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Bible-Believing
Liberals
by
Todd Wilken
When a thing grows weak and
out of date, it is obviously soon going to disappear. That's also
true of churches. If a church cannot change, it will eventually die.
~~~
Clearly change in both liturgy
and structure is inevitable, and this change will probably be
radical, if not total. …the forms the Church assumed in the past
inevitably must die.
One
of these statements comes from a famous Christian liberal, the other
comes from a famous Christian conservative. Without peeking at the
footnotes, which statement belongs to the conservative and which
belongs to the liberal?
You
can't tell, can you?
How
can this be? One is against abortion, human cloning, embryonic
stem-cell research and gay marriage and against removing
the words "under God" from the Pledge of Allegiance and "In
God We Trust" from the currency. The other is in favor of
all these things. One calls himself "Bible-believing." The
other thinks the Bible is a myth. Yet both say that the church must
change or die.1
Full-blown
liberal Christians are easy to spot. They will tell you up front that
they don't believe what the Bible says. But what about liberals
who think that they are conservative? What about the liberals who
claim to be Bible-believing Christians?
Many Christians today think of
themselves as conservative. They are pro-life, pro-family. They
listen to Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity. They watch FOX News. They
vote traditional values. But can you be politically, socially
and morally conservative without being theologically
conservative? Oh, yes you can.
Meet the Bible-believing
liberals. While they believe that the culture needs to return to its
historic traditions, they think the Church needs to abandon hers.
While maintaining that the Flag should be proudly displayed, they
fear that a cross in Church might offend seekers. While they believe
men and women have defined roles in marriage and family, they don't
see why a woman can't replace a man in the pulpit. While outraged
that our schools cater to the lowest-common denominator, they think
our churches need to be geared toward the unchurched. They believe
that public policy should be based on objective facts, but preaching
should be based on felt needs. They want "under God" in
Pledge of Allegiance, but omit the Apostles' Creed from the Sunday
service. They want the Ten Commandments in the public square, but are
unconcerned when those commandments are replaced with "principles
for living" in the pulpit. To the Bible-believing liberal, the
ceremonies of a Presidential inauguration are meaningful and
inspiring, but the Sunday morning liturgy is boring. For the
Bible-believing liberal, the differences between political parties
are serious, but the differences between Christian denominations are
petty. While they insist on a strict literal interpretation of the US
Constitution, they play fast and loose with the Bible and its
theology, even while maintaining its inerrancy and inspiration. These
are the Bible-believing liberals.
A
Contradiction in Terms
Now, I know what you're thinking.
"Bible-believing liberal" is an oxymoron, right? You can't
be truly Bible-believing and be liberal at the same time.
THAT is the point.
You see, many Christians think of
themselves as conservative Christians. But they have confused
cultural conservatism with theological conservatism.
Theologically these Bible-believing Christians have a lot in common
with liberals.
I had been thinking about this
for some months. Then, during a conversation with Gene Edward Veith,
he said something that made it all clear. Dr. Veith was describing
the old-line liberals in the 20th century:
In the churches there was a
sense of panic, that "Oh people, the culture's changing! So if
we're gonna survive, we've got to go along with the culture."
And so you had a movement in the Christian church to change
Christianity according to the dominant culture… And that's what
liberalism is: changing your theology to fit whatever the culture
is.2
I suddenly realized that Dr.
Veith was also describing many Bible-believing Christians today.
"That's what liberalism is: changing your theology to fit
whatever the culture is." He was describing Bible-believing
liberals.
William Tighe recently observed
of old-line liberals:
Liberals do think, since in
their view there is no divine revelation with specific, objective and
if one wants to use the term, propositional content, since its all a
matter of feeling, you can't cling to any definitions, any
confessional formulas. And since they're always invoking the Holy
Spirit, chasing the Holy Spirit… since everything for them is the
revelation of the Holy Spirit in the world, they play the game of
"here He is on the plain," "here He is on the
mountain," and the only thing they have to go by are social
trends, which for them is where God is at, and the Church has to keep
up with it.3
But exactly the same thing could
be said of many otherwise "conservative" Christians today.
Yes, they still affirm the divine revelation of the Bible in
principle. But theologically, they have adopted the liberal's way of
thinking. John Armstrong has also noticed this:
At the
end of the last century theological liberalism told us that we needed
to make Christianity attractive, or acceptable, to its
"cultured despisers." This type of concern was not new. The
very tension of "being in the world" but "not of the
world" has always been with the church. What was new was the way
liberalism decided to advance the church before the world, namely by
reinterpreting the message of the cross in the light of the world's
understanding and belief system. …One of the most blatant examples
of the compromise which flows out of this can be seen in 1966
World Council of Churches dictum: "The world must set the agenda
for the church." I would suggest that this idea, formulated in
the crucible of ecumenical dialogue between light and darkness, is
not far from the "seeker sensitive" approach adopted
through the Church Growth ideology of contemporary evangelicals.4
The fact that so many otherwise
"conservative" Christians fail to see the similarity
between themselves and liberals is remarkable. The fact that so many
Bible-believing liberals fail to see the disparity between their
cultural beliefs and their theological beliefs is astonishing. But
there is a reason for it.
How
"Bible-Believing" are They?
Bible
believing liberals affirm Scripture's inspiration and inerrancy. That
is the main reason they consider themselves conservative Christians.
"After all," they think, "I can't be a liberal!
Liberals deny Scripture."
But
there is more than one way to deny Scripture. Mike Horton has written
about "the practical denial" of Scripture.5
While evangelicals and other
conservative Protestants hold to a high doctrine of Scripture in
principle, the last two decades have especially seen a growing
disregard for making their sermons expositions of Scripture; rather,
it's often the case that the Bible is used as a sourcebook of
quotations for what we really want to say.6
You
see, you can affirm Scripture's authority in principle even while
denying it in practice.7
Bible-believing
liberals aren't liberal in what they say about the Bible,
Bible-believing liberals are liberal in how they use the
Bible. Here's an example.
About
ten years ago, G. A. Pritchard wrote a landmark book on the most
influential megachurch in America, Willow Creek Community Church. He
wrote of the staff and people of Willow Creek:
It would not be accurate or
fair to depict them as theologically liberal. Liberal Christianity
denies central Christian truth claims. However, there is a lack of
emphasis on Christian truth at Willow Creek.8
Nevertheless,
in some cases, Willow Creek's "lack of emphasis" ends up
looking a lot like denial —as in the case of Pastor Nancy
Beach. About the time Pritchard was publishing his book, Nancy Beach
became one of Willow Creek's teaching pastors.9
You ask, "How did
Bible-believing Willow Creek end up with a woman pastor?"
Here's how. Willow Creek had women elders since it's founding. But in
the mid-1990s a debate began over the inclusion of women at all
levels of leadership. Dr. Gilbert Bilezikian is a founding member of
Willow Creek and its resident theologian. In his 1985 book, Beyond
Sex Roles, Bilezikian argued (among other things) that women
should be pastors. Bilezikian's method was to highlight the apparent
contradictions in Paul's epistles. For example, He writes:
…the juxtaposition of Paul's
approval of women prophesying with this absolute command for women
not to speak in church and to remain silent as a sign of their
subordination constitutes a monumental contradiction that only a
state of mental dislocation could explain...10
In
time, Bilezikian's view and his way of reading the Bible won
acceptance at Willow Creek:
In January 1996, John Ortberg,
one of Willow Creek's teaching elders, taught a two-hour class to
church ministry leaders, in which he said that staff needed to share
the convictions of the church, or study until they shared those
convictions; and they had a year to do so.11
The
result of that study was a position paper. That paper is a classic
example of how liberals read the Bible:
The statement makes clear the
church's belief that "when the Bible is interpreted
comprehensively, it teaches the full equality of men and women in
status, giftedness, and opportunity for ministry," despite "a
few scriptural texts [that] appear to restrict the full ministry
freedom of women." 12
Willow Creek affirms the
authority of Scripture. 13
But notice how they use
Scripture. Paul's epistles only "appear" to restrict the
pastoral office to men. But that appearance disappears "when the
Bible is interpreted comprehensively." This is just another way
of saying, "If we disregard the scriptural texts that say women
can't be pastors, we discover that they can be pastors!"
14
Bible-believing liberals don't
deny the inerrancy or inspiration of Scripture. They just interpret
the Bible "comprehensively" to make it say what they want.
In the case of Willow Creek, interpreting the Bible "comprehensively"
means explaining away Bible passages that forbid what you want to do.
Bible-believing liberals are Bible-believing in principle, but
liberal in practice.
In the 1970s liberal
denominations used this reasoning to introduce the ordination of
women. Today they are using the same reasoning to introduce the
ordination of homosexuals. Will Bible-believing liberals follow suit?
The leaders of Willow Creek
insist that these changes have nothing to do with the changing
culture. But I ask, "Then why have you changed your view on
women in the Church? Why have you departed from the historic
interpretation of Paul's teaching on women? What changed?" The
answer is, of course, the culture changed. The culture changes and
Bible-believing liberals change to keep up with it. Remember Dr.
Veith's words. "That's what liberalism is: changing your
theology to fit whatever the culture is." Pritchard concludes:
A serious critique of American
culture from a Christian perspective is generally absent at Willow
Creek. The fundamental reason for this failure is that Creekers do
not think critically with the categories and content of Christian
theology15
Like it or not, many
Bible-believing Christians are thinking and acting just like
liberals. What else do many Bible-believing Christians have in common
with liberals?
Doctrinal
Minimalism and Meiderlin's Maxim
"In things essential, unity;
in doubtful, liberty; in all things, charity." This is a truism
for many Christians today. It is often attributed to Saint Augustine.
But Augustine never said it. In truth, this saying's origins are more
recent —in early German liberalism.
The
real author of this sentiment was a 17th century Lutheran,
Peter Meiderlin. Meiderlin's lived during a
time of doctrinal compromise and unionism between Lutherans and the
Reformed. Meiderlin was disturbed by the doctrinal debates taking
place and thought that insistence on doctrinal purity was satanic.
Meiderlin counseled a minimalist approach to doctrine: "In
a word, were we to observe unity in essentials, liberty in
incidentals, and in all things charity, our affairs would be
certainly in a most happy situation."16
Liberal
Christians have taken Meiderlin's maxim to heart. But so have many
Bible-believing Christians. When it comes to doctrine, they don't
sweat the details. And, just like liberals, when Bible-believing
Christians talk about "unity in essentials" it isn't
altogether clear what those "essentials" are.
Bishop
T. D. Jakes was the keynote speaker for Willow Creek's August 2004
Leadership Summit. Jakes is a best selling author, a megachurch
pastor and a popular televangelist. Willow Creek's bookstore,
"Seeds," sells dozens of different books, tapes, CDs and
DVDs by Jakes. The only problem is, Jakes denies the biblical
doctrine of the Trinity.17
Is
the Trinity "essential" or "incidental" at Willow
Creek? To be sure, Willow Creek affirms the Trinity in its public
statements.18
But
remember, what Bible-believing liberals affirm in principle, they
often deny in practice.
Meiderlin's
maxim assumes that false teaching is benign. Instead, the real danger
comes from those who point out doctrinal error. Rick Warren has said:
Some
of the most cantankerous Christians that I know are veritable
storehouses of Bible knowledge, but they have not applied it. They
can give you facts and quotes, and they can argue doctrine. But
they're angry; they're very ugly people.19
We've
heard liberals say it for years; now we're hearing Bible-believing
Christians say it: Doctrine divides. That is, insistence on doctrinal
clarity and purity is divisive. On this subject, Warren echoes
Meiderlin's maxim: "I'm not going to get into a debate over the
non-essentials. I won't try to change other denominations. Why be
divisive?"20
Warren
downplays "supposed theological conflicts" between
Christians. He sees them as a product of our limited knowledge of
God. He dismisses such differences by appealing to how "awesome"
God is:
On earth we "see though a
glass darkly" so we all need a large dose of humility in dealing
with our differences. God's ways are awesome and far beyond human
mental capabilities. He has no problem reconciling the supposed
theological conflicts that we debate when ideas don't fit neatly into
our logical, rational systems. 21
This sounds broadminded but is
really complete nonsense. Can God reconcile a theology that says man
is totally depraved with one that says he isn't? Can God reconcile a
theology that teaches faith alone with one that teaches faith and
works? Warren's idea would fit right in at the World Council of
Churches —one of their latest documents says essentially the same
thing as Warren:
…a
more recent ecumenical vision includes the search for a new paradigm
and image which could accommodate a diversity of truths
under the same roof without diluting or annihilating any in the
process of trying to bring them into convergence, for the sake of
reaching one common and binding apostolic truth.22
We've
heard liberals say it for years; now we're hearing Bible-believing
Christians say it: Let's agree to disagree. A Willow Creek event
demonstrated recently how far this idea can go. Shortly after the
terrorist attacks of 2001, Bill Hybels invited a local Muslim imam,
Fisal Hammouda, to speak at a weekend service. During the service the
imam asserted, "We [Muslims] believe in Jesus, more than you do
in fact." Hybels ventured to disagree, but the misimpression
stuck. "'I didn't know they believed in Jesus,' church member
Elizabeth Perez, 60, said after the service. ‘I thought it was
interesting how much we have in common.'"23
Don
Matzat summed up the doctrinal minimalism of Bible-believing liberals
well:
Successful
evangelical pastors like Bill Hybels and Robert Schuller are really
no different than the successful modern liberal clergy, like Sloan
Coffin and Harry Enwrson Fosdick. While Coffin and Fosdick built
their congregations by appealing to human reason, Hybels and Schuller
"grow a church" by appealing to the feelings and experience
of people. While the classic liberal pastor questioned on the
basis of reason the truth of traditional Christian doctrine, the
postmodern pastor ignores doctrine and focuses on methods which
produce success.24
The
Mission Justifies the Means
In
2004 Pastor James Perry made an impassioned plea to his church:
What
would it be like if we had a moratorium on issues that divide us, and
spent all our time and energy focusing on reaching out to those in
our world who feel like outcasts, and share God's love with them? It
is my hope that we will be more concerned about extending God's Grace
than getting it right. 25
Was Perry was arguing for more
evangelism? Was Perry pleading for greater mission efforts? Not
really. Perry was speaking at the 2004 General Conference of the
United Methodist Church in Pittsburgh, arguing for the full inclusion
of active homosexuals in the church. For Perry, discussing what the
Bible says about homosexuality was getting in the way of "extending
God's Grace."
We've
heard liberals say it for years; now we're hearing Bible-believing
Christians say it: the church is justified in using whatever means it
deems necessary to carry out its mission. Again, Mike Horton
describes this mindset well:
Increasingly, we hear that
what unites us is mission, not theology. Doctrinal diversity is
encouraged, as long as we can all agree on the mission and its
methods. "Mission" and "evangelism" are in danger
of being exploited as "get out of jail free" cards for any
capitulation to the culture that we can imagine.26
The ecumenical movement and
liberal church bodies have been doing this for decades.27
But today, it is common to hear
the same "Mission justifies the means" argument from
conservative Christians. Mark Mittelberg writes:
The redemptive mission of the
church is simply too important to let fear and traditional
strongholds keep us from examining everything in light of our
biblical, God-directed vision. 28
Notice the phrase, "our
biblical God-directed vision." Whatever happened to examining
everything in light of the Bible itself? The mission blueprint
has replaced the Bible; it must. For the Bible-believing liberal, the
mission justifies the means.
Rick Warren is famous for saying,
"never criticize what God is blessing"29
Warren uses his congregation's
mission success to justify the sloppy doctrine in his books:
I knew that by simplifying
doctrine in a devotional format for the average person, I ran the
risk of either understating or overstating some truths. I'm sure I
have done that. …But I decided when I planted Saddleback in
1980 that I'd rather reach large numbers of people for Christ than
seek the approval of religious traditionalists. In the past
eight years, we've baptized over 11,000 new adult believers at our
church.30
For
the Bible-believing liberal, all means are neutral —even
"understating or overstating some truths." The mission (and
it's apparent success) justifies it. George Barna likewise urges the
Church,
It is …critical that we keep
in mind a fundamental principal of Christian communication: the
audience, not the message, is sovereign… our message
has to be adapted to the needs of the audience.31
Therefore,
Barna sees anything but the most pragmatic concerns as a waste of
time:
…it behooves us to not waste
time bickering about techniques and processes, but to study methods
by which we can glorify our King and comply with the Great
Commission.32
And
C. Peter Wagner, father of the church growth movement, agrees:
… we ought to see clearly
that the end DOES justify the means. What else possible could justify
the means? If the method I am using accomplishes the goal I am aiming
at, it is for that reason a good method. If, on the other hand, my
method is not accomplishing the goal, how can I be justified in
continuing to use it? 33
Among Bible-believing liberals
the "mission" not only justifies whatever approach seems to
work, it also serves as a convenient way to discredit critics. Mark
Mittelberg describes those who raise concerns about the means:
For a variety of reasons, some
people will be unable to go along with you and the other leaders in
your efforts to reach lost people…. There are some people who
profess to be Christians yet who don't care one whit about people
outside God's family. They are typically self-centered people who
think that the church revolves around them and exists solely to meet
their needs, and everyone else can go to hell —literally.34
The
Bible-believing liberal says, "I am justified in using whatever
means I deem necessary to carry out the church's mission. If you
oppose my means, you are opposing the mission."
"God
Loves You" —A gospel without Sin
John
Shelby Spong, perhaps the most liberal Christian liberal alive today,
writes:
The
language of original sin and atonement has emanated from Christian
circles for so long that it has achieved the status of sacred mantra.
…In light of new circumstances, it is merely adjusted, never
reconsidered. Yet, upon closer inspection, these sacred concepts
involve us in a view of human life that is no longer operative.35
Joel
Osteen, a "Bible-believing" Christian and pastor of the
largest megachurch in America, says the same thing in simpler
language:
We've
heard a lot about the judgment of God and what we can't do and what's
going to keep us out of heaven. But it's time people start hearing
about the goodness of God, about a God that loves them. A God
that believes in them. A God that wants to help them.36
Spong
wants to do away with the concept of sin altogether. Osteen simply
wants to stop taking about it. Instead, Osteen wants to emphasize
"the goodness of God":
God
wants us to have healthy, positive self-images, to see ourselves as
priceless treasures. He wants us to feel good about ourselves. God
knows we're not perfect, that we all have faults and weaknesses; that
we all make mistakes. But the good news is, God loves us anyway.37
And
why does the perfect and holy God love us with all our faults and
weaknesses? Is it because Jesus lived a perfect life and died a
perfect death in our place? No…
His
love for you is based on what you are, not on what you do. He created
you as a unique individual —there has never been, nor will there
ever be, another person exactly like you… Moreover, God sees you as
a champion. He believes in you even more than you believe in
yourself!38
Apparently
for Joel Osteen, sin is simply not a problem for God, or for us. Bill
Hybels, on the other hand, certainly believes that sin is a problem.
But what Bible-believing liberals affirm in principle, they often
deny in practice. When an internal survey of Willow Creek members
revealed that "large percentages of singles (25 percent of
singles, 38 percent of single parents, and 41 percent of divorced
individuals) ‘admitted having illicit sexual relations in the last
six months,'" Hybels failed to focus on the seriousness of sin:
Hybels did not call the
congregation to repent for their rebellion against a holy God.
Instead he emphasized God's compassionate love: "We are a
love-starved people, with broken hearts that need the kind of repair
that only he can give long-term. We need to bring our brokenness out
into the light of his grace and truth."39
Yes,
the members in the survey certainly might have been "loved-starved
people, with broken hearts," but they were also fornicators.
When Bible-believing liberals dilute the Bible's message of sin, they
also dilute the Bible's message of salvation. The Gospel gets reduced
to "God loves you." Hybels' gospel often sounds largely
therapeutic:
God satisfies. He does
something for us and in us that we can't do for ourselves. God meets
inner needs. He quiets restlessness and turmoil. He ministers to
longings. He soothes wounds. He calms fears. He satisfies our souls.
40
All
of this is true, of course, but it's not the whole truth. What's
missing? In this gospel, we are presented as unsatisfied, unable,
needy, restless, longing, wounded and fearful, but not sinful.
This is a gospel without sin.
A
gospel without sin satisfies sinners, but doesn't save them. A gospel
without sin requires a God Who is merely good, not gracious and
forgiving. A gospel without sin requires a Jesus who is merely
sympathetic, not our substitute at the Cross. A gospel without sin is
a gospel wherein Christ crucified is unnecessary. John Shelby Spong
realizes this; he has done away the Cross. Maybe this is why
Bible-believing liberals are doing away with it too.
The
"God loves you" gospel is a gospel that any liberal could
love. By contrast, here is what St. Paul says,
God was pleased to have all
his fullness dwell in [Christ], and through him to reconcile to
himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by
making peace through his blood, shed on the cross. Once you were
alienated from God and were enemies in your minds because of your
evil behavior. But now he has reconciled you by Christ's physical
body through death to present you holy in his sight, without blemish
and free from accusation.41
One thing is for sure, Paul was
no liberal, Bible-believing or otherwise.
"God loves you" isn't
the Gospel. The world is full of unbelievers who firmly believe that
God loves them. Pritchard writes in his study of Willow Creek, "all
the seekers or weekend attenders I interviewed were convinced that
God loves them. They held this belief before coming to Willow
Creek."42
"God loves you" will
not do. What unbelievers need to know is how God loves them:
This
is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son
into the world that we might live through him. This is love: not that
we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning
sacrifice for our sins.43
We've heard liberals say it for
years: "The Church must change or die. The culture calls the
shots. We must re-read the Bible to fit the culture. When it comes to
doctrine, don't sweat the details. Our differences don't matter
anyway. After all, doctrine divides; it's the mission that really
unites us. And when it comes to that mission, we're justified in
using whatever means we deem necessary. Remember, people just need to
know that God loves them." Now we're hearing Bible-believing
Christians saying the very same things.
The old-line liberals considered
the Gospel irrational; Bible-believing liberals consider it
irrelevant. The old-line liberals criticized the Gospel;
Bible-believing liberals are trying to give it a makeover. The
old-line liberals tried to deconstruct the Gospel; Bible-believing
liberals are trying to reinvent it. Old-line liberals did their best
to discredit the Gospel; Bible-believing liberals are doing their
best to shift the focus away from the Cross.
Do Bible-believing liberals
realize how liberal they really are? No. Are they well intentioned?
Certainly! But the some of the old-line liberals were well
intentioned too. St. Bernard of
Clairvaux said, "Hell
is full of good intentions."
When the Church follows the
advice of liberals—Bible-believing or otherwise— the Gospel
message suffers. When liberals —Bible-believing or otherwise—
have their say and have their way, the Cross ends up obscured. When
the Cross is obscured sinners go unsaved. This alone is reason enough
to turn a deaf ear to the advice of these well-intentioned liberals
—Bible-believing or otherwise.
Change
or Die?
Bible-believing liberals say,
"The Church must change or die." But they cannot tell you
what the Church will be preaching 5, 10 or 20 years in the future. No
one really knows, it all depends on how things change.
In fact, Bible-believing liberals
cannot even say that the Church will be preaching in at all in the
future; maybe it will be doing poetry slams, kabuki theater or
walking the labyrinth. No one really knows, it all depends on how
things change. Do you really want to entrust your children and
grandchildren to this kind of a Church?
Bible
believing liberals say, "The Church must change or die."
But change can't insure the survival of the Church. The survival of
the Church depends entirely on the One Who lived and died and lives
again forever, the One Who does not change —"Jesus Christ, the
same yesterday and today and forever."44
Swift
to its close ebbs out life's little day;
Earth's
joys grow dim; its glories pass away;
Change
and decay in all around I see;
O
Thou Who changest not, abide with me.
Hold
Thou Thy cross before my closing eyes; Shine through the gloom and
point me to the skies. Heaven's morning breaks, and earth's vain
shadows flee; In life, in death, O Lord, abide with me.
45
1The
first statement belongs to Rick Warren, perhaps the most influential
conservative evangelical in the world today. Rick Warren, "First
Person: Stifled by Structure," Baptist Press September
22, 2003. The second statement belongs to John Shelby Spong, perhaps
the most notorious liberal in the world today. John Shelby Spong,
Why Christianity Must Change Or Die: A Bishop Speaks to Believers
in Exile, San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1998, pp. 198-199.
Of course, Warren and Spong are not alone. A few minutes of
searching produced the following titles by a variety of authors: A
Church for the 21st Century, Bringing Change to Your
Church to Meet the Challenges of a Changing Society; Dying for
Change; Changing Church: How God is Leading His Church Into The
Future; How to Change Your Church (without killing it); Pouring
New Wine Into Old Wineskins: How to Change a Church Without
Destroying It; Faithful yet
Changing: The Church in Challenging Times.
2Gene
Edward Veith, Issues, Etc., Sunday, March 28, 2004, hour 1.
3William
Tighe, Issues, Etc., Monday, April 4, 2005, hour 2.
4John
Armstrong, "Trendier-Than-Thou: An Essay," Premise,
vol. 2, no. 3, March 27, 1995.
5Michael
Horton, A Better Way, Rediscovering the Drama of God-Centered
Worship, Grand Rapid: Baker, 2002, p. 218.
6Ibid.,
p. 214, emphasis mine.
7The
first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church USA, Gene Robinson,
still claims to affirm Scripture's authority: "This is not
about the authority of Scripture, this is about the interpretation
of Scripture." " New Hampshire's Bishop Gene Robinson,"
Fresh Air radio interview, December 9, 2004.
8G.
A. Pritchard, Willow Creek Seeker Services, Evaluating a New Way
of Doing Church, Grand Rapids: Baker, 1996, p. 276.
9The
Willow Creek web site says, "Nancy Beach's main
responsibilities include overseeing the use of creative arts at
Willow Creek's services and serving on the church's Management Team.
She is also a gifted teacher and speaks at both weekend and New
Community services." www.willowcreek.org/teaching_pastors.asp
10Gilbert
Bilezikian, Beyond Sexual Roles: What
the Bible Says About a Woman's Place in Church and Family, Grand
Rapids: Baker Academic, 1985, p. 145, emphasis mine. Bilezikian has
also written, "…it is evident that the statement in 1
Corinthians 14:33-36 forbidding women to speak in church has nothing
to do with women exercising their spiritual gifts. In this passage,
the Apostle was dealing with a different issue that did not concern
the exercise of spiritual gifts. He was actually opposing, by
quoting their words derisively, abusive church leaders who were
intent on excluding women from active participation in the life of
the church" and "Since the institution of ordination is
traditional rather than biblically prescribed, there can be no valid
objection raised on scriptural grounds to women being ordained."
www.godswordtowomen.org/challenge.htm. Bilezikian asserts that women
must be ordained for the church to be authentic: "There cannot
be authentic community as described in the New Testament without the
full inclusion of the constituency of members into the ministry,
life, and leadership of the group." Susan Olasky, "Femme
Fatale," World Magazine, March 29, 1997.
12Ibid.,
emphasis mine. The membership FAQ at Willow Creek's web site also
says, "It is and has historically been the position of Willow
Creek Church that the Bible, when interpreted comprehensively,
teaches the full equality of men and women in status, giftedness and
opportunity for ministry. Therefore, Willow Creek affirms the
participation of women in all levels of leadership, including elder
positions and teaching positions (based on spiritual qualification
and giftedness). We recognize that this is a complex issue and has
historically been the subject of much debate among godly believers."
Actually, the issue had never been a subject of debate until the
late 20th century. At Willow Creek, members are required
to agree, "that they can joyfully sit under the teaching of
women teachers" and "that they can joyfully submit to the
leadership of women in various leadership positions." See also,
Wayne Grudem, "Willow Creek Requires Egalitarian Position For
Staff And New Members But is there a Biblical Basis?" CBMW
News (now the Journal for Biblical Manhood and Womanhood),
vol. 2, no. 5, December 1997, and Roland Cap Ehlke, "A
Woman's Place: The
Evangelical Debate over the Role of Women in the Church,"
Christian Research Journal, vol. 22, no. 4.
13The
Willow Creek website states, "The sole basis of our belief is
the Bible, which is uniquely God-inspired, without error, and the
final authority on all matters on which it bears."
www.willowcreek.org/what_we_believe.asp.
14Bill
Hybels, Willow Creek's head pastor, has signed, the document, "Men,
Women and Biblical Equality". It says: "The few isolated
texts that appear to restrict the full redemptive freedom of women
must not be interpreted simplistically and in contradiction to the
rest of Scripture, but their interpretation must take into account
their relation to the broader teaching of Scripture and their total
context." Christians for Biblical Equality, "Men, Women
and Biblical Equality," Minneapolis, Minnesota: 1989. The
document says, "women and men are to be recognized, developed
and used in serving and teaching ministries at all levels of
involvement: … in pastoral care, teaching, preaching, and
worship."
15Pritchard,
Willow Creek Seeker Services, p. 272.
16Peter
Meiderlin's tract was, "A
Prayerful Admonition for Peace to the Theologians of the Augsburg
Confession." See Hans Rollmann,
"In Essentials Unity: The Pre-history of a Restoration Movement
Slogan," Restoration Quarterly, vol. 39, no. 3, 1997. In
the tract Meiderlin recounted a vision in which Satan claimed to be
secretly directing the movement for doctrinal purity.
17Jerry
Buckner, "The Man, His Ministry, and His Movement: Concerns
about the Teachings of T. D. Jakes, Christian Research Journal,
vol. 22, no. 2, 1999. Jakes is also a proponent of the Word-Faith
heresy. See also Chris Carmichael, "Willow Creek Bookstore
Peddles Error: When Churches Promote Books Instead of The Book,"
christianunplugged.com/wcbooks.htm
18"As
the Bible teaches, there is one God, eternally existing in three
persons — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — each possessing all the
attributes of Deity." www.willowcreek.org/what_we_believe.asp
19Rick,
Warren, "Purpose-Driven Preaching: An Interview with Rick
Warren," Michael Duduit, Preaching, September-October,
2001.
20"This
Evangelist has a 'Purpose'," Cathy
Grossman, USA Today, July 21, 2003.
21"A
Purpose Driven Phenomena, An Interview with Rick Warren,"
Modern Reformation, January/February 2004.
22Emphasis
mine. The document even entertains the argument that Christianity
may be, "one of many truths found in various religions or in
creation in general. …in theory these other truths have a similar
value and final goal…" WCC Conference on World Missions and
Evangelism, Come, Holy Spirit – Heal and Reconcile: Called in
Christ to be Reconciling and Healing Communities, Preparatory
Paper 1, Athens, Greece, May 12-19, 2005, p. 13.
23Sean
Hamill, "Pastor, Imam have Dialogue at Suburban Church,"
Chicago Tribune, October 12, 2001.
24Donald
Matzat, "The New Liberals," Issues Etc. Journal,
vol. 3, no. 2, 1998.
25Proceedings
of the 2004 General Conference of The United Methodist Church,
Tuesday Afternoon Proceedings, 2004 Daily Edition vol. 4 no.
6, p. 1770, Perry served as chairman of the Commission on the
General Conference.
26Horton,
A Better Way, p. 215.
27"The
ecumenical movement has its origins in the missionary movement, for
the contemporary search for the unity of the church was initiated
within the framework of the mission endeavour." WCC Conference
on World Missions and Evangelism, Come, Holy Spirit – Heal and
Reconcile: Called in Christ to be Reconciling and Healing
Communities, Preparatory Paper 1, Athens, Greece, May 12-19,
2005, p. 1.
28Mark
Mittelberg, from Building a Contagious Church, Revolutionizing
the Way We View and Do Evangelism, Grand rapids: Zondervan,
2000, p. 380.
29Rick
Warren, The Purpose Driven Church, Growth without Compromising
Your Message & Mission, Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1995, p.
62.
30"A
Purpose Driven Phenomena, An Interview with Rick Warren,"
Modern Reformation, January/February 2004.
31George
Barna, Marketing the Church, Colorado Springs: NavPress,
1988, p. 145.
33C.
Peter Wagner, Your Church Can Grow - Seven Vital Signs Of A
Healthy Church, Ventura, California: Regal Books, 1976, p. 137.
34Mittelberg,
Building a Contagious Church, pp. 128-129.
35Spong,
Why Christianity Must Change Or Die, p. 84.
36www.lakewood.cc/index.htm,
emphsis mine.
37Joel
Osteen, Your Best Life Now: 7 Steps to Living at Your Full
Potential, New York: Warner Faith, 2004, p. 57.
38Ibid.,
p. 58. Compare Osteen with Spong: "Religion, I believe, in its
highest and purest form calls us to respect the innate dignity of
every human being and help them become all that they can be…. I
worship God by living, by loving and by being all that I can be."
John Shelby Spong on The O'Reilly Factor, Wednesday, April
13, 2005.
39Pritchard,
Willow Creek Seeker Services, p. 264.
40Bill
Hybels, Seven Wonders of the Spiritual World, Dallas: Word,
1988, p. 137.
42Pritchard,
Willow Creek Seeker Services, pp. 263-264.
45Henry
Lyte, "Abide with Me," st. 2 & 8, 1847.
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