As I follow the developments of the Federal Vision Controversy I see that there have been a couple of recent events that make a new blog entry worthwhile.
The most significant of these are two associated rulings from the Presbyterian Church in America‘s (PCA) Standing Judicial Commission (SJC) in the two cases related to the Federal Vision controversy. To make a long story very short… Central Carolina Presbytery complained to the GA to have the SJC investigate Steve Wilkins, pastor of Auburn Avenue Presbyterian Church in Monroe, LA, or at least to have his presbytery, the Louisiana Presbytery do it. The SJC had the presbytery do it, the presbytery did it, and reported back to the SJC last spring that there was not a problem. In the mean time the GA adopted the report critical of the Federal Vision/Auburn Avenue Theology.
With that as background, a couple of weeks ago the SJC unanimously decided these cases and they have just become available on the web on Puritan Board. You can either read them in a post to the board with some interesting follow-up discussion or as links to documents on their server. ( Central Carolina complaint decision, Louisiana response decision, agreement to copyrights will be necessary) And if my very crude description of events in the paragraph above makes no sense to you, each of the decisions has the respective time-lines in them in great detail.
To give a one-line description of the SJC decision: Louisiana Presbytery did it right, but came to the wrong decision.
Now, the detailed version:
In the SJC Report on the Memorial from Central Carolina Presbytery the SJC originally found a year ago that Louisiana Presbytery had not properly “dealt with the allegations that TE Steven TE Wilkins’ views are out of accord at key points with the system of doctrine as summarized in the Westminster Confession of Faith and Larger and Shorter Catechisms” and as a result the Louisiana Presbytery “has not met its responsibilities under BCO 13-9.f and 40-4, 5, and thus has not adequately protected the peace and purity of the Church.” The SJC then directed the presbytery to conduct an examination with six specific requirements.
Part II of this decision then examines the actions of the Louisiana Presbytery in response to the original decision. The SJC found that while the presbytery complied with the directives of the SJC, they did not reach a decision “consistent with the Constitution of the Presbyterian Church in America.” And this is were we jump off to the second decision released…
In the presbytery action on the examination the vote was 13 to 8 to exonerate Pastor Wilkins. Following the vote Teaching Elder (TE) James Jones filed a complaint that quickly found its way to the SJC. TE Jones was joined by one additional Teaching Elder and five Ruling Elders. The points in the complaint are that it is a matter for the GA, that TE Wilkins redefined theological terms, and that TE Wilkins had “serious variances” with the Westminster Standards. This became the second SJC decision that was released.
In their decision, the SJC ruled that the Louisiana Presbytery had failed to apply the correct constitutional standard and that in doing so it had erred and should have found a strong presumption of guilt that some of TE Wilkins’ views were “out of conformity.”
Now, here is where I am not sure what happens next. Problems were declared with Louisiana Presbytery and TE Wilkins, but I have not found in these decisions an order about what to do next. I will keep looking around but my guess is that it will return to the GA and this year’s Assembly will determine the corrective action. (Let me know if I missed this somewhere.) It should also be noted that while the SJC found the strong probability that some of TE Wilkins’ theology is out of conformity, the actual decision only says that the presbytery did not use the correct standard. The problem is not the Federal Vision theology itself but how the presbytery decided if there was a problem. Judgment on the Federal Vision/Auburn Avenue theology has not been directly rendered.
In a related action, on his blog De Regnis Duobus (Concerning the Two Kingdoms) the Rev. Jason Stellman posts a letter from the Pacific Northwest Presbytery declaring that the Rev. Peter Leithart, in compliance with the fifth recommendation of the Federal Vision report adopted by last year’s GA has posted a public letter declaring the differences in his views. Rev. Stellman also reports that he was elected to be one of the members of the study committee to look at Rev. Leithart views. It is interesting to note that Peter Leithart, while apparently a member of Pacific Northwest Presbytery and therefore a PCA Teaching Elder, is pastor of Trinity Reformed Church in Moscow, Idaho. The church is a member of the Confederation of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC). The committee is to report back in January.
I think that to no one’s surprise the conversation about the Federal Vision controversy continues in the blogosphere. In some cases it contains harsh criticism on both sides producing more heat than light. But in others it is very civil and even sheds light on the nuances of the controversy.
One of the more interesting was a well as enlightening was a discussion held on the blog De Regno Christi back in late September. If you look at their Federal Vision thread you can find a multitude of posts and comments about very specific points under discussion.
In another twist Jeff Meyers reports that an overture is being introduced in different presbyteries of the PCA about informing the presbytery if ordained individuals views differ from the standards. The twist is that while the constitution and ordination vows refer to differences with the “Standards,” that being Westminster, the overtures refer to differences with the Federal Vision report, raising it to the level of constitutional standard.
Well, I think that is enough for now. The discussion continues and will undoubtably surface at the PCA GA in June.