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(J.C. Ryle)
The consequences of this widespread dislike to distinct biblical
doctrine are very serious. Whether we like it or not, it is
an epidemic which is doing great harm, and especially among
young people. It creates, fosters, and keeps up an immense amount of instability
in religion. It produces what I must venture to
call, if I may coin the phrase, a 'jelly-fish' Christianity
in the land--that is, a Christianity without bone, or muscle, or
power.
A jelly-fish, as everyone who has been much by the seaside knows,
is a pretty and graceful object when it floats in the sea,
contracting and expanding like a little delicate transparent
umbrella. Yet the same jelly-fish, when cast on the shore, is a mere
helpless lump, without capacity for movement, self-defense, or
self-preservation.
Alas! it is a vivid type of much of the religion of this day, of
which the leading principle is, 'No dogma, no distinct beliefs,
no doctrine.' We have hundreds of ministers who seem not to
have a single bone in their body of divinity! They have no definite
opinions; they are so afraid of 'extreme views,' that they have no
views at all. We have thousands of sermons preached every year,
which are without an edge or a point or a corner--they are as smooth
as marble balls, awakening no sinner, and edifying no saint!
We have legions of young men annually turned out from our
universities, armed with a few scraps of second-hand philosophy, who
think it a mark of cleverness and intellect to have no decided
opinions about anything in religion--and to be utterly unable
to make up their minds as to what is Christian truth. Their only
creed, is a kind of 'nothingism.' They are sure and positive
about nothing!
And last, and worst of all, we have myriads of respectable
church-going people, who have no distinct and definite views about
any point in theology. They cannot discern things that differ, any
more than color-blind people can distinguish colors. They think . .
.
everybody is right--and nobody is wrong,
everything is true--and nothing is false,
all sermons are good--and none are bad,
every clergyman is sound--and no clergyman unsound.
They are 'tossed to and fro, like children, by every wind of
doctrine;' often carried away by some new excitement and sensational
movement; ever ready for new things, because they have no
firm grasp on the old; and utterly unable to 'render a reason of the
hope that is in them.'
All this, and much more, is the result of that effeminate
dread
of distinct doctrine which has been so strongly developed, and
has laid such hold on many pastors in these days.
I turn from the picture I have exhibited with a sorrowful heart. I
grant it is a gloomy one; but I am afraid it is only too accurate
and true. Let us not deceive ourselves. Distinct and definitive
doctrine is at a premium just now. Instability and unsettled notions
are the natural result, and meet us in every direction.
Cleverness and
earnestness are the favorite idols of the age!
What a man says matters nothing--however strange and heterogeneous
are the opinions he expresses! If he is only brilliant and
'earnest'--he cannot be wrong! Never was it so important for
believers to hold sound systematic views of truth, and for ministers
to 'enunciate doctrine' very clearly and distinctly in their
teaching.
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