In every generation, the church is commanded to “contend for the
faith once for all delivered to the saints.” That is no easy task, and
it is complicated by the multiple attacks upon Christian truth that mark
our contemporary age. Assaults upon the Christian faith are no longer
directed only at isolated doctrines. The entire structure of Christian
truth is now under attack by those who would subvert Christianity’s
theological integrity.
Today’s Christian faces the daunting task of strategizing which
Christian doctrines and theological issues are to be given highest
priority in terms of our contemporary context. This applies both to the
public defense of Christianity in face of the secular challenge and the
internal responsibility of dealing with doctrinal disagreements. Neither
is an easy task, but theological seriousness and maturity demand that
we consider doctrinal issues in terms of their relative importance.
God’s truth is to be defended at every point and in every detail, but
responsible Christians must determine which issues deserve first-rank
attention in a time of theological crisis.
A trip to the local hospital Emergency
Room some years ago alerted me to an intellectual tool that is most
helpful in fulfilling our theological responsibility. In recent years,
emergency medical personnel have practiced a discipline known as triage –
a process that allows trained personnel to make a quick evaluation of
relative medical urgency. Given the chaos of an Emergency Room reception
area, someone must be armed with the medical expertise to make an
immediate determination of medical priority. Which patients should be
rushed into surgery? Which patients can wait for a less urgent
examination? Medical personnel cannot flinch from asking these
questions, and from taking responsibility to give the patients with the
most critical needs top priority in terms of treatment.
The same discipline that brings order to the hectic arena of the
Emergency Room can also offer great assistance to Christians defending
truth in the present age. A discipline of theological triage would
require Christians to determine a scale of theological urgency that
would correspond to the medical world’s framework for medical priority.
With this in mind, I would suggest three different levels of theological
urgency, each corresponding to a set of issues and theological
priorities found in current doctrinal debates. Continue at Refocusing Our Eyes
No comments:
Post a Comment