A couple years back, while at a big leadership conference for church
leaders, I was listening to a statistician discussing the state of the
church in Canada. He explained that he believes Roman Catholics and
Protestants need to come together if we’re going to find any success in
turning Canadians back toward Christ. After all, he said, the more
discussions he had with Catholics, mainline Protestants and
Evangelicals, the more he found we had in common (which, basically
amounted to “all of them pray and take their faith seriously”).
Sitting in this session, I was kind of annoyed, and more than a
little depressed. I mean, seriously? This is the best advice that could
be offered to church leaders wanting to impact their communities? Hook
up your carts to the United Church and Mainline Presbyterianism (both of
which are haemorrhaging members) and bury the hatchet with the Roman
church?
Sadly, this is the same advice that’s been given to Evangelicals for
decades—dating back to the 1940s and earlier. J.I. Packer addresses how
we should respond to this sort of thinking well in his 1958 release, “Fundamentalism” and the Word of God. He writes: Continue at Aaron Armgstrong

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