NEW TESTAMENT PURITANISM
by B.B. Warfield
[From Faith and Life: 'Conferences' In
The Oratory of Princeton Seminary, published by Longmans, Green, and
Co. New York, 1916]
2 Cor. 6:11-7:1. - "Our mouth is open unto
you, 0 Corinthians, our heart is enlarged. Ye are not straitened in
us, but ye are straitened in your own affections. Now for a
recompense in like kind (I speak as unto my children), be ye also
enlarged. Be not unequally yoked with unbelievers: for what
fellowship have righteousness and iniquity? or what communion hath
light with darkness? And what concord hath Christ with Belial? or
what portion hath a believer with an unbeliever? And what agreement
hath a temple of God with idols? for we are a temple of the living
God; even as God said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and I
will be their God, and they shall be my people. Wherefore come ye
out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch
no unclean thing; and I will receive you, and will be to you a
Father, and ye shall be to me sons and daughters, saith the Lord
Almighty. Having therefore these promises, beloved, let us cleanse'
ourselves from all defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting
holiness in the fear of God."
IT is not easy to determine with exactitude the circumstances which
gave occasion to this striking paragraph, which stands out so
prominently on the pages of Second Corinthians as almost to separate
itself from its context and form a whole of its own. Of two things,
however, we may be reasonably sure. There was a party in the
Corinthian Church which we may perhaps fairly describe as the party
of the Libertines; and out of this party, too, there had arisen an
opposition to the leadership of Paul, and a tendency to accuse him
of insincerity and self-seeking in his work at Corinth. We must
picture the Apostle, therefore, as compelled to defend himself and
the purity of his ministry, in this Epistle, not only against a
narrow Judaistic formalism, with its touch not, taste not, handle
not, but also against a loose worldliness which was inclined to
adapt its Christianity to the usages current in the heathen society
about it. Differing in everything else, both parties agreed in
unwillingness to subject themselves unreservedly to the guidance of
Paul; and in defence of themselves represented him as acting towards
the church from interested motives.
Bearing this in mind, we may readily understand how, when in the
course of his self-defence the Apostle has been led to dwell upon
the hardships he had suffered in the prosecution of his mission, he
should break off suddenly with an appeal to his Corinthians to
separate themselves from heathen practices and points of view, and
themselves to walk worthily of the Gospel they professed. "See, O
Corinthians," he exclaims, "how freely I am speaking to you, how
widely open my heart is to you. You find no constraint on my part
with reference to you; the only constraint there is between us lies
in your own hearts. Give me what I give you - I am speaking as to my
children; open wide your heart to me. Seek not your standards of
life in the unbelievers about you. Remember who you are and what you
should be as organs of the Holy Spirit; and be not content until you
have attained that perfect holiness which becomes the children of
God." So the Apostle transforms his defence of his ministry into an
exhortation to his readers, in which he again exercises his ministry
of love in a disinterested plea to them to walk worthily of the
Gospel of holiness.
Dr. James Denney in his commentary on this Epistle,
published in "The Expositor's Bible," heads the chapter in which he
deals with this section, "New Testament Puritanism." On the face of
it, this is a very good designation for it. The note of Puritanism,
which is the note of separation, certainly throbs through the
section. "Come ye out from among them and be ye separate, saith the
Lord" - that assuredly expresses the very essence of Puritanism. Or,
perhaps, we may more precisely say that it is exactly that
conformity with the world which, above all things, Puritanism
dreads, that Paul here declares, almost with indignation, to be
inconceivable in a true Christian. "For what fellowship," he demands
"is there between righteousness and iniquity? Or what communion is
there for light with darkness? Or what concord of Christ with
Belial? Or what part has a believer with an unbeliever? Or what
agreement has a temple of God with idols?" Here certainly is
Puritanism at the height of its expression.
Nevertheless we must be careful not to give the Apostle's
exhortation a turn which does not belong to it. The Apostle is not
here requiring of Christians a withdrawal from the world, considered
as the social organism; and most certainly he is not asking of them
to segregate themselves into a community apart, between which and
the mass of men there shall be no, or only the least possible,
intercourse. On a former occasion, when addressing these same
readers, he does indeed command them not to keep company with
fornicators. But he immediately adds that he means this aloofness
only as a disciplinary measure towards sinning brethren. If a man
who is called a Christian be a fornicator, Christian
fellowship must be withdrawn from him, that it may be brought home
to him that a man cannot be both a Christian and a fornicator. But,
says the Apostle, I do not mean that you should not associate with
fornicators of the world; else you would need to remove out of the
world - a thing, he implies, which would be manifestly impossible;
and let us add, for the leaven which is placed in the world, grossly
inconsistent with the prosecution of its function in the world,
which is to leaven the whole mass. And if we will scrutinize our
present passage closely we shall quickly see that the separation
which the Apostle is urging here, too, is not separation from men
but from evil - applying, in deed, to the Corinthians in the way of
exhortation what our Lord prayed for in behalf of His followers, not
that they should be taken out of the world, but that they should be
kept from the evil of the world. The exhortation: "Come ye out from
among them and be ye separate, saith the Lord," is immediately
followed by the explanation, "And touch no unclean thing." And the
whole exhortation closes with a poignant prayer that they may
"cleanse themselves from every defilement." It is not from their
fellow-men that the Apostle would have Christians hold themselves
aloof; it is from the sin and shame, the evil and iniquity, which
stains and soils the lives of so many of their fellow-men. This is
the Apostolic variety of Puritanism.
The opposite impression is perhaps fostered among simple Bible
readers by the phrase which stands in the forefront of the
exhortation in our English Bibles: "Be not unequally yoked together
with unbelievers." This certainly appears at first sight to
represent any commerce with unbelievers as indecorous and to forbid
it on that account. This impression is wholly due, however, to the
awkwardness of the rendering given to an unusual Greek phrase. This
Greek phrase is an exceedingly awkward one to render; and I am not
sure that it is possible to give it an English equivalent which will
convey its exact sense. The figure which underlies it is, no doubt,
the yoking together, in the bizarre way of the East, incongruous
animals for labour, say an ox and an ass. And the English version is
a very creditable effort to bring the figure home to the English
reader; for surely such a yoking of incongruous animals together is
a very unequal one. Yet the English phrase fails to express the
exact shade of meaning of the Greek term. This does not say: "Be not
unequally yoked together with unbelievers" but rather, "Become not
bearers of an alien yoke along with unbelievers "- or, in other
words, "Take not on yourselves a yoke that does not fit you, in
order to be with unbelievers." You see the point is very different
from that which is often taken from the English phrase. What is
forbidden is not that we should company with unbelievers; but that
we should adopt their points of view and their modes of life. It is
a question, in other words, not of intercourse, but of standards.
What the Apostle is concerned about is not that his converts lived
in social communion with their heathen neighbours; this he would
have them do. What he is concerned about is that they took their
colour from the heathen neighbours with whom they lived. He wished
them to be leaven and to leaven the lump; they were permitting
themselves rather to be leavened; and this made him indignant with
them.
We see, then, that the Apostle's urgency here is against not
association with the world, but compromise with the worldly.
Compromise! In that one word is expressed a very large part of a
Christian's danger in the world. We see it on all sides of us and in
every sphere of life. We must be all things to all men, we say,
perverting the Apostle's prescription for a working ministry; for
there was one thing he would on no account and in no way have us be,
even that we may, as we foolishly fancy, win the more; and that is,
evil. From evil in all its forms and in all its manifestations he
would have us absolutely to separate ourselves; the unclean thing is
the thing he would in no circumstances have us handle. Associate
with the world, yes! There is no man in it so vile that he has not
claims upon us for our association and for our aid. But adopt the
standards of the world? No! Not in the least particular. Here our
motto must be and that unfailingly: No compromise!
The very thing which the Apostle here presses upon our
apprehension is the absolute conflict between the standards of the
world and the standards of Christians; and the precise thing which
he requires of us is that in our association with the world we shall
not take on our necks the alien yoke of an unbeliever's point of
view, of an unbeliever's judgment of things, of an unbeliever's
estimate of the right and wrong, the proper and improper. In all our
association with unbelievers, we, as Christian men, are to furnish
the standard; andwe are to stand by our Christian standard, in the
smallest particular, unswervingly. Any departure from that standard,
however small or however desirable it may seem, is treason to our
Christianity; We must not, in any case, take the alien yoke of an
unbeliever's scheme of life upon our necks.
Interesting to us as this exhortation itself is, and important
beyond expression for the guidance of our lives, it, perhaps, yields
in interest to the grounding which the Apostle supplies for it in an
explanation of the essential springs of a Christian's life. This
grounding he gives in a series of rhetorical questions, by means of
which he sets forth the absolute contrariety of the Christian's and
the unbeliever's points of view, sources of judgment and principles
of conduct. The ordering of these questions is such that they begin
by setting over against one another the obvious contradictions of
righteousness and iniquity; and then proceed in a series of rapid
and convincing antitheses until they end in setting the believer and
the unbeliever over against one another as the embodiment
respectively - at least in principle - of those contradictions,
righteousness and iniquity. "What fellowship have righteousness and
iniquity," the Apostle demands in support of his exhortation not to
take on themselves the alien yoke of unbelievers, "or," he
continues, "what communion has light with darkness? or what concord
has Christ with Belial? or what portion has a believer with an
unbeliever? Or -clinching the whole matter with a reference to the
source of the entire contrast-what agreement has a temple of God
with idols?"
The force of the appeal lies in the necessary - and inevitable -
identification, as we go on through the series, of each pair with
the preceding; so that with the fundamental "righteousness is
identified the light; and, of course, Christ; and because he is
Christ's, the believer, who is the temple of the living God: and
with the fundamental iniquity is identified the darkness, Belial,
and the unbeliever, because he is the worshipper of idols and
partaker of the idolatrous point of view. The reason, then, why a
Christian must not take on himself the alien yoke of unbelievers is
just because it is to him alien; he is in and of himself, because a
believer in Christ and, therefore, a temple of the living God, a
different, a contrary, an opposite kind of being from the
unbeliever; and it is, therefore, incongruous in the extreme for him
to put his neck in the same yoke with an unbeliever, seek to live on
the same plane, or consent to order his life or to determine
questions of conduct by his standards, in any degree whatever.
Now it is just in this contrast drawn by the Apostle between the
believer and the unbeliever - in its firmness, its clearness, its
extremity if you will - that we discern the most interesting, the
most important, teaching of our passage. According to the Apostle,
obviously, there are two kinds of men in the world, believers and
unbelievers. And these two kinds of men stand over against one
another in complete, not only contrast, but contradiction; as
complete contradiction as righteousness and iniquity. There can be
no compromise between them any more than between righteousness and
iniquity. There may be intercourse mutual action and reaction -but
never compromise.
The Apostle is far from saying, of course, that in any given
individuals this fundamental contradiction is fully manifested. It
finds its complete manifestation only in the abstract - in the
contrariety of righteousness and iniquity; and in the full concrete
manifestation of righteousness and iniquity in Christ and Belial.
Between Christians and unbelievers the manifested contradiction is
only relative. Compromise there ought not to be - in principle there
can not be - but compromise in fact there is. Christians are not,
like Christ, pure embodiments of righteousness; they require
exhortation not to admit iniquity into the governing principles of
their life. Alas, alas, though they are temples of the living God,
they are far, far from having no commerce with idols. The Apostle
recognizes all this. On his recognition of it he founds the urgent
exhortation of our passage. Nevertheless he founds this exhortation
also on the fact that this contradiction exists in principle - that
Christians, like Christ, their Lord, are in principle righteousness,
and that unbelievers are, like Belial, their lord, m principle
iniquity. It is because Christians are thus in principle holy and
unbelievers are thus in principle unholy that he proclaims that it
is incongruous that Christians should adopt their standards of life
from unbelievers, who are not merely their opposites But their
contradictories; so that there can be no mean between them but every
one must be one or the other.
There are then, according to the Apostle, two kinds of men in
the world, believers and unbelievers; and these two kinds of men
stand in contradiction to each other. One may conquer and eliminate
the other; but there can be no mixture between them. The ultimate
source of the fundamental difference between them he finds in the
indwelling in Christians of the Holy Ghost: "Or what agreement hath
a temple of God with idols? For we" - emphatic here, in
contrast with the unbelievers, "as for us, We are a temple of the
living God." The influx of the Holy Spirit into the heart
constitutes, then, a new humanity. Over against those who have not
the Spirit, and who are, therefore, as another Scripture puts it,
earthly, sensual, devilish ,- the children of Belial, as Scripture
suggests, - those who have the Spirit are a new creation, with new
standards and new powers of life alike. There can be no compromise
between such opposites. It has become customary among theologians to
speak of these two kinds of men as the men of nature and the men of
the palingenesis; or as it is now becoming fashionable to call them,
once born and twice born men. They who are born of the flesh are
fleshly; and they only who are born of the Spirit are spiritual; and
to the spiritual man belong all things. The message which Paul
brings to us in this passage is, then, that we who are spiritual,
because we are believers in Christ Jesus, have in principle the
righteousness which belongs to Him, and though it may not yet appear
what we shall be, we must in all our walk comport ourselves as what
we are, the temples of the living God, having the powers and
potencies of a new, even a Divine, life within us. The ultimate
reason why the Christian man is not to compromise with the world is,
because as a Christian man, he is a new creature, born from above,
with the vigour of the Divine life itself moving in him and with an
entirely new life - course marked out for him. Why should -how can -
such an one put his neck incongruously within the yoke of worldly
policy or self-seeking, or evil-living with unbelievers; and seek to
deflect his Spirit-given powers to a life on this lower plane and
for these ignoble ends? O, says the Apostle, O, Christian men, this
is surely impossible to you; do you not see that in the power of
your new life you are to - you must - take an utterly new course,
directed to a new goal, and informed with new aspirations, hopes and
strivings?
On the basis of this great declaration the Apostle erects, then,
his exhortation. Nor is he content to leave it in a negative, or
merely inferential form. In the accomplishment of the Spirit -
filled life he sees the goal, and he speaks it out in a final
urgency of exhortation into which he compresses the whole matter:
"Having, therefore, such promises as these (note the
emphasis), beloved," he says, "let us purify ourselves from every
defilement of flesh and spirit and perfect holiness in the fear of
God." It is perfection, we perceive, that the Apostle is after for
his followers; and he does not hesitate to raise this standard
before the eyes of his readers as their greatest incitement to
effort. They must not be content with a moderate attainment in the
Christian life. They must not say to themselves, O, I guess I am
Christian enough, although I'm not too good to do as other men do.
They must, as they have begun in the Spirit, not finish in the
flesh; but must go on unto perfection.
What are they to cleanse themselves from? Every
defilement - every kind of defilement - not only of the flesh
but of the spirit. Aiming at what? At the completion of holiness in
the fear of God! The Apostle does not tell them they are already
holy - except in principle. They obviously were not already holy -
except in principle. They were putting their necks in the alien yoke
of unbelieving judgments. They were contenting themselves with
heathen standards. They were prepared to say, O, the Lord doesn't
ask all that of us; O, there is nothing wrong in this; O, I guess it
will be enough if I am as good as the average man; O, you can't
expect me to live at odds with all my neighbours; O, these things
are good enough for me. Such compromises with the spirit of the
world are wrong; and the Apostle tells his readers plainly that they
are unworthy of them as Christian men. They were, if not born to
better things, yet certainly born anew to better things. Let them
turn their backs on all such inconsistencies and live on their own
plane of life as believers, believers in Christ, Christ the Light,
Christ our Righteousness. Let them remember they are temples of the
living God and have no commerce with idols.
No, they were not perfect except in principle. But in principle,
they were perfect; because they had within them the principle of
perfection, the Spirit of the Most High God. Let them walk in
accordance with their privileges, then, on a level with their
destiny. Hear God's great promise. And having these promises,
cleanse yourselves; O, cleanse yourselves, the Apostle cries;
cleanse yourselves from every defilement whether of flesh or spirit,
and so perfect - complete, work fully out to its end - holiness in
the fear of God. Let your standard be the holiness of the indwelling
Spirit whose temples you are. Let your motive be, not merely regard
to the good of others, much less to your own happiness, but joy in
God's gracious promises. Let your effort be perfect sanctification
of soul and body, cleansing from all defilement. Let your end be,
pleasing God, the Holy One. In a word, says the Apostle in effect,
here as elsewhere: O, ye Christians, work out your own salvation in
fear and trembling, for it is God who is working in you the willing
and the doing according to His own good pleasure.
We perceive, thus, in the end that the thing Paul is zealous for
is the holiness of his followers. For in their holiness he sees the
substance of their salvation. We are saved by Christ and only
Christ; and Christ is righteous; both for us and unto us. For it is
by grace that we are saved, through faith; and that not of
ourselves, it is the gift of God - not out of works, lest we should
boast, but unto good works, which God has afore prepared that we
should walk in them. And if we walk not in them - are we, then,
saved? Holiness of life is, I repeat, precisely the substance of
salvation, that which we are saved to, that in which salvation
consists. If then we are in Christ Jesus, shall we not live like
Christ Jesus? "If we are in the Spirit, shall we not walk by the
Spirit?" This is Paul's final exhortation to us; since we are
Christ's, and the Spirit dwells in us and we are the temples of the
living God, let us be careful of good works; let us, remembering the
great promises He has given us, cleanse ourselves from all
defilement of body and soul; and let us perfect holiness in the fear
of God, so that we approve ourselves His children and He will be to
us as a Father and we shall be to Him sons and daughters. |