The OPC Embraces Explicit Egalitarianism — Rev. Mize & The Ordained Servant
“The Fatherhood of God is not an archetype of hierarchy but the source of communion. To imitate that Fatherhood is not to rule but to give life. The Church’s task therefore is not to restore a patriarchal system in the world but to embody the new humanity.”
Rev. Aaron Mize
Ordained Servant Magazine
Orthodox Presbyterian Church
Often the egalitarians and complementarians will insist that I Cor. 11 does not mean what it says;
I Corinthians 11:3 But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, and the head of the woman is man, and the head of Christ is God.
They will insist that the Greek word for head here (κεφαλὴ / kephalē) means “source” and not head. First, this interpretation was seldom if ever argued before the rise of feminism in the Church. Second, this Greek word is universally translated as “Head” in every other NT passage. Third, if we argue that this word means “source” then we run into the problem that Paul is saying that source of Christ is God and that in turn would run us into some major theological problems.
When we note that the head of Christ is God we remember that Christ is the title that our Savior held and in His role as the incarnated anointed one (Christ) God indeed was the head of Chris in the sense that we find in Phil. 2:5-8. The Son in his economic role as the incarnate Christ was always about the doing of the Father’s will, thus demonstrating the Father’s headship over Christ in his economic subordination.
This submitting of Christ to the Father during his economic subordination serves as the model for man’s submission to Christ and the woman’s submission to man. Christ’s economic subordination reflects the divine order and harmony within the Godhead, providing a pattern for human relationships.
So, Aaron Mize, in his written words above is in contradiction to the clear revelation of Scripture. Further, the OPC Ordained Servant inasmuch as it published this tripe is also in contradiction to the clear revelation of Scripture. Heads need to roll over this contradiction of Scripture.
What Mize and the OPC Ordained servant has given us with the opening quote is the affirmation of egalitarianism in its worst expression. Not only does Rev. Mize (we say “Rev.” only by way of courtesy) desire to jettison patriarchy, he even insists that hierarchy must be evacuated. Mize desires to give us a “new humanity,” as only envisioned by Albigensians, Cathars, Bogomils, Anabaptists, and Marxists.
By all that is Holy has the Conservative Reformed church fallen so far that it is now putting people in the pulpit, and further publishing them in denominational magazines wherein what is promoted is the very antithesis of Biblical Christianity?
Keep in mind dear reader, that what Mize has promoted here with the right hand in the Reformed Church is perfectly consistent with what is being promoted with the left hand in the Reformed Church as it continues its witch hunt to stamp out white Kinism. (Ironically enough, the Reformed church seems perfectly fine with Black, Korean, and Hmong Kinism.) The egalitarianism required to advance the bilge that Rev. Mize is advancing above is the same egalitarianism that is being championed to drum godly ministers out of the putatively conservative Reformed Churches. I guess the cynic could say; “Well, at least they are being consistent.”
They tell me that the Rev. Aaron Mize article, “In Defense of Union Not Patriarchy,” has been pulled from the OPC Ordained Servant website. clearly this is due to the heat that the effeminate Mize’s article created.
However, this does not mean that the OPC is out of the woods here.
1.) Mize wrote the article and hasn’t himself recanted/repented.
2.) Editors and/or Publishers let this article be published. They need to recant (preferably repent in ashes and dust).
3.) There needs to be an apology written in the Ordained Servant.
4.) Actually, people need to be brought up on charges here — (Mize and those who made the decision to run the article) unless their is a full throated repentance.
5.) Without a full throated repentance you can count on the fact that this kind of bilge will be repeated.
This is the practitioning of the Hegelian dialectic.
If the OPC doesn’t demand repentance … and if it doesn’t fire or bring up people on charges due to this article running, you can bet the farm that this article will return in some other form at a later date.
These people are not to be trusted.
Post-script
From Dan Brannan on the subject of this Mize article;
I think it was my session (in Idaho) that got the article pulled. Now people are mounting a case to have charges brought against Mize.
Nonetheless, I have told the session that …
Rebutting Darryl Gnostic Hart On His Attempted Rebuttal Of James Baird
“That Baird can call for a government powerful enough to promote the true religion, only five years after government ignored civil liberties to enforce public health, is well night amazing. And yet, the author does not appear bashful in calling upon government to implement the idea of the public good by a minority of the American people.”
Darryl Gnostic Hart
Ordained Servant Article
1.) Belgic Confession, Article 36 is against Hart and in favor of Baird here;
“Their (Magistrates) office is not only to have regard unto and watch for the welfare of the civil state, but also to protect the sacred ministry, that the kingdom of Christ may thus be promoted. They must therefore countenance the preaching of the Word of the gospel everywhere, that God may be honored and worshiped by every one, as He commands in His Word.”
Clearly, Baird is within Confessional bounds while Hart is not.
2.) Hart continues to operate under the fallacy that Governments and Magistrates can be neutral as if Governments and Magistrates can avoid using its power to be about the business of promoting some religion as the true religion. To be succinct, Governments and Magistrates never fail to promote some religion that the Governments and Magistrates believe to be the one true religion. Certainly Hart can’t miss how the US Government and it’s magistrates promote the true religion of humanism with its sodomy, Trannieism, abortion, etc.
Hart always, without fail, misses the fact that Governments can not be and never have been neutral. Hart is blind to the fact that Government always promotes the religion it considers to be the true religion. What Hart is upset about is that the Government/Magistrate might champion Biblical Christianity. He’s frightened to death of a return to blue laws, or the forbidding of sex education in Government schools, or that Christ might be allowed back into our current Government education.
3.) Hart, and the other R2K heretics, need to consider the simple truth that
a.) Governments make laws
b.) All laws are derivative of morality
c.) All morality is derivative of religion
d.) Therefore all Governments are powerful enough and by necessity do promote the Magistrate’s vision of the one true religion.
4.) The fact that our government ignored our civil liberties to enforce our public health only proves that we need Christian government since a Christian government would never have embraced the humanist agenda to control its population through a pseudo disease scare. So, Hart’s “proof” that the government reaction to the Scamdemic proves we don’t need Christian government, in point of fact proves just the opposite. That our pagan “government ignored civil liberties to enforce public health,” demonstrates that we need Christian government so that this kind of thing never happens again and it is well nigh amazing that anybody would contend to the contrary — especially someone who claims to be a Christian.
5.) Hart complains about the idea of Christians “calling upon government to implement the idea of the public good by a minority of the American people.”
a.) Keep in mind that if the public good is not crafted by a Christian government it will necessarily mean that the religious adherents of some other religion will be calling upon the government to implement the idea of the public good. Does Hart think that the idea of the public good just leaps out of the head of Zeus? Does the man not realize that the public good is always shaped by the adherents of some religion?
b.) Hart’s implicit insistence that the public good has to be supported by the will of the majority is nothing but Rousseau’s idea of the general will, which is nothing but pure humanism.
c.) Hart, by opposing explicitly Christian government, ends up championing for explicitly non-Christian government. Now, Hart will try to insist that he wants neither Christian nor non-Christian government but that takes us back to the myth of neutrality. No government exists that isn’t a derivative from and a reflection of some kind of religion.
Darryl Gnostic Hart, were we living in a sane world, would be told that he either needs to repent of abandoning the Kingship of Jesus Christ or else be excommunicated, but we no longer live in a sane ecclesiastical world and so Hart (who has said even more egregious non-Christian statements) will continue being printed in pagan publications that call themselves “Christian” such as the OPC’s Ordained Servant.
Dr. Rev. Mark Dever & His Fundamentalist Christianity
“I’m a fundamentalist Christian, but I am happy to have Muslims, Jews, liberal Christians and non-religious types in our government.”
For those who might not know, Dever started the 9Marks movement and was, in his day, what we used to call a “mover and shaker.” He’s not taken as some dimwit from Podunk, NY, though the above words testify to just the opposite.Where to start?
1.) Dever obviously isn’t smart enough to realize that there is no such thing as “non-religious” types. Of course there are those who claim to be non-religious but the claim and the reality are separated by a vast chasm.
2.) All Dever has told the reader with the above quote is that his “fundamentalism” is of a liberal variety. In other words Dever is a “Liberal fundamentalist.”
3.) Of course Dever is a Baptist and being Baptist the quote should not surprise us.
4.) Dever here communicates that he is for societal pluralism. Societal Pluralism is a nice way of saying “polytheism.” Dever, in the quote above states he is a polytheist. We wants to invite all the gods and their adherents into the public square.
5.) Although he doesn’t say it, we presume that Dever would also be fine with Biblical Christians being in the government. On the other hand he might not be, since a Biblical Christian would oppose “Muslims, Jews, liberal Christians and non-religious types in our government.”
6.) This Dever quote goes a long way towards proving my contention that “fundamentalist” is an inescapable category. Everyone you meet is a fundamentalist of one stripe or another. I am a Classical-Historical Calvinist fundamentalist. Illhan Omar and Zohar Mamdani are Muslim fundamentalists. Bibi Netanyahu, Bill Clinton, and Jeffrey Epstein were or are NWO fundamentalists. I never meet someone who is not a fundamentalist.
7.) However, Dever certainly is no fundamentalist Christian, though he may well be a “fundamentalist” “Christian.”
8.) Dever thinks he is being broad minded here but Dever’s statement really betrays a very narrow-minded approach. Dever is perfectly fine with any liberal system that embraces pluralism until someone shows up and says to Mr. Broadminded Dever … “Would you mind too terribly much including in your pluralism my view that abominates pluralism?” So, Dever is pluralistic just so long as what is not included in his pantheon of gods is a God who says, “Thou shalt have no other Gods before me.” At that point Dever’s pluralism ends. He owns the god who teaches that all gods in the public square is fine except for any God who says all other gods have to go.
9.) When it is the case that one has Muslims, Jews, Liberal Christians, and “non-religious types” in one and the same government where does one find the ultimate transcendent reference point needed to rule? I mean, all the gods of all these people oppose one another. Given that opposition what ground does the government operate upon in order to make law? The Bible? The Talmud? Sharia? Humanist Manifestos?
I don’t think Dever and other’s like him have thought this through.
10.) Rev. Dr. Dever is not a wise man — and that regardless of how many degrees he has behind his name.
From The Mailbag – Pastor, Where Are We Supposed To Attend On The Lord’s Day?
Dear Pastor,
You’ve made it clear that NAPARC, CREC, the “Ogden Boys,” and Apologia, among others, are “over the falls” as you recently put it (besides the last one being Baptists). The question I put to you is what would you have the people in the pews actually do, who do not and cannot live in Charlotte, Michigan? Where are they supposed to go on the Lord’s Day?
Lancelot
Hello Lancelot,
First, on this score, let us cite the Belgic Confession of Faith;
Article XXIX. The Marks of the True Church, and Wherein
it Differs from the False Church
We believe that we ought diligently and circumspectly to discern
from the Word of God which is the true Church, since all sects which
are in the world assume to themselves the name of the Church. But
we speak not here of hypocrites, who are mixed in the Church with
the good, yet are not of the Church, though externally in it; but we
say that the body and communion of the true Church must be
distinguished from all sects that call themselves the Church.
The marks by which the true Church is known are these: If the pure
doctrine of the gospel is preached therein; if it maintains the pure
administration of the sacraments as instituted by Christ; if church
discipline is exercised in chastening of sin; in short, if all things are
managed according to the pure Word of God, all things contrary
thereto rejected, and Jesus Christ acknowledged as the only Head of
the Church. Hereby the true Church may certainly be known, from
which no man has a right to separate himself.
My problem with the modern reformed “church” is that I am certain that where it is denouncing Kinism, and embracing egalitarianism it is at that point that the “pure doctrine of the gospel is not being preached therein.” No one would ever say that the Gnostics preached the pure doctrine of the Gospel, yet that is exactly what Egalitarianism is an expression. The current church, which disembodies man in regeneration/conversion by saying that God ordained distinctions are taken away in the Church is Gnostic. Ironically enough, it is also Marxist since the Marxists have forever been saying that their intent is to flatten all the distinctions among the nations. Is it possible for Gnostics and Marxists to give the pure doctrine of the gospel in the preaching and teaching?
Second, these denominations have anathematized themselves by anathematizing the race-realists. They have hurled their fatwas, Papal bulls, and anathemas repeatedly at the Biblical Christians. Should they expect that we who have been on the receiving end of their blasphemies now conclude anything else except that they are not true churches?
So, that sets the context for the question you ask and for the answer.
First, as to answering your question, if I were in the position of other folks around the country I would try to operate thusly,
1.) I would realize that not all congregations are equally bad. I would further realize that there might be yet congregations in these denominations that are positively good. If I were considering membership of a positively good one I would find out if that good congregation was sending money to the bad denomination and if that good congregation was sending money, I would attend there but I would not financially support the local congregation until it quit supporting the bad denomination. These denominations need to either repent or have their money source dried up.
2.) If there was a congregation that were not intolerable and if I had children, I might attend but I would not let the children go to Sunday School and I would make sure to debrief the children every week, as needs be, by asking them, in a kind of catechetical way, “So, what did we hear today from the pulpit that is not true?” Believe me, you could write hefty tomes’ on what is being said today by clergy that is not true.
3.) If there are no churches in your area that are at least tolerable (and I get phone calls from these people quite frequently) then I would start a home bible study and find good material. I would also, during that time together on the Lord’s Day, listen to one good sermon. (There are scads of them on line.) I would also designate my tithes and offerings to churches that are seeking to be faithful in a very difficult climate. Failing that, I would send tithes and offerings to para-Church organizations that you know and trust.
As a result of your home bible-study, it may be that God would be pleased to start a little church. If that is the direction that matters were heading I would find solid Elders in another church who could serve as kind of an umbrella for you in getting off the ground.
4.) What I would not do is continue to attend and support a ministry and church that is decidedly in opposition to my undoubted catholic Christian faith and worldview. These are not churches but are only referred to as churches by way of habit or courtesy.
Finally, please realize that in all this I doubtless have fault. My paradigm is likely tied too tightly and I see things and the implications of those things that will come to pass if what I see is not corrected. Seeing things that many others perhaps do not see probably tends to make me overly-critical. I like to tell myself in my more optimistic moments that the church in the West is probably not as bumfuzzled as I tend to think it is.
There remain good churches and clergy out there. I am friends/acquaintances with more than a few. A few actually serve in NAPARC and CREC churches for now. So, all is not lost.
I am deeply sorry that you are in this situation. I daily pray for repentance for the church in the West. I daily remind myself that though the wrong seems oft so strong, God is the ruler yet.
And I know that it is true of me as St. Paul said;
“This is a trustworthy saying, worthy of full acceptance, that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners – of whom I am chief.”