Someone sent me an article
last week about “6 Questions Evangelicals Are Going to Have to Answer” (or some
such title). They followed it up with
another one, under a title like “50 Products Evangelicals Are Going to Have to
Stop Buying.”
Note: that second article
was rather sarcastic, poking fun at people who have boycotted one company
because of their stance on some moral issue but continuing to patronize other
companies with the same stance.
The articles were almost
interesting enough to read all the way through, but they both assumed, as might
be said on a lawyerly TV show, facts not in evidence. Mainly, that I do not now and never have
claimed to be an evangelical. In fact,
in 20+ years of ministry, I have only had one conversation about being
evangelical. It went something like
this:
Church member: Well it just
seems that if we’re going to call ourselves an evangelical church—
Me: What?
When did we do that?
It was reminiscent of
another time when a man who had been visiting the church for quite a while
(along with his family, his son even playing on the “worship team”) asked me to
come over to his house to talk about some thing. I did and he began to bring up a point of
doctrine he had heard me express in a sermon recently that he didn’t agree
with. He gave his view, I stated mine,
then he said—with something like consternation—“But I’ve been in Baptist
churches all my life and even went to a Baptist college and this is how it’s
always done!”
I calmly told him, “But this
isn’t a Baptist church and I’m not a Baptist.”
He had no idea what I meant. In
his mind, there was only one denomination in America : Baptists; and everyone believed the same. Surprisingly, he continued to come to church
with us but I’m not sure we ever convinced him we weren’t a Baptist church.
So, anyway, I read the
articles with varying degrees of interest about which prominent preachers have
or have not left “evangelicalism”. Some
of them I find interesting because the salient points are interesting: is this
guy preaching universalism? Has this guy denied the virgin birth? Is this guy saying that some sins aren’t sins
anymore? How come that one guy swears
during interviews? Isn’t he smart enough
to think of better words?
In my own mind, I might ask
the question, “Is what this guy (or gal) is teaching sound doctrine?” If the answer seems to me—from my
understanding of Scripture—to be “no” … I don’t know that I doubt their
salvation but I do start taking anything else they have said or written with a
grain of salt. Are they still “good
evangelicals”, though? I don’t care.
“Evangelical” is not a
Scriptural term. And while it might have
had some value and meaning at one time, in reality it’s just another buzz word
that may well have outlived its shelf life because it no longer has an
agreed-upon meaning. Like “missional” or
“seeker friendly” or “GWRBI”.
If someone asks me if I
think Pastor __________ (fill in the blank of the favorite pastor flavor du
jour) has left the evangelical reservation, I’ll ask what specific doctrinal
point has them troubled and go from there.
If they call me “evangelical” (I don’t know why they would start now as
I don’t think anyone ever has), I won’t be offended. At most, I might ask them what they mean by
it. If they say I have left
evangelicalism, I’ll do my best Jerry Seinfeld imitation and ask (at the top of
my lungs), “How can I be outed? I was
never in!”
What do I call myself, if
not evangelical, missional, or daoist (or whatever, I don’t mean to insult any
daoists out there)? It may be a cliché,
but I like the old saying: “We are not the only Christians, but we are
Christians only.”
I am not sure what the term means now. Always thought of Evangelical as being one who believes in sharing the gospel and converting others to Christianity. If that is the definition, I have been one in belief but not so much in action, which I repent of every day.
ReplyDeleteSo much of the modern thought is that we should not persuade people to become Christians. If we think that you can go to heaven no matter what you believe, then that is a good belief. But if you believe that people can only be saved by believing in Christ, then you are doing them a great disservice.
The word looks like it ought to mean something like "evangelism", which I am all for. Apparently, to some though, it has become a rigid set of beliefs "you better subscribe to or else".
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