Note: Last Sunday (1.3.16) in our first Lord's Day of the month adult Bible study, we discussed the recent, much-discussed and controversial article from John Piper on guns and self-defense. I recorded the notes (below) from the discussion and posted them to sermonaudio.com (Listen here).
Who is John Piper?
Piper (b. 1946) is the former pastor of Bethlehem Baptist
Church (serving from 1980 to 2013), the Chancellor of Bethlehem College and
Seminary, and the founder of Desiring God ministries, all based in Minneapolis,
Minnesota.
Piper was a leader in revival of interest in “New Calvinism”
(Calvinistic soteriology) known for his passionate preaching style and for his
many books, including Desiring God: Meditations of a Christian Hedonist
(1986).
In his later years Piper has shown a tendency to veer into
controversial and unsafe territory. One
of his weakness, doctrinally speaking, is that he is not confessionally
Reformed. Another is his tendency to
lack discernment in his associations (e.g., He has invited men like Rick Warren
and Mark Driscoll to speak at his influential Shepherd’s Conferences for
pastors.). He is also a continuationist,
and he rejects the validity of the moral law (i.e., his views seem more in line
with New Covenant theology rather than classical covenant theology).
The recent
controversy:
There has been much political discussion in the country over
the issue of gun rights and gun control.
After the Islamic terrorist shooting in San Bernadino, Liberty
University President Jerry Falwell, Jr. urged Liberty students to consider
getting lawful permits to carry guns to protect themselves on campus if a
shooting should occur.
Piper then wrote his article on December 22, “Should Christians Be Encouraged to Arm Themselves?”
which has been much shared on social media and probably more vilified
than defended.
Note: This is not the
first time that Piper has stirred controversy on this issue.
Review and Response to
Piper’s Nine Considerations:
1. Paul called on Christians not to avenge
themselves but to leave this is the civil government.
He cites Paul’s emphasis on the ethic of love (Rom 12:17-21)
and submission to civil authority (Rom 13:1-4).
Response: Piper
wrongly judges the motives of Falwell and other Christians who choose lawfully
to own guns. Yes, it would be wrong to
form vigilante gangs or to take justice into one’s own hands as a citizen to
hunt down criminals. But there is a
difference between this and owning and using a gun according to the lawful
rules of the land.
2. Peter teaches that Christians will suffer
mistreatment.
Piper cites a number of passages on suffering from 1 Peter
(e.g., 4:16).
Response: Piper
misapplies passages having to do with Christian suffering due to state or
religious persecution and issues related to lawful self-defense.
3. Jesus taught that Christians would be opposed
but did not urge Christians to arm themselves.
Piper appeals to the teaching of Jesus about how Christians
should deal with persecution (cf. Matt 10:16-22).
Response: Piper again
misapplies passages having to do with Christians suffering state or synagogue
sponsored persecution to issues related to lawful self-defense.
Note: Surprisingly,
for a German trained NT PhD and veteran pastor, Piper shows weakness in
hermeneutics of these passages.
4. Jesus set the stage for Christian living by
refusing to advance the Christian cause with the sword.
Piper cites John 18:36 and Matthew 26:52 when Jesus disarmed
his disciples before his arrest.
Response: Piper
against falsely judges the motives of his opponents and wrongly applies
Biblical texts. Yes, it would be wrong
to attempt to convert persons at the end of a gun. Yes, Jesus told his disciples not to resist
his arrest, but this had more to do about his passive obedience to God’s design
for the cross than it did with setting up a universal practice of pacifism (a
concept which Piper apparently embraces).
5. Jesus taught that we should love our enemies
and not return evil for evil.
Piper here turns to the love of enemy and non-retaliation
passages in the Sermon on the Mount (cf. Matt 5:38-39, 44-45, etc.).
Note: The title of
Piper’s PhD dissertation was “Love Your Enemies.”
Response: The right
interpretation of the Sermon on the Mount has long been an issue in Christian
theology. There are those who are absolutists
(those in the so-called “Peace church”). Others see this as the bedrock for personal
Christian ethics which must be interpreted in light of other passages.
6. The early church in Acts suffered without
armed resistance.
Piper cites various
passages in Acts to this end.
Response: Again, Piper
misapplies passages about persecution to the issue of lawful bearing of arms.
7. When Jesus told the disciples to buy a sword
(Luke 22:36) he was not arming them.
Piper explains Luke 22:35-38.
Response: I agree that
the usage here is likely metaphorical (cf.
Matt 10:34), though some might argue that Jesus was urging his disciples
to be prepared. In the end, the context indicates
that Jesus was predicting division and persecution his disciples would experience
as his disciples. Again, this passage does
not really apply to the issue of lawful gun ownership.
8. Piper addresses the question, “Can I shoot my
wife’s assailant?”
Piper seems to argue that self-defense is ambiguous in the
NT. He cannot say he would defend his
wife or daughter if attacked. He even
suggests it might be wrong to call the police if one’s heart is not right.
Response: Piper’s
thinking here is muddled. Ecclesiastes
3:8 says that in this fallen world there is time for war and a time for peace. Jesus
did not teach absolute pacifism nor did the early Christians (cf. Christian
soldiers who were converted were not told to lay down their arms: Matthew 8 and Acts 10-11). There is a Biblical command to protect the
weak and defenseless (see Deuteronomy).
Jesus taught us to love our neighbor (cf. Mark 12:28-31), certainly this
would involve the basic concern of defending our neighbor’s life. Husbands are told to love their wives and to
be willing to lay down their lives for them (cf. Eph 5:25) and Christians, in
general, are told to provide especially for their family members. Compare:
1 Timothy 5:8 But if any provide not [verb:
pronoeo: to take thought for or to care for] for his
own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is
worse than an infidel.
In his 1983 essay “Who is For Peace?” Christian theologian
Francis Schaeffer wrote:
This is why I am not a
pacifist. Pacifism in this poor world in which we live –this lost world—means
that we desert the people who need our greatest help.
Let me illustrate: I am walking down the street and I come upon
a big, burly man beating a tiny tot to death—beating this little girl—beating
her—beating her. I plead with him to
stop. Suppose he refuses? What does love mean now? Love means that I stop him in any way I can,
including hitting him. To me this is not
only necessary for humanitarian reasons:
it is loyalty to Christ’s commands concerning Christian love in a fallen
world. What about that little girl? If I desert her to the bully, I have deserted
the true meaning of Christian love—responsibility for my neighbor. She, as well as he, is my neighbor.
9. Christian
hope is not in armed defense.
Finally, Piper
appeals to passages about Christian identity in the world.
Response: This is another misapplication. What does this have to do with this issue?
Conclusions:
1. Piper embraces a narrow pacifistic interpretation of the Sermon on the Mount.
2. Piper misapplies numerous
passages.
3. Christians should submit to
the civil authority.
4. Christians have a right to
lawful self-defense.
5. Ownership of guns is a matter
of liberty of individual Christian conscience.
6. Pastors and Christians leaders
should not seek to politicize such issues.
7. Churches might want to set prudential,
reasonable, and mutually agreed upon policies for dealing with guns.
2 comments:
This is a very good missive, Pastor Jeff. Even if I had to look a few words up, you delivered a sound fisking in a very reasonable manner.
Thanks MJ. If it's any consolation, I had to look up "fisking." Nice term to add to the vocab.
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