John Wycliffe was a fourteenth century reformer who is
largely credited with one of the first translations of the Bible into English.
This activity, and many of the theological views he espoused, were contrary to
the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church. His influence, however, was so widespread
that forty-three years after his death, his bones were dug up by church
authorities, burned, and the ashes scattered in the river Swift. In his day,
that made sense. Heretics were burned at the stake. Wycliffe’s death prevented
that. A space of forty-three years between his death and his burning does seem
excessive. Luther, born almost exactly a century after Wycliffe’s death, shared
many of Wycliffe’s theological views. One supposes that if the Roman Catholic Church
had been able to get hold of Luther, he would have met the same end as Wycliffe’s
bones.
The church in the West no longer burns heretics. In fact,
given the plethora of Protestant denominations, the disagreements among various
Catholic orders, and the vast numbers of non-Protestant, non-Catholic sects,
and non-denominations, it seems impossible any longer even to identify a
heretic, let alone burn one. Yet we have, perhaps, a more effective way of
dealing with those whose views do not fit the spirit of the age. If not more
effective, it is at least more satisfying to the heresy-hunters of our day. We
burn those with theological failings on social media. We denounce them. We
denounce their views. We point out, with a fair measure of glee, their
shortcomings and their foibles. We hold them up to mockery and ridicule. Like
the French Revolution, we lead them to the guillotine and lop off their heads.
But perhaps we ought to rethink our approach. After all,
those who began the Reign of Terror in France ended up as its victims. Times
had changed. Views had changed. The former revolutionaries were now considered
oppressors, rightly to be beheaded. It may well be that, as times and cultural
commitments change, those who are now leading the pack in decrying the failures
of their forefathers will become the victims of a new social media purge. They,
too, may be hanged, drawn-and-quartered, beheaded, burned at the social media
stake.
True heresy is rightly opposed. But who defines the heretic?
The non-denominations, and most of the non-Protestant, non-Catholic sects have
no way of defining heresy, because they have no confessions that define the
limits of orthodoxy. It is only those churches that have theological
confessions that are able to define heresy. Thus heresy, since it to be
opposed, ought rightly to be opposed and condemned, not by individuals with
their differing individual standards, but by the church courts, properly
called. When the shortcomings of our forefathers are examined in light of our
confessions, it may be that their views are properly called heresy, and that
heresy is to be condemned. But let it be done decently and in order, not by the
rabid pack of social-media hounds who madly tear to shreds that which they
often do not even comprehend.
1 comment:
I like this. I was attacked as a mantra praying false mystic by one of the extremely right wing discernment ministries and they didn't even have their own doctrinal statement. Their statement was borrowed from another fundamentalist ministry (which actually sold the books that they condemned - imagine that). Anyhow, when they asked me how I discern truth, I said, "The Westminster Confession of Faith and Larger and Shorter Catechisms." I'm not sure they even knew what that means.
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