|
| About
Us |
| Information |
 Available
Resources |
 Online
Reference |
  World’s
End Theology Outlet |
  Hitchhiker’s
Guide |
  to
Unorthodoxy |
   Dyslexicon
of |
   Aberrant
Theology |
   Directory
of Cults |
   Recurring
Themes |
   >Back
in the Day |
   >Honey,
I Shrunk |
   
the Church |
   >The
Small, the Bad |
    &
the Ugly |
   >Reinventing
the Wheel |
   >I
Know Something |
    You
Don’t Know |
   The
Usual Suspects |
  Mitey
Fine Audio Diner |
  etc.
(electronic text collection) |
 News,
Notes & Needs |
| Events
Calendar |
| Young
Defenders |
| Eternal
Life |
|
|
Midwest
Christian Outreach, Inc.
P.O. Box
455
Lombard,
IL 60148-0455
U.S.A.
|
|
|
|
|
| Branches: |
Main
Office: Lombard, Illinois. |
Lohrville,
Iowa. |
Salisbury,
North Carolina. |
Scranton,
Kansas. |
Spring
Hill, Florida. |
|
This
article is reproduced with the permission of Dr. Ronald B. Allen.
When we first uploaded it to the Web, Dr. Allen had moved on to become
Professor of Biblical Exposition at Dallas Theological Seminary, where
he taught a course in Hermeneutics (biblical interpretation).
This
article was written as a report to be delivered to Bill Gothard by Dr.
Earl Radmacher, who was president of Western Baptist Seminary at that time.
In
a telephone interview with Dr. Allen, he told us that he attended the Basic
Seminar at the initiative of his wife in 1973. He found the very
first session so objectionable that he wanted to leave, but his wife persuaded
him to finish the Seminar, since they had already paid for it.
Dr.
Allen has also indicated that Bill Gothard refused to meet with him personally
in order to discuss his concerns. Gothard indicated to us (in a meeting
held on December 4,1997) that his refusal was based on his understanding
that Allen attended the Seminar upon Dr. Radmacher's request, and that
the real source of conflict was Radmacher. Dr. Allen has denied this,
informing us that when he attended the 1973 Seminar he was not even aware
that Radmacher had an opinion about the Seminar.
—
Ron Henzel,
Midwest
Christian Outreach
|

|
Issues
of Concern —
Bill
Gothard and the Bible:
A
Report
By Ronald B.
Allen, Th.D.1
Professor of
Hebrew Scripture
Western Baptist
Seminary, Portland, Oregon
May 30, 1984
The week that
I spent at Basic Youth Conflicts in 1973 (Portland) was one of the most
difficult of my life. In this seminar I was regularly assaulted by a misuse
of the Bible, particularly of the Old Testament, on a level that I have
never experienced in a public ministry before that time (or since). All
speakers, including myself, fail to interpret and apply the Bible rightly
from time to time. But in the Gothard lectures, Old Testament passages
were used time after time to argue points that they did not prove. I was
as troubled by the errors made from the lectern as by the seeming acceptance
of these errors as true and factual by the many thousands of people in
attendance.
At
the time, I made my complaints known to Dr. Radmacher who proposed a meeting
with Mr. Gothard in Portland. Gothard subsequently told Radmacher
that the two of them might meet together, but that he had no interest in
meeting with me to discuss these issues. I am setting these issues down
on paper at this time at the request of Dr. Radmacher for a meeting that
he will be having with Mr. Gothard on May 31, 1984.
I
do not raise these issues with any desire to deny that God has been pleased
to bring blessing to many thousands of people through the ministry of Bill
Gothard. But I do raise these issues to demonstrate — willful or not —
Gothard’s use of Scripture is so suspect as to render him a poorly informed
and untrustworthy teacher. To cite letters of approval based on success
stories is beside the point, unless one wishes to argue that the end justifies
the means.
Here
are a few of the issues that concerned me then and which have been added
to over the years:
1)
A mechanistic approach to human personality.
There
are ten steps for this and five steps for that, yet eight steps for another.
Such an approach to human personality accords neither with the variations
in people or with the dynamics of Scripture. The listing of these “steps”
is pure human invention, but Gothard presents each of the lists as though
they were the direct teaching of the Bible. This is my principle objection
to his ministry.
For
example, the wisdom literature of the Bible uses many terms to describe
the
fool. One word peti (Prov. 1:4; 14:15; 22:3) describes the naive,
the one who is inexperienced and is at a crossroads, drifting along to
temptation, but still within hearing of wisdom. Another word is
les
(Prov. 1:22; Psalm 1:1), to describe the scorner who is unteachable, idle,
foolish and irrational. These two words depict two extremes in folly, but
the Bible does not spell out the steps that leads from the stage of
peti
to the stage of les. The Bible uses various terms at various times
to describe differing people, or even the same person in differing aspects.
That is, the presentation of folly in the Bible is dynamic and relational,
not mechanistic and impersonal.
Gothard’s
approach is not that of the careful exegete who wishes to determine the
meaning of the text, but of the engineer who wishes to use the material
in his own programmatic approach which is mechanical and not personal,
mechanistic and not dynamic. Gothard does not really teach the Scripture;
he really uses the Scripture to fit into his own categories.
|
|
Gothard
does not really teach the Scripture; he really uses the Scripture to fit
into his own categories.
|
|
It
is particularly in the wisdom literature of the Old Testament, a section
that Gothard uses often, that Gothard is at his weakest from an exegetical
and theological point of view. He uses the Proverbs not as general maxims,
but as specific, predictive, authoritative predications. He has not really
entered into the world of biblical wisdom, a world which does not present
the simple answers to the complex questions of life that he imagines.
Qoholet,2
for example, presents quite a different picture than Gothard’s simple lists.
Qoholet presents a world of ambiguity, of uncertainty, of questionable
value — but a world in which the man or woman of God may demonstrate resolute
faith in God even when one cannot pin down the nature and value of reality.
The
Book of Job presents a point of view that is dramatically different from
Gothard’s lists. In fact, Gothard is a splendid modern example of Eliphaz,
Bildad and Zophar — each of whom approached the problems of Job from a
mechanistic, cause-and-effect, point of view. Here was their principle
error: while there is a cause-and-effect approach to reality that is found
at times in the wisdom literature of Scripture, that is not the only approach
to life that the Bible teaches.
The
clear teaching of the Book of Job is that a mechanistic, cause-and-effect,
approach to life may be way off base! Is it any wonder that Gothard tries
to evade the clear teaching of the Bible that Job was a righteous man (the
only reading on which the book works!), and finds many sins and character
flaws in him (overwork in Christian causes, neglect of his family, embittered
sons, estranged from family, wrong attitutdes toward the workers). In this
way the book is turned inside out and by this strange alchemy Job supports
Gothard’s lists.
Given
Gothard’s low view of the body and his repressed views of human sexuality,
it is not surprising that he neglects entirely the Song of Solomon with
its beautiful eroticism and its delight in human sexuality. For Gothard,
the things done between a man and a woman are the secret things of Ephesians
5:12, a disgrace even to speak of such. Only on the basis of his own negative,
programmatic approach to human sexuality would Ephesians 5:12 refer to
the marriage bed. Serious exegesis matters little in such an approach.
Similarly,
only one having a point to prove, and not a passage to understand, would
say that the Chain-of-Command applies in all cases to commands from parents
whether they are regenerate or not. Gothard says: “Notice that the spiritual
condition of the parents is not listed as a factor in obeying these clear
commands.” Then, without giving the source, he quotes Prov. 6:20-21:
| My son, keep
thy father’s commandment, and forsake not the law of thy mother; bind them
continually upon thine heart, and tie them about thy neck. |
To assert
that the spiritual condition of the parental teachers of wisdom is irrelevant
in this text is an absurdity, a mark of sheer incompetence of biblical
interpretation. The writer of Proverbs 1-9 is presenting teaching that
is in the mold of the Torah of Moses. These words of Proverbs 6 (see verses
22-23) are reflective of Deuteronomy 6 and are responsive to Psalm 119.
To say that they may be applied indiscriminately of unregenerate parents
in a chain-of-command mentality is not to interpret the Bible, but to use
the Bible for one’s own ends.
2)
A dogmatic presentation of personal opinions as though they were the word
of God, when in fact they are countered by the Bible itself.
Paramount
among these is the terrible picture of the chain of command in the family
with the husband as the hammer, the wife as the chisel and the children
as the gems in the rough. (In my Red Notebook, this is page 3 of the “Chain-of-Command”
Notes). The ghastly picture is that he beats on her and she chips on them.
If ever there were a reason for a women’s movement in the evangelical church
— this is it. This illustration is simply not reflective of biblical theology;
it is a parody of patriarchalism.
Lost
is all concept of mutual submission and inter-relatedness of wife and husband
which the Bible truly presents; instead there is the basest form of male
chauvinism I have ever heard in a Christian context.
Women
are stripped of dignity other than that which they have in their husband;
children are to be broken; the husband is to be permitted tyranny over
the grin-and-bear-it little woman. Gothard has lost the biblical balance
of the relationship between women and men as equals in relationship. His
view is basically anti-woman.
3)
Presentation of discredited opinions of Scripture as correct evangelical
insights and “new discoveries” for the church today.
I
will never forget the presentation made in the seminar I attended where
the Torah’s injunction not to boil the kid in its mother’s milk (the mistaken
basis for the Jewish tradition of meat-dietary laws) was applied to the
Christian church!
“Why
do Christians get sick?” he asked. “Because they do not eat as God
has commanded!” He then proceeded not only to lay the burden of the
Levitical dietary law on the people, but the non-biblical injunction of
meat-dairy distinctions as well! I cannot understand why people did not
rise en masse and object ot this error then and there. But all wrote these
notes in their red notebooks as another insight from his peculiar mount.
Even Jewish authorities now admit that Maimonides was correct, that the
passages on boiling a kid in its mother’s milk had nothing to do with diet
but with an abominable sacrificial practice of the Canaanites from which
Israel was to abstain. But in the teaching of Gothard an ancient bad turn
of Judaism was made the new path for Christian people.
4)
A surprising use of Scripture texts to produce guilt on the part of godly
people.
Women
with rebellious sons are made to believe that these heartaches are the
direct result of their own lack of submission to their husbands. Guilt
is piled on guilt.
Surpassing
even my credibility level is the audacious new teaching reported to me
that Gothard now warns parents of adopted children that they may be under
the injunction of God’s displeasure because the children they have adopted
may be visited by God for the iniquity of their fathers. The only result
of such a teaching is guilt — something Gothard seems to desire to produce
in his people.
That
the Bible never ties adoption and the “sins of the fathers” is not a consideration.
Imagine the consequences in the life of both the adoptive parents and the
adopted children of such a pernicious teaching. This is an example of a
mechanical use of the Bible that shows no sensitivity to context, culture,
theology or the character of God. What could be the motivation for such
a teaching? I really do not know.
5)
A hypocrisy of life standard.
Gothard
makes an issue of a low personal profile. He shuns magazine and news reporters,
refuses to allow interviews or photos. But somehow he does make it well
known that he lives on a sub-standard wage (about $600 per month, as I
remember), without mentioning that every creature comfort is provided by
company funds. A person who does not think through these issues would imagine
Gothard to be living at a poverty level — as a modern monastic.
I
have no brief for low wages, nor any compelling complaint against a very
high wage when it is earned by true industry and when it is used with compassion
for the needy and not only for a fine life-style. My complaint here is
against what is said and what is real — the disparity of statement and
life-style.
6)
The personal problems in the life of Bill Gothard and his organization
were
not a matter of public record when I attended the seminar in 1973. It appears
to me that these sad problems — and the failure to rectify them — are the
results of using the Bible but not really learning from it. When the Bible
becomes something that one can manipulate, then personal difficulties can
be rationalized away with impunity.
I
close with this quotation from Wilfred Bockelman,
Gothard: The Man and
His Ministry: An Evaluation:
One
final example should be sufficient to warn the reader against distorting
the scriptures to support a preconception. In one of his lectures I heard
Gothard say:
| “There are
those who say, ‘What’s wrong with drinking a little wine? Doesn’t the Bible
say that Jesus himself made wine?’ It is inconceivable that Jesus made
wine. Wine comes about through a process of decomposition. Decomposition
is a part of death, and Jesus was the exact opposite of death. He is life
himself. It is inconceivable that Jesus could be party to something that
involved death. It is inconceivable that Jesus made wine.” |
It
should be obvious to the reader that when scripture is treated like this,
it can be made to say anything.
[Santa Barbara:
Quill Publications, 1976, (p. 56)] |
Endnotes
1.
Dr.
Allen is currently Professor
of Bible Exposition at Dallas Theological
Seminary, Dallas, Texas, USA. [Back
to Text]
2.
Qoholet refers to the narrator of the book of Ecclesiastes. It is a Hebrew
name word meaning "Preacher," and is sometimes used as the title of the
book. [Back to Text] |
 |