Why the Electric Fence?
By Bruce N. Cameron, J.D.
Copr. 2008
No one goes in the living room of my home. It is the “museum” section of our house. But, if anyone did they did they would find a cow. Actually, a picture of a milk cow. And, not the front end either. My wife grew up on a large farm and as a result loves bovine art. For her it is “udderly enthralling!”
While dating her, I learned about a lot of things that were not part of life on the acre of ground on which my boyhood home was located. One of those things I learned about was an electric fence. My general view was that a fence had to be bigger and stronger than whatever it was supposed to keep out (or in) the pasture. The issue was, who would be stronger, men or animals? Men or the invaders?
An electric fence was different. It was not force, it was brains. Men could keep out invaders by being smarter, thinking more carefully.
My “Sabbath Sense” article shows that I think the Proclaimation! people (Life Assurance Ministries) are literally “on the lam” (Life Assurance Ministries = LAM). “On the lam” is an old phrase for running away from the police. The LAM/Proclamation! crowd is running away from the law of God. If they were simply doing that, it would make them one small part of a huge unwashed mob. The problem with them is that they are not content to just run away, they attack those who are not running away from God’s law. It reminds me of soldiers on a battle line. Adventists see themselves at war with Satan. The good guys, according to Revelation 12:17 (NIV), are “those who obey God’s commandments and hold to the testimony of Jesus.” The Proclamation! crowd are like a pack of deserters who are not simply content to run away, they want to hurl insults at the faithful who remain on the battle line.
This is very odd conduct for deserters. Instead of fleeing from the battle with the real enemy, they engage in battle with the faithful on the battle line. They are constantly taking shots at the Adventist Church and its members. Their goal is to steal or shame the Adventist faithful. For that reason, I decided to create an electric fence to keep out the Proclaimation! wolves and howlers. The Electric Fence is merely an extension of what I have been doing for decades: defending the faithful and the faith.
Money Is No Motive: In one Proclaimation! article early in the Tinker editorial tenure, she complained about her husband not being able to continue to work for an Adventist Church institution. Somehow “wolf logic” says that you should be able to bite the hand that feeds you. Unlike Tinker, I’ve never been an employee of the Adventist Church. The only money flowing from the Church to me has been payment for published articles I’ve written and expense reimbursement for meetings. Compared to what I’ve contributed to the Church, the dollar amount coming back is infinitesimal. The Electric Fence does not exist because I’m getting paid by the Church.
Xenophobia Is No Motive: No part of the motivation for the Electric Fence is that I think the Adventist Church is the only place where faith resides. My entire professional life has been devoted to defending employee religious and political freedom. When I started litigating in my small legal niche (compulsory unionism), Adventists were already protected by the law. The work of my three decades of litigation has been to expand the borders of the law to protect those believers who were not Adventists. I don’t keep count, but I would estimate that one in one hundred of those employees I have defended is an Adventist. This process has proven to me, beyond any doubt, that the highest level of genuine faith exists outside the walls of the Adventist Church. Indeed, I expect that when I enter heaven Adventists will be a small minority of those enjoying eternal bliss.
Today, I teach at Regent University School of Law, which is part of a non-denominational university. My fellow faculty members are devout Christians. Regent is a very special place where the Spirit of God exists in power. I’m the first and only full-time member of the law faculty who is an Adventist. Because both the university and the law school have their own weekly worship, during the school year I hear two non-Adventist sermons for every Adventist sermon I hear on Sabbath. I admire and respect the faith of those who I have defended in court, those with whom I work, and those young champions who I teach to go out and change the world for Christ.
The Defense of Truth: The reason I’m an Adventist is because I think it has things “more right” than anyone else. Would I have “29 Fundamental Beliefs?” No. Five, maybe ten would be sufficient for me. (Check out the Southern Baptists sometime. They have a surprising large number of statements of belief.) Are there nuts and lunatics among Adventism? Absolutely. Sometimes it seems there is a distressing number of them. I remember having lunch with a nationally known Adventist evangelist who said to me “There are too many lunatics in the Church.” I agreed. But, you know what? Every church has them. As far as I can tell, our lunatics are a better breed. Most of the lunatics in other churches don’t believe in the Bible. They might not admit that, but they think they know better than God, and thus they create the word of God in their own image. Our lunatics, for the most part, are very concerned about doing the will of God. They are not bending the word of God to their will. I admire that devotion.
Since I think Adventists are right for the most part, I don’t like to let the Proclamation “lammers” paint the Church and the faithful as some sort of “Great Satan.” What these “lammers” have not figured out yet is that their fight is not against the Adventist Church per se, it is against the “holiness tradition.” There is a very large number of Christians who are diverse in their denominational affiliation, but who share the view that knowing God better and obeying His law more fully, is the first priority of humans. They are saved by faith alone, but the attitude of their life is to understand and obey God’s will. That is why the Fourth Commandment (the Sabbath) is no more optional than the Sixth Commandment (murder).
So, take a ride with me. I’m strapping on my warrior armor, getting on my horse (maybe it’s one of my wife’s beloved cows, I’ll have to check), lowering the level of my lance-pen towards the Proclamation crowd, and charging off in opposition to every issue. I’m not going to challenge every article in every issue. I don’t have the time, and even those on the lam can’t be wrong 100% of the time.
Instead, I plan to focus on the personal “Stories of Faith” section of each issue - the testimony of those who left the “evil clutches” of Adventism to enjoy the elevated life of those on the lam. The tricky part is that I do not want to attack the people who left, I want to attack their logic and theology. If it seems I’ve crossed the line, I apologize. From my point of view those who left are confused people, and I do not want to add to their woes. However, since they have put their names and their stories in print to try to persuade others to leave Adventism, there may be a little “collateral damage.” I apologize in advance.
Beginning with the 2008 Proclamation!, let’s look at the logic of those who are willing to publicly state they left in order to encourage the rest of us to leave too. Let’s see if their reasons hold any logical or spiritual water - or whether they are “all wet.”
Tags: Adventists, Life Assurance Ministries, Proclaimation!, Sabbath, Seventh-day Adventists
August 2nd, 2008 at 7:10 am
Dear Bruce (Dr.?) Cameron,
I’ve availed myself of your SS material for several years and appreciate the work you put in to assist the rest of us.
My dated (but continued) surprise at folks like the “lammers” or Dale Ratzlaff (Is there any connection between the two?) is that there are billions of people in this world that have either not heard of, or have been given the wrong picture of Christ, and as a result, have not had the opportunity to know him has their Savior. Yet folks of this sort spend their time, effort, and money trying to convince Adventists to become ex-Adventists. The disconnect between the Gospel commission and what they are doing is stunning to me. Relationally speaking, it looks like the person who gets stuck emotionally after a relationship ends. I’m certainly not pleased that there are folks who want to end their relationship with the Adventist church, but if that’s their desire, the healthy thing to do is move on. Especially in light of the magnitude of the work before us in the world.
We need to be growing God’s kingdom. There is no kingdom growth value to the kind of activity practiced by these people. However, I do know that among people who decide to leave Adventism, there are some for whom the road doesn’t stop at sitting in the pew of a Sunday keeping church. Rather for some, (to whom I am related), the road ends (ended) outside of the company of any fellowship of believers, which is certainly not consistent with any New Testament model of practice. And this is the risky non-academic mischief that the lammers apparently have no qualms in visiting on their targets of opportunity. It seems they’d would rather risk having folks not connected to the body of Christ at all than to be connected via an Adventist church. Thus the only possible outcome of lammer activites, in aggregate, is a reduction in God’s Kingdom among folks who follow the path advocated and prepared by them.
I could go on. There are other aspects of their approach that make no logical sense to me. Unfortunately, I believe most folks who leave Adventism under the kinds of circumstances cited in their “Stories Of Faith” are not leaving for considered logical reasons, though I doubt you could convince them of that at the time. The telling indicator is that there is generally a common thread or kernel of outrage at something, that starts a person on this path and apparently renders them unable to do a truly logical analysis of their motivations for wanting to leave. Anger is a powerful and blinding emotion.
However, for those who might be considering, but have not yet moved in their thinking so far as to actually leave the church, I pray that your well reasoned (and pithy) arguments may have the desired effect of making folks reconsider walking down a path with so many potholes in it.
Thanks so much for all you’re doing! I believe your efforts are a needed counterweight to these misguided attacks.
God bless.
November 29th, 2008 at 11:59 pm
Hi I like your post “Why the Electric Fence?” so well that I like to ask you whether I should translate into German and linking back. Answer welcome. Greetings Kroatien
January 2nd, 2009 at 2:02 am
greatings…
great…
January 5th, 2009 at 6:39 am
hi…
exellent…
April 22nd, 2009 at 6:25 am
i understand your zeal for adventism,but I implore you to read the writings and testimonies of former adventists with a prayerful and open heart…asking God to honestly guide you to find what is truth…really you should, and if you still feel the SDA doctrines are infallible then reach out to those you feel have left the fold with love and not condemnation.
May 16th, 2009 at 11:01 pm
I never said and do not believe that “SDA doctrines are infallible.” The Electric Fence is not about those who have left the Adventist fold. It is about the editors of Proclamation! who in their ungracious way take shots at the Adventist Church and those who still believe in the Church. The point is to show that the Proclamation! stories are not a persuasive reason for others to leave the Church.
If you are part of the lammers’ movement, you might spend a little time suggesting to the leadership that reaching out in “love” rather than with a sledge hammer, would be a more appropriate approach towards the Adventist Church and its members. Blessings, Bruce
June 4th, 2009 at 6:19 am
Hi Bruce,
Thank you and God bless you in your ministry.