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United Pentecostal
Church
A while back a friend of
mine who was a pastor of a church in Canada invited me to give a series
of lectures. During the drive to his home from the airport he mentioned
his concern about a certain “Ministers Prayer Breakfast” he was
attending. His concern focused upon there being a United Pentecostal
Church (from hereon UPC, not to be confused with other Pentecostal
groups who are Christian in theology) minister as part of the gathering.
What worried him was not necessarily this man’s presence at the
breakfast, but the fact that the group engaged in prayer, using only
terms upon which they all agreed.
I
attended the breakfast. The event indeed began with prayer, followed by
breakfast, during which the ministers talked about spiritual things. At
the close of the hour, I suggested to the group that what was going on
was not biblically sound. All were taking part in prayer and spiritual
conversation without recognizing that there was “another Jesus”
represented by one of the ministers. “With all due respect,” I said,
“our UPC friend here does not believe in the biblical Jesus.” The UPC
minister raised his voice and exclaimed, “Steve, ‘In the beginning was
the Word and the Word was with God, and the Word was God’!” I then
asked, “In John 1:1 is ‘the Word,’ who was with the Father, a person?”
He said, “No. The Word is a ‘thought’ in the Father’s mind.” I then
turned to the others in the group and explained that this was another
Jesus, because this man denied the preexistence of the Son as the Son
(more on this later).
At this point, one of the other ministers scolded me for being too
picky, and that before they started having these meetings they agreed on
terms that all could use without being divisive. My friend stood for the
fact that the view represented by the UPC minister was not biblical, and
that he had been concerned and convicted about being part of the
meeting.
By the way, during that initial drive from the airport, I also told my
friend that the UPC minister did not consider him a Christian because he
had not been baptized “in Jesus’ name only” in order to obtain the
remission of sins, and because he did not speak in tongues (not to be
confused with Christian Pentecostal groups who state that tongues are a
sign of a subsequent blessing, not of salvation). This was
confirmed several days after the confrontation at the prayer breakfast.
Soon after the meeting, the UPC minister went to each of the other
ministers’ homes and told them they were not Christians.
UPC View of the Godhead The UPC is
vehement in its denial of the
biblical doctrine of the Trinity. Rather than believing that there is one
God (Isa. 43:10), and that there are three persons who are called God (the
Father is called God in 2 Pet. 1:17; the Son is called God in John 20:28;
the Holy Spirit is equated with God in Acts 5:3-4), and that the three
distinct persons exist simultaneously (Matt. 3:16-17) and are the
one God (see Matt. 28:19), the UPC opts instead for a modalist concept of
the “Godhead.” Their modalism is summed up by the following short formula:
One person, three modes of operation. Again, this is vastly different from
the biblical doctrine of the Trinity, which simply put is “One God, three
persons who exist eternally and simultaneously.” |
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The UPC brand of modalism suggests that there is only one person (Jesus) who
is God, and that Jesus acts in different modes—he can be the Father at one
time, then the Son at other times, and still at other times the Holy
Spirit.
As regards the UPC doctrines that “the Word” of John 1:1 is a
“thought” in the mind of the Father (and Jesus was the Father before the
incarnation!) and that there is no preexistent Son of God, UPC writer
David K. Bernard states, “The Word or Logos can mean the plan or thought
as it existed in the mind of God. This thought was a predestined plan . .
. the Son did not have pre-existence before the conception in the womb of
Mary. The Son of God pre-existed in thought but not in substance” (The
Oneness of God, p. 103).
In UPC theology Jesus did preexist, but as the Father: “If there is
only one God and that God is the Father (Malachi 2:10), and if Jesus is
God, then it logically follows that Jesus is the Father” (Ibid., 66).
Negative Implications
There are two negative implications
arising from the UPC view of God.
First, and I briefly mentioned this earlier, when
a group denies the preexistence of the Son (i.e. that the Son existed as a
person before the incarnation) as the Son, they end up believing in
another Jesus, a Jesus contrary to the Jesus that is taught in the Bible.
The Bible teaches that the preincarnate Jesus, the “Word” of John 1:1, is a
person. The teaching of John 1:1 is that the Word was “with” the Father
(clause b). The rub with the UPC lies in the debate of whether the Word is a
person or a “thought.” The UPC position that the Word is a thought in the
Father’s mind is not supported by further segments of the Gospel of John.
For example, what did Jesus mean when He stated, “Now, Father, glorify Me
together with Yourself, with the glory which I had with You before the world
was”? Note carefully the “I” of Jesus’ statement. Jesus, as a person
who can say “I,” experienced glory “with” the Father “before the world was.”
This evidences a personal preexistence of Jesus with the
Father prior to Jesus’ incarnation. Some UPC teachers explain the dialogue
of prayer between Jesus and the Father in this way: Jesus’ human nature was
praying to His divine nature. We, however, must ask whether it is possible
for natures to communicate with each
other, or whether it is more reasonable to believe that persons
communicate with each other!
Second, if there is only one person in the Godhead (as the UPC
believes), and that person is Jesus, how does this affect the doctrine of
the atonement of Jesus and the doctrine of the mediatorship of Jesus? How,
in UPC theology, does Jesus make atonement TO the Father, and how
does he mediate for us TO the Father? In the UPC literature that I
have read, Jesus’ human nature made atonement to His divine nature, and
Jesus’ human nature mediates for us to His divine nature. One reason we
might reject this interpretation lies in the Old Testament, where the
person of a priest of Israel brings the offering of atonement made
to God (See Lev. 4). Another reason is that the plain meaning of 1
John 2:1 (“we have an advocate with the Father”; emphasis mine) is
that two persons are involved, Jesus and the Father, when Jesus mediates
for us.
With these kinds of beliefs, the UPC cannot be considered a Christian
group. Its denial of the Trinity and its view of Jesus place it outside
the pale of classic, biblical orthodoxy.
Steven Tsoukalas |