SIR ROBERT ANDERSON
Secret Service
Theologian
TYPES IN HEBREWS
APPENDIX 4
THE VISIBLE
CHURCH
"The visible Church of Christ is a congregation of
faithful men in the which the pure word of God is preached, and the sacraments
be duly administered according to Christs ordinance in all those things
that of necessity are requisite to the same." - (Article 19). In the
Churchmans Theological Dictionary1 Canon Eden states the different views
taken of the phrase, "the visible Church," in this sentence; and then, after
noticing the fact "that there is no such thing on earth as the Catholic Church
existing as one community," he suggests that perhaps the writer, "through mere
oversight, translated Ecclesia Christi visibilis, the Church, when the evident
meaning is a Church."
But if this phrase be in itself ambiguous, the fact
of Cranmers authorship of the Article removes all doubt as to its
meaning. And in the rest of the sentence there is no ambiguity whatever. It is
not "the" but a (i.e. any) "congregation of faithful men." And to make this
still more explicit it goes on to exclude the Greek and Roman Churches from the
category of visible churches of Christ, thus vetoing the figment that the
corporate position of blessing depends upon an historic sequence.2 Wherever
"the pure Word of God is preached, and the sacraments are duly administered
according to Christs ordinance" - there is "a visible Church of Christ."
But where the Word of God is corrupted or discredited, or where Christian
baptism and the Lords Supper are ousted by baptismal regeneration and the
Mass, such a congregation, whether it be a Chapel or a Parish Church, is
outside the pale.
In the case of the Reformers the "Churchs
motherhood" declared itself by butchering the saints of God, and among "her
resources to meet every religious need" were the torture chamber and the stake.
And men who bought the truth at a terrible cost were not the men to sell it
(Proverbs 23:23). But in these days the truth costs us nothing, and we are
ready to barter it for plausible errors and venerable superstitions, in order
to maintain a false peace and the semblance of unity.
To quote the
Archbishops decision in the Incense case, "It was the purpose of the then
rulers of the Church to put prominently forward the supremacy of the Bible."
The conception of the Church which the Reformers thus repudiated is the root
error of the apostasy. If that error be accepted, great and devout thinkers
like J. H. Newman are prepared to believe the "blasphemous fable" of
transubstantiation.3 And men who are not incarnate devils, but devout and
kind-hearted human beings, will condone and approve the Churchs cruelties
and crimes. "For no means came amiss to it, sword or stake, torture chamber, or
assassins dagger. The effects of the Churchs working were seen
in
the hideous crimes committed in His name" (Froudes Council of
Trent).
But, we shall be told, these crimes were the work of the Apostate
Church in evil days now past. Yes, but what concerns us here is that if we
accept the traditional, antichristian conception of "the Church,"4 they are not
crimes at all. Moreover, as Froude so wisely says, "the principles on which it
persecuted it still professes, and persecution will grow again as naturally and
necessarily as a seed in a congenial soil." And ex hyp. the Romanisers are
right in denouncing the Reformation as itself a "hideous crime"; and nothing
but Protestant ignorance and British pride will make us adhere to the Churches
of the Reformation, or the more modern organizations of Revival times.
"The
Church to teach": how harmless and right it seems. And yet it is the germ of
the error which (as Article 20 clearly shows) the Reformers meant to kill by
insisting on the supremacy of the Bible, and claiming for the Christian the
right to appeal to it, even against the teaching of the Church. Moreover, the
Church is "a congregation of faithful men," not a college of teachers set over
them. It is not the shepherds but the flock. "Every particular or national
Church" necessarily possesses powers of a certain kind, but such powers are
strictly limited (Article 34). And no "particular or national Church" is the
Church. "Christs Holy Catholic Church" the Reformers defined to be "the
whole congregation of Christian people dispersed throughout the whole world."5
What grand Christians those Reformers were!
And if the Reformation is
becoming a spent force in this country, it is because modern Evangelicalism is
enervated by the Romish conception of "the Church." "Which is the true Church?"
This utterly false question accounts for every secession to Rome. And
Evangelicalism no longer gives in bold plain words the answer the Reformers
gave6 that no body on earth is "the Church" in the sense implied in the
question. But Latin theology entirely ignores the failure of the Professing
Church on earth,7 confounding it, as it always does, with the unity of the Body
of Christ. And further, it always takes words spoken by the Lord to His
Apostles as such, as though they were addressed to the Church of Christendom.
"Who cares anything for any church save as an instrument of Christian good!" If
all true Christians were animated by these bold words of
Chalmers - one of the greatest
"church-men" of the nineteenth century - and if they thought less of their
Church and more of their Lord, true spiritual unity would become a reality in
the sight of all men.
Footnotes
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