Love the Brotherhood

By Irven Lee

“Honor all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honor the king” (1 Peter 2:17). This collection of short sentences is full of advice that our generation needs. This verse has, no doubt, been urgently needed in all ages. Those who are least prepared to appreciate this wisdom often use the word “relevant.” To use their often repeated word, we could say that these short messages are relevant.

The children of God are brethren. They are heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ. How could any one find words to describe the blessedness of one who pleases God and is added to the church or family? For God to set one in this body is the greatest thing that can be done for that one. This is much more wonderful than it is to achieve political power or to accumulate wealth. Faithful children of God receive a hundredfold now in this life, with persecution, and in the world to come eternal life. Brethren, let these thoughts linger in grateful hearts.

The children of God on earth are in need of praying for forgiveness. They are sinners saved by grace, and they have no room to glory, save in the cross of Christ. God is willing to call them children, and Christ is willing to call them brethren, so they are the most highly blessed creatures on this earth. Love, mercy, grace, and forgiveness are needed to explain this acceptance from deity. Men do not attain this relationship by merit, but in obeying the truth they walk in the light and the blood of Christ cleanses them from all unrighteousness.

If the Lord is willing to accept this great brotherhood, surely each disciple should be willing to accept all other children of God. We should all learn to be lovers of good men. The color of the skin, the degree of education or social status, and other such things do not count. There should be fervent love shown because this is a mark of this discipleship. The man who does not love the brethren is not God’s son. He is not one of this great brotherhood.

The brotherhood is made up of people who have received love, mercy, grace, and forgiveness, so they must show this same spirit toward each other. Slander, envy, bitterness, and self-will are so very inappropriate in this family of God. Let us remember this week after week, month after month, and year after year. Remember that Christ said: “Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.” It seems evident that some who want to be in that number must forget at times.

The brotherhood is the universal church over which Christ is head. We may have great joy and consolation in hearing of the faith and love of a brother even if he is overseas. The saints who meet at one place regularly may be touched by the needs of brethren in other areas, and rejoice in their accomplishments. Our view is such too narrow if we are interested only in our congregation.” Is it not a sad state of affairs when the disciples in a given community forget the brotherhood, having no interest beyond the imaginary line a few miles or a few blocks from their meeting house?

We are to “love the brotherhood,” but we are not to seek to activate it under some human agency so that we can do “big things.” The servants of God are the salt of the earth, but the Lord does not want His salt in a big lump. It seems that in the different centuries it has been very difficult for men in the church to be great by being servants of all, rather than by creating chief seats where they may sit. Men began this mystery of iniquity before the apostles died, and the digression continued until the “brotherhood” was activated as a body with a government almost exactly like that of the old pagan Roman Empire, but when it was thus activated it was an apostate church. Christ had, no doubt, removed the candlestick. Similar digressions in the direction of an activated brotherhood have filled and are filling the church history books. Men forget that the Bible authorizes no unit larger than the local church as a working unit under overseers. Very much of the work authorized by God is assigned to the individual. We are to be judged as individuals, even in worship, even though we are to assemble for public worship.

We are to love the brotherhood so much that we would not condone men from among us who would speak perverse things and draw away disciples after them. We are to love the brotherhood so much that we would dispute daily in the school of Tyrannus or in any other place in earnestly contending for the faith. Would any one doubt that Paul had the proper love when he withstood Peter who was to be blamed because be caused some to be carried away in a dissimulation? People who would divide this spiritual body for which Christ died should be marked, avoided, rejected, and purged out as old leaven. Love for this brotherhood can furnish the motivating power for one’s wrestling against wickedness in high places, warring a good warfare, or fighting a good fight, as good soldiers of Christ.

Some parents say they love their children too much to chasten them. They are wrong in this remark. He that spareth the rod hateth his son. People who say, “Peace, peace, where there is no peace” are hindering those who are set for the defense of the gospel. “Love the Brotherhood.” Do not harm it seriously by defending the factious man who is subverted and sinneth, being condemned already.

TRUTH MAGAZINE XVII: 46, pp. 12-13
September 27, 1973

How Successful Is Ketchersidean Subversion? (III)

By James W. Adams

Replies from the Gospel Guardian scribes who have been the object of criticism by Truth Magazine writers relative to their stance in the Ketcherside fellowship movement via personal letters and articles attribute motives to us which touch just about every rung of the ladder of the ulterior. All of this is done, of course, with an air of great piety and humility. The charges run the gamut from the carnal desire to play Pope to the mercenary ambition to build book business at the expense of other human establishments involved in the same endeavor and operated by brethren. I am solemnly informed by one scribe, young enough to be my son, that I am being used (misused would be a better word) by my colleagues. He evidently thinks better of my ethics than he does of theirs but considerably less of my intelligence. Their least offensive appraisal of our efforts seems to be that we are much like a small pack of Southwest Texas coyotes howling at the moon-the analogy is mine but is suggested by their published statements regarding the Ketcherside fellowship movement and its influence among conservatives. I closed my last article in the midst of a discussion of the Gospel Guardian’s reaction to my criticism of the actions and writings of Brother Edward Fudge relative to this matter. I was discussing “Fudge and Ketchersideism. I should like to continue this discussion by noticing some past history.

Facts from the Past

Attention is directed to some facts from the past, which vindicates our concern relative to Brother Fudge’s attitude toward the Ketchersidean concept of “fellowship.” I mentioned in previous article information given to me by a former classmate of Brother Fudge relative to Fudge’s introduction of Ketcherside and his doctrine to Florida College students. Fudge has written me a rather lengthy personal letter in which he denies certain aspects of this matter. He says he was not selling Bibles in St. Louis, that he visited Ketcherside for ten minutes, that he was not enamored of any man as a man (This was not my charge; I said, “enamored of his views.”), that he distributed a bundle of Mission Messengers with the permission of Brother Homer Hailey, the sponsor of the Sower’s Club of which he (Fudge) was president, and that this was done so that both sides could be heard just as The Preceptor and Truth Magazine were distributed to preacher students.

Let us look at these particulars carefully. It is immaterial as to whether Fudge was or was not “selling Bibles” in St. Louis between college sessions; he was there on some kind of business connected with publishing or selling literature. How long he visited with Ketcherside I do not know nor did I say nor my informant. He was there long enough to become greatly impressed with Ketcherside’s “brotherly spirit,” long enough for Ketcherside to get his name and later mail him a bundle of Mission Messengers for distribution to preacher students, long enough to be impressed to the extent of desiring to distribute the Mission Messenger’s propaganda and gaining permission to do so, long enough to argue in support of some of Ketcherside’s erroneous positions with fellow students at Florida College. It should be emphasized that my informant’s name has been given to Fudge with my informant’s full permission, even insistence. He is in correspondence with Fudge, and as usual, Fudge is quibbling and equivocating.

Relative to the distribution of Mission Messengers at Florida College so that “both sides could be heard,” the fact is there was no controversy at that time with or concerning Ketcherside being carried either in The Preceptor or Truth Magazine, so the reason given for the distribution of the papers is without validity. Fudge probably supposes that the invocation of Brother Hailey’s name may exonerate him. It is not germane to this matter to discuss the judgment of Brother Hailey in permitting this distribution, if indeed he did. I can say only that no publication carrying as its principal feature the pernicious error characteristic of Mission Messenger would be distributed to immature preacher students in any situation in which I was in control and for which I would be held responsible unless they were at the same time provided with material carrying a complete refutation of the error which it contained in all its parts, or unless I saw that the students were completely insulated against the error by a personal exposure and refutation of it. The success of Ketcherside in subverting Florida College students is the only vindication I need for such a point of view. This is not to be understood as a criticism of Brother Hailey. It is simply a statement of my personal convictions. I love and respect Brother Hailey as much as Fudge could ever do so. I know him to be completely opposed to all Ketcberside stands for in regard to the “fellowship” question, for we have discussed it at great length. I know that He has advised Fudge to take time to mellow and establish himself before becoming so vocal – that such advice was badly needed is demonstrated by the spectacle of a man not yet thirty writing commentaries or workbook commentaries on Romans, Galatians, and Hebrews to say nothing of a full revelation of the “truth” to misguided and “legalistic” brethren on “the grace of God.”

Another fact from the past has to do with the division and loss of the University congregation in the city of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The facts are these: (1) Fudge conducted a meeting with this church in 1969 in which he preached on the subject of “Unity.” In this lesson, he advocated fellowshipping so-called “liberal” brethren and criticized those who would not. This antagonized faithful members of that church. (2) The local preacher, Brother Jerry Phillips, took the Fudge point of view and began to announce the meetings of the so-called “liberal” churches and to call on their preachers for prayer over the protests of faithful brethren in the congregation. (3) This resulted ultimately in driving the faithful brethren from the congregation and the congregation itself reversing its stand on church support of human institutions and sponsoring churches as well as church-sponsored recreation etc. This reversal occurred after Jerry Phillips had moved from Baton Rouge. Officially, the change of position took place November 10, 1970. (4) Fudge returned to this church for a second meeting June 20-24, 1971 (5) Previous to this return, January 4, 1971 Fudge wrote a letter to the congregation sympathizing with them because they had been the subject of attacks by faithful brethren for the action just described. Space will not permit the inclusion of Fudge’s entire letter in this article, but it can and will be done if necessary. Among other things, he wrote the following: “You know from my preaching there and conversations with you that I do not believe it best honors the Lord for congregations to get involved with institutions of any sort. I think His work is accomplished in the simple working of individuals and independent congregations of His people. I urge this course whenever I have the opportunity, in the most appropriate and timely manner I know for each case. At the same time, we are saved ones because of God’s grace to us in His Son, and we are accepted by Him ‘in the beloved!’ Not because we know it all, or do it all right!” (Emphasis mine. JWA) Ketcherside could not have said it better. This is Ketcherside’s “unity in diversity” concept stated exactly as Ketcherside states it again and again. In addition, it should be noted that Fudge says, “best honors the Lord.” This puts the matter in the realm of human judgment. It is not with Fudge a matter of right or wrong, truth or error. It is a matter of what is best. If I remember my grammar, best is the superlative degree of good. It is good, better, best. According to Fudge, for a church to function through a human institution in benevolence or evangelism would be good. Not to do it would be best. Fudge conducted the meeting concerning which he wrote and is said by reliable persons to have done no public teaching whatever on the issues inherent in the division and subsequent change of position of the congregation. (6) Between Fudge’s letter to University Church and the time of his meeting, the two liberal preachers of University heard Ketcherside at Abilene along with another member of the congregation who was most active in forcing faithful brethren out of the congregation and siding with Fudge and Phillips in their unity and fellowship concepts. This member upon returning from Abilene wrote Ketcherside a glowing letter of tribute and appreciation for his spirit and views and indicated that the two preachers were cooperating with a preacher of a Christian Church on the same basis as with so-called “liberal” brethren. (7) Into this sort of situation, Fudge went and preached and did nothing about it. All of this can be documented. In fact, I have such documentation in my files – photocopies of all letters, bulletins, and a written account of the whole matter by a man who was there and who is of unimpeachable veracity, personally known to me for many years.

Fudge’s attitude seems best summed up by a statement from his own pen. It is the closing paragraph of an article which be wrote on the subject: “Christian Unity: 1 Cor. 1:10ff.” It is of interest and certainly pertinent to note that this article was sent to me by one of the young men I have previously mentioned who is all but lost to the cause of truth by reason of his acceptance of Ketchersidean concepts and who places great confidence in the writings of Edward Fudge. The paragraph follows:

And it should be remembered that it is a party spirit (factiousness) that causes division-not issues. Issues are simply the occasion for Jactious-minded men to demonstrate their party spirit. Or, to look at it from another viewpoint, for men who have the mind of Christ to show that, in Christ, they can differ without tearing the body into shreds.

Ketcherside never made a ranker nor more prejudicial statement than this, nor one that is more fallacious. Fudge unreservedly affirms that no division ever occurs because of an issue but always because of the party spirit. If an issue, a real issue, arises which involves vital Bible truth and which cannot be resolved, Fudge’s position is that the faithful cannot separate themselves from the unfaithful without demonstrating the party spirit. Does anyone wonder then why we raise a question concerning the position of the Gospel Guardian with an associate editor with such convictions and with such a history of their practical application, particularly when the company which owns the Gospel Guardian is controlled by him and members of his family?

I respect and admire the ability, educational achievements, and high moral character of Brother Edward Fudge. I love him as a brother in the Lord and seek to do him well, not ill. My criticisms are for his good and in the interest of the peace and security of God’s people. I do not wish to attribute to him any position he does not hold, but he needs to clarify his positions so that all may know where he stands without question. I am not trying to “line him up” with anything. I believe brethren have a right to know what we may expect of him and the Gospel Guardian and I am convinced he has an obligation to help rescue young preachers from their Ketchersidean delusions and to save others from them because he has been a strong influence in leading them to their present conclusions and in creating the situation which now obtains. To put it plainly, he has helped put them where they are!

Re: Randall Mark Trainer

Elsewhere in this issue of Truth Magazine will be found a short statement by Brother Randall Mark Trainer entitled “Having Trouble Over Baptism?” I am most happy for our brother to be given this opportunity to reply to a statement I made concerning him in the June 14, 1973 issue of this magazine. It is not my purpose to misrepresent any person’s past or present position about anything. I wrote: “He admits in private discussions with friends that, baptism gives him trouble.’ ” Brother Trainer says, “This charge is untrue, misleading, and damaging to my personal reputation, and I hereby request a retraction from brother Adams and Truth Magazine. ” He says further, “I believe (and have always believed) that baptism (immersion in water) is necessary for the forgiveness of sins.”

I will number my replies to Brother Trainer for the sake of order: (1) My information came from a college classmate of Brother Trainer at Florida College who beard Trainer discuss this subject on more than one occasion. He was not trying to hurt Trainer in any way. We were discussing a lengthy dissertation which Trainer had written and sent to Brother Lindy McDaniel on the subject of “Salvation by Grace.” I suggested that Trainer’s views as therein expressed were contradictory of his belief in the essentiality of baptism. In this connection, my informant said that he had heard Trainer admit that baptism gave him trouble. (2) I did not accuse Trainer of not believing baptism to be “necessary for the forgiveness of sins.” I merely said he admitted it gave him trouble.

(3) Trainer denies ever having made such a statement and demands a retraction. This reduces the matter to a question of memory and veracity. My informant has an excellent memory and an impeccable reputation for veracity. I choose to believe what he told me, but happily acquiesce in extending to Brother Trainer the opportunity and space to deny it in the same medium in which the report was given. My reasons for choosing to believe my informant rather than Trainer follow:

First, my informant is, in my judgment, more reliable spiritually than is Trainer. While attending college at Abilene Christian College, Trainer worshipped most of the time with a so called “liberal” congregation when there were two “conservative” groups of Christians meeting regularly in that city (Abilene, Texas). Following this, Trainer lived for a time in Austin, Texas. While there, he worshipped with “liberal” groups rather than with either of the two faithful and respectable “conservative” groups in that city. My informant, on the other hand, consistently takes his stand with “conservative” brethren wherever he is!

Second, in Trainer’s letter to Lindy McDaniel on “salvation by grace” (a photocopy of which I have in my files), he takes positions, which indicate beyond question that “baptism” does indeed “give him trouble. ” He says:

The Christian does not obey the law of Christ in order to be justified or saved . . . If we do not obey in order to be saved, why do we obey? We obey because the faith, which has already saved us necessarily, implies that we will want to obey Christ’s law the best we can.

Now, try to harmonize that statement with the one, which follows. I promise you that it will take some doing.

Rom. 10: 9 teaches that a part of the faith which is necessary to salvation is the conviction that “Jesus is Lord. ” To recognize a person as one’s lord means to recognize that he now controls one’s life authoritatively. To refuse to obey a lord is tantamount to repudiation of his lordship . . . You might call him lord, but you do not really believe it unless you do the things which he says (Lk. 6:46) … The moment a Christian stops believing in the lordship of Christ over his life, with all its ramifications, he no longer has saving faith, and is therefore no longer saved.

In these statements, Trainer, in effect, says that obedience is not in order to be saved, but if you do not obey you will not be saved. This is a palpable contradiction. It makes no sense whatsoever. To circumvent his difficulties, Trainer attempts to equate faith with obedience. Faith is not obedience except in the sense of being a response to the command of our Lord to believe. Faith itself is simply the belief of testimony. Obedience is the submission of the will of one person to the will of another person, whom he recognizes as possessing authority, by compliance with his expressed mandates. Webster says, “Obedient implies compliance with the demands or requests of one in authority” (New Collegiate Dictionary, Second Edition, p. 579).

It is not denied that the terms faith, believe, believeth, believed, and believer are sometimes used generically – a figurative use (synecdoche, a part for the whole), to include in their meaning obedience to the will of Christ; i.e., a baptized believer living in faithfulness to Christ. It is denied that the term faith of necessity includes obedience in its meaning. The “chief rulers believed” but refused to “confess” Jesus because of fear and perhaps greed (John 12:42), and Trainer to the contrary notwithstanding, there is nothing to indicate they had “demon’s faith.” Paul clearly affirms that “faith works by love” (Gal. 5:6) and that such faith “avails.” This is not sola fide (faith alone) as Trainer so learnedly states it. This faith plus love and works.

Is baptism a part of the law of Christ? Is being baptized obedience to the law of Christ? Is it obedience to Christ? Is baptism essential to forgiveness of sins, salvation, justification? If so, then one has to obey the law of Christ in being baptized in order to be saved. How then can Trainer logically maintain his position that obedience to the law of Christ is not in order to be saved and at the same time, baptism not give him trouble? I have never read a greater “mess” of contradictions than Trainer’s letter to McDaniel. As confused as he is, how can he expect me to “retract” my statement concerning “baptism giving him trouble?”

A competent Baptist debater would turn Trainer inside out and hang his tender hide on a barbed wire fence to dry before he would have time to scholarly declaim, “Sola fide equals baptistheto eis aphesin ton hamartion.” Reverently but fervently I pray, Lord, deliver us from neophyte scholars who do not know that is what they are! If this does not satisfy Brother Trainer, and he desires for me to do a complete review of his letter to Lindy McDaniel, I will be happy to oblige him. In addition, I will be quite happy to affirm with any competent and respectable respondent of more maturity (orally or in writing), who cares to champion the cause of our precocious neophytes and who presently is only growling in the underbrush, that salvation is not sola anything, Christus, gratia, or fide, and that salvation sola anything is not only unscriptural but arrant nonsense. Just name the place and time, Brother.

Trainer also says in his letter to McDaniel, “I am really thankful for my beloved teachers at Florida College who so patiently hammered sola fide into my head.” While we are on the subject of veracity, if Brother Trainer will pardon my skepticism, I must tell him I do not believe a word of that statement relating to Florida College teachers. I call upon him to name the teacher or “retract” his statement. I categorically deny that there is a single teacher at Florida College who teaches salvation by faith alone. Faith alone is faith sans anything, baptism or anything else. If Jesus requires a single thing other than faith in order for a man to be saved, his salvation is not by faith alone, and no amount of double-talk can make it otherwise.

(5) To demonstrate further that baptism does indeed give Trainer trouble, note the following from his pen in the Lindy McDaniel letter:

… the Bible doctrine of baptism is so multifaceted, I cannot discuss it here. Suffice it to say that baptism appears to be a unique sort of action, since it is the only external act which the Bible requires for salvation. Of course, baptism is only a ramification of Paul’s concept of faith. God recognizes saving faith as complete when a person is baptized; baptism is the way God has appointed for man to make his initial response (if faith, and as far as we know, He will have it no other way. I can’t really say that I understand all there is to this, but the Scripture is very plain, and I must believe and teach it. At any rate, baptism is not presented as just another element of the law of God which one obeys in order to be self-justified, i.e., it is not a “work of law.”

Trainer injects such statements as “self justified” and “work of law” to prejudice and confuse. Informed brethren do not teach “self justification,” the necessity of perfect compliance with Divine law in order to salvation, nor salvation by works of merit. These are figments of Trainer’s imagination, Trainer styles baptism as the “only external act” essential to salvation. While we agree that this is true relative to one’s initial enjoyment of remission of sins, this is not true relative to eternal salvation in the world to come. What about prayer, singing, giving, and partaking of the Lord’s Supper? Can one go to heaven and do none of these things? They are “external acts.” One’s “initial response of faith” is no more important than his continuing response of faith relative to ultimate and eternal salvation. When Trainer styles baptism as “appearing to be a sort of unique action,” he thereby admits that baptism gives him trouble, so in what sense has he been misrepresented? All of this double-talk, this affectation of scholarship, and this assumption of deep spiritual insight into salvation by grace on the part of these young men give me a deep-seated pain which I cannot exactly locate, and may I add, with no desire to be gross or indelicate, which might be too embarrassing to describe in print if I could locate it!

TRUTH MAGAZINE XVII: 46, pp. 3-8
September 27, 1973

Having Trouble Over Baptism?

By Randall Mark

On page 9 of the June 14, 1973 issue of Truth Magazine, brother James W. Adams wrote concerning me, “He admits in private discussions with friends that ‘baptism gives him trouble.’ ” This charge is untrue, misleading, and damaging to my personal reputation, and I hereby request a retraction from brother Adams and Truth Magazine.

The only trouble I am having over baptism is the circulation and publication of this false rumor. The unnamed friends who allege that I have been admitting this to them need to publicly identify themselves and substantiate their statements with the time, place, and context of the discussions. In case they honestly misunderstood or forgot something I may have said, I hope these friends will talk to me first.

I believe (and have always believed) that baptism (immersion in water) is necessary for the forgiveness of sins. I have no more difficulty reconciling this conviction with the biblical doctrine of salvation by grace through faith than did Peter and Paul (Peter 1.3-9; 3:21; Ephesians 2.8-9; 5.25-26). If brother Adams had contacted me concerning my convictions on baptism, I would have told him so.

If anyone is truly concerned to know or discuss my understanding of baptism, they may obtain their information first-hand by addressing me at 199 Bridge St., S. Hamilton, Massachusetts 01982 or calling me at 617-774-8539.

TRUTH MAGAZINE XVII: 46, p. 2
September 27, 1973

An Introduction in Personal Form to the Reader

By Ron Halbrook

9-Year History of Unsoundness

To understand the background to “An Appeal In Love: Clarify Please,” our readers need to understand the unsound history of a brother. When brother Ed Fudge and I were in school together from 1964-66, he was not grounded in the faith. For instance, he not only introduced me to the writings of Carl Ketcherside, he was very impressed by the writings of this digressive. I realize that recently he has written that he passed out many religious papers while at Florida College and that this did not mean he endorsed all that was in those papers. But, it was a generally known fact among young men like myself that Ed was not only passing out Ketcherside literature, he was in fact very impressed with such material. In spite of Ed’s recent effort to play this down, I can get written statements from other young men who were there at school which would prove this. It was not only because of the literature Ed passed out that it was generally known that he was impressed with Ketcherside, it was also known because of discussions held with Ed by young men at that time. Ed and I were friends at that time and have continued to be since then; neither I nor the other young men referred to have the least motive to misrepresent Ed on this matter of his being very much impressed by and under the influence of digressive Ketcherside. I’m not saying Ed has followed Keteberside 1007o. I don’t know every origin of his false concepts, but I do know (1) what his concepts are and (2) that they are unscriptural.

At various times since school days, Ed and I have discussed such matters as unity and fellowship, instrumental music, institutionalism, denominationalism, etc. He has not shown himself to be sound and scriptural on these subjects. Of course, he will have some good things to say, but before it is over he always shows his unsound and unscriptural concepts. For instance, all through these years since school, Ed has believed that whereas it is better not to use the instrument in worship, it is not a sin to use it. He told me himself that all through the summer of 1965, brother Leonard Tyler tried to get him to say that the instrument was sinful, but Ed told me he never would say that. Ed feels, and has felt during this time period since school, the same way about institutionalism. He thinks we do not have the right to label institutionalism “sin,” and that if we do; we are guilty of creating our own little sect. Of course, at the same time, he says he will not contribute to the institutions and will not teach churches to do so; but he believes churches that practice such have not gone into sin and apostasy.

To bring this up to date, Ed and I have discussed these matters since he has moved to Athens, Ala. He is just as unsound on these matters as I have always known him to be in school and since school. He has not changed; he is, so far as I can tell, no closer to teaching sound doctrine on these matters than he ever was. You will read the positions he has held and still holds in the following series of articles.

If he has been unsound all this time, and it has been known to others and evidenced in public writing, you may wonder why he has not been publicly opposed sooner. There are two reasons why I have waited and why others have told me they have delayed. (1) The very name Fudge has been equated with soundness because of the good work brother Bennie Lee did through the years in saving Limestone County from institutionalism. It just does not seem possible that his oldest son would hold and teach unscriptural concepts. So, partly out of respect for the good name of Bennie Lee and out of trust that some way Ed would eventually show the faith of his father, we have delayed ‘ (2) Brethren, like myself, have loved Ed and not wanted to do anything to hurt him. We have wanted to be patient. Many who have been concerned for Ed have generally felt he would give up these ideas if given time.

Why have I decided to no longer delay publicly exposing and opposing Ed’s unsound ideas? (1) His unsoundness now has a history of at least nine years; I know from personal discussion with him as late as mid-July that he has not changed and is not changing. (2) The unsound writing he has done has definitely encouraged some young preachers to drift from the old paths; the longer we let it go, the more he will influence in this way. (3) The particular kind of teaching he has done is spreading, not only because of him, but also because of others who teach similar ideas. These errors need to be exposed and answered, or we will have another major apostasy. (4) The positions he holds definitely undermine Bible authority, as you will see when you read them. This is proven also by the fact that some of the young preachers who have admired him and circulated his writings have left the absolute authority of the Bible. (5) The history of digression teaches that many brethren are deceived and churches lost because those with the truth have often sat idle while error took the initiative. If Ed can’t be turned from error, others can be saved from ever falling into it if those who have the truth will take some public initiative in teaching on these matters. (6) Being quiet (as far as public discussion) has not helped Ed; maybe enough public exposure will bring him to see the seriousness of what he has been teaching. (7) Responsibilities accompany love for Ed, for God, for truth, and for other brethren. My love for and responsibility to Ed cannot become an excuse for failing in love and responsibility involving God, truth, and others. (8) My conscience won’t let me rest without doing what little I can to expose this error. I must answer to God (Tit. 1:13-14; 2 Tim. 4:1-5). A gospel preacher cannot be clear from the blood of all men unless he declares “all the counsel of God,” including God’s counsel on dangerous errors that arise (Acts 20:27).

A Meeting With Brother Fudge

The decision to deal with these matters publicly has not occurred behind Ed’s back. He was the very first to read the completed article. We sat together at a table to ourselves in the little restaurant across from the Athens Hospital; he read every single line and we discussed it page by page. I pled with him at that time (July 18, 1973), to realize that the article is constructed in such a way that he could clear up all question by showing in written articles that he never intended to say the things I quoted him as saying, or by saying he no longer held such views. He told me the article would not clear up his name because he could only write that he did indeed believe the things I quoted from him. He said that he hoped I would not publish the article i.e., though he is not willing to retract his unscriptural views, he does not want anyone to publicly oppose what he has publicly written. I told him I could not comply with his desire, but that I would change anything in the article that he thought was ugly. He told me there was nothing ugly in it. Next, I told him I would change anything in the article that misquoted or misrepresented him. He said there was no mis-quotation. Then, I also told him I would consider any other suggestion he wanted to make on the wording of the article; the few minor suggestions he made were incorporated, though it did not change the actual meaning of anything. The only other thing he said was that even though I quoted him correctly, he felt my article would leave the wrong impression about him; in my judgment, that just means he knows a lot of people aren’t going to like it when they see what he actually believes. It is time to expose, answer, and oppose his false teaching. He knows that is the decision I have made.

In the course of our discussion and in the article itself, I asked Ed if he believes the instrument is sinful. He answered plainly, “No. ” So, he believes what he always has on such matters, if you can ever nail him down. I wonder if he will put his answer in print, so all the brethren can see what he really meant by some of the things he has written.

Origin of Article

Next, a word of background is in order on how the following article (or series) came into existence. Let me make plain that Truth Magazine did not solicit the article from me; I submitted it to them. The article does not represent some sort of attempt to “get on the bandwagon” simply because Truth has been publishing similar material recently. My article is an independent study; the first manuscript draft, in typed form, was complete before Ed Fudge’s name was ever mentioned in Truth.

I have been noticing and laying aside unsound material written by Ed Fudge since about 1968. As it piled up, with no evidence of a change, I became convinced that the matter needed to be dealt with. In the summer of 1972, the idea of writing an appeal to Ed began to take shape in my mind. I began extensive research in the fall of 1972, reviewing my own position and Ed’s on some fundamental principles of New Testament Christianity. The first completed copy of the first draft was finished in the spring of 1973, and a second, more thoroughly documented form in mid-July.

While shaping the idea and doing the writing, I consulted with many brethren-on scriptures, proper attitude, the need of such an article, and other related matters where the need of mature advice was keenly felt. Some of these men knew when I consulted them that I was writing the article; from some, suggestions were sought on passages or concepts without my stopping to explain why I was asking. These men include Homer Hailey, William Wallace, Lynn Headrick, Paul Earnhart, Frank Puckett, Melvin Curry, Ed Harrell, Sewell Hall, Gene Frost, David Tant, Irvin Lee, Bob Crawley, Granville and Leonard Tyler, Frank Smith, and at least half a dozen more of the same caliber. They don’t assume responsibility for anything in the article, nor can they be relied on to prove the article is scriptural-only the Bible can do that! My point is this: the article was produced absolutely independent of the recent efforts of Truth Magazine.

Once finished in mid-July, the article went directly into Ed’s hands, for suggestions from and discussion with him. I apologized to him for not having the final product ready in time for print before his name was mentioned in Truth. He might have been able to clarify matters and clear his name, thus avoiding its mention, if the article had been printed in time. He said for me not to worry about that angle; any response he might make to the article would not do much to clear his name because he would not renounce the positions attributed to him by the article.

Why In Truth, Not Guardian?

Since the article contains a reference to being offered to the Gospel Guardian, we need to explain why it is appearing in Truth Magazine.

About May or June of 1972, I told brother William Wallace that I might want to write some material dealing with Ed directly at some point, but not yet. I did want to start writing for the Guardian some, dealing mostly with some of the issues involved in the type of teaching Ed and others had done. He agreed to consider whatever was submitted. All that was submitted was graciously printed, often in an amazingly short time, occasionally after advising a small change. He was concerned with helping Ed and others, but agreed it might not be time to mention his name. Brother Wallace never discouraged writing an article that named Ed, if handled in the proper spirit. After seeing the spring (1973) draft of the article, he thought something of the kind might help bring Ed out into the open, if there was more “sufficient documentation.” He felt, as I did, that such a public effort might “help him,” if conducted in a proper spirit.

His wise suggestion on more careful documentation was taken to heart. I spent till mid-July on this job. After reviewing the finished article with Ed, I gave it to Brother Wallace. On July 24th, he told me by phone that he had read the article, and found nothing amiss in spirit or otherwise; as to printing’ he said he would wait until the Guardian – Truth controversy was fully subsided; he felt this might be well up into the Fall, if then.

On Aug. 8, 1 wrote him that more news about young preachers drifting kept coming to me. “. . the urgency of exposing the weakness of these loose concepts is pressing on me more and more . . . I am just one preacher, and a young one at that, and further . . . not the ablest thinker or writer around. I cannot do everything to stop this increasing drift, but I can do something; before God, I am responsible to do that something to the best of my ability. I have a conscience to live with, a responsibility to discharge, and a judgment to face … time is of the essence and the time needs to be redeemed when a particular form of unsound teaching is spreading.” I told him to let me submit the material to someone else if he still did not see fit to print it by early September. He returned it on Aug. 16 because he still felt he should not print it until after the controversy “with Truth Magazine is over.” I wish the Guardian could print it without waiting on this open-ended contingency. On the other hand, I wish the article and issues involved were of a less urgent nature so that the contingency might be waited upon, no matter how long.

I don’t understand why the delay was so imperative, but I’m not editor of the Guardian. It should be pointed out in fairness to Brother Wallace that he does not share such views of Ed as that instruments are not sinful in worship. He still hopes Ed is coming around to more scriptural concepts; after reviewing the material with Ed, I can’t share that hope at all. If Ed ever states concisely and plainly what he really believes and tries to defend it as he did with me, many good brethren are going to see the hope we have embraced is a delusive phantom. (For instance, he attempted a defense by saying we have used a “human system of interpretation never given to us by the Lord,” but that he will not expose and refute it because all be has is “‘a more scriptural human system of interpretation.”)

The Same Article

The article is being printed in Truth just as it was when reviewed by Ed and submitted to the Guardian. Here are three exceptions: (1) a subtitle is added and (2) this introduction. (3) Some of Ed’s reactions are added in parenthesis, always set off by an astrisk (*). Here is why the last exception. The article was written in hopes of getting a response from Ed that might indicate a turn back toward Bible truth. When we reviewed the material together, there wasn’t even the slightest hint of turning from his unscriptural concepts; rather, be tried to defend them without exception. It is time, then, that they be fully exposed, analyzed, and refuted. In fact, “the day is far spent.”

Please notice the arrangement of the article. Each “POINT” presents Ed’s view, carefully documented. The quotes are from his own pen. Each “REVIEW” shows the fallacies, consequences, and dangers of his positions. The “REVIEW” may contain direct quotes, too. In fairness to Ed, discriminate between what he actually says (in quotation marks) and the consequences of his assertions which may be stated in my words, not his.

(More to follow)

TRUTH MAGAZINE XVII: 45, pp. 9-12
September 20, 1973