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Retrieving the Past Can Sharpen Your Convictions
Several years ago, I served as an elder at a church that began to introduce to our congregation the idea of reciting the Apostles’ Creed together weekly. We were careful to unpack this idea through sermons and discussion, but our congregation still raised several concerns and critiques. Notably, one concern was that creeds are for Roman Catholics. A few church members who’d left the Roman Catholic Church said reciting a creed would feel to them like a step backward.
Many low-church evangelicals who care about theological retrieval—especially pastors—have heard church members raise concerns about the use of ancient church practices like reciting creeds, or even teaching a catechism, in worship. Frankly, these concerns should be taken seriously. When our pastoral team was shepherding our Baptist church toward use of the Creed, we wanted to help our church members see and celebrate their connection to the ancient church. But those church members were right to recognize the danger in theological retrieval. Indeed, some who have looked to the past have ended up swimming the Tiber, trading in their evangelical convictions for the Anglo-Catholic, Roman Catholic, or even Orthodox faiths.
Is there a way to embrace theological retrieval that strengthens rather than weakening our convictions? As enthusiastic retrievers, is there a way to discern what to embrace and what to leave behind?
Renewers, Not Revolutionaries
Historically, we Protestants have been renewers more than revolutionaries. As theologically diverse as they were, the 16th-century Protestant reformers were all concerned that the late-medieval church had allowed man-made traditions to overshadow the Scriptures, that it had left behind the apostolic deposit and even the faith of the early church fathers. Well-known figures like Jan Hus and John Wycliffe raised alarms about the late-medieval church’s practices over a century before Luther and others lit the larger flame.
Theological retrieval doesn’t have to be a path to losing your evangelical roots—so long as you approach the past with wisdom.
So when it comes to retrieving the past, we Protestants have always had a strong inclination to see Scripture as the master over tradition. The Reformation cry was sola scriptura. The reformers saw tradition as a derivative authority for the church but not equal to Scripture’s ultimate authority.
The issue for Protestantism wasn’t (and isn’t) retrieving the past. The concern is whether we retrieve it in a truly reformational mode. Protestants have in common an approach to tradition that requires our denominational beliefs to be subject to Scripture. So whether we’re Baptist, Presbyterian, Anglican, or otherwise, we can hold our particular convictions tightly because we believe they have genuine biblical warrant, while learning from other Protestants with whom we disagree about sacraments or ecclesiology.
As a scholar who has been practicing retrieval for over a decade, I’ve developed a simple taxonomy for how Protestants can interact with the Christian past and retrieve its insights for today. Some may call this cherry-picking what one likes or doesn’t like from the past, but picking and choosing is what every individual, church, and broader tradition ultimately does. No pure Christian tradition remains unchanged and unhindered throughout time and space. Instead of pretending any one does, this taxonomy can help us all think through how and to what extent we implement the past into the present.
Threefold Taxonomy
1. Reinforce
The first way to retrieve the past is to draw on biblical, theological, and philosophical ideas that reinforce what my particular tradition already holds.
Since I’m a Baptist, religious liberty and church-state distinctions are core to my beliefs. So when I read apologists like Justin Martyr and Tertullian, and they offer resources that bolster my views of religious liberty, I freely draw from them. Both are concerned that believers should be able to practice their religion freely without fear of persecution or discipline, and this speaks deeply to my Baptist heart. In a Western world where Christianity has often been unduly mocked, Athenagoras’s Plea rings true:
For it does not comport with your justice, that others when charged with crimes should not be punished till they are convicted, but that in our case the name we bear should have more force than the evidence adduced on the trial, when the judges, instead of inquiring whether the person arraigned have committed any crime, vent their insults on the name, as if that were itself a crime.
I don’t need to abandon my Baptist convictions to affirm and implement these insights; rather, his views reinforce my own.
2. Refine
I can allow biblical, theological, and philosophical ideas from the past to refine my own. When I began reading Athanasius of Alexandria and Gregory of Nazianzus on the Trinity, I found these church fathers’ insights beneficial for strengthening the way Baptists talk about the Trinity. They challenged Baptists’ 20th-century turn toward Trinitarian views that were more sociological and anthropological than biblical.
What’s sometimes called “classical theism” wasn’t only more biblically satisfying than what popular systematic theologies offered; I discovered that it was more in line with my Baptist roots. Article 38 of the Orthodox Creed, a Baptist document from 1679, cites the Nicene, Athanasian, and Apostles’ creeds and says they should be “thoroughly . . . received, and believed” by Baptist churches. As a Baptist, I learned that adopting these creeds and their related patristic sources didn’t require me to rethink my Baptist convictions; instead, they helped to refine and strengthen them.
3. Reject
While retrieval can reinforce or refine our convictions, there are certainly times when insights from the past should be rejected because they’re at odds with our core beliefs.
The issue for Protestantism wasn’t (and isn’t) retrieving the past. The concern is whether we retrieve it in a truly reformational mode.
Thomas Aquinas’s views on transubstantiation and the effectiveness of the sacraments were more in line with later Roman Catholic beliefs than with Protestant and Baptist beliefs. While his doctrine of the Trinity and some of his exegetical insights easily fall into the “reinforce” and “refine” categories for me, it’s impossible to meaningfully implement his sacramental theology into a Baptist context, even if one holds to a reformational view of communion that differs from the memorial position most Baptists hold. As a convictional Baptist, I must reject Aquinas’s views on the sacraments as a whole, or else rethink my commitment to being Baptist at all.
Over time, my Baptist church warmed to the idea of using the Apostles’ Creed in worship, and it’s been reciting the creed together every Sunday for years. I don’t think that church should be alone. Whatever core denominational convictions you may have, it’s better to thoughtfully and even critically join with the great cloud of historical witnesses trying to better understand and articulate biblical truth. The same Spirit at work in the past is at work today. May we glean wisdom from his work behind us as we press ahead into the work before us and on to the new creation.