On Institutions
Affirming the prohibition of church support of institutions, Kyle Pope writes, “If there is no approved example of collective benevolence to non-Christians (or support of human institutions) in the NT, the same approach to biblical authority that leads us to mutually reject the instrument should lead us in unity to mutually rejecting these practices as additions, not expedients” (GA 35-36).1
Kyle seems to take the position that an “approved example” in scripture is required for biblical authorization, but where does this hermeneutical rule come from? Ascertaining the divine will involves more than just locating a specific account of action in the Bible. What about direct statements and necessary inferences? Instrumental accompaniment in Christian worship is unauthorized not only because there is no approved NT example; it further lacks any explicit or implied sanction. In the previous post we analyzed 2 Cor. 9:12-13 and Gal. 6:9-10, authorizing collective benevolence to non-Christians.
Kyle notes that the word koinōnia in 2 Cor. 9:13, variously rendered “sharing,” “contribution,” or “distribution,” is often translated “fellowship” and the same gift is described in the previous chapter as “the fellowship (koinōnia) of the ministering to the saints” (2 Cor. 8:4). Kyle then points out that the same word appears just two chapters earlier in 2 Cor. 6:14-15, and he reasons: “are we to conclude that Paul prohibits koinōnia with unbelievers, only to commend it three chapters later?” (GA 36).
Sadly Kyle has committed a blatant exegetical fallacy here by ignoring his own prefatory remark, “Certainly, context determines the meaning of any word …” If 2 Corinthians chap. 6 concerns individual behavior and chaps. 8–9 are about collective activity, would Kyle still want to make this comparison? In chap. 6 Paul is forbidding unholy alliances with the unbelieving world. Everything he contrasts with Christian values in vv. 14-16 is descriptive of the pagan environment of mid-1st-century Corinth from which believers are to be cognitively and behaviorally separated. The Corinthian saints are being reminded to make a complete break, not with all their associations in the world (cf. 1 Cor. 5:9-10; 7:13-14; 10:27; 14:23), but with their idolatrous and sinful past (cf. 1 Cor. 6:18; 10:7, 14).2 By the time we get to chaps. 8–9 of 2 Corinthians, Paul is addressing an entirely different topic, and it is baffling that the positive employment of koinōnia in these verses would be proscriptively interpreted according to an unrelated usage in an unrelated text.
If caring for widows is both an individual (family) and church obligation (1 Tim. 5:3-16) and constitutes, in part, “pure and undefiled religion before God” (Jas. 1:27a), would the same apply to orphan care (Jas. 1:27b) and other good works (2 Cor. 9:8; Heb. 13:21)? What about a Christian who is unable to provide adequate homecare for an aging widow but makes provision for her needs in a specialized geriatric institution? Has he fulfilled his family duty or is he religiously impure and defiled? Whether a good work is accomplished directly or indirectly, it is still accomplished. If funding a parachurch institution subverts God-given responsibilities or compromises congregational autonomy, it ought not be supported. Otherwise, each Christian and every self-governing church has the liberty to determine the most expedient ways to do the work God has commissioned us to do, including the employment of means.
On Cooperation
Based on the presupposition that an “approved example” in the Bible is necessary for biblical authorization and a practice is forbidden if it “is not demonstrated in Scripture,” Kyle maintains that the only authorized agency of supporting the work of the church is “sending direct …. directly supporting …. sending support directly …” (GA 38). So if funding is to be “direct,” how is this realistically accomplished? Relief aid was sent from the Antioch church by a pair of envoys (Acts 11:30); benevolence contributions were sent by multiple churches through congregational delegates (1 Cor. 16:3-4; 2 Cor. 8:19; Acts 20:4); missionary support was sent by a plurality of Macedonian churches via Christian emissaries (2 Cor. 11:7-9); congregational support from Philippi was sent to Paul by a church representative (Phil. 4:18). If these are the only approved examples of how church support can be transmitted, would all other channels be disallowed and considered additions to the biblical pattern?
Assuming we are not restricted to ancient modes of transportation used by 1st-century couriers, are modern-day churches bound by these “approved examples” of sending support by way of congregational delegates? Would the biblical pattern be violated by using banks, shipping companies, postal and delivery services, electronic transfers, et al.? Funds cannot be “sent directly” without some type of intermediary facilitation. Either we are bound by a particular method employed by 1st-century churches, or we are generally authorized to provide benevolent and missionary funding by practical expediencies that enable us to most effectively accomplish the work of the church.
While there are numerous accounts in the Bible of cooperation among autonomous congregations, how this cooperation is to be administered or coordinated is not specifically addressed. Paul sometimes received financial support from a plurality of churches (2 Cor. 11:8), sometimes from a single church (Phil. 4:16), and sometimes he supported himself (Acts 20:34), but no administrative pattern is prescribed. A congregation whose leadership accepts the responsibility of supporting a missionary or benevolent need by coordinating the funds contributed by other supporting churches provides an expedient way to manage funds in a cooperative effort without sacrificing congregational autonomy.
The Antioch church sent relief aid to help needy brethren in the region of Judea, and they sent it to “the elders” (Acts 11:30). This benevolent ministry was accomplished in the city of Jerusalem (Acts 12:25), and even though there appears to have been a plurality of congregations in Judea (9:31; 11:1; cf. 1 Thess. 2:14), only the Jerusalem church is specifically mentioned as having elders at the time (15:2-6, 22-23; 16:4; 21:17-18). It is at least plausible that the Jerusalem elders received the relief aid from Antioch and then dispersed it among the needy brethren (or congregations) in the region. This would not have violated congregational autonomy but would have simply been an expedient way to meet the needs of all the brethren concerned. The point is: the needy Judean Christians ultimately received the benevolent aid, irrespective of how it was administered or distributed.
Conclusion
It all comes down to the way the divine will, as revealed in scripture, is to be ascertained. If the Bible is viewed as a storehouse of proof-texts to be selected and arranged to bolster a set of beliefs, the danger is allowing little consideration of context and authorial intent. The traditional “command, example, necessary inference” methodology is helpful but is also subject to abuse if arbitrary rules are created, along with the binding of inferences that are not necessary, producing faulty conclusions and needless brotherhood divisions.
--Kevin L. Moore
Endnotes:
1 Kyle Pope and Doug Burleson, “Distinguishing Expedients from Additions: Opening Statements, Church Benevolence, Institutions, Cooperation,” GA 161:10 (Oct. 2019): 28-40; also Truth Magazine 10:63 (Oct. 2019): 22-34.
2 See K. L. Moore, “Unequally Yoked Together with Unbelievers,” Moore Perspective (17 Aug. 2016), <Link>; and “Have No Fellowship with the Unfruitful Works of Darkness,” Moore Perspective (28 Feb. 2018), <Link>.
Related Posts: Part 1: Church Benevolence, Individualism vs Collectivism, Eating in the Church Building (Part 1)
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