Seeking a Better Country - book review
Seeking a Better Country by DG Hart and John Muether is
overall a good book that looks critically at the history of Presbyterianism in
America. If you are worried that Hart
carries over some of his usual tone from his blog, do not worry. This book is even handed and avoided scorn
and condemnation. It does point out
places that the church may have gone wrong, but even then it is done with a
gentleness that will surprise many. It
is a well-researched book and many will learn from it. It comes up to the modern day and thus it does
not have the opportunity to dive too deeply into any one period of history, yet
applies the broad sweep of history to today.
I appreciated the book a great deal.
That said, I have one large fundamental disagreement with
this book that I think throws both Hart and Muether off in their historical
application and point. This fundamental
disagreement colors their understanding of all subsequent Presbyterian history differently
than I color it.
Before I get into that point, I do want to point out one
other small weakness. Hart and Muether
are OPC guys and thus the Southern Church gets a bit of a short stick in this
book. And some PCA guys might get
heartburn when they read the conclusion that the PCA was not really unified in
its formation (pg.236), and that the OPC is more confessional and the PCA more
evangelical (pg.257). Those are really minor
complaints, but maybe worth mentioning.
My fundamental
disagreement with the book is this statement: “For confessional Presbyterians,
including the authors, who tend to put a premium on the teachings of the
Westminster Standards, highly prize the Presbyterian form of church government,
and esteem the reverence and simplicity of historic Presbyterian worship, the
era of the Old School Presbyterianism is the most appealing” (pg.257). I applaud the honest expression of their own
bias in this history, however, it means they have seriously misunderstood the
Great Awakening and the Old Side – New Side Controversy.
Overall the section in the book about the Great Awakening is
better than most books. They don’t go
overboard trying to smear the Old Side, and they are willing to admit some
excess on the part of Gilbert Tennent.
However, in the conclusion to the discussion they state this: “Many of
the Old Side objections had already been removed with the formation in 1745 of
the Synod of New York and its affirmation of creedal subscription and
insistence that members submit to synodical decisions” (pg.66).
I think that is simply historically wrong. Creedal subscription never seems to have been
a debate between the two groups. So, I
am not sure why that is in there. The
submission to synodical decisions was indeed an issue, but because the Tennent’s
were willing to submit to synodical decision of fellow New Siders did not mean
they were willing to do so with Old Siders.
Any honest evaluation of the New Side behavior leading up to the split
has to come to the conclusion that the New Siders were a disorderly group that
viewed the Old Siders as unconverted wretches.
Go read “Dangers of the Unconverted Ministry” again and remember Gilbert
is preaching in a church that is not his own, in the bounds of an Old Side
Presbytery, and had vacant pulpit. The
sermon is a warning not to call an Old Sider because they are Pharisees. Not surprisingly within a year that church
split with the New Side minority faction erecting a church literally across the
highway from the original church. One of
the first actions of the Conjunct Presbytery (the first New Side Presbytery
after the split) was to order men to go on a preaching tour that included
churches that were part of the Old Side Synod of Philadelphia several of which
were not even vacant! This group
actively tried to split churches.
And therein lies the rub.
Seeking a Better Country laments the trend in Presbyterianism to go with
so-called progress and innovate in an attempt to nab the culture or more
members, yet the New Side is the group that did just that during the Great
Awakening. It was the New Side that
focused on individualism and had no problem throwing out church regulations and
authority. It was the New Side that fostered
a spirit of celebrity pastors, lower ministerial standards, and the “world is
my parish” ideas. It was the New Side
that fostered innovation in preaching styles and added “conversion narratives”
as a requirement for membership not to mention ordination. This tension then between accepting the New
Side conduct and desiring to remain a confessional, orderly church is still
inherent in Old School Presbyterianism.
The Old School is the New Side.
The New School is the New Side taken to the next logical step.
This acceptance of the New Side as heroes of the faith leads
Hart and Meuther to look uncritically upon the post-reunion phase of the
church. An agreement was reached in 1758
that was to be a Plan of Union, yet this plan of Union was violated in almost
every point as early as the year 1762. In
that year the New Side majority Synod violated Point 6, which was the only
doctrinal point in the Plan of Union.
They broke point 7 often through their refusal to do things, but clearly
in 1766 when they disbanded on Old Side majority presbytery without the
presbyteries consent. They also earlier had
refused to create a Presbytery west of the Appalachia Mountains claiming 5
churches were not enough to start a Presbytery, but the next year created a
Presbytery with 5 churches. The only
difference . . . the presbytery west of the Appalachia Mountains would have had
an Old Side majority, and the other had a New Side majority. The New Side systematically destroyed their Old
Side opponents with the majority power (which violated article 2). This unconditional acceptance also leads to
praise of John Witherspoon ignoring the shadier parts of his character and his transformation
of Princeton from a training ground for ministers to a training ground for
lawyers and politicians.
In the end the book is worth a read. However, the problems pointed out by Hart and
Muether seem to have an earlier origin that is not addressed. Using the Old School as the high point requires
an acceptance of the New Side. So go
read the book, just make sure you take a hard look at the Great Awakening. It is not all it’s cracked up to be.
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