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"...The church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth."
I Timothy 3:15


The Scriptural Way

B. Bogard, 1945



Bible is the all sufficient rule of faith and practice and is as much a rule of practice as it is of faith.


The commission given by our Master in Matt. 28:19-20, commands the church to “teach all things whatsoever I have commanded you.” The specification of one thing in law is the prohibition of everything else. Since what the church is to teach is specified, viz., “all things whatsoever I have commanded,” it follows that all things not commanded are forbidden.


It follows that the church is shut up to the things commanded. There is therefore no place for the exercise of private opinion except it be in our effort to understand the things commanded. Any doctrine or institution that is outside of the purview of the Scriptures is wrong. In 2 Tim. 3:16-17 we read: “All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.”


If this is true, and to dispute it is to contradict the words of inspiration, it follows that we are “thoroughly furnished unto all good works.” Then we do not need to invent plans for work, since we can learn all about it in the Scriptures for “the man of God is thoroughly furnished unto all good works.”


From these passages we are compelled to conclude that there must be a “thus saith the Lord” for all we do. We dare not organize a church, a school, a board, a committee, an evangelistic movement, or anything else without a “thus saith the Lord,” because the Scriptures “thoroughly furnish is unto all good works,” and we are to “observe all things whatsoever the Master has commanded,” no more no less.


By the Scriptures, the all sufficient rule of faith and practice, must every doctrine and every truth be tried. If it be allowed that reason or sanctified common sense shall determine in matters of faith and practice, it shall still be an open question as to whose reason and whose sanctified common sense shall make the decision. If reason or common sense shall be the rule of any part of faith and practice then it is certain that we shall see division, contention, and strife. Let the Bible be the rule of faith and practice and our only difficulty shall be understanding our rule.


The primary difference between Baptist and Roman Catholics is that Baptists contend that the Scriptures are the all sufficient rule of faith and practice, while Catholics deny this and claim that reason, or sanctified common sense, of the church should be the rule of faith and practice.


If Baptists forsake this cardinal and fundamental principle, it shall not be long until they shall cease to be Baptist. They shall be at sea without chart or compass.