Golden Oldie (part three)

From Make War No More?: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of J. Gresham Machen’s Warrior Children

J. Gresham Machen may not be the gold standard for twentieth-century Reformed orthodoxy but he does stand out not only in every account of American Presbyterianism but in most accounts of religion in United States as arguably the most important defender of historic Christianity. Some of the reasons are circumstantial. Machen happened to be teaching at a seminary, Princeton, that was firmly linked to the Protestant establishment and that had a long history of educating conservatives in other denominations. This placed Machen at the center of a the fundamentalist controversy when it erupted in the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. with support and admiration from non-Presbyterian conservatives. If he had been teaching at Columbia Seminary in South Carolina or at Wheaton College, the reporters who covered the religion beat in America would likely have been less interested than in a Princeton professor. Other reasons for Machen’s reputation stem from those attributes he brought to bear in his circumstances. His writings show remarkable acumen, courage, and even fairness to his opponents. In addition, Machen carried on in his battles with liberalism for the better part of two decades and, not being content with celebrity or individual effort, recognized the importance of establishing institutions to sustain a Reformed witness. As a man of his times and a person who distinguished himself from his contemporaries, Machen was, in the words of the novelist, Pearl Buck, “worth a hundred of his fellows who, as princes of the church, occupy easy places and play their church politics and trim their sails to every win, who in their smug observance of the convention sof life and religion offend all honest and searching spirits.” That is why Buck, whom Machen had opposed, wished that he had lived longer so he could “go on fighting them.”

Yet, for all of Machen’s accomplishments, the verdict on his efforts has been mixed even among conservative Presbyterians and evangelicals. Much of the discomfort with Machen surrounds his flair for controversy. Of course, critics such as Robert Moats Miller, the biographer of Harry Emerson Fosdick, might be expected to focus on the unflattering aspects of Machen’s career. In fact, Machen’s combativeness was so extreme for Miller that he could, without qualification or fear of misinterpretation, in a respectable academic journal refer to Machen as “quite loony.” Ernest R. Sandeen, one of the first American historians to give fundamentalism an even-handed inquiry would not let his impartiality extend to Machen whose belligerency was supposedly characterized by “perverse obstinacy.”

But when scholars with ecclesial ties to Machen demonstrate a similar unease with his combativeness, the problem is particularly grave. On the fiftieth anniversary of Machen’s death, Mark A. Noll, then an elder in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, observed that the cost of Machen’s contentiousness was “large.” He “undermined the effectiveness of those Reformed and evangelical individuals who chose to remain at Princeton Seminary, with the Presbyterian mission board, and in the Northern Presbyterian Church.” Furthermore, according to Noll, Machen “left successors ill-equipped to deal with the more practical matters of evangelism, social outreach, and devotional nurture.” George M. Marsden, in a piece for Princeton Seminary Bulletin expressed similar reservations to Noll’s about Machen’s “cantankerousness.” Even though Marsden was a son of the OPC and his father had been a prominent official in the OPC and at Westminster Seminary, he still could not warm up to Machen’s propensity to fight. Marsden conceded that Machen’s critique of liberalism had merit, but he “had a personality that only his good friends found appealing, and he stood for a narrow Old School confessionalism and exclusivism that many people today find appalling.”

One last example of an Orthodox Presbyterian who could not stomach Machen’s combativeness is John R. Frame, for many years a professor at Westminster (in Philadelphia and at California) and a minister in the OPC. In his book, Evangelical Reunion Frame indicated his discomfort with the militancy that had characterized the OPC since its founding, and more recently in his infamous article, “Machen’s Warrior Children,” he registered a complaint similar to Noll and Marsden: “The Machen movement was born in the controversy over liberal theology.” “I have no doubt that Machen and his colleagues were right to reject this theology and to fight it,” Frame added. “But it is arguable that once the Machenites found themselves in a ‘true Presbyterian church’ they were unable to moderate their martial impulses. Being in a church without liberals to fight, they turned on one another.”

Aside from the merits of these assessments, the verdicts of Noll, Marsden, and Frame all point to a curious phenomenon among those in the second generation of Orthodox Presbyterians – that is, an unwillingness to fight for the Reformed faith combined with a strong dose of theological and ecclesiastical pacifism. None of these scholars thought Machen was wrong to oppose liberalism per se even if each person might assess the strength’s of Machen’s critique differently. But beyond the errors that liberalism posed, like many who were associated with the institutions that Machen founded – the OPC, Westminster Seminary, and the Presbyterian Guardian – these scholars were unprepared to go. Combating liberalism, then, was apparently acceptable because it was obviously wrong. But opposing errors among evangelical or Reformed Christians was apparently unacceptable for many in the second generation. Indeed, the views of Noll, Marsden, and Frame were not unusual among conservative Presbyterians during the 1970s and 1980s. In the OPC particularly, the reasons for contending for the Reformed faith looked increasingly pointless and the church sought ways to escape its rut, first by seeking a merger with the Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod, and then with the Presbyterian Church in America. In less than forty years, the fight had left the OPC and with its departure had come reassessments of Machen, his role in the controversies of the 1920s and 1930s, and even his legacy.

15 thoughts on “Golden Oldie (part three)

  1. I get the annoyance of those who are belligerent or ‘cage phase’ as we call it, but after living in the passive-aggressive southern PCA for 20 years and watching our disingenousness sold as ‘winsome’ and settling into a mile wide and an inch deep, who in their right mind wants to champion the product that culture has produced. Give me candor and courage and even some obstinance, all day,every day.

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  2. When it comes to certain individuals and institutions, the irenic John Frame does not appear to be able to moderate his martial impulses, either. Perhaps he is one of Erdman’s Passive-Aggressive Children?

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  3. “a strong dose of theological and ecclesiastical pacifism”

    mcmark— is “pacifism” short for “indifferent agnosticism”? Do pacifists who make arguments for pacifism disqualify themselves as pacifists?

    shock—-even in elite journals, you can call Calvinists “looney”! And Ernest Sandeen hated Machen as much as he hated dispensationalists!!

    Maybe those who think they have become more “catholic” have simply switched sects…

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  4. Men unacquainted with war, grief, loss, struggle and victory. What does Frame know about it?

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  5. Why fight about the gospel, when by joining forces with those who have different gospels, we can “make a difference” here and now? But “they” don’t want us to do that….

    Alan Jacobs on why worship is not enough—-http://blog.ayjay.org/uncategorized/my-one-and-only-post-on-religious-liberty/

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  6. One last example of an Orthodox Presbyterian who could not stomach Machen’s combativeness is John R. Frame, for many years a professor at Westminster (in Philadelphia and at California) and a minister in the OPC. In his book, Evangelical Reunion Frame indicated his discomfort with the militancy that had characterized the OPC since its founding, and more recently in his infamous article, “Machen’s Warrior Children,” he registered a complaint similar to Noll and Marsden: “The Machen movement was born in the controversy over liberal theology.” “I have no doubt that Machen and his colleagues were right to reject this theology and to fight it,” Frame added. “But it is arguable that once the Machenites found themselves in a ‘true Presbyterian church’ they were unable to moderate their martial impulses. Being in a church without liberals to fight, they turned on one another.”

    So maybe Frame found an area we Machenites needed (and still need?) some Semper Reformanda? I can appreciate those on the outside who critique us, those of us finding ourselves (for whatever reason, I might add) in the church Machen himself founded. For one thing, I find it odd that those who leave our ranks turn on us (I’m thinking B. Cross).

    But every particular church has struggles from within. We OPC people should not be surprised that this is so, even for us. We are not the Only Perfect Church after all (maybe others think they are?).

    You can take the presby out of Machen’s church, but can’t take Machen out of Bryan Cross (or John Frame?)

    If nothing else, the OPC does seem to get some recognition (for better or worse)(seemingly disproportionate to our size). This blog has quite a few commenters who comment comment comment away. One wonders..

    Why?

    Maybe it's because we know how to bowl like no other??

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  7. Andrew, Frame’s problem is to think that once you leave liberalism behind and have a conservative church you are going to be free from controversy or problems. That understanding of the church is not biblical since the biblical church (Israel and Christianity) was always corrupted.

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  8. I’m not sure why anyone (Frame included) think the OPC’s balls need busting. They have made it 75 years and have made attempts to merge with others. More often than not the other group has been the one to kill the potential merger (the CRC being the prime example). At GA there is not a lot of controversy. They wrote probably the best paper dealing with The Federal Vision of all the NAPARC churches. They produce excellent scholars like Hart, Muether, and Van Drunen. Those of us conservative P&R folks who are outside the OPC are in her debt.

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  9. But if the argument from “Lost Soul” is right then when will the creeping eeeevangelicalism cause the kind of fight that liberalism did? Maybe not enough have read “Lost Soul” though.

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