From: Darrell128 <Darrell128@aol.com>
Date: Sat, 2 May 1998 19:18:06 EDT

Subject: NR 98025: Cl. Thornapple Valley Proposes Revising Subscription to 
CRC Doctrinal Standards

NR #1998-025:   Classis Thornapple Valley Proposes Revising Form of 
Subscription to Christian Reformed Doctrinal Standards
   Since 1619, the Christian Reformed Church and its predecessor 
denominations in the Netherlands have had some of the strictest policies of 
any Reformed tradition for subscription to the doctrinal standards of the 
church. That could change if Classis Thornapple Valley gets its way. By 
unanimous vote, the January 17 meeting of the suburban Grand Rapids assembly 
overtured Synod 1998 to appoint a study committee that would "revise the 
statement in the Form of Subscription that "all the articles and points of 
doctrine set forth in the Belgic Confession, the Heidelberg Catechism, and 
the Canons of Dort fully agree with the Word of God' (italics added) to 
reflect the fallibility of all human work." Changing those requirements 
would have severe consequences for the life of the Christian Reformed 
Church, said Dr. Cornel Venema, professor of doctrinal studies at Mid-
America Reformed Seminary in the Chicago suburb of Dyer, Indiana. "I would 
propose that what they are proposing is the undoing of any meaningful 
confessional subscription on the part of the denomination and its 
ministerial servants," said Venema. "Were such a proposal adopted by the 
synod, it would formally confirm that the CRC has ceased to be a 
confessional Reformed body and that those who have left the CRC for that 
reason have confirmed the validity of that ground."

NR 1998-025: For Immediate Release
Classis Thornapple Valley Proposes Revising Form of Subscription to 
Christian Reformed Doctrinal Standards

by Darrell Todd Maurina, Press Officer
United Reformed News Service

(April 28, 1998) URNS -- Since 1619, the Christian Reformed Church and its 
predecessor denominations in the Netherlands have had some of the strictest 
policies of any Reformed tradition for subscription to the doctrinal 
standards of the church.
   That could change if Classis Thornapple Valley gets its way. By unanimous 
vote, the January 17 meeting of the suburban Grand Rapids assembly overtured 
Synod 1998 to appoint a study committee that would "revise the statement in 
the Form of Subscription that "all the articles and points of doctrine set 
forth in the Belgic Confession, the Heidelberg Catechism, and the Canons of 
Dort fully agree with the Word of God' (italics added) to reflect the 
fallibility of all human work."
   Other provisions in the overture propose that the study committee "modify 
the Form of Subscription so that it distinguishes the responsibilities of 
elders and deacons from those of ministers, evangelists, and professors of 
theology in the promise to teach and defend the articles and points of 
doctrine" and "modify the requirement that signers of the Form of 
Subscription, if they come to have some difficulty with a doctrine or 
doctrines in the creeds, will not speak or write about it until they have 
disclosed their sentiments to the proper authorities in the church for 
examination."
   In the CRC, all ministers, elders, deacons, evangelists, and theological 
professors must "declare truthfully, sincerely, and in good conscience 
before the Lord that we sincerely believe" the doctrinal standards of the 
church in "all the articles and points of doctrine… fully agree" with 
Scripture -- the language to which Classis Thornapple Valley unanimously 
objected. Furthermore, the Form of Subscription requires that officebearers 
promise "to teach these doctrines diligently, to defend them faithfully, and 
not to contradict them, publicly or privately, directly or indirectly, in 
our preaching, teaching, or writing" and to pledge "not only to reject all 
errors that conflict with these doctrines, but also to refute them, and to 
do everything we can to keep the church free from them." If officebearers 
should "come to have any difficulty with these doctrines or reach views 
differing from them," the Form of Subscription requires them not to 
"propose, defend, preach, or teach such views, either publicly or privately, 
until we have first disclosed them to the council, classis, or synod, 
realizing that the consequence of refusal to do so is suspension from 
office." Further provisions specify a process whereby a church council, 
classis, or synod supervising an officebearer may, "on sufficient grounds of 
concern," vote to "require a fuller explanation of our view concerning any 
article in the three confessions," specify suspension from office if the 
officebearer refuses to provide the required explanation, and indicate a 
procedure for appeals.
   Changing those requirements would have severe consequences for the life 
of the Christian Reformed Church, said Dr. Cornel Venema, professor of 
doctrinal studies at Mid-America Reformed Seminary in the Chicago suburb of 
Dyer, Indiana.
   "I would propose that what they are proposing is the undoing of any 
meaningful confessional subscription on the part of the denomination and its 
ministerial servants," said Venema. "I call that a tongue-in-cheek 
subscribing, you say you believe in something but you reserve to yourself 
the right to disagree, and that is no subscription at all. Were such a 
proposal adopted by the synod, it would formally confirm that the CRC has 
ceased to be a confessional Reformed body and that those who have left the 
CRC for that reason have confirmed the validity of that ground."

Why Change the Form of Subscription?

   The Classis Thornapple Valley overture originated at Princeton CRC of 
Kentwood. Elder Cornelius Korhorn said his church didn't send the overture 
because of any specific problems with Christian Reformed doctrine but rather 
out of concern that the Form of Subscription requires more than can properly 
be expected of officebearers.
   "As we see it the Form was written in the early part of the seventeenth 
century," said Korhorn. "The people who signed it were all professors and 
ministers and if there were elders there, they were competent, whereas today 
most of our elders and deacons aren't competent in theology. If the preacher 
said something wrong they wouldn't know it."
   "In my particular council not a single person has ever read the Canons of 
Dort; there's something wrong there," said Korhorn.
   While particularly concerned about requiring elders and deacons to 
promise things for which they are not sufficiently trained, Korhorn also 
argued that the Form reflects an outdated method of doing theology.
   "When this was first written, scholars were largely working by 
themselves; there was no mail service, telephone, they were off by 
themselves," said Korhorn. "Today if a theologian is wondering about a 
certain question you can get on the Internet and ask questions. Theological 
conversation today is entirely different from what it was when the Form was 
written, which means that the way it should be handled must be modified to 
reflect twentieth century reality."
   "If the Form had said they will not publicly preach or teach something 
that is at variance with the creeds, that would be reasonable, but it says 
they will neither publicly nor privately talk about it, and that is 
unreasonable," said Korhorn.
   The most serious problem with the current language, in Korhorn's view, is 
the statement that the creedal language fully agrees with Scripture.
   "To say the creeds are fully in accord means there is nothing in the 
creeds that is possibly contrary to the Scripture; to us it seems that in 
any human document you need to leave open always the possibility that 
something is not in accord," said Korhorn.
   "We are not saying that anything is not in accord, but only that we 
should not say that," emphasized Korhorn. "We are not saying there is 
anything wrong in the creeds; all our objection is to the Form of 
Subscription."
   According to Korhorn, the overture went through a two year process of 
review and six editions before its current language was adopted by Princeton 
CRC and later by Classis Thornapple Valley.
   Retired Princeton CRC pastor Rev. Sierd Woudstra, one of the primary 
authors of the overture, concurred with Korhorn's explanation of its genesis 
and rationale.
   "I have become convinced that signing the Form of Subscription has become 
a ritual, and is basically meaningless," said Woudstra. "I love the Reformed 
faith, properly defined of course, but I've had difficulties with the Form 
of Subscription for decades already. I have always felt that too many elders 
and deacons don't know what they are signing and if they did know what they 
were signing they would have problems with it because that don't know what's 
in the creeds."
   "One of the things I said is when I retired, nobody can require me to 
sign the creeds as a condition of employment," said Woudstra. "It's 
something you do because you have to do it, and trust the Lord will forgive 
you for signing despite the fact that you do have some reservations."
   While Korhorn said his primary concern was the overture's second point 
that elders and deacons may not have the necessary theological knowledge to 
intelligently sign the current Form of Subscription, Woudstra said his 
primary concern was the restrictions the Form places on theological inquiry.
   "The provision in the Form that says you may not write or talk about 
things before you talk to your consistory or classis is putting the cart 
before the horse," said Woudstra. "The best way to find out if your concerns 
are valid is to write an article about it; it is by means of public 
discussion of an article that you see if your opinion is right or not."
   Citing the way synod handled the concerns of deceased CRC missionary Dr. 
Harry Boer and his denial of the doctrine of reprobation -- the historic 
Calvinist doctrine that God damns people to hell as well as elects them for 
salvation -- Woudstra said the Form of Subscription created a bad 
theological climate in the CRC.
   "I have a high regard for the creeds even though I have grave concern 
about the creeds, especially the doctrine of reprobation where I am fully in 
agreement with Dr. Harry Boer," said Woudstra. "I have often wondered if the 
CRC is hospitable to theological issues."
   In addition to Boer, Woudstra cited two professors from the CRC's "mother 
church," the Gereformeerde Kerken in Nederland, as examples of world-
renowned theologians who might have difficulty working in a Christian 
Reformed context.
   "Would a man like G.C. Berkouwer be able to effectively lecture at Calvin 
Seminary?" asked Woudstra. "I think not. To me it is an utter travesty of 
justice what was done there by Calvin Seminary to Dr. Jan Veenhof. This was 
an act of gross injustice, and I still want to challenge Calvin Seminary to 
make amends."
   Berkouwer and Veenhof, both longtime professors in the GKN, came from 
strongly conservative backgrounds and later in life broadened their 
theological positions. In 1996, Calvin Seminary terminated Veenhof's 
visiting professorship at the seminary when it became known that he had been 
a member of the GKN study committee that provided theological justification 
for allowing monogamous homosexual unions and had written a book defending 
that position.

Origin and Defense of the Current Form of Subscription

   According to Calvin Seminary church history professor Dr. Henry 
Zwaanstra, the language to which Classis Thornapple Valley objects dates 
back to the earliest days of the Dutch Reformed tradition and was reaffirmed 
by the CRC's predecessor denomination in the Netherlands after the old state 
church changed the Form of Subscription to say officebearers subscribe to 
the confessions "insofar as" rather than "because" they agree with 
Scripture.
   "The people of the Secession of 1834 went back to the earlier 
understanding of subscription that dates at least from Dort, and that was 
subscription "because' they do fully agree with the teaching of the Word of 
God," said Zwaanstra. "That was early in our history our position and it 
remains substantially the same. One does not subscribe to the articles of 
faith "insofar as' they agree with Scripture but "because' they agree with 
Scripture."
   Zwaanstra said the Christian Reformed synod had periodically dealt with 
challenges to its position on subscription, most recently the Boer case 
cited by Woudstra. "He had some difficulties with some specific statements, 
and then eventually the synod said that this involved subscription to the 
articles of faith and not to the specific language of every detail in it 
because these are historically conditioned, and other things to that 
effect," said Zwaanstra. "It recognized that one does not subscribe 
necessarily to all the details and did not attempt to take the confessions 
out of their historical context, but we have always required subscription to 
the articles of faith, that is, what is affirmed in the various articles 
because they agree with Holy Scripture."
   Zwaanstra declined comment on the specifics of the Thornapple Valley 
overture until he could analyze it. "I'm not presently aware of 
dissatisfaction in the church with the Form of Subscription as it presently 
stands, but if there is an overture, there is evidently some concern with 
regard to the matter," said Zwaanstra.
   While strongly opposing the overture, Venema agreed with Woudstra that 
there are significant problems in the CRC with lack of knowledge of the 
confessions among the elders and deacons. "The solution to that problem is 
not to jettison the Form of Subscription but to do a better job of teaching, 
preaching and studying," said Venema. "You don't solve the problem by 
rejecting the confessions and subscription to the confessions."
   "The one outstanding argument for the overture is it would bring the 
denomination's practice into conformity with present reality. They are 
arguing that people would be forced to be hypocrites," said Venema. "If you 
wish to be, like myself, part of a confessionally Reformed communion of 
churches, the CRC is not the place."

Cross-References to Related Articles:
#1996-122:   Calvin Theological Seminary Terminates Pro-Gay Professor

Contact List:
Dr. David Engelhard, General Secretary, Christian Reformed Church in North 
America
   2850 Kalamazoo Ave. SE, Grand Rapids, MI  49560
   O: (616) 246-0744 * H: (616) 243-2418 * FAX: (616) 246-0834 * E-Mail: 
engelhad@crcna.org
Elder Cornelius Korhorn, Clerk, Princeton Christian Reformed Church
   c/o Princeton CRC, 5330 Kalamazoo Ave. SE, Kentwood, MI  49508
   H: (616) 878-7146 * E-Mail: princcrc@iserv.net
Dr. Cornelis Venema, Professor, Mid-America Reformed Seminary
   229 Seminary Dr., Dyer, IN  46311
   O: (219) 864-2400 * H: (219) 322-7568 * FAX: (219) 864-2410 * E-Mail: 
cornel@jorsm.com
Rev. Sierd Woudstra
   2929 Giddings SE, Kentwood, MI  49508-1429
   H: (616) 241-5129 




----------------------------------------------------------
file: /pub/resources/text/reformed/archive98: nr98-025.txt
(reformatted 5-6-98)
.