THE MAJOR "REFORMED" RESPONSE TO THEONOMY AND "CHRISTIAN RECONSTRUCTION”
This 1990 book contains sixteen essays by faculty members of Westminster Theological Seminary, criticizing both the "Theonomic" (i.e., "God's law") and broader "Christian Reconstruction" viewpoints of persons such as their former students Gary North and Greg Bahnsen. The Preface to this volume states, "The purpose of this volume is to offer a reply from within the Reformed camp, from which theonomy has sprung... the authors of this book share with theonomy many basic theological commitments... The point at issue, however, is one of fundamental hermeneutical perspective: How is the Israelite theocracy under the Mosaic law to be understood and its typological significance related to the proper role of the church and the state today?"
One essayist says, "Most disturbing to those who are introduced to theonomy for the first time, it seems, is its advocacy, not only of the Mosaic case law, but also of its system of punishments. The death penalty for murder is one thing to the contemporary Christian; death for ... intercourse with one's wife during her period, adultery, and blasphemy is another." (Pg. 41) He adds, "Most Christians agree that the death penalty is still in effect for murder, but Bahnsen and Rushdoony extend the list of capital offenses ... (to include) sabbath breaking, kidnapping, apostasy ... false pretension to prophecy... propagating false doctrines... rejecting a decision of the court, and failing to restore bail." (Pg. 44) An essayist asserts, "God caused his special presence to rest in the midst of Israel... However, God has not chosen America as a nation. He does not dwell on the banks of the Potomac as he did on Mount Zion... The church does not seek the death of blasphemers who are in the church but their excommunication." (Pg. 48)
Another argues, "Bahnsen will not concede the obvious point that in Matthew 5:38-42 Christ abrogates the principle of immediate justice; Christ will bring justice in the parousia... The many specific changes of the law in the New Testament seriously undermine the thesis that the burden of proof rests upon the interpreter to show that the law is not in force." (Pg. 81)
Still another asks, "If theonomy is the consistent teaching of Scripture and the Westminster Confession of Faith, why does it seem that we have discovered it only now, in late twentieth-century America? Why not, say, in seventeenth-century England or in nineteenth-century Holland?" (Pg. 245)
This book is "must reading" for people on ANY side of the Christian Reconstruction/Theonomy debate.