The Necessity—and Limits—of Doctrinal Distinctives
Appreciating Agreement Without Erasing Difference
Tota Scriptura: Letting All of Scripture Speak
A Better Way Forward
Few things have done more harm to the public witness of Christianity than internecine conflict among those who confess the same Lord. Disagreements within the household of faith are not new; the New Testament itself records sharp disputes, earnest exhortations, and necessary corrections. Yet there is a difference between contending for the faith and consuming one another in the process. When believers turn doctrinal disagreement into personal attack - especially across denominational or theological lines - the result is not clarity but carnage.
This is particularly evident in debates among those within the broad evangelical and Reformed orbit: Reformed theologians, traditionalists, and provisionalists. These streams differ in significant ways, especially regarding soteriology, divine sovereignty, and human responsibility. To pretend otherwise would be dishonest. Doctrinal distinctives matter, and they matter because truth matters. However, the manner in which those distinctives are defended often undermines the very truth being proclaimed.
The Christian faith is not a vague spiritual sentiment; it is a revealed truth grounded in the self-disclosure of God in Scripture. Doctrinal boundaries are therefore unavoidable. The church must teach, clarify, and sometimes draw lines. To abandon doctrinal specificity in the name of unity is not unity at all but confusion.
Yet doctrinal clarity does not require doctrinal hostility. When distinctives become badges of superiority rather than tools for edification, they distort their purpose. Theological systems - whether Reformed, traditionalist, or provisionalist - are attempts to faithfully synthesize biblical data. None are Scripture itself. When systems are absolutized, those who disagree are no longer seen as fellow students of the Word but as adversaries to be defeated.
A healthier posture begins by recognizing that substantial doctrinal agreement already exists. Those across these traditions affirm the authority of Scripture, the deity of Christ, salvation by grace through faith, the necessity of repentance, and the call to holiness. These shared convictions are not marginal; they are foundational. To ignore them while magnifying secondary disagreements is to reverse biblical priorities.
Genuine theological charity does not require minimizing disagreement, but it does require maximizing understanding. Too often, caricatures replace careful listening. Reformed believers are accused of denying human responsibility; provisionalists are accused of denying divine sovereignty; traditionalists are dismissed as inconsistent or evasive. Such accusations may occasionally reflect real tensions, but they more often reveal a failure to appreciate the internal logic and biblical motivations of each position.
When believers take the time to understand one another, they often discover that disagreements arise not from a rejection of Scripture, but from differing judgments about how best to integrate its teaching. This realization should temper rhetoric and foster humility. It reminds us that our interlocutors are not enemies of truth but fellow servants striving - sometimes imperfectly - to be faithful to the same Word.
At the heart of these debates lies a shared commitment that must not be compromised: tota Scriptura. Faithfulness to God requires grappling with the whole counsel of Scripture, not merely the passages that fit comfortably within a preferred framework.
Scripture speaks with unmistakable clarity about God’s sovereignty. God “works all things according to the counsel of his will” (Ephesians 1:11). Salvation is described as God’s gracious initiative, not human achievement. Any theology that mutes these truths does violence to the text.
At the same time, Scripture is equally clear that not all professions of faith are genuine. Jesus Himself warns that some who call Him “Lord” will be turned away (Matthew 7:21–23). The apostle John speaks of those who depart from the faith as revealing that they “were not of us” (1 John 2:19). These passages cannot be dismissed as mere anomalies; they are part of the same inspired canon.
Tota Scriptura requires holding these truths together in tension, even when the tension is uncomfortable. Attempts to resolve the tension by denying either divine sovereignty or the reality of false professions inevitably flatten the biblical witness. Faithfulness does not demand that every mystery be solved, but it does require that no portion of God’s Word be silenced.
Internecine attacks flourish when confidence turns into contempt. The church does not need less conviction; it needs more charity shaped by conviction. When believers speak as though their theological opponents are intellectually dishonest or spiritually deficient, the body of Christ is wounded, and the watching world sees not truth adorned but truth disfigured. (Recall David's comments during class regarding his encounters with non-Reformed individuals. Contrast this with Jeff's question regarding children raised in Christian homes, who made professions of faith, but upon leaving home no longer live lives consonant with biblical teachings.)
A better way forward begins with repentance - repentance for careless words, for pride disguised as orthodoxy, and for a willingness to wound fellow believers in the name of being right. It continues with a renewed commitment to Scripture in its fullness and to one another in love.
Christ prayed that His people would be one, not so that truth and love would be diluted, but so that they would be displayed. When those who affirm the same gospel learn to disagree without devouring one another, they offer a compelling testimony: that truth and love are not rivals, and that the Lord of Scripture is honored when His Word is handled with both reverence and grace.
I left the class this morning feeling as though, like Athanasius contra mundum, the PCA, as articulated by its Elders, presents itself contra non-Reformed. This appears to be an unfortunate result of Scripture-sniping rather than adhering to the tota scriptura we profess.