Reforming Evangelicalism?
Too late.
(First posted 22 July 2005)
or the record, I have no sentimental attachment to the term evangelicalism or the visible movement that now employs that name. What's important to me are the principles of historic evangelicalism. I have explained a little more fully what those principles entail in an article posted here. Those wishing to delve into this theme more deeply should also read the document and subsequent discussion posted here.
The question of whether the evangelical movement is dying, dead, irrelevant, irreformable, or whatever, is not my primary concern in the series of articles I've been posting. If asked, I would say the large movement that has represented "American evangelicalism" for the past century and a half (beginning roughly with D. L. Moody and culminating in Billy Graham) is in its final death throes. (Billy Graham himself hardly seems "evangelical" most of the time nowadays.)
Actually, that's a really optimistic assessment. My strong suspicion is that the movement is well and truly dead, and we shouldn't mistake the bloated and expanding size of its corpse, or its occasional spontaneous post-mortem twitches, for signs of real life.
I'm not interested in reviving or reforming that movement. Neither church history nor Scripture gives us much encouragement to work for the reformation and perpetuation of organizations and movements. Earthly institutions and human campaigns always decline and decay. Even the Protestant Reformation had its main impact outside the Roman Catholic Church, the Catholic priesthood, and the papacyalthough those were the visible institutions the earliest Protestants originally set out to reform.
Institutional reform almost always fails. Twentieth-century evangelicals who stayed in the mainline denominations ultimately failed to reform any of them. We shouldn't be the least bit surprised or discouraged by that, but we should learn from it. Our concern should be for truth and principles, not for visible institutions, organizations, and movements.
To be as clear and concise as possible: What I am eager to see preserved and perpetuated are the sound, biblical ideas that sparked the evangelical and fundamentalist movements, not the corrupt cultures that ultimately overwhelmed them and led to their predictable demise.
My main aim in this current series of posts is to delineate some of the important differences between sound evangelical and fundamental principles and the various fads and manias most people today falsely refer to as "evangelicalism."
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10 comments:
It is very dangerous to begin defending and unquestioningly follow movements and institutions over and above Scripture. Liberalism or Pharisaical religion are the end results of this, both of which is present in various Evangelical circles.
Good points, Phil, with valid applications elsewhere as well!
"Yet they allowed for amazing diversity on peripheral issues."
But in being so caught up in the peripheral issues, we have lost sight of those things that make us truly evangelical. Going by your definition, there are very few who qualify. Very few.
May the Lord revive and reform His church!
Looking fwd to this series
Egad but it certainly does seem that the post-mortem twitches of evangelicalism are the only things that the world at large sees of it.
"Our concern should be for truth and principles, not for visible institutions, organizations, and movements."
ive been wanting to write something like this.
emphasizing that instituions wont last.
from religious institions to businesses, its spirit tends to decay and becomes more robotic.
we're tired of hearing those new labels of religion as if they guarantee their relationship with our Lord.
Labels dont define us. only by fruits can we tell the difference.
So true, and so necessary for us to be reminded of these vital distinctions frequently, as the errors of our fathers were very much like our own (probably because they were so much like ourselves!)
However, I've recently been emailing an old friend I've reconnected with after many years, and quickly discovered that we have some significant differences over peripheral doctrines even though we both hold to reformed theology. In fact, our emails have read more like heated debates, as he is committed to his views and I am committed to mine. We also disagree over our take on politics. Now, I love this brother, but making headway in our communication is nearly impossible. Objectively speaking, the problem is not over whose peripheral doctrines are correct, but rather that he does not accept the very concept that "peripheral" doctrines really exist at all, explaining to me that anything we call peripheral will inevitably become essential (as peripheral doctrines are viewed as essential by all who embrace them...peripherally). In fact, he seems to believe that the view we have in [the importance of] politics plays a significant role in our theology. Now, it is important to note here that his politics are not of the "typical" American evangelicalism ilk, but rather more libertarian, and one key disagreement is that I tend to take a more apolitical view towards horizontal politics (thanks in part to your series on politics Phil, of which I'm grateful) and his is more engaged. My friend is committed to the lordship of Christ, the doctrines of grace, and intellectual integrity in everything he studies, but I've been challenged by this notion that the peripheral does not/should not exist at all...particularly by someone who thinks politics (tertiary in order of importance, following essential doctrines and then peripheral ones).
"not the corrupt cultures that ultimately overwhelmed them and led to their predictable demise."
That's a great point that doesn't get mentioned enough.
In the Sharper Iron forum and the related article, mention is made of a 2005 Shepherd's Conference session that Phil gave on the modern evangelical movement.
The session paper is here (PDF format). I look forward to reading it later today.
There are a number of other interesting-looking sessions given that year by Mr. Johnson and others. The entire list is here.
The principles of true evanglicalism are alive! They function out of the beautiful uniqueness and razor sharp exclusivity of the Lord Jesus Christ Himself.
It seems to me that we can do no better than what Paul commanded Timothy in his pastoral letter at 2Timothy 4:1-5.
I appreciate your definition of Classic Evangelicalism, Phil and happily adhere.
I have wondered much in recent years that a weakness in the Evangelicalism of a forbears was a underdeveloped doxology and especially as it relates to soteriological/Christological truth.
How we define ourselves gives away what we are on the most basic, essential level. And if we begin with the Gospel we show ourselves first to be soteriological.
Yet, I wonder if our definition should not include an inexorable tie to the doxological. And it should display where our taxonomy begins. Do we begin with Theology Proper (as I assume would Jonathon Edwards)? Or, do we start with the Gospel and man's great need?
Maybe I am being anal about semantics. :)
But, I suspect that Classic Evangelicalism inadvertently spawned a generation of believers who felt that we (and our eternal destiny) were at the core of God's plan for the ages.
In reality, and I would assume everyone here agrees, at the core of the Lord's will is His own glory.
So, if we believe that, should not our seminaries reflect a doxological first taxonomy and shouldn't what we are at the core as confessing Evangelicals as God-glorifiers be articulated in our definition?
I wonder what that would look like in a written fashion.
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