The Gospel of the Kingdom by Philip Mauro an Introduction
INTRODUCTION TO
THE
GOSPEL OF THE KINGDOM
With an
Examination
of
DISPENSATIONALISM
and the
"Scofield Bible"
by
Philip
Mauro
INTRODUCTION
Through an incident of recent occurrence I
was made aware of the extent--far greater than I had imagined--to
which the modern system of dispensationalism has found acceptance
amongst orthodox christians; and also of the extent
correspondingly great--to which the recently published "Scofield
Bible" (which is the main vehicle of the new system of doctrine
referred to) has usurped the place of authority that belongs to
God's Bible alone.
The incident alluded to above is what
prompted the writing of this book. For it awakened in my soul a
sense of responsibility to the people of God to give them, in
concise form, the results of the close examination I have been led
to make of this novel system of doctrine (
dispensationalism).
Let it be understood at the outset that my
controversy is solely with the doctrine itself; and not at all
with those who hold and teach it, or any of them. Indeed I was
myself one of their number for so long a time that I can but feel
a tender consideration, and a profound sympathy likewise, for all
such.
Moreover, as I said in another
place:
"It is obvious that, in a matter involving
truth of God so vital to His entire household, personal
considerations must needs be disregarded. I greatly regret having
to mention by name the "Scofield Reference Bible"; but that cannot
be avoided, inasmuch as it is unhappily the case that that
publication has been, and is, the chief agency for promulgating
the errors against which I feel called upon to protest. I deeply
regret having to bring any man's name into the discussion. But we
must deal with conditions as we find them. It is a matter of grief
to me that a book should exist wherein the corrupt words of mortal
man are printed on the same page with the holy Words of the living
God; this mixture of the precious and the vile being made an
article of sale, entitled a 'Bible,' and distinguished by a man's
name."
It is mortifying to remember that I not
only held and taught these novelties myself, but that I even
enjoyed a complacent sense of superiority because thereof, and
regarded with feelings of pity and contempt those who had not
received the "new light" and were unacquainted with this
up-to-date method of "rightly dividing the word of truth." For I
fully believed what an advertising circular says in presenting
"Twelve Reasons why you should use THE SCOFIELD REFERENCE BIBLE,"
namely, that:--
"First, the Scofield Bible outlines the
Scriptures from the standpoint of DISPENSATIONAL TRUTH, and there
can be no adequate understanding or rightly dividing of the Word
of God except from the standpoint of dispensational
truth."
What a slur is this upon the spiritual
understanding of the ten thousands of men, "mighty in the
Scriptures," whom God gave as teachers to His people during all
the Christian centuries before "dispensational truth" (or
dispensational error), was discovered! And what an affront to the
thousands of men of God of our own day, workmen that need not to
be ashamed, who have never accepted the newly invented system! Yet
I was among those who eagerly embraced it (upon human authority
solely, for there is none other) and who earnestly pressed it upon
my fellow Christians. Am deeply thankful, however, that the time
came (it was just ten years ago) when the inconsistencies and
self-contradictions of the system itself, and above all, the
impossibility of reconciling its main positions with the plain
statements of the Word of God, became so glaringly evident that I
could not do otherwise than renounce it.
At that time I was occupied almost
exclusively with the central doctrine of the system; a very
radical doctrine indeed concerning the supremely important subject
of the Kingdom of God, which our Lord and His fore runner
proclaimed as then "at hand," and which they both identified with
the era of the Holy Spirit.* [*John preached, saying, "Repent
Ye; for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand," and he announced the
coming of Christ, saying, "He shall baptize you with THE HOLY
GHOST" (Mat. 3:1,11). And Christ Himself taught a Jewish rabbi,
saying, "Except a man be born of water and of THE SPIRIT, he
cannot enter into the Kingdom of God" (John 3:5). Compare Paul's
definition of that Kingdom: "For the Kingdom of God is not meat
and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy, IN THE HOLY
GHOST" (Rom. 14:17).]
According to the new dispensationalism, our
Lord and John the Baptist were not proclaiming the near coming of
that "Kingdom of God" which actually be gan shortly thereafter
with the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost,
and which actually was then "at hand," but were announcing a
kingdom of earthly grandeur for which the carnally minded Jews and
their teachers were then (and are still) vainly looking; though
the earthly kingdom of Israel is not called in the Scriptures,
"the Kingdom of God," and though (as is now evident enough) it was
not "at hand" at all.
As I continued, however, to study this new
system of teaching in its various details, I found there were more
errors in it, and worse, than I had at first expected; and these,
as they became evident to me, I have attempted, by occasional
writings subsequently, to expose. The work, however, is not yet
finished; and hence the need for the present volume. Indeed, the
time is fully ripe for a thorough examination and frank exposure
of this new and subtle form of mod ernism that has been spreading
itself among those who have adopted the name "Fundamentalists."
For Evangelical Christianity must purge itself of this leaven of
dispensationalism ere it can display its former power and exert
its former influence.
Happily, however, there is a positive and
construc tive side to what I am now seeking to accomplish. For the
object is not merely to expose the errors of twentieth century
dispensationalism, but also and mainly to set forth the great, and
truly "fundamental," truths of Scripture which that system has,
for those who have received it, either completely obliterated or
at least greatly obscured.
Finally it is appropriate in these
introductory remarks to call attention (as I shall have occasion
to do once and again in the pages that follow) to the striking and
immensely significant fact that the entire system of
"dispensational teaching" is modernistic in the strictest sense;
for it first came into existence within the memory of persons now
living; and was altogether unknown even in their younger days. It
is more recent than Darwinism.
Think what it means that an elaborate,
ramified and comprehensive system, which embraces radical teach
ings concerning such vital subjects as the preaching and ministry
o[ Jesus Christ, the character and "dispensational place" of
the four Gospels, the nature and era of the Kingdom o[ God,
the Sermon on the Mount, the Gospel of the kingdom, and other
Bible topics of first importance, a system of doctrine that
contradicts what has been held and taught by every Christian ex
positor and every minister of Christ from the very be ginning of
the Christian era, should have suddenly made its appearance in the
latter part of the nineteenth century, and have been accepted by
many who are prominent amongst the most professedly orthodox
groups of Christians! it is an amazing phenomenon indeed. For the
fact is that dispensationalism is modernism. It is modernism,
moreover, of a very pernicious sort, such that it must have a
"Bible" of its own for the propagation of its peculiar doctrines,
since they are not in the Word of God. Ample proof of this will be
given in the pages that follow.
Nevertheless, what I now urge in view
thereof is only:--
First, that we have in these historical
facts a most cogent reason why we should, each for himself,
scrutinize this modern system most carefully in the light of
Scripture; and second, that the above stated fact, of the very
recent origin of the system, raises the presumption that
dispensationalism is not in accord with the truth of God, and is
not to be accepted except upon clear and ample proof.
In concluding these introductory remarks I
would point out that this modern system of "dispensational
teaching" is a cause of division and controversy be tween those
followers of Christ who ought to be, at this time of crisis,
solidly united against the mighty forces of unbelief and apostasy;
and further that it tends to bring the vital truth of our Lord's
second coming into discredit with many, because it associates that
great Bible doctrine with various speculative details for which no
scriptural support can be found.
Return to Table
of Contents for
Gospel of the
Kingdom
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