
They Will Not Endure Sound Doctrine
Signs of the Times—October 1, 1856
NOTE: Providence Baptist Ministries
(PBM) does not agree with all that is herein written by Elder Beebe. PBM is
deeply rooted in the Doctrines of Grace, yet, are decidedly in favor of those
institutions that, when used properly, educate men for the Gospel ministry.
Likewise, we do not think that such institutions are the complete and final
answer to the necessity of the on-going illumination of the mind of the saint,
but rather is one of the means whereby one my better equip himself.
“For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after
their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; and
they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto
fables.” 2 Timothy 4:3-4
The
apostle Paul, and all the apostles, were inspired by the Holy Ghost, and thereby
duly qualified to give such instructions to Timothy, and to all other gospel
ministers and gospel saints, as they were then, or ever should be in need of.
Without the immediate inspiration of God, they could not have predicted the
things which should come to pass in subsequent ages, both in reference to the
Some very conscientious and good brethren have seemed
afraid to admit that God has set the bounds of wickedness of men and of devils,
so that they have no power to change them; but we would ask such brethren
whether the Spirit would speak to us of things which it would be wrong for us to
believe? Would the Spirit tell us expressly, things which we ought not to know?
Has not the Spirit told us expressly that the wicked shall be revealed in his
time, and that God withholdeth it until its time, and has pledged his word that
it shall in its time be revealed? Read the Scriptures on this subject, and then
ask yourselves, could the beast with seven heads and ten horns, have risen up
out of the sea before the great red dragon had been manifested? Or could the
second beast have preceded the first? Or could the image of the beast have
anticipated any of its predecessors? If they could not, it was because God had
ordered things as they came to pass, even so, likewise the apostasy predicted in
our text, has its time fixed. “For the time will come when they will not endure
sound doctrine.” But who are they that will not endure sound doctrine? Some have
supposed that this could not mean Christians, and that it must mean the world or
antichrist. But when, we ask, has the world or antichrist ever endured sound
doctrine? Did the world, the Jews or pagans, endure the sound doctrine set forth
by Christ and his apostles, in their days? Did the carnal Israelites endure the
sound doctrine that was reported to them by the prophets? Which of them did they
not slay? The truth has, in all times since sin entered the world, been opposed
by the world, and by all unconverted men. We cannot therefore suppose that the
Spirit spake thus expressly of a time when nothing unusual was to be revealed.
These non-endurers of sound doctrine are marked as apostates, thus, “Some shall
depart from the faith.” We do not understand that these apostates are the
children of God, born of the Spirit, or that they ever possessed the vital
principles of faith in their hearts. But we do contend that they are those who
have professed the faith of the gospel, and have been held in the fellowship of
the
Within the space of the last half century, the prophecy of our text has been
manifestly realized in the
Now, as it is not very
likely that either party will admit that they have so departed, but as each
charges the other with having departed from the faith, we have but one
alternative for the settlement of our respective claims—to the word and to the
testimony. What does the Spirit expressly say, by the mouth of the inspired
Paul, shall be the distinguishing marks or characteristics of those who in the
last times will not endure sound doctrine? And with which party are these marks
and characteristics found? Will any sane man who has any knowledge of the Old
School Baptists, say that we have, since the division, after our own lusts,
heaped to ourselves teachers? Will the New School Baptists themselves so charge
us? So far from it, they have continually thrown it in our teeth, that instead
of having heaps of teachers, that we have but very few, and they have been
predicting that in a few years we shall have none. Some of them have exultingly
said they expected to live to see the last of the Old School preachers buried.
If, then, we have no such heaps of teachers, it cannot be that we are the party
who are advertised in the holy Scriptures as having heaped to ourselves
teachers.
Again, who will charge
that the Old School Baptists have itching ears, leading them to lust after heaps
of teachers, and evincing such lusts and such itching, by running after all the
new doctrines and institutions of the age? Is it not proverbial that the Old
School Baptists are behind the age? That they are an anti-effort, unprogressive
people, and more than five hundred years behind the improvements of the age in
which we live?
Once more! Will any one
say that what preachers we have, have been raised up by any effort of ours? That
we have number of our minister? Do our teachers or ministers, show so much of
the wisdom and polish of this world, as to give any just grounds to suspect that
they have been called, qualified or brought into the work the agency of men? No
rational man who has any knowledge of us believes any such thing. The marks,
therefore, which are to identify and distinguish the class of apostates in our
text, cannot apply to the Old School Baptists. Nor can it be said in truth, of
Old School Baptists, that they are turned away from the truth, turned unto
fables. We have been constantly charged with obstinacy, for so pertinaciously
adhering to the Scriptures, as our only standard and rule of faith and practice.
Our refusal to depart from the Bible as our standard of morality and religion,
and to unite in the various schemes of the age for reforming society, reclaiming
drunkards, converting sinners, and evangelizing the world, has brought down on
us such epithets as Hardshells, Iron Jackets, and a profusion of titles
indicative of anything but a readiness to turn away from what we hold to be the
truth, and of being allured by fables. Flatteries and frowns alike have failed
to draw the Old School Baptists from the Bible as their standard, We could
mention cases where flattering titles of presidents, vice-presidents and
directorships in popular, humanly devised religious societies, and lucrative
missionary appointments, have been tendered, as a bait to draw some of our
number from their steadfastness in the faith, and other instances could be
particularized where proscription, reproach and calumny, have also been employed
for the same purpose, but all in vain. How then can any of the marks which
divine revelation has fixed on the apostates, described in our text, apply to
the Old School Baptists?
As these marks cannot be
found on the Old School Baptists, they cannot be the people who have departed
from the faith, or who cannot endure sound doctrine. We will now proceed to show
that the New School or Missionary Baptists have them all as plainly stamped on
them as was the mark which was set on Cain, and as indelibly written as were the
words, “Mystery, Babylon The Great, The Mother of Harlots,” &c., on the forehead
of the woman that John saw sitting upon the scarlet-colored beast, (Rev.17:5.)
The
Mission Baptists who have gone out from us, have very clearly demonstrated that
they cannot endure sound doctrine, not only by going out from us, on account of
our holding sound doctrine, but also by heaping to themselves teachers. Their
ears have itched for such doctrines as would make them popular in the eyes of
the world, and give them a place and respectability with the worldly
religionists of the age. This appears from their pleading the necessity of
Theological schools, colleges and universities, for training young men for the
ministry, because other religious denominations around them have such worldly
institutions for that purpose, and lest they should thereby draw all the
learned, wealthy, and influential, into their societies. This itching for
popularity has shown a lack of confidence in God to raise up suitable teachers
for them, or a sufficient supply to compete successfully with other
denominations. The instruction of the King of Zion to his disciples, is, to pray
the Lord of the harvest to supply laborers for the gospel ministry, but their
own lusts have dictated to them to heap teachers to themselves, in defiance of
the command of Christ, and in contempt of his authority. They not only prepare
for themselves a number corresponding to their congregations, but they heap
them, so that they have quantities of them for transportation to foreign lands,
and an abundant surplus to be employed as itinerant beggars, colporteurs [A
peddler of devotional literature; Ed.],
&c., at home. Thus they not only crowd out from their pulpits all such as would
offend their delicate itching ears, with sound doctrine, but have troops of them
to send forth, like the frogs of Egypt, into all the land, to come up into our
houses, our kneading-troughs, and our ovens. Is this picture overdrawn? Are
there not hundreds of this heap now, and at all times, lounging about the cities
and large towns, waiting for a call, and begging their way along, because they
are too lazy to work for an honest living? Will any
Who can deny that the New
Order of Baptists raise up, call, educate and qualify their own teachers? For
what other purpose do they organize their State Education Societies, build their
colleges, and establish their Theological schools? Their white cravated
mendicants are constantly abroad in every neighborhood, soliciting funds and
their petitions are spread out before every State legislature, asking for State
patronage, to aid them in their work.
Another mark of their apostasy is found upon them: They have turned away their
ears from the truth, and are turned unto fables. In no part of the religious
world can any be found who are more deadly set against the truth, or who
manifest a greater hostility to the very doctrine which they themselves once
professed to hold, than do the New Order of Baptists, who are commonly call the
Webster thus defines the
term fable: “l. A feigned story or tale, intended to instruct or amuse; a
fictitious narration intended to enforce some useful truth or precept. 2.
Fiction in general. 3. An idle story; vicious or vulgar fictions. 4. The plot or
connected series of events in an epic or dramatic poem. 5. Falsehood; a softer
term for a lie.”
Are the New School
Baptists turned to fables, as thus defined? Read their publications and the
tracts which they have turned to, which they approve, and which they circulate.
Read their “Dairyman’s Daughter.” Their “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” and a thousand more
of their fabulous stories which have been manufactured to order, and then decide
whether these fictitious stories are the sound doctrine of the Bible, or fables.
But, not only in the
tracts which they publish and circulate, but in the general ministry of the
teachers which they have heaped to themselves, a system of fiction, instead of
reality prevails. The sovereignty of God, and the exclusive work of the Spirit,
in the quickening and regeneration of men, is denounced, and the power, ability
and will of the creature, is extolled. Salvation is by them ascribed to the will
and works of men, and the heaven-taught truth of God, that salvation is alone of
God by grace, through faith, and that not of the creature, but the gift of God,
is by them rejected, and the fictitious doctrine of men, that salvation is
effected by the use of means, instrumentalities, and that the gospel, or
something else, is the means, and their heaps of teachers are the instruments of
saving souls from hell, and of advancing them to heaven is preached instead
thereof. They have turned away from the truth of the gospel, to the fiction and
fables of the schools, from-the eternal realities which are taught by the word
and Spirit of the true and living God, to the vain, delusive, fabulous fictions
of their own vain imaginations, and to a teaching for doctrine, the commandments
of men.
In conclusion of this long
article, in which we have, as we believe, fully proved that all the marks of
apostasy given in our text, are legibly written on those who have gone out from
the Old School Baptists, and that none of them can be found upon the old
apostolic order of Baptists which remain on the old Bible grounds, we would urge
upon our brethren the solemn truth, that we have nothing wherein to boast over
those who are turned unto fables. God has, as we hope, made us to differ, and
all that we have, we have received of him. Let us then rejoice, not that others
have fallen, but rather that our names are written in heaven. And let him that
standeth take heed lest he fall. May we trust alone in him who is able to keep
us from falling, and to give us an inheritance among them that are sanctified.
Footnotes:
1
We speak of those denominations; Christ has but one church
on the earth. “There is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one
hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism,” (Eph. 4:4-5). We freely
admit and fully believe that as there have been many nominally connected with
the church of Christ, who were not children of God, not born of God, not taught
by his Spirit, so there have been many of God’s children nominally connected
with the various branches of antichrist, but so long as they remain there, they
are living in disobedience to their Lord and Master; and, by that order of
discipline which he has established in his church, we cannot extend our
fellowship to them, as long as they continue to rank and file with the enemies.
“What agreement hath the
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