The Evangelical Liberalism of Andrew Fuller
Andrew Fuller (1754-1815), a Particular Baptist who departed radically from the faith of his father's is becoming quite a name amongst churches and para-church movements that once taught the doctrines of grace. Though at best a Calminian and at worst an absolute heretic, Fuller is being proclaimed by the evangelical Reformed Establishment as the Luther of the Baptists and as the man that fanned the smoking wick of the Evangelical Awakening into a blaze . He is seen as the reformer who rescued Calvinists from the dunghill of their fathers in the faith and is now presented as the greatest theologian of the 19th century, a genius whose work was epoch-making . No praise seems to be too high or too exaggerated for this sturdy contender of the system of rationalism now known as Fullerism and one writer of fairly recent years has even dubbed him a 'prophet of evangelical Calvinism .' Fuller's followers, though they disagree amongst themselves on minor aspects of Fuller's teaching, are all quite unanimous in proclaiming that no true evangelism is possible unless one adopts the doctrines and practices of Andrew Fuller .
Messing about in dunghills
The aim of this paper is to show that rather than rescue anybody from
any dunghill whatsoever, Fuller, gathered his teaching from just
about every contemporary theological dunghill he could find. Thus his
teaching is nothing but an anthology of Latitudinarian, Cambridge
Platonist, Chandlerian, Grotian, Arminian, Baxterian and Socinian
teaching. Never was there such a mishmash of rank liberalism and
plain heresy introduced as 'evangelical Calvinism' since the New
Testament authors presented the real thing!
Both Latitudinarian and Cambridge New Philosophy scholars claimed to
have their roots in the Reformation and Puritan theology but
emphasised moral philosophy and natural revelation in their system
rather than the Biblical teaching of law and grace. This moral
philosophy taught that man was naturally able to comprehend the
'nature and fitness of things' in creation and use his reason to make
him aware of what is essential and inessential in revealed religion.
Both these movements maintained that true religion was a matter of
following one's natural inborn duties, a philosophy which they termed
'duty-faith'. Archbishop Tillotson (1630-1698) explained what
duty-faith entails in his sermon The Wisdom of Being Religious:
"For to know our duty, is to know what it is to be like God in goodness, and pity, and patience, and clemency, in pardoning injuries, and passing by provocations; in justice and righteousness, in truth and faithfulness, and in hatred and detestation of the contrary of these: In a word, it is to know what is the good and acceptable will of God, what it is that he loves and delights in, and is pleased withal, and would have us to do in order to our perfection and our happiness ."
This teaching, of course, has become the backbone of modern Fullerism which relieves preachers of the responsibility of expounding the law and expects them to appeal directly to the unfallen natural abilities of their hearers, encouraging them to 'love him (Christ) with all their hearts, the same as if they had never apostatised .' When dealing with the law, Fuller shows his allegiance to the Latitudinarian doctrine that in obeying the spirit of the law, one is actually obeying the gospel and exercising faith in Christ. He also combines the Cambridge Platonist teaching that man's reason teaches him what is essential in the Bible with the Grotian teaching that Natural Law (always written with capitals) is eternal whereas revealed law (written without capitals to show its subordinate position) is arbitrary and temporary. Thus the only difference between the Old Testament and the New in Fuller's eyes is that the Old is sufficient to point a sinner to Christ but the New merely encourages him to do so and shows him how to distinguish between the nature and fitness of things and the 'positive' laws of revealed religion which he holds to be secondary manifestations of primary eternal laws, wrapped up in earthly or even carnal letters.
Fuller and the law of the fitness of things
Fuller can thus argue in his essay entitled The Principle of
Church Discipline :
"The form and order of the Christian church, much more than that of the Jewish church, are founded on the reason and fitness of things. Under the former dispensation, the duties of religion were mostly positive; and were of course prescribed with the nicest precision, and in the most exact minuteness. Under the gospel they are chiefly moral, and consequently, require only the suggestion of general principles. In conforming to the one, it was necessary that men should keep their eye incessantly upon the rule; but, in complying with the other, there is more occasion for fixing it upon the end ."
It is obvious that this kind of teaching puzzled
the faithful considerably and in 1807 Fuller decided to send out a
circular pastoral letter entitled On Moral and Positive Obedience to
the churches of the Northamptonshire Association explaining his
Chandlerian-Grotian views. He told the once Particular Baptist
churches, now polluted by Fullerite liberalism, that they must accept
the reasonableness of his dual thinking because:
"Without it, we should confound the eternal standard of right
and wrong given to Israel at Sinai (the sum of which is love to God
and our neighbour) with the body of "carnal ordinances imposed
upon them until the time of reformation." We should also
confound those precepts and examples of the New Testament which arise
from the relations we stand in to God and to one another, with
positive institutions which arise merely from the sovereign will of
the Lawgiver, and could never have been known had he not expressly
enjoined them."
What a surprise such
peeps into Fullerism must be to those Christians who have heard that
Fuller was orthodox in his theology. Here is the arch-heretic telling
his sheep as their pastor that the Old Testament laws are cluttered
up with carnal rules and the New Testament precepts demand that we
separate what is eternal in them from what is the mere institutional
mind of the Lawgiver. This is all in keeping with his view, taken
over from Grotius and the New Divinity School that the moral law
reflects what is eternally right, whereas revealed law states what is
right merely because God says it is right and is therefore an
arbitrary law, deviating from the eternal norm or, to use Fuller's
own words, "The one is commanded because it is right; the other
is right because it is commanded. The great principles of the former
are of perpetual obligation, and know no other variety than that
which arises from the varying of relations and conditions; but those
of the latter may be binding at one period of time, and utterly
abolished at another." Fuller goes even further than Grotius in
his radicalism, however, as he argues that even moral laws cannot be
accepted as absolutes as if we did "everything according to the
letter of moral precepts, we shall often overlook the true intent of
them, and do that which is manifestly wrong." Indeed, he argues
that, "It was not our Lord's design, in these precepts, to
regulate external actions so much as motives."
Fuller continually tells his readers that it is Christ's example in
following the nature and fitness of things which ought to determine
our attitude to the law and explain what the laws true motives are
behind the regulating of external conduct. This advice, if followed,
can only lead into the wildest Antinomianism. Fuller stresses, for
instance, that nowhere was Christ expected to follow the whole law
and fulfil it all for sinful man's sake. On the contrary, when
arguing against the position of John Milton who claimed that man must
die unless:
"Some other able, and as willing, pay
The
rigid satisfaction, death for death,"
Fuller begs to differ and says:
"The law made no such
condition or provision; nor was it indifferent to the Lawgiver who
should suffer, the sinner or another on his behalf. The language of
the law to the transgressor was not, Thou shalt die, or some one on
thy behalf, but simply, Thou shalt die: and had it literally taken
its course, every child of man must have perished. The sufferings of
Christ in our stead, therefore, are not a punishment inflicted in the
ordinary course of distributive justice, but an extraordinary
interposition of infinite wisdom and love; not contrary to, but
rather above the law, deviating from the letter, but more than
preserving the spirit of it. Such, brethren, as well as I am able to
explain them, are my views of the substitution of Christ ."
Thus the weary soul who feels the burden of his sin, is not pointed
to the One who fulfilled all that man broke concerning the law but
one who deviated from its letter and found its spirit above and thus
beyond it. Fuller offers the sinner a new way which is only
attainable through the right use of reason and what he calls
'inference '. The Scriptures, indeed, he argues, never say that
Christ died for anyone in particular but merely that "there is
none other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be
saved.' This salvation does not come through any initiative of God
other than His offering it to whosoever wishes to grasp out for it ,
inferring from what he reads in Scripture, that what was good for,
say, Paul, would be also good for him. It is thus no wonder that
Fuller claims that God's acceptance of certain individuals is not
because of any decree 'in his mind' but purely because the seeker
grasps out and partakes of the feast spread before him . This is what
Fuller calls human agency, which, in his theology, is always
eclipsing God's purpose.
Baxterian elements in Fullerism
Fullerites are quick to deny any accusations, such as those of
Abraham Booth , that Fuller was a Baxterian but their evidence quite
misses the point. Robert Oliver, arguing in 'A Highly Biased
Biography', claims that as Fuller did not believe the gospel is a new
law (which is not quite true ), he cannot thus be a Neonomian nor can
he be a Baxterian. In arguing that the moral law is all that is
necessary to teach a man gospel obligations, Fuller is robbing the
law of its condemning and commanding powers and thus creating a new
law robbed of its sting for saints and sinners alike and a new gospel
which is merely an accommodation to the weakened law. For Fuller, his
new law is applicable directly to sinners as it tells them that they
ought to love Christ as if they had never apostatised . What is this
but the Neonomian doctrine of 'sincere obedience'? Fuller is much
more radical than Baxter on this point and attacks not only gospel
precepts, ridding them of all their 'positive' elements but he
ruthlessly cuts down the Mosaic law, discarding the letter-rules and
keeping to the spirit-rules. What these spirit-rules are to Fuller is
anyone's guess. In claiming that even Christ merely had to obey a
token part of the law, Fuller makes Christ a Neonomian. Fuller's
acute Neonomianism borders on absolute Antinomianism as it is
absolutely sceptical as to what true law really is. Thus when
Fullerites point out that Baxter made Fuller ill, this does not make
Fullerism any safer than Baxterism as Fuller, where he errs, he
always errs on the far side of Baxterism from the truth.
The parallels between Fuller and Baxter are nevertheless enormous.
Both Baxter and Fuller, as Fuller freely admits, believe that Christ
did not place Himself under the law to stand where the sinner stands
as a vicarious substitution but remained above the law and provided a
different substitution than that which the law demanded in some token
way. Fuller complains of Baxter's universal redemption theory of the
atonement, but his own doctrine of universal sufficiency is almost
identical. Robert Hall proclaimed openly that this doctrine was his
grounds for preaching universal offers of salvation and it is this
doctrine that lies at the roots of the Fullerite system of evangelism
. Here again, Fuller shows himself as being far more radical than
Baxter. The latter always looks upon redemption as being accomplished
in the atonement but Fuller follows the Socinian view that redemption
is to be seen as a mere figure of speech to indicate the application
of salvation in the believer's life. Thus repentance and faith are
the main ingredients of redemption and not Christ's sacrifice on the
cross.
There is certainly a close parallel in
Baxter's insistence that the sinner must 'do something' towards his
salvation. Fuller points out that Baxter looks for evangelical works
before a sinner can be justified. This is hardly different from
Fuller's duty-faith teaching. Indeed, again Fuller is more radical as
he believes man has his full moral powers and natural abilities
intact and his duty to use them savingly goes far beyond any
Baxterian views of 'evangelical works' before justification. Fuller
demands a work of faith on the part of the sinner before
righteousness and justification can be given him. What is this if it
is not works-righteousness? In most of his works, Fuller emphasises
and dwells at length on man's natural abilities and claims that there
are no natural impossibilities for man to co-operate with God
in salvation. A man who emphasises so much that man 'could if he
would' in matters of faith, can hardly criticise Baxter for saying
that man 'could do something' towards his conversion.
Fuller accuses Baxter of virtually confusing what is legal with what
is evangelical, i.e. law with gospel. This of course is one of the
very severe criticisms with which Fullerism itself is faced. In their
History of the Church of God, the Hassells argue "Andrew Fuller
becomes a wonderful standard. He takes repentance and faith out of
the covenant of grace, and puts them under the law, in the sense that
he makes them man's duty, and not gifts of grace ." This
criticism must hold as Fuller argues that the law provides us with
all the obligations necessary to believe in Christ savingly and the
gospel merely brings with it the encouragement to perform them.
Fuller keeps company with the Arminians
Although any study of Fuller's works at any
depth must show that Fullerism goes hand in hand with Arminianism on
a number of issues, Fuller criticises Baxter for believing that
Calvinists and Arminians are reconcilable, "making the
difference between them of but small amount.". He declares of
Arminians that he "should rather choose to go through the world
alone rather than be connected with them." This is not the
issue. Fuller has very obviously striven to reconcile Calvinism and
Arminianism by combining what he feels is the best of their various
gospels in his own system of a universal atonement with a particular
application. He has thus no need to be directly connected with the
Arminians as he has produced his own mixed version of the gospel to
take him safely past the Scylla of Calvinism and the Charybdis of
Arminianism.
Fuller's doctrine that Christ
died for no one in particular although the elect are those who
eventually avail themselves of this blessing, would delight any
Arminian's heart. Both Arminians and Fullerites believe in a
conditional atonement. He is also thoroughly Arminian in his teaching
that God's wrath is not on Adam's descendants because of Adam's
transgression and that no one is totally unable to believe.
Arminians, however, believe in a true fall but Fuller looks on sin,
Christ's becoming sin for our sakes and imputed sin as mere figures
of speech.
Fuller is never so close to
Arminianism as when he denies that the covenant of works still holds
for sinners. Arguing in his defence of Fullerism under the misleading
title The Gospel Worthy of All Acceptance, he maintains that there is
no covenant between man and sinners , obviously denying the Biblical
doctrine of God's eternal covenant with man concerning his duties to
God's law and also his eternal covenant with God's elect for
whom Christ died in history but which was worked out before the
foundation of the world. Thus Calvinists believe as Hermann Witsius
(1636-1708) concludes in his two-volumed work on the Covenants, "The
covenant of works . . . is in no account abolished ." This is
because "There is a plain passage, Gal. 5:3 which confirms, that
even by the promulgation of the new gospel covenant, the breakers of
the covenant who are without Christ, are not set free from that
obligation of the law, which demands perfect obedience, but continue
debtors to do the whole law ." Needles to say, Fuller is more
radical even on this doctrine than the Arminians. They teach that as
man is dead in trespasses and sins, one cannot keep a covenant with a
dead man. Fuller, however, maintains that man is in no way dead but
quite alive, otherwise God would not expect him to exercise duty
faith savingly. Fuller's theology is well-represented in Tolkien'
poem, appropriately entitled Mythopeia:
"Man is not wholly lost nor wholly changed.
Disgraced he may be, yet is not de-throned,
And keeps the
rags of lordship once he owned."
How clearly rings the gospel bell in the poetry of William Cowper who scorned with a righteous scorn the gospel of natural abilities and a common feeling of virtue in the human heart. He tells us in his long poem Truth:
"Perish the virtue, as it ought, abhor'd,
And the fool with it that insults his Lord."
He then goes on to write words which are a death knoll to Fullerism and Arminianism:
"Of all that wisdom dictates, this is the
drift,
That man is dead in sin, and life a gift."
To Fuller, as to Arminians, all the conditions
of life are available through obedience to the gospel but they deny
that the Mosaic Law was ever a condition of life and glory. Thus law
and gospel are completely substituted for each other. Paul, however,
teaches in Rom. 10:5 "For Moses describeth the righteousness
which is of the law, that the man which doeth those things shall live
by them." The condition is clear but the impotency of man to
fulfil the condition on his own is equally clear as Paul says of his
own experience, "The commandment which was ordained to life, I
found to be unto death. (Rom. 7:10). Criticising John Brine, whom he
thought was a Hyper-Calvinist for teaching what Paul taught, Fuller
says "God requires nothing of fallen creatures as a term of life
." Thus it is obvious from Fuller's writings that though he says
he prefers his own company to that of the Arminians, this seems to be
because he has absorbed what he can from his Arminian company and
then dropped them for an even more rationalistic way.
Socininian Traits in Fuller's System
Fuller has a great deal to say about Socinianism with which he often
disagrees. Yet his controversy with the Socinians is fought out on a
philosophical-ethical basis where both he and the Socinians are far
from the Biblical teaching on holiness and sanctification. Thus
Fuller seems to be more prepared to argue morally on such topics as
'the nature and fitness of things', 'virtue', 'the loveliness of
vindictive justice' and 'candour and benevolence to men' so that the
sinner, longing for a word from God to edify his soul is rather left
out of things. It is when one compares Socinianism with Fullerism on
Bible doctrines alone that the numerous similarities between them
become evident. Ten doctrines will be picked out for examination here
but this author feels that even then 'the half has not been told.'
1. Scripture
Not all Scripture is
of the same importance to Socinians, nor is it all inspired in the
sense that it all reflects God's own will and character. Only the
essential parts of Scripture are of immediate divine inspiration and
these mainly concern doctrinal matters. Fuller's view of moral and
positive obedience comes very near this teaching as also his
continual emphasis on deviating from the letter of a Bible word so
that the spirit may be grasped. The Old Testament, though part of the
Socinian's Bible, is, to them, mere history. Spiritual truths,
i.e. essential doctrines, are scarcely to be found there. Fuller is
extremely ambivalent in his attitude to the Old Testament. He finds
the whole gospel wrapped up in the Old Testaments 'positive' wording
but completely rejects its wrapping. The gospel's work is to separate
the wheat from the dross. For Fuller the Old Testament dispensation
knew only a 'work to rule' way of life and, though he discusses the
law much, he neglects the promises. He thus tends to have a very
unsure view of the Old Testament Church, which hardly comes into his
teaching, as also of the covenantal relationship of Christ to His
pre-Calvary Bride. His doctrine of the atonement does not look back
to the saints of the Old Testament but is merely a future deterrent.
Fuller, of course, totally rejects a literal interpretation of key
Scriptural terms such as justification, imputation, reconciliation
and righteousness and teaches a figurative view of the Bible that, at
times, runs into the wildest allegorising. Fuller's efforts to
explain away the doctrines of grace such as election and particular
redemption show up his non-literary approach to the Scriptures for
the arbitrary method it is.
2. Reason and revelation
Reason, for
the Socinian is his touch-stone in all controversial matters. Few
theologians argue from the earthly to the spiritual more than Fuller
and he is continually writing of common sense, reason, inference and
a knowledge of the nature and fitness of things to guide the
Christian in discerning what is truly moral and what is merely
'positive'; what is right in itself or what is merely right because
God says so for the moment. Reason, in Fuller's system is part of the
image of God in man and thus not fallen. Fuller agrees fully with the
Socinians that the truths of revelation are above reason but not
contrary to it but this still leaves reason as the final judge as it
alone determines what is contrary to itself or not. Just as the
Socinian believes that true philosophy and true religion always
agree, so Fuller argues that the philosophically acceptable principle
of 'right reason' is the yardstick of religion.
3. God's knowledge
Socinians argue that
God does not know in such a way that whatever He knows will surely
come to pass. They mean by this that God never uses His knowledge to
force things to happen or not happen. If this were so, whatever
happens or does not happen would be merely because of God knowing it
into existence or oblivion and thus everything existent would be a
product of sheer fatalism or necessity. Applying this to the doctrine
of salvation, they affirm that if God did know things into existence
and they happen necessarily so, it would mean there could be no real
sin and no real guilt.
It is obvious that Fuller's double
emphasis of 'no necessities' and 'no impossibilities' arises from
this view of God. His idea of an atonement which does not of
necessity atone for any one and his idea of a fall that does not make
it impossible for the sinner to realise his state and duty to do
something about it are typically Socinian points of view. Fuller
leaves these factors outside of God's knowledge, indeed, even God's
foreknowledge is rejected as Fuller sees conversion as not being
secured in the mind of God and effected through the atonement but in
the repentance and faith exercised by whosoever will. Christianity
must remain, in Fuller's system, the gospel of surprises. Fuller,
however altered the Socinian doctrine in two ways. He argued that,
though there is no necessity in man's conversion or perdition, there
is a certainty. He also did not see the necessary relevance of
punishment and guilt at all in God's plan of salvation as the whole
problem was circumlocuted by the demonstration effect of the
atonement rather than its expiatory effect.
4. The Trinity
The Trinity is alleged
by Socinians to be irrational, contrary to reason and thus
unscriptural. Fuller pays lip service to the Trinity but his entire
view of the law shows that he believes in an eternal truth which is
outside of God and grounded in a knowledge of the nature and fitness
of things. On the other hand, God's revelations are subsequent to
natural revelation and, at best, half-truths as they are only right
because they are commanded and not commanded because they are right.
Fuller thus presents us with a Trinity of irrationality and
un-scripturality. His doctrine is not that of the triune God, Father
Son and Holy Spirit who took counsel before the world began to elect
a people for Himself. The God of the Scriptures, we are told in those
Scriptures, elected us in Christ before time began and in God's
knowledge and experience in eternity Christ was offered for our sins,
i.e. before the foundation of the world. This is discarded totally by
Fuller who sees God the Father secretly ignoring the atonement as a
means of securing salvation and applying election directly to those
who believe. Meanwhile God the Son is setting His human life on the
atonement as a means of releasing all or anybody, as the case may be,
from sin. At the same time the Holy Spirit is not only encouraging
one and all but even warranting one and all that if they keep one eye
on the ten commandments and one eye on Christ's exemplary death and
what they infer from both, they are of the elect. The Spirit stands
behind the would-be believer, urging him on as there seems to be no
doctrine of the indwelling of Christ and the Spirit in Fuller's
system and certainly no doctrine of a union with them. One cannot
help concluding that a caricature of a Trinity is just the same as no
real Trinity. A god whose own will contradicts his own revelation is
not the God of the Bible. Even if Fuller pays lip-service to the
Godhead, he certainly does not attribute to either Person His
Scriptural role. Thus Fuller's view of God is not a fraction sounder
than that of the Socinians.
5. The image of God in man
The image of
God in man, according to Fuller, consists of his reason, conscience
and immortality and this is not lost in the fall. The Socinians
substitute mind for conscience and drop mortality as they believe man
is only as immortal as God makes him in salvation. Practically
speaking, however, Fuller and the Socinians agree. The outcome of
this teaching, as seen in Fullerism, is there is no true fall and no
true absolute depravity as God's image in man is always there for God
to appeal to directly. There is something of God, e.g. His image, in
every man. This common feature of Quaker theology is shared by Fuller
and the Socinians. In order to understand this teaching better it is
necessary to examine Fuller's and the Socinians teaching on Adam.
6. Adam and the fall
According to the
Socinians, the sin of Adam did not cause his posterity to lose their
freedom to chose between right and wrong. There is no original sin
and each man is condemned for his own sin alone. There is no federal
sharing of Adam's sin; there is no being in Adam as there is no true
being in Christ. There would be no point in calling a man to repent
and believe, they argue, if he were captive to original, i.e. Adam's,
sin. Man's inclining to sin has nothing to do with Adam. If it were
so it would not be sin because sin implies guilt and it is impossible
to be guilty of another's sin.
Similarly,
Fuller does not believe that there is any true imputation either from
Adam to man, from man to Christ or from Christ to man. Guilt cannot
be transferred, neither, accurately speaking, can punishment. Only
the effects and the affliction caused by it can be experienced by
another. Although Fuller admits that man has some connection with
Adam because he was the first to sin, he views unfallen Adam as a
proto-type example of how man could be if he repented and believed.
Fuller does not see the New Adam as this proto-type in any sense and
salvation projects us back to the earthly Adam rather than forwards
to the heavenly Christ.
Both Fuller and the
Socinians as a result of their denial that Adam's sin was imputed to
his posterity, can blandly believe that man has not lost the image of
God in him. It is still intact whatever Adam might have done! This is
why one can appeal to man's reason in presenting Scriptural
revelation to him as he has the mental wherewithal to separate the
wheat from the dross, the spirit from the letter, the essential from
the inessential. Fuller goes, however, further in his radicalism than
the Socinians. They look upon man as following in Christ's footsteps
in the life and walk of faith, gradually becoming more Christ-like
whereas Fuller teaches a restitution theory in which man becomes the
Old Adam restored.
Fuller in his The Gospel
Worthy of All Acceptation, argues just like the Socinians that God
could not require repentance and faith of man if he were not in a
position to respond to His commands, invitations and offers. Dead men
cannot stand up and walk. Here there is no idea of the Biblical
teaching that even whole valleys of dry bones can be made to walk,
the dead to be resurrected, the blind to see and the deaf to hear.
Luke tells us dramatically in chapter four that when Christ first set
out to bring the good news to man, he read from the book of Isaiah to
show that he was the Servant of God whose work was to heal and
restore sight to the blind and deliver the captives.
7. Satisfaction seen as being at variance with
the gospel
There is no satisfaction in the atonement
according to Socinianism. They believe that satisfaction would
logically rule out salvation as a free gift given by a gratuitous
God. It is unreasonable to believe, they argue, that the guilt and
punishment of one can be borne by another, so it is obvious one
cannot be obedient in place of another. Thus Christ obeyed for
Himself and could not obey on behalf of others. Christ's sacrifice
was thus not to appease God's wrath against sin but to demonstrate to
man what obedience is and to show him that, using his own abilities,
strengthened by Christ's example, he could go the same way. He would
thus emancipate himself from sin. Indeed, redemption for the Socinian
is nothing but an emancipation from sin where no price is paid. This
view is identical with Fuller's. It is interesting to note how often
Fuller uses the idea of 'encouragement' to illustrate the work of the
gospel. This is the very term, with its synonyms, that the Socinians
use. The gospel merely encourages us to return to God.
Fuller teaches that sins are not forgiven via the cross directly but
indirectly. God was so impressed by Christ's obedience that after His
death, the Father gave Christ the power to forgive sins as a reward.
Even this is perhaps an overstatement as Fuller merely emphasises the
pardoning factor of God's attitude to the believer's sins rather than
the forgiving factor. Christ keeps us from sin by presenting His love
and obedience to us and showing to us how He was able to resist
temptation. Thus the atonement saves no one absolutely in Fullerism
but always conditionally on accepting the atonement's influence. What
one learns from the atonement in moral obedience is the true
atonement, not the decree of God whether 'in God's mind' or outworked
in history on the cross. Atonement is by application not by
satisfaction; it is by exemplary demonstration not by penal
expiation. This view is at the heart of Socinianism with its teaching
that the virtues of the atonement are in its appointment and
application by God. This is, of course, election but not atonement.
Election is worked out in the atonement but it is not the atoning
factor itself. The atonement in Fuller's system has no direct,
specific, logical or soteriological connection with its appointment
or application. It is equally sufficient for one as it is for many,
indeed, for all. It appoints and secures nothing of itself in God's
plan of salvation as any efficacy the atonement might be attributed
with is in the appointment of the believer alone.
In
fact, both the Socinians and Fuller are appalled by the idea of a
penal, vicarious redemption in which debts are paid and accounts are
balanced. If debts are paid, there can be no forgiveness as there is
then no reason or need for forgiveness. All has been settled! God's
salvation, however, is freely given without demanding anything of man
or Christ. Thus we see Fuller denying that man's debts are taken over
by Christ and denying that man's guilt is completely blotted out. It
is all unnecessary as salvation has nothing to do with former guilt
but everything to do with present moral obedience.
8. No imputed righteousness
The
Socinians teach that God does not impute Christ's righteousness to
sinners but, for Christ's sake, treats them as if they were like Him.
This, of course, is Fullerism pure and simple. It is the gospel of
make-believe. Fuller emphasises that if our sins were really imputed
to Christ them Christ's death would have been a just action on God's
part and Christ would have been treated according to his deserts
which would have not helped the sinner in any way. Similarly, if
Christ's righteousness were imputed to the believer, he would be able
to claim his deliverance as a matter of right and not of grace . This
is because Fuller cannot accept any literal substitution or
satisfaction in any sense. He has no doctrine of God's justice being
wrought out in Christ on our behalf and no teaching that Christ works
out for us the privilege of being right with God and thus judged
righteous. In arguing for more grace, he is actually denying true
grace. This does not mean that the Socinians believe that true
righteousness is impossible to obtain. Repentance is the gateway to
righteousness. Repentance means abandoning sin and, because of this,
earning God's forgiveness. Repentance is imitating Christ and thus
becoming like Him. Thus the Socinians see a Christ-like righteousness
in believers but not the righteousness of Christ. Repentance is also
the gateway to atonement with God in the theology of Andrew Fuller
and, no matter how pious such a view appears to be, it can only be
named by its correct name - a substitute for the righteousness of
Christ.
9. The reasons for and depth of Christ's
sufferings not taken seriously
The Socinians view Christ's
sufferings and death as merely those of a martyr in the cause of
righteousness. Here, too, we find many echoes of Fuller. In comparing
Christ to the officer who has his hand blown off in the battle fray -
seemingly quite accidentally, Fuller paints a caricature of the real
sufferings and death of Christ. He rejects the doctrines of Christ
death being a punishment for sin, as a result of the wages of sin
being imputed to Him. The same applies to the idea of atoning
sacrifice itself. Fuller actually believes that Christ's sacrifice is
of even less efficacy than the Old Testament shadows of it as they
were sacrifices of sin-transfer which, Fuller believes, Christ's was
not. This is the old Socinian and Remonstrant heresy of acceptilatio,
i.e. that the sacrifice of Christ was only expiatory in its
side-effects and was not more so than that of bulls and goats. The
point is that it was accepted as if it had been more by God. There is
thus no power in the blood of the Lamb of God to save! There is only
executive power in God's deciding to accept it as such. This is a
blasphemous insult to both God's justice and mercy. It is a central
doctrine of Fullerism-cum-Socinianism.
10. The upkeep of God's moral government
The principle design of the atonement in the Socinian system is
to reveal God's displeasure (not wrath) against sin in His upkeep of
His moral government. This is obviously an important factor in the
redemption story and is an equally obvious intention and outcome of
Christ's sacrificial death. Yet this cannot be all the cross
provides, nor can it be the essential factor of redemption. God shows
His wrath and hatred (displeasure is far too weak a word,) of sin in
the law and the Old Testament dispensation. This same law provides
also for God to exercise moral suasion as the wages of sin is death
and justice, even without the atonement, would take its natural
course and God's moral government would not suffer in any way.
Sinners are punished in the old dispensation as they are in the new.
If a declaration of God's moral government is the sole aim of the
atonement, then it is little wonder that Fuller and the Socinians see
Christ's death merely in its symbolic function, akin to part of the
function of the Old Testament sacrifices.
Christ is not a new law-giver bringing a new code of obedience to
keep the administrative wheels of God's executive power turning. The
old law is good enough for Christ as it reflects the eternal nature
of His Father and is the law He fulfils and establishes. Christ came
as a Saviour to atone from sin through taking upon Himself the
punishment and guilt of His elect so that they might go free so that
full mercy can be combined with full justice.
Fuller's terms of atonement are far less than the Biblical terms and
in keeping with those of the Socinians. The atonement for the sins of
the elect is not Christ's primary task; it is very dubious whether
Fuller sees this as a true moral task at all but just another
'positive' executive device. Christ's task, for Fuller, is to bring
new administrative conditions to bear on man so that he might be
morally reformed and return to God via a path that was hitherto
closed to him. This again shows Fuller as the Neonomian he is at
heart as he always emphasises that it is the act of believing which
is imputed to us for righteousness and not Christ's obedience.
Neonomians teach that "faith in Christ is the principle part of
that obedience which is required by the new law, and this is accepted
for righteousness, instead of that perfect, un-ceasing obedience,
which the law of ten commands requires ."
Conclusion: Fullerism denies the fundamentals
of both Calvinism and evangelism
Fuller
always argued that those whom he called Hyper-Calvinists or
Antinomians could never preach the gospel properly as they believed
that man was totally unable in all respects to think spiritual
thoughts until it was given him to believe. Surely this is the very
work of the gospel i.e. to resuscitate the spiritually dead and make
the spiritually blind to see. It is thus obvious that Fullerites have
a completely different view of God, and man, of the law and the
gospel to traditional Biblical Christianity and that rather than
being evangelical Calvinists, they are purveyors of a religion void
of the true need to evangelize and completely ignorant of what
Calvinism entails. William Gadsby used to warn his flock that Fuller
was a wolf in sheep's clothing. This writer believes that Fullerism
is the work of the serpent itself in its own soul-piercing scales and
is the greatest heresy that ever strove to corrupt the Bride of
Christ from within her retinue.