After
five decades spent obsessing over a warped notion of "relevance,"
American evangelicalism is overrun with "change agents" who are so
steeped in worldly values that they can't distinguish true relevance
from mere trendiness. Their philosophies of ministry are complex,
wrong-headed, counterproductive, and hostile to the notion that some
things—namely God Himself and the truth He has revealed in His Word—are
by definition not susceptible to change.
By contrast, what Paul
bequeathed to Timothy in two brief epistles was a remarkably simple,
straightforward, but comprehensive ministry philosophy. Not only did
Paul not urge Timothy to be innovative; what he did urge Timothy to do flatly contradicts practically every ministry philosophy currently in vogue.
This is part 1 in a series of posts I intend to write in the days to come.
Consider the undue stress today's leading church-growth gurus invariably
put on innovation. We are relentlessly told that pastors and church
leaders must be novel, "contemporary," cutting-edge—architects of change within the church.
Evangelicals have been obsessing for at least four decades about "relevance." But that word as used in evangelical circles has become practically synonymous with novelty and fashionableness. It has little to do with actual relevance.
Of course, the church's only true relevance lies in her role as a community where God's Word is proclaimed, where the whole counsel of God is taught, and from which the gospel is taken into the world. But when a church nowadays advertises itself as "relevant," we know exactly what is meant—and let's be honest: it isn't about anything Paul told Timothy to do; it's about being "innovative." Continue at Phil Johnson
Evangelicals have been obsessing for at least four decades about "relevance." But that word as used in evangelical circles has become practically synonymous with novelty and fashionableness. It has little to do with actual relevance.
Of course, the church's only true relevance lies in her role as a community where God's Word is proclaimed, where the whole counsel of God is taught, and from which the gospel is taken into the world. But when a church nowadays advertises itself as "relevant," we know exactly what is meant—and let's be honest: it isn't about anything Paul told Timothy to do; it's about being "innovative." Continue at Phil Johnson
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