What do we mean when we quote Thomas Campbell’s phrase, first uttered in 1809, that goes like this: “Where the Scriptures speak, we speak, and where the Scriptures are silent, we are silent.”? If the church of God is ever to be unified and the followers of Christ are ever to teach the same gospel, it is a motto that must be taken to heart! There is no other rock on which we can stand (Matthew 7:24)!
The best explanation of this principle I have been able to find comes ringing down through the years to us from 1832. In Lexington, Kentucky that year a meeting took place between two associations of Christians with one goal. One group aligned with Barton Stone preferred the moniker, “Christians.” The others took many of their cues from Alexander Campbell and were referred to as “Reformers” or “Disciples of Christ.” On that day Stone spoke for the Christians and a man named John “Raccoon” Smith represented the Disciples. They pledged to join together, not as two groups, but to throw off all shackles of party affiliation and become one even as the Father and the Son are one (John 17:11). This portion of Smith’s speech is moving to me every time I read it. Here are Smith’s words as recorded in his biography1:
“God has but one people on the earth. He has given to them but one Book, and therein exhorts and commands them to be one family. A union such as we plead for — a union of God’s people on that one Book — must, then, be practicable. Every Christian desires to stand complete in the whole will of God. The prayer of the Saviour, and the whole tenor of his teaching, clearly show that it is God’s will that his children should be united. To the Christian, then, such a union must be desirable.
But an amalgamation of sects is not such a union as Christ prayed for, and God enjoins. To agree to be one upon any system of human invention would be contrary to his will, and could never be a blessing to the Church or the world; therefore the only union practicable or desirable must be based on the word of God as the only rule of faith and practice.
There are certain abstruse or speculative matters — such as the mode of the Divine Existence, and the Ground and Nature of Atonement — that have, for centuries, been themes of discussion among Christians. These questions are as far from being settled now as they were in the beginning of the controversy. By a needless and intemperate discussion of them much feeling has been provoked, and divisions have been produced.
For several years past I have tried to speak on such subjects only in the language of inspiration; for it can offend no one to say about those things just what the Lord himself has said. In this scriptural style of speech all Christians should be agreed. It cannot be wrong — it cannot do harm. If I come to the passage, “My father is greater than I,” I will quote it, but will not stop to speculate upon the inferiority of the Son. If I read “Being in the form of God, he thought it was not robbery to be equal with God,” I will not stop to speculate upon the consubstantial nature of the Father and Son. I will not linger to build a theory on such texts, and thus encourage a speculative and wrangling spirit among my brethren. I will present these subjects only in the words which the Lord has given to me. I know he will not be displeased if we say just what he has said. Whatever opinions about these and similar subjects I may have reached, in the course of my investigations, if I never distract the Church of God with them or seek to impose them on my brethren, they will never do the world any harm.
I have the more cheerfully resolved on this course, because the Gospel is a system of facts, commands, and promises, and no deduction or inference from them, however logical or true, forms any part of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. No heaven is promised to those who hold them, and no hell is threatened to those who deny them. They do not constitute, singly or together, any item of the ancient and apostolic Gospel.
While there is but one faith, there may be ten thousand opinions; and hence, if Christians are ever to be one, they must be one in faith, and not in opinion. When certain subjects arise, even in conversion or social discussion, about which there is a contrariety of opinion and sensitiveness of feeling, speak of them in words of the Scriptures, and no offence will be given, and no pride of doctrine will be encouraged. We may even come, in the end, by thus speaking the same things, to think the same things.
For several years past I have stood pledged to meet the religious world, or any part of it, on the ancient Gospel and order of things, as presented in the words of the Book. This is the foundation on which Christians once stood, and on it they can, and ought to, stand again. From this I cannot depart to meet any man, or set of men, in the wide world. While, for the sake of peace and Christian union, I have long since waived the public maintenance of any speculation I may hold; yet not one gospel fact, commandment, or promise, will I surrender for the world!
Let us, then, my brethren, be no longer Campbellites, or Stoneites, New Lights, or Old Lights or any kind of lights, but let us all come to the Bible and to the Bible alone, as the only Book in the world that can give us all the Light we need.”-John “Raccoon” Smith
Amen.
1 Williams, John Augustus. “Life of Elder John Smith.” Cincinnati: R.W. Carroll & Co., 1870. Print. p 452-454
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