I just sat down after a long day’s events. Phew! What a day.

As part of the “Converse with Scholars” series at the Credo House, our special guest for an entire day of festivities was Justo Gonzalez. For those of you who don’t know him, shame on you! Here is a list of some of his works available on Amazon. We started the day with our “Lunch with Scholars” (an event reserved for members of the Credo House), followed by two special sessions of Theology Unplugged (to be published in the next week or two).  After that, we moved to our book signing, called “Coffee with Scholars;” finally, we ended the day with our special main event, called “An Evening with Scholars.” Justo’s main topic was “How Heresy has Helped the Church.”

It was a great time. It was particularly special for Tim and me as we were able to meet and hang out with one of our great heroes. Justo is lively, light-hearted, and fun. I knew he was a great scholar, but these three characteristics surprised me. Moreover, it was a wonderful treat to meet his wife Catherine. I had no idea that she is not only a former church history professor, but quite the scholar herself. We had fun with the fact that she is a Presbyterian, while Justo is a Methodist.

Here are some highlights from the day’s events:

Justo said that one of the greatest heresies happens when we believe that everyone else is a heretic. I found this very interesting and particularly profound, coming from someone of his stature. I certainly agree that doctrinal legalism leads to a snobbery that eventually, despite our best intentions, begins to shroud the Gospel with a dark blanket of obscurity leading to deadness in the church. We need to be very careful that we don’t draw our lines of doctrinal stability so tight that no one can fit inside those lines but us.

Cardinal Newman once said “To be deep into history is to cease to be Protestant.” This is an oft used sound-bite which can be found on the lips of many Roman Catholic apologists. Of course, the Protestant’s normal response to this is to say, “To be deep into the Bible is to cease to be Roman Catholic.” However, I have certainly never been satisfied with this position. I am an enthusiastic student of church history and don’t find it particularly favorable toward the doctrines of Rome (for the most part). But I wanted to see what Dr. Gonzalez had to say in response to this. After all, there are not many people living today who have been as deep into church history as he has. As well, Dr. Gonzalez is respected across the board for his balanced scholarship. In response to this sound bite, Justo Gonzalez said that he has never been close to converting to Rome. Both he and his wife agree with great passion that if one were to dig deep in church history, they would understand that Protestantism is necessitated because there is no better way to smooth over the divisions in the entire church. “Eastern Orthodox maybe,” they said. “But not Roman Catholic. Church history shows how necessary Protestantism truly is.”

Furthermore, both of them agree that the history of the church is our history. It is not owned by any particular tradition or denomination. They also believe (as did the Reformers) that the Gospel of God’s grace began to get lost in the late middle ages, making the Reformation necessary. Moreover, they also agree that the doctrine of salvation by faith alone (sola fide) was not invented by the Reformers, but recovered by them. This is an incredibly important distinction.  

“What is one of the greatest heresies in the church today?” This was a question asked  tonight. Gonzalez’s answer might surprise you. No, it was not a denial of the deity of Christ. No, it was not liberalism. It was American individualism. It took him some time to unpack this, but the essence of what he was saying was that we don’t care too much about the community of the church. “I would not be here without the church. And neither would you. Just listen to the worship music at your local church and make a tab of how often ‘I’ or ‘my’ is used. ‘Christ is my savior.’ ‘He died for me.’ We have forgotten that we are a community. If we don’t like a church, we just go to the next one. If the sermon is bad, we find a new preacher . . . or worse, start our own church. It is all about us. But this is not the Gospel.”

Who is Gonzalez’s favorite heretic? Now, I found this interesting. It was Marcion! Why? He said that Marcion, when you attempt to read between the lines of what he said, cared deeply about Christ. He even went so far as to suggest that we might see Marcion in heaven. Tim Kimberley said afterward (tongue in cheek), “Now I want to take Marcion off the wall in heretics corner.” Ha! I would not go so far, but it is little things like that which really mess with my head and cause me to rethink things (or at least remember that I don’t know as much as I think).

There is a bit more to tell, but that might give you enough to chew on for now. Thanks for listening.

 


C Michael Patton
C Michael Patton

C. Michael Patton is the primary contributor to the Parchment and Pen/Credo House Blog. He has been in ministry for nearly twenty years as a pastor, author, speaker, and blogger. Th.M. Dallas Theological Seminary (2001), president of Credo House Ministries and Credo Courses, author of Now that I'm a Christian (Crossway, 2014) Increase My Faith (Credo House, 2011), and The Theology Program (Reclaiming the Mind Ministries, 2001-2006), host of Theology Unplugged, and primary blogger here at Parchment and Pen. But, most importantly, husband to a beautiful wife and father to four awesome children. Michael is available for speaking engagements. Find him everywhere: Find him everywhere

    11 replies to "A Summary of Justo Gonzalez's Visit to Credo House"

    • Marcion? Ugh! Without the OT, we simply cannot have the New, nor really Christ: “whose are the fathers, and from whom is the Christ (the Messiah) according to the flesh, who is over all, God blessed forever. Amen.” (Rom. 9:5)

    • theo

      I think we can find a few things to be thankful for in most all heretics. Even Bart Erhman has challenged us to deeply examine the textual sources of the Bible. Why should we be afraid of the truth as long as it is arrived at honestly? I think Dr. Gonzalez was saying that Marcion was honestly attempting to find the truth. But what Dr. Gonzalez also pointed out is that God is the only one with full revelation. So we walk humbly through the aisles of dogma.

    • Indeed humbly before GOD, in and thru the “aisles of dogma”, but not with the heretics! One thinks of what the Apostle John thought and said about Cerinthus! 😉 Btw, we should remind ourselves of the heresy of Cerinthus, which appears to have had a mix of Ebionitism and Gnosticism. He taught that the world was created by an inferior demiurge and that Jesus, a mere man, was chosen at the time of his baptism, but the Christ left Jesus just before the Crucifixion. And too Cerinthus envisioned the millennium as a 1,000 year orgy of carnal pleasure. Indeed, Ugh!

    • theoldadam

      God loves and died for heretics, too.

      But that does not mean that we don’t have the right to criticize them. When they veer from the Cross…alone…they need to be gently guided back onto the rails.

      __

      Personally, I believe “free-will” is the single biggest heresy in this country. A lot of heretics hold to that blasphemous doctrine…God love ’em.

    • Kathleen

      Could you please say more about this: “he and his wife agree with great passion that if one were to dig deep in church history, they would understand that Protestantism is necessitated because there is no better way to smooth over the divisions in the entire church. “Eastern Orthodox maybe,” they said. “But not Roman Catholic. Church history shows how necessary Protestantism truly is.”

    • I think myself the Bible teaches us to be a bit more than just critical with heresy and heretics! (2 John 7 thru 11) Indeed separation from evil and serious error, both biblical-theological and moral is not popular in the church today, but it is surely biblical, (1 Cor. 5 / 2 Tim. 2: 19-21, etc).

    • And btw, GOD just does not love everyone the same! There is an election of grace and a reprobation, not a dualism but a Sovereign God! (Rom. 9 / 2 Thess. 2: 13-14)

    • Josh

      That’s great he was able to visit! I am reading his History of Christianity (in Spanish) volume one right now. I’m loving it. He really does seem to have a good balanced view of things. I’m learning quite a bit from him.

      I didn’t know anything about him other than what wikipedia says and that I like his approach to history. I look forward to hearing the podcasts. Some of his books came with a Logos Bible software package I purchased. That’s how I ran across him.

    • Francis

      I am not sure that he believes liberalism to be heretic in the first place. His Story of Christianity vol. II (where he talked about modern Christianity) seem to take more issue with fundamentalists than with liberals.

    • snooop1e

      Justo says,

      “I would not be here without the church”

      But then he says.

      “If we don’t like a church, we just go to the next one. If the sermon is bad, we find a new preacher . . . or worse, start our own church. It is all about us. But this is not the Gospel.”

      I agree, which is why I left Protestantism and became a catholic. Can you imagine the Pope saying

      “if you don’t like the church or the pastor go and start your own church, it’s not about the Gospel it’s all about you and you wouldn’t be where you are today if it wasn’t for the church”

      God Bless

    • Jason

      I think American individualism is as much necessitated as Protestantism itself. It is the inevitable consequence of our freedoms that many will start their own churches for selfish reasons. We see the heretical implications yet we see that it is better that way. If any of us who reject individualism were excommunicated unjustly from a community, we would go to the church next door, too. Are we refuting ourselves? Perhaps the greatest heresy is collectivism. It is actively promoted by politicians and community organizers. It is the mindset of allowing oneself to be defined by a group and checking one’s brains at the door, and the willingness to give up liberty in order to fit in. The Galatians certainly weren’t guilty of individualism when they let themselves be circumcized, and Paul criticizes them for giving up liberty.

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