The Larger Catechism's Ninth Commandment: A Case Study in Confessional Hermeneutic
Recently
the Westminster Larger Catechism's treatment of the Ninth Commandment
(particularly Q. 144) has become an issue in some conservative Presbyterian
presbyteries. For example, last fall my
own ARP presbytery voted to establish an ad
hoc committee "to draft a code of online conduct for ministers and ruling
elders, with a special reference to the Westminster Larger Catechism's
teachings on the ninth commandment (WLC 143-145)," and (for my sins, no doubt)
I was appointed to serve on it. The
context of the action suggests that it may have been occasioned by a particular member of
the presbytery whose Internet blog has sought with considerable gusto to expose
what he takes to be the institutional foibles of the denomination.
But
such use of the Larger Catechism is not confined to the ARP Church. I recently spoke with a PCA minister/blogster involved in a doctrinal controversy, and he told me that he
had been threatened with ecclesiastical charges on the basis of WLC Q.
144. Thus Q. 144 of the Larger Catechism now seems
to be one of two tools falling to hand among those who seek to silence
ecclesiastical whistleblowers, the other being the now nearly ubiquitous appeals
to Matthew 18:15-20 (for some thoughts on this, see here).
But
is this a proper use of the Larger Catechism's treatment of the ninth
commandment ("Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor")? As I reflected on the matter, I came to the
decided conclusion that it is not. More
specifically, I realized that such attempts to deploy the WLC as grounds for
ecclesiastical discipline are neither practical nor appropriate, and that such
usage stands in considerable tension with the Standards themselves.
Given
that the intent seems to be to silence those who raise public questions about
the doctrinal orthodoxy and behavior of others, it is not surprising that
attention has focused on language from Q. 144: "The duties required in the
ninth commandment are, the preserving and promoting of truth between man and
man, and the good name of our neighbour, as well as our own; appearing and
standing for the truth; and from the heart, sincerely, freely, clearly, and
fully, speaking the truth, and only the truth, in matters of judgment and
justice, and in all other things whatsoever; a charitable esteem of our
neighbours; loving, desiring, and rejoicing in their good name; sorrowing for,
and covering of their infirmities; freely acknowledging of their gifts and
graces, defending their innocency; a ready receiving of a good report, and
unwillingness to admit of an evil report, concerning them; discouraging
tale-bearers, flatterers, and slanderers; love and care of our own good name,
and defending it when need requireth; keeping of lawful promises; studying and
practising of whatsoever things are true, honest, lovely, and of good report."
A
close examination of the Larger Catechism suggests, however, that that document
should not and cannot be used in this fashion.
The Larger Catechism was framed as a catechetical document, not as a set
of grounds for discipline. As the
Westminster divines themselves noted, it was intended "to be a directory for
catechising such as have made some proficiency in the knowledge of the grounds
of religion." Thus, we might say that
the Larger Catechism is a fine tool for uncovering sin in ourselves and a
considerably less serviceable one for judging others.
One
problem we face here is hermeneutical.
Confessional documents must be interpreted, and part of the
hermeneutical (interpretive) challenge here has to do with bridging the
historical and cultural gap between the Westminster divines and ourselves. When many contemporary conservative
Presbyterians (especially in the American South) read the language of WLC Q.
144 above, they tend to read it through the lenses of the American southern
"culture of niceness," and through an ecclesiastical culture that since the
nineteenth century has been, as historian Ann Douglas trenchantly demonstrated
in The Feminization of American
Culture, increasingly sentimentalized and feminized. Thus, in many church circles we tend to shy
away from overt conflict, regard any direct confrontation as inappropriate, and
avoid the public airing of dirty laundry at all costs. In this way, the ninth commandment comes to
be seen as more about "niceness" than about truth.
But
the Scriptural writers were not hampered by such a culture of niceness. Many examples could be cited, but the
following will suffice. The prophet
Elijah publicly mocked the 450 prophets of Baal, even to the point of
lampooning their alleged god's bathroom habits (1 Kings 18:27). The prophet Amos described the self-indulgent
matrons of Samaria as "cows of Bashan" (Amos 4:1). The prophet Micah excoriates the corrupt
leaders of Judah as cannibals (Micah 3:1-12). Turning to the New Testament, Jesus himself
blasted the Pharisees as "hypocrites," "blind guides," "whitewashed tombs," and
a "brood of vipers" (Matthew 23). The
Apostle Paul was no shrinking violet either.
He calls down a curse on Judaizing false teachers (Galatians 1:8-9) and
he even suggests that they surgically emasculate themselves (Galatians
5:12). Moreover, Paul's so-called
"Fool's Speech" in 2 Corinthians rings with bitter irony and sarcasm (see esp.
2 Corinthians 11:16-21), and the repeated condemnations of false teachers in
the church throughout the New Testament can scarcely be described as "nice,"
though they are necessary and important.
We
see similar patterns in church history.
Here we recall the bitter condemnations of the heretic Arius by the
great church father Athanasius of Alexandria, the excoriations of error by
Epiphanius of Salamis (the "hammer of heretics"), the vituperative exchanges
between Luther and Thomas More, Luther's witty characterizations of his
opponents (e.g., his description of Andreas Karlstadt as thinking he had
"swallowed the Holy Ghost, feathers and all"), and Calvin's entertaining
descriptions of his theological opponents (e.g., "that barking dog Pighius"). Even the Puritan controversial literature
(e.g., the pamphlets of a William Prynne) tends to be more robust than what
many of us might be comfortable with today.
Our purpose here is not to justify each and every one of these examples
from church history. Rather, the point
is that today's conventional culture of niceness cannot be imposed on Scripture
and upon church history, and it ought not to be imposed on Christians today as
a binding obligation by means of an ahistorical and untenable reading of the
Larger Catechism.
The
second problem is that the Larger Catechism does not lend itself to such use,
and severe problems quickly result when it is pressed into the service of
policing use of the Internet. When used
in this way we quickly find that the Larger Catechism is a double-edged
sword. For example, those accused of a
lack of charity on the basis of LC Q. 144 might well respond with charges drawn
from Q. 145: "The sins forbidden in the ninth commandment are . . . calling
evil good and good evil; rewarding the wicked according to the work of the
righteous, and the righteous according to the work of the wicked . . .
concealing the truth, undue silence in a just cause, and holding our peace when
iniquity calleth for either a reproof from ourselves, or complaint to
others." In other words, the WLC needs
to be treated as a whole, and problems emerge when specific passages are lifted
out of that larger context.
Another
aspect of this problem has to do with the fact that the Larger Catechism
expresses in its exposition of the Ten Commandments some views that are shared
by few Christians today. For example, in
its treatment of the second commandment ("Thou shalt not make unto thee any
graven image") it forbids any pictorial representation of God (i.e., pictures
of Jesus) and even the forming of mental images of Jesus (LC Q. 109). Try reading the Gospel accounts without
forming a mental picture of Jesus! The
treatment of the fourth commandment ("Remember the Sabbath day to keep it
holy") is highly restrictive, and it is safe to say that few Christians, even
in conservative Reformed circles, observe the Sabbath as the Westminster
divines intended (LC QQ. 116-121). Also,
the elaboration of the fifth commandment ("Honour thy father and thy mother"),
with its extensive descriptions of duties to superiors, inferiors, and equals
(LC QQ. 124-133), clearly presupposes the British class system of the
seventeenth century. Here the point is
not that the WLC is rife with errors. It
is not, and the amazing thing is that, given the length and specificity of the
document, there are so few issues of this sort!
I suspect that most thoughtful ministers tacitly recognize the
historically conditioned nature of the WLC at these points and move on to more
important matters, and problems only emerge when the document is used in
inappropriate ways.
In
short, use of the Larger Catechism as grounds for discipline not only runs
counter to the purpose of the document but it also opens the door to all sorts
of abuse and hypocrisy. Almost
inevitably those bringing charges against another on the basis of the Larger
Catechism would themselves be open to charges on the basis of other parts of
the document, and the fact that appeals to the Larger Catechism for purposes of
discipline are often arbitrary merely underscores the fact that the document
was not intended to be used in this fashion.
Finally,
the use of the WLC as grounds for discipline stands in tension with the express
teaching of the Westminster Confession of Faith in that it assumes the WLC to
be a rule of faith and practice. But the Confession of Faith tells us, "All
synods or councils since the apostles' times, whether general or particular,
may err, and many have erred; therefore they are not to be made the rule of
faith or practice, but to be used as an help in both" (WCF 31.4).
That
being said, we must not lose sight of the central and obvious teaching of the
ninth commandment--it enjoins truthfulness in all dealings. Thus the most important question to be asked
with respect to Internet communication in relation to the ninth commandment is
this: "Is it truthful." In addition, we
are also called as Christians to be "speaking the truth in love" (Ephesians
4:15). Here we must also recognize that
"love" is not to be equated with "niceness," that the proper relationship of
truth and love is often complex, and that discerning the proper balance calls
for wisdom and dependence upon the Spirit of God.
I am happy to report that the presbytery committee on which I served decided that an internet "code of conduct" was not such a good idea, and that Scripture and the Standards of the Church are sufficient to provide guidance in this matter. May such good sense prevail elsewhere as well.