other believer’s baptism churches that I have known. But there is a clear difference, which I think is right.

(3) There was an unexpressed assumption in my discussion, an assumption which your response makes clear to me. I did not express it because it is so commonly assumed in nearly all churches. The assumption is this:

Baptism is required for church membership.

I think I assumed this because, as far as I know, it has been the practice of all major denominations throughout history. Presbyterians believe that baptism is necessary for church membership (for they consider infant baptism true baptism). Episcopalians believe that baptism is necessary for church membership. Baptists believe that baptism is necessary for church membership. Pentecostals believe that baptism is necessary for church membership. Methodists believe this. The Evangelical Free Church of America (which allows both views of baptism) believes this. Independent Bible churches believe this. Even Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox churches believe this. Apart from some unusual groups that don’t practice baptism at all (such as the Salvation Army), I think that the whole church throughout its history has held that baptism is necessary for church membership.

In the light of that assumption, which I have now made explicit by adding the words in boldface type, I think the section that you objected to makes good sense: [In this section I am explaining the problem that will arise if a church decides to allow both views of baptism to be held and taught:]

On the other side, those who hold to believer’s baptism (as I do) would have to be willing to admit into church membership people who have been baptized as infants, and who did not make a personal profession of faith at the time they were baptized. But from a believer’s baptism position, genuine baptism has to follow a personal profession of faith. So how can believer’s baptism advocates in good conscience say that infant baptism is also a valid form of baptism? That contradicts what they believe about the essential nature of baptism – that is an outward sign of an inward spiritual change, so that the apostle Paul could say, “As many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ” (Gal. 3:27).

For someone who holds to believer’s baptism, and who holds that baptism is necessary for church membership [I just now added these words], admitting to church membership someone who has not been baptized upon profession of faith, and telling the person that he or she never has to be baptized as a believer, is really giving up one’s view on the proper nature of baptism. It is saying that infant baptism really is valid baptism! But then how could anyone who holds to this position tell anyone who had been baptized as an infant that he or she still needed to be baptized as a believer?
(4) Now it may be that someone would want to start a new denomination in which baptism is not necessary for church membership. Or people may decide to change their church constitutions so that baptism is no longer required for membership. People are free to do that if they wish.

In that case, I suppose a (hypothetical) Baptist church could say to someone, “We require baptism for church membership, unless you disagree with our view of baptism. For those who disagree with us, we do not require baptism for church membership. Whether we require it or not depends on what you think of baptism.” I suppose a church could say that.

In such a church, they could allow an unbaptized person to be a member. If a godly, Bible-believing, born again Presbyterian (such as your examples of our friends Ligon Duncan or R. C. Sproul, or others) came and wanted to be a member, this (hypothetical) Baptist church could say to him, “We don’t believe you have been baptized, but you can become a member anyway because we allow unbaptized people like you to be members.”

(5) But I don’t think I could support such a practice in a church. I think the reason churches throughout history have required baptism for membership is that the New Testament so clearly makes baptism the public act that every believer undergoes at the outset of the Christian life. It is right there in the Great Commission: “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you” (Matt. 28:19-20). There is no such thing in the New Testament as an unbaptized person being an active member of any local church. So how could we say today that we should start allowing unbaptized persons to be members of our churches? But that (it seems to me) is what my earlier position, and your current position, would have to say.

I do not think such a position is wise, or consistent with the New Testament, and I would not recommend any church to adopt it.

Thank you again for your thoughtful, gracious response, John.

Your friend,

Wayne

Update: Grudem sends along this correction:

There is a factual error in my reply to John Piper that someone has pointed out. The Evangelical Free Church does not require baptism for church membership, contrary to what I said. This is stated in an article by an EFCA pastor, Bill Kynes. I suppose this is the natural corollary to their "allow both views" position, and it is an internally consistent position. If a church adopts the "both options" view, then it seems they also have to go to the "baptism not required for membership" view. But, as the article by Pastor Kynes shows, many in the EFCA denomination are concerned with the resultant downplaying of the importance of baptism. This is not surprising.


28 Comments:

Blogger Darby Livingston said...

"There is no such thing in the New Testament as an unbaptized person being an active member of any local church."

By what I've read, I don't think Piper thinks unbaptized people can be a member of a local church. He simply doesn't find evidence that a Presbyterian is heretical based on their view of baptism. Therefore, they can be admitted as members based on their clean conscience within their system of theology, and taught correct views along the way.

I sympathize with Grudem's argument. If one makes believer's baptism a prerequisite to church membership, then paedobaptists don't fit the definition, regardless of their conscience. The only way around it is to do away with baptism as a prerequisite. Baptism does seem to be an elevated, introductory command.

8/09/2007 04:12:00 PM  
Blogger Peter Kirk said...

I do see an alternative which the hypothetical Baptist church could say to the Presbyterian who wanted to become a member: "You need to declare that you have been baptised. We are not convinced that your baptism is valid, but that is a matter between you and God."

After all, the church really does have to take people's declarations of baptism on trust, unless it is going to require documented proof from every potential member that they were baptised and at the time they were believers. What would they do with someone who had been baptised in a Baptist church on some kind of profession of faith but later realised they had never truly believed and came to faith? Or what about someone like me who was baptised as a believer (as well as as an infant) but in an informal setting with no documents or other proof? Would such people be required to be re-baptised? What are the theological implications of that? The only safe practical way is to accept people's own statements that they have been baptised.

8/09/2007 04:13:00 PM  
Blogger Bob Hayton said...

I respect both Grudem and Piper highly. In this response, Grudem says that the majority of Baptists he knows advocate an open communion position. My question is:

How far removed is the open membership question from the open communion question?

The New Hampshire Baptist Confession of 1833 affirmed: “Christian Baptism is the immersion in water of a believer… that it is prerequisite to the privileges of a Church relation; and to the Lord’s Supper…” Is not the historic acceptance of open communion among Baptists not significantly opening the door for an open membership view?

I also agree with Peter Kirk here that under Piper's proposal, only baptized believers would be admitted to membership. The church and elders would disagree with the validity of the baptism of the Presbyterian, but would allow for him to be wrong as long as his spirit is right in the matter.

8/09/2007 04:55:00 PM  
Blogger Scotty Karber said...

I don't just sympathize with Dr. Grudem's argument I agree with it. I also identify with all those he mentioned who believe that baptism is a prerequisite for church membership and believe his argument is compelling in regard to the necessity of regarding baptism as either/or and not both/and in regard to believer's baptism and paedobaptism. Against his wife - I agree with him. :)

8/09/2007 05:26:00 PM  
Anonymous Jeremy Pierce said...

I find this notion to be very strange. A committed Presbyterian who has been both baptized as an infant and confirmed at a later age has done what Baptists will view as being dedicated as an infant and then being baptized at a later age. Baptists will just insist that the Presbyterians have been mislabeling these events. So saying that the Presbyterian hasn't been baptized simply because the event the Presbyterian calls baptism wasn't a baptism is too quick. There's another event that the Presbyterian calls confirmation that amounts to the same content and commitment as baptism.

8/09/2007 05:43:00 PM  
Anonymous Alex Chediak said...

Bob,

I don't think open communion necessarily "opens the door" (no pun intended) toward open membership. Taking communion in an open communion church is "on your own reconnaissance" -- declaring yourself to be a believer. Church membership, on the other hand, as Dr. Grudem points out, is to have a "formal, recognized part in determining the ongoing policies and teachings of the church."

You say that you agree with Peter that "only baptized believers would be admitted to membership." But that assumes too much: Only those who have been credobaptized have in fact been baptized.

8/09/2007 07:15:00 PM  
Blogger Jessica said...

I would like your thoughts on this. Martin Luther had an essay titled "Concerning Rebaptism" in which he addressed a similar issue. A lot of people at that time were wondering about their baptism because they had been baptized in the Roman Catholic Church [false church] and not in a Protestant (Reformed) Church. Because of the Catholic traditions, they were also baptized as infants. (Luther himself was a proponent of paedobaptism) What he writes is really interesting. I cannot reproduce the whole section here, but I found it on the web: http://joelbrondos.worldmagblog.com/joelbrondos/archives/004595.html


All in all, he says
Assume that the first baptism is without faith. Tell me which is the greater and the more important in the second baptism, the Word of God or faith? Is it not true that the Word of God is greater and more important than faith, since faith builds and is founded on the Word of God rather than God's Word on faith? Furthermore, faith may waver and change, but God's Word remains forever."

Can someone please respond with their thoughts regarding Luther's arguments? I would really like to hear some thoughts, because after reading this essay last year, I was convinced that rebaptism of a previously baptized person (whether through infant baptism or not) is not valid, yet wasn't convinced of the paedobaptist position.

Thanks,
Jessica

8/09/2007 10:11:00 PM  
Blogger Lloyd said...

This a fascinating discussion that hits close to home. I'm a Baptist who is also a member of a fine PCA church in the deep south. My youngest daughter is saved and has completed the communicant's class at church. The elders appreciated her testimony and are ready for her to become a "communing" member. As Baptists, we affirm the necessity of baptism for membership and agree that it is not salvific. However, we also believe in immersion. Although the Westminster Confession specifically allows immersion, the PCA's Book of Church Order says "[Baptism] is not to be privately administered, but in the presence of the congregation under the supervision of the Session (56:2)." This means if I baptize her in my pool it is not acceptable because it is "privately administered" and the Session won't because it would be outside the normal worship of the congregation.

All this leaves my daughter high and (very) dry. In addition, because she isn't baptized she can't become a "communing" member and thus cannot partake of communion.

We knew when we joined it would not be easy on certain points but we are consistently blessed through the preaching and teaching and we have grown to love the people as well. In addition, we believed that purposefully joining those with whom we didn't see eye on everything would make some small contribution to the unity for which Jesus prayed.

Unity is hard -- I'm glad He continues to intercede.

8/09/2007 10:11:00 PM  
Blogger Jessica said...

Oops, the link didn't go completely through. you'll have to cut and paste it. it's:
http://joelbrondos.worldmagblog.com
/joelbrondos/archives/004595.html

8/09/2007 10:14:00 PM  
Anonymous Duane said...

Grudem is right on, both in his first explanation from the book, and even more convincing in this post. If one believes baptism is an outward expression of faith, commanded by the Lord, than infant baptim is no baptism at all. It is not merely a matter of semantics (i.e. Baby dedication and confirmation could be essentially the same thing). To allow a non-baptized Christian to be a member is simply not an option someone convinced of believer's baptism has. You cannot do that without weakening the significance of baptism.

Secondly, Grudem is quite right that Piper, and some on this thread, have greatly exagerated the implications of not allowing a non-baptized believer into membership. It is not the same as excommunication. It is not the same as calling them heritics. No credible Baptist makes that claim! But it is an issue on which there really is no compromise without weakening the institution of Baptism.

8/09/2007 11:00:00 PM  
Blogger Andy Wayne said...

This post has been removed by the author.

8/10/2007 12:09:00 AM  
Anonymous David Sawyer said...

I think this is such a refreshing debate.

I used to visit theology discussion sites on the internet but just found people twisting scripture or frankly getting very personal and abusive.

It is fantastic to see two prominent Christians discussing this topic with integrity, honesty and brotherly love.

8/10/2007 03:03:00 AM  
Blogger James Anderson said...

Jeremy:

I find this notion to be very strange. A committed Presbyterian who has been both baptized as an infant and confirmed at a later age has done what Baptists will view as being dedicated as an infant and then being baptized at a later age. Baptists will just insist that the Presbyterians have been mislabeling these events.

I'm more sympathetic to Piper's position than Grudem's (and I also concur with much of what you've written on your own blog on this issue) but I'm afraid I don't follow your reasoning on this point.

You suggest that Baptists will view a committed Presbyterian's confirmation as a mislabelled baptism. But I find this hard to swallow. How many Baptists would view an event that involved no water at all (not even sprinkling) as a genuine baptism? Most Baptists, I submit, would see neither the infant baptism nor the confirmation as a valid baptism (because of the lack of a credible profession of faith and the lack of water, respectively) and would therefore conclude that the Presbyterian has received no valid baptism at all.

Do you know something about Presbyterian confirmations that I don't? :)

8/10/2007 03:33:00 AM  
Blogger James Anderson said...

Grudem writes:

(1) I do not see denial of church membership as "virtually the same as excommunication," nor do any of the Baptist churches known to me.

I'm afraid this is rather beside the point. Piper's argument (as I understand it) is that if most Baptist churches were consistent then they would see denial of church membership as "virtually the same as excommunication". So appealing to the common practice of Baptist churches, as Grudem does, carries no weight here. Piper will simply reply that such churches are inconsistent in their practice; and that's precisely what concerns him.

The question is not whether visiting non-members can participate in worship, communion, preaching, etc. The question is whether any of those non-members would be accepted as members if they were to apply for membership of the church. If not, that is tantamount to saying that if they were already members then there would be sufficient reason to remove them from membership.

8/10/2007 03:48:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Jessica,

Interesting question. Among the Baptists themselves, I have been required to be rebaptized 3 times! Since then I have been convicted for complying, as I believe my first baptism was valid. Each time I was not permitted as a member(without being re-baptized) because of some doctrinal difference in the church I was coming from.
Philip's response to the Eunich (in the KJV) seems to give us the only requirement for baptism... "If you believe, you may." I am beginning to disagree (from prayer and scripture) with the practice of rebaptizing. (One of the reasons that I am leaving the Primitive Baptists.)The requirement is the faith in the believer, not the soundness of the church that performs the ordinance.

John
Texas

8/10/2007 07:40:00 AM  
Anonymous Justin said...

I am a Free Church pastor, and I think Dr. Grudem might want to check with the EFCA again... He is simply incorrect that the Free Church requires baptism for membership. All the EFCA requires is that a person be a believer. Now if there were members in my church that were unbaptized, they would be strongly encouraged to be baptized. But the EFCA's position is that if baptism is not required for membership in the universal church, it should not be required for membership in the local church.

For more information, you can check out this ministerial report...
http://www.efca.org/today/media/2003-so-4-pastors.pdf

8/10/2007 07:56:00 AM  
Blogger doug said...

I have tremendous respect for Dr. Piper. However, in this instance I favor Dr. Grudem's position as he explained it. I find troubling Dr. Piper's use of the word "excommunication", which clearly has a different (and more powerful) meaning than what is being promoted here; and certainly nothing in league with the types of actions and attitudes associated with church discipline. There doesn't seem to be a need for this type of propagandizing if the rest of the argument truly holds watter. Using the word in this context does more damage to his argument than anything else.

8/10/2007 10:20:00 AM  
Blogger doug said...

This post has been removed by the author.

8/10/2007 10:22:00 AM  
Blogger Brantley said...

Baptism is a public profession of faith. Why would a true Christian attempt to sow seeds of argument in a church by refusing baptism? The only reason I can see for not wanting to be baptised again is a pride issue. I am a born again Christian and I've made that a public profession in the form of baptism. If a Church I wanted to join wanted me to make that profession again infront of their Church body, I would do so gladly.

8/10/2007 10:24:00 AM  
Anonymous PJ said...

I'm not going to comment on the issue directly, but this I will say (as a Baptist) if most Baptist churches work like Grudem says they do allowing nearly all privileges of membership to non-members then I must admit I am horrified. That is much worse position that Piper's charitable (maybe too charitable) position.

PJ

8/10/2007 12:30:00 PM  
Anonymous Jeremy Pierce said...

James,

I see your point. Many baptists aren't consistent with their own views and take immersion to be required. There's a case in point in this very comment thread. But since baptist views insist that baptism is merely symbolic, I don't see how it follows from the baptist view of baptism that immersion is required. I neither see how water at all would be required. It's the content that really matters.

So I stand by my main thesis. Some paedobaptists and some credobaptists would not in good conscience be able to see things this way, but there is nothing inconsistent about the practice of paedobaptists and credobaptists coexisting in a congregation and seeing each other doing the same thing (in terms of content, which is what really matters) but under different names and with different symbols.

8/10/2007 01:33:00 PM  
Blogger James Anderson said...

Jeremy,

Yes, you're right that most (but not all) Baptists see baptism as merely symbolic. But if there's no symbol then it isn't even symbolic! What else is there to serve as the symbol if not the water? How much liberty do we have to substitute some other symbol? I can't see that either Baptists or Presbyterians would be able to allow the degree of liberty your point requires.

Consider this parallel. Do you think that the Lord's Supper could take place without bread and wine (or similar symbolic elements)?

8/10/2007 02:08:00 PM  
Blogger MRMARK said...

I like what Andy Stanley says..."It's not where or how you were baptized, but when you were baptized."

You can listen here:
http://www.northpoint.org/messages
(scroll to the bottom, under Key Messages, Baptism-What's the Big Deal)

8/10/2007 07:34:00 PM  
Blogger Lloyd said...

Much has been written about what baptism means. This is interesting and even profitable, but it one sense it is beside the point. Ultimately, we baptize not because of what it means but because it was commanded.

As to the HOW to baptize, most discussion wander off into the symbolism involved. Again, as one who believes that the death and resurrection of Christ -- and our participation in it -- are portrayed by immersion, I'm not convinced this is the best basis for immersion. The best basis (to me) is that Christ commanded THAT disciples should be baptized and also HOW they should be baptized.

Yes, it is symbolic, but to say it is ONLY symbolic misses the point.

8/11/2007 08:27:00 AM  
Anonymous Chris Prang said...

Membership requirements to any church (genuine New Testament) can be found in Acts 2:37-47.

Here they are:
1. Heard the Word/Received the Word
2. Pierced to the heart
3. Repented
4. Baptized (the New Testament church ONLY did baptism by immersion to those who completed 1-3)
5. Received the Holy Spirit (Yes #5 might come before #4, if indeed it does then 1-4 must be completed to be baptized)

1-5 = Salvation and added to the church by God, not by men.

What is not noted here is the fact that those that became a part of the church of Jerusalem resided at that time in the same geographic vicinity. Thereby one should be a member of a body that is in their same geographic/local vicinity.

Here’s what true members did afterward:
1. Devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching
2. Fellowshipped (not some silly covered dish meal after church)
3. Broke Bread
a. For communion as part of a meal, not sitting in a pew looking at the back of someone’s head.
b. Ate meals together in each others homes.
4. Were together and had all things in common, shared with others, sold stuff so that others would have.
5. They came together daily, not just on Sundays.
6. Ate meals together, not just after service on Sundays, but throughout the week.
7. They were glad and sincere.
8. They praised God.
9. They had favor with all the people, not just other like-minded believers.

And the Lord added to the church day by day as they were being saved. No voting on membership, no new members class, no forms to fill out.

A church like that is a genuine New Testament church! With genuine New Testament members!

Acts 2:37-47
Now when they heard this, they were pierced to the heart, and said to Peter and the rest of the apostles, "Brethren, what shall we do?" Peter said to them, "Repent, and each of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. "For the promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off, as many as the Lord our God will call to Himself." And with many other words he solemnly testified and kept on exhorting them, saying, "Be saved from this perverse generation!" So then, those who had received his word were baptized; and that day there were added about three thousand souls. They were continually devoting themselves to the apostles' teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.
Everyone kept feeling a sense of awe; and many wonders and signs were taking place through the apostles. And all those who had believed were together and had all things in common; and they began selling their property and possessions and were sharing them with all, as anyone might have need. Day by day continuing with one mind in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, they were taking their meals together with gladness and sincerity of heart, praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord was adding to their number day by day those who were being saved.

8/11/2007 01:48:00 PM  
Blogger BJ Mora said...

(I just recently have been discussing this question with a Christian brother, I apologize if this has been hashed out in a previous thread)

My question is, if someone were firm in their belief of paedobaptism, why would they join Piper's church in the first place? Even under the (now inactive?) proposal? I would assume such a person may be welcome but encouraged to find a sound paedobaptist (preferably Reformed!) church... would that be an appropriate thing to do?

8/12/2007 07:18:00 PM  
Blogger Blackhaw said...

Isn't a large part of the real issue is that in both Piper's and Grudem's plan Baptism is not as important as it should be? The NT makes baptism very important. But Piper seems to think that the differences in paedobaptism and believer's baptism really do not matter that much. Either way one can become a member of the church. But Grudem is doing the same thing. He states that baptism is only valid if it is believer's baptism. Okay. But then he accepts those who were not baptised in almost all facets of the life of the church except membership. This seems odd that one can accept another as a Christian who refuses to be baptised. Remember that padeobaptism is not valid so infant baptism is not true baptism. So if one does not want to get re-baptised then why should Baptists fellowship with this person? They only can if baptism is really not that important.

8/15/2007 10:31:00 AM  
Blogger Scott said...

So a non-member can:
- Fellowship
- Take communion
- Preach and teach the congregation

It's hard not to see membership as merely a formality.

8/19/2007 09:55:00 PM  

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