Many Christians see the church world in black and white. You have
liberals on one side–they are the bad guys who doubt the resurrection
and don’t believe in the Bible. And on the other side you have the good
guys who believe in the miracles, do not waver on the deity of Christ,
and want lost people to be saved. We call these folks evangelicals or
conservatives or Bible-believing Christians. Give them a checklist of
doctrines and they will get almost everything right.
Liberalism is a problem, but squishy evangelicalism is the much bigger problem.
I do not write thinking that churches self-consciously in the
tradition of Bushnell, Beecher, and Briggs will do an about face, or
that those in the stream of process theology, liberation theology, or
feminist theology will abandon ship.
I may vehemently disagree with
full-on liberalism, but I can respect that there is an ecclesiastical
and intellectual tradition behind it.
The audience I have in mind are those Christians, pastors, and
churches that continue to affirm the basic contours of evangelical
faith. They’ve never read Fosdick or Tillich or Schleiermacher. They
don’t read the Christian Century. They don’t know much about
Deutero- or Trito-Isaiah and don’t really care to waste any more time
with documentary hypotheses. They think Paul wrote Ephesians and John
wrote John. They love Jesus and want other people to love Jesus. If you
ask these Christians, pastors, or churches if hell is forever and people
must be born again, they’ll say yes. If you ask them whether you can
trust everything in the Bible, they wouldn’t dare say no. They have no
problem with any of the historic creeds and confessions. The people and
institutions I have in mind gladly affirm penal substitution, the bodily
resurrection of Christ, and a real historical Fall. The folks I want to
address are energetic about evangelism. They want to see churches
planted and people come to Christ. They think small groups,
accountability partners, and mission trips are excellent. And at least
in private conversation they’ll tell you that homosexuality is not.
These Christians, pastors, and churches are not liberal. They don’t seem
like one of the bad guys. Continue at Kevin DeYoung
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