I’m
grateful for the widespread response this series of blogposts has
generated, including all the feedback we have received from people who
disagree about certain points. Yes, a few vocal critics have replied
with mocking or misrepresentation, as if to illustrate the validity of
some of my central concerns. But most of the response we have
received (including a lot of the dissent) encourages me—because it comes
from young people who seem genuinely thoughtful about the dangers I
have tried to highlight, and I trust they are genuinely committed to
cultivating a thoroughly biblical worldview.
That being said, I’d like to give a final word of encouragement to my Young, Restless, Reformed friends: Keep reforming.
Semper reformanda (“always reforming”) is one of the enduring slogans often associated with the Protestant Reformation. The origins of the phrase are murky and probably date from the late 1600s. But the kernel of the idea is true enough: Until we are glorified—until we are fully, finally, perfectly conformed to the exact likeness of Christ—we as saints individually, and the whole church collectively, must always be reforming.
The idea is not that we should change for the sake of change. You can be sure that whoever first penned that slogan was not urging Christians to stay abreast of every wind of earthly fashion in order to suit someone’s shallow notion of “relevance.” Nor does the principle of semper reformanda require us to rewrite our doctrinal standards every generation in order to keep in step with the constantly-changing dogmas of human philosophy. Keep Reading...
That being said, I’d like to give a final word of encouragement to my Young, Restless, Reformed friends: Keep reforming.
Semper reformanda (“always reforming”) is one of the enduring slogans often associated with the Protestant Reformation. The origins of the phrase are murky and probably date from the late 1600s. But the kernel of the idea is true enough: Until we are glorified—until we are fully, finally, perfectly conformed to the exact likeness of Christ—we as saints individually, and the whole church collectively, must always be reforming.
The idea is not that we should change for the sake of change. You can be sure that whoever first penned that slogan was not urging Christians to stay abreast of every wind of earthly fashion in order to suit someone’s shallow notion of “relevance.” Nor does the principle of semper reformanda require us to rewrite our doctrinal standards every generation in order to keep in step with the constantly-changing dogmas of human philosophy. Keep Reading...
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