Sin, Salvation, and Service
Excerpted from "The Van Til I Knew: An Interview With R.J. Rushdoony" (1995)
[Van Til] held, “Man’s highest good is the Kingdom of God.” Now, the church has been made into an end rather than a means.
The church sees itself as the Kingdom of God. This was what destroyed the medieval church. It began to see the church as the Kingdom. But Protestants began with the Kingdom as the goal, and the church as the army to create the Kingdom, but now the church sees itself as the end, as the goal. Therefore it works to build up the church, not the Kingdom of God. And that’s why Christian Reconstruction is so offensive to them. It takes the focus away from the church and puts it on the Kingdom...
When the church is church-centered, it sees itself and bringing people into the church as the goal. It develops its version of the scholastic doctrine of the Middle Ages that man as he is, is essentially whole, he only needs something added to nature to give him the good life, and that’s the donum superadditum, the extra gifts that God gives which caps your natural powers and abilities and makes you a Christian, a citizen of the Kingdom of God. Then you have no calling except to wait for heaven, to be a part of the church, which is the Kingdom, and this has become the doctrine of Protestantism...
Its whole message to people is, "God loves you. There’s a little something He can give to you, which will make the plus you need to have a wonderful life, nothing about the fact that you are a reprobate." Now, what was once called the three Ss, virtually unknown now, constituted, it was rightly held by Protestants, the essence of God’s plan for man. You start with sin, you need salvation, and because of salvation you go into service . . . sin, salvation, service. But now it’s sin, salvation, and wait to be raptured, or wait to die and go to heaven.
{The full interview can be read in Faith and Action, volume 1, pp. 559-574}
Topics: Apologetics, Biblical Commentary, Biblical Law, Biography, Christian Reconstruction, Church History, Church, The, Culture , Dominion, Eschatology, Government, Humanism, Justice, New Testament History, Old Testament History, Philosophy, Reformed Thought, Theology