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James
Montgomery Boice
[Earlier this year the late Dr. James Montgomery
Boice delivered a series of three messages — the Den Dulk Lectures
— at Westminster Theological Seminary, Escondido, California. The
following are his opening words which appeared in Update, the
Westminster Seminary in California magazine and used by permission.]
These are not good days for the evangelical church
as three recent books agree: No Place for Truth by David Wells;
Power Religion by Michael Horton; and Ashamed of the Gospel
by John MacArthur. Though the titles speak clearly, the subtitles
are even more revealing. Respectively, they are: "Whatever Happened
to Evangelical Theology?", "The Selling Out of the Evangelical Church",
and "When the Church Becomes like the World." These three careful
observers agree that evangelicalism approaches abandoning its truth-heritage.
A Thirty-Year Perspective
I returned to the United States from Europe in
1966 to work at Christianity Today. The 1960s were a time of rising
influence for evangelicals. Under the leadership of Carl E H. Henry,
Christianity Today challenged the theological trends in liberal
churches. Evangelical seminaries grew large and numerous. Evangelical
churches emerged from their suburban ghettos to engage selected
aspects of the secular culture. One decade later, Newsweek magazine
would call 1976 "the year of the evangelical." From 1968
to 1980, I was part of a mainline church. Like other churches, it
was declining because it had adopted the world's ways in the four
following areas:
The World's Wisdom
Liberals ceased to seek wisdom from God through
the Scriptures and became deaf to the reforming voice of God in
the church. Undermined by rationalism, they were no longer able
to receive the Bible as God's Word to man, only as man's word about
God.
The World's Theology
I will define the world's theology as the view
that human beings are basically good, that no one is really lost
and that belief in Jesus Christ is not necessary for salvation,
though it is helpful for some people. Liberal churches could not
abandon biblical terminology and still pretended to be Christian.
But biblical terms were given different meanings. Sin became ignorance
or the oppression of certain social structures. Jesus became a pattern
for creative living — an example or a revolutionary. Salvation became
liberation from oppression. Faith became awareness of oppression
and the willingness to do something about it. Evangelism meant working
to overthrow entrenched injustice.
The World's Agenda
The theme of the 1964 World Council of Churches
was: "the world must set the agenda." Liberals believed
that the church's concerns should be the concerns of the world,
even to the exclusion of the gospel. Hunger, racism, ecology, aging
— whatever issue was crucial to the world was to be of first concern
to Christian people.
The World's Methods
God has given us methods to do his work: participation,
persuasion and prayer. But mainline churches jettisoned these methods
in favour of power, politics and money. A cartoon that appeared
in The New Yorker got it exactly right. One pilgrim on the Mayflower
said to another, "Religious freedom is my immediate goal, but
my long range plan is to go into real estate."
The Worldly Churches
What hit me like a thunderbolt several years
ago is that what I had been saying about liberal churches in the
1960s and 1970s now can be said about evangelical churches too.
Have evangelicals now fixed their eyes on a worldly kingdom and
chosen politics and money as their weapons? About ten years ago
Martin Marty, a shrewd observer of the American church, said that
by the end of the century evangelicals would be "the most worldly
people in America:" He was probably too cautious. Evangelicals
fulfilled his prophecy before the turn of the millennium.
The World's Wisdom
Evangelicals are not consciously heretics. Is
the Bible God's Word? Of course! Is it authoritative? Yes, that
too. Inerrant? Most evangelicals will affirm inerrancy. But many
do not think the Bible adequate to meet today's challenges, or sufficient
for winning people to Christ. They have turned to felt-need sermons,
entertainment or "signs and wonders." The Bible is insufficient
for achieving Christian growth; so they turn to therapy groups or
Christian counselling. It is insufficient for making God's will
known; so they look for external signs or revelations. It is inadequate
for changing our society; so they establish evangelical lobby groups
in Washington and work to elect "Christian" congressmen,
senators, presidents and other officials. They seek change by power
politics and money.
The World's Theology
Like the liberals, evangelicals are giving new
meaning to the Bible's words, pouring secular, therapeutic content
into spiritual terminology. Sin has become dysfunctional behaviour;
salvation, self-esteem or wholeness; and Jesus, an example for right
living. Sunday by Sunday people are told how to have happy marriages
and raise nice children, but not how to get right with God.
The World's Agenda
Francis Schaeffer said that happiness is the
maximum amount of personal peace and sufficient affluence to enjoy
it. Forget world hunger, racism or ecology. The world's agenda is
to be happy. But is not this the message of much evangelical preaching
today? To be happy? To be satisfied? Though its most extreme expression
is found in health, wealth and prosperity preachers, the gospel
of the good life permeates evangelical preaching, failing to expose
sin, and to drive men and women to the Saviour' True discipleship
is hard.
The World's Methods
Evangelicals now emphasise numerical growth,
physical plants and money. Pastors tone down the hard edges of biblical
truth and use bizarre evangelistic methods and entertainment to
attract more people. Many support a National Association of Evangelicals
lobby in Washington and social action groups to advance specific
legislation. One church attracts worshipers by imitating radio news
programs that promise: "Give us twenty-two minutes, and we'll
give you the world." Their Sunday "Express Worship"
service is, according to the pastor, "not one person delivering
the truth to you, but a shared experience."
When you put these contemporary evangelical characteristics
together - pursuit of the world's wisdom, acceptance of the world's
theology, adoption of the world's agenda and utilisation of the
world's methods — it is hard to escape feeling that today's evangelicals
have fallen into the trap of the liberals before them.
Yet, as Gene Veith writes, Christianity thrives
"not by trying to offer people what they already have, but
by offering them what they desperately lack — namely, the Word of
God and salvation through Jesus Christ."
The Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals exists
to call the church, amidst our dying culture, to repent of its worldliness,
to recover and confess the truth of God's Word as did the Reformers,
and to see that truth embodied in doctrine, worship and life. Central
are the five solas of the Reformation: Scripture alone, Christ alone,
faith alone and glory to God alone. the evangelical church must
repent of her sin and recover her historic Christian faith. Like
the Reformation, we must move forward by the power of the Word of
God. We can experience the same blessing and influence the reformers
had if we hold to a full-orbed gospel and do not compromise with
the culture around us, as we have been doing. if we hold to these
doctrines, our churches and those we influence will grow stronger,
while other churches go the way of the liberals before us, not vanishing
entirely but becoming increasingly significant as an effective religious
force.
Return to the Main Highway
Return to Calvinism and the Reformed Faith

:-) <——
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