Posted on 02/14/2008 4:28:15 PM PST by Terriergal
The Religious Left is successfully redefining what it means to be a conservative evangelical by misrepresenting what it means to be a conservative evangelical. In a recent conference call hosted by Faith in Public Life, one of the emerging voices of the Religious Left, Dr. Joel Hunter, said:
Theres also a change in the voices that are defining what is conservative now, and what is evangelical. In the past couple of decades youve had some very loud voices on both sides hard right, hard left and when those were the only choices, then of course many evangelicals are going to go with the hard right because, well, thats kind of where we mostly are. Now there are many more voices that are expanding the agenda, and so those people that have always had kind of a holistic approach, rather than just a one or two issue approach, are now feeling permission and given permission to be more nuanced and more sophisticated in their approach, rather than just going in a very bifurcated system. And so, what youre hearing now is that the old voices that appointed themselves as the definers of what was evangelical or what was conservative are not holding sway with the majority of evangelicals anymore.
By convincing America that conservative evangelicals are concerned only with two issues, stopping abortion and preserving traditional marriage, these new voices of evangelicalism are effectively making the case that conservative evangelicals ignore poverty, HIV/AIDS, and the environment. The history of evangelicalism tells a different story.
Evangelicals have set the standard throughout history for social action which continues into the present through numerous humanitarian relief organizations. The Association of Evangelical Relief and Development Organizations claim 64 such organizations as members, including World Vision, Compassion International, Samaritans Purse, and Mercy Ships.
One of the largest humanitarian relief organizations in the world is the Salvation Army. It defines its commitment to social services as an outward visible expression of the Army's strong religious principles. Those social services include disaster relief, services for the aging, AIDS education, medical facilities, and shelters for battered women. The Salvation Army impacts 30 million people a year in the United States alone. The founder of the Salvation Army, William Booth, was a Methodist minister. On its website the Salvation Army defines itself as an evangelical group.
To these readily recognizable evangelical organizations add the innumerable evangelical churches across America that in very quiet and unrecognized ways minister to the needs of the poor and suffering every day. In my own community a local evangelical church runs the oldest and largest homeless shelter in our county. Grace Gospel Fellowship in Pontiac, Michigan serves 127,000 meals a year, provides rehabilitation services and housing for drug addicts and single mothers, and creates jobs. It accomplishes its mission without one dime of government funding, and is dedicated to recovery through the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
The Religious Lefts appeal for the Religious Right to broaden its agenda to include poverty, HIV/AIDS, and the environment ignores the fact that conservative evangelicals have always had a strong commitment to these issues. So if conservative evangelicals are already leading the efforts to relieve poverty and disease, whats behind the call to broaden the agenda? Another agenda altogether.
Whats really happening here is an attempt by the Left to define evangelicalism down by moving it away from its emphasis on the power of the gospel to change lives. The churchs ability to affect social and cultural change, bringing relief to the poor and suffering, is rooted first and foremost in its commitment to the gospel of Jesus Christ, and what the gospel says about the condition of man in sin which results in the symptoms of poverty and disease.
The Religious Left invalidates the conservative evangelical commitment to humanitarian relief because we are achieving our ends in the name of Jesus Christ through the gospel, without the assistance of government funding. The fundamental tenant of modern liberalism is that a government program funded by redistributed wealth is the preferred method of humanitarian relief rather than what the church is accomplishing by faith through compassionate hearts.
The new voices of the Religious Left Rick Warren, Joel Hunter, Tony Campolo, Jim Wallis, et al are defining down what it means to be an evangelical by making the symptoms of mans sin (poverty, disease, etc.) a priority rather than addressing the cause of those symptoms (sin) and the cure found in the gospel of Jesus Christ.
The argument for this reprioritizing is a convincing one, suggesting the new priorities for evangelicals ought to be determined by asking, How would Jesus respond to (fill in your favorite social cause here)? The implied answer is that Jesus would be more concerned about the treatment of the poor (especially illegal immigrants) and, at best, neutral on the questions of abortion and homosexual marriage because Jesus never spoke against abortion or homosexual marriage.
These new voices of evangelicalism wear the label red letter Christians, but they are in reality white space Christians, determining Jesus view of abortion and homosexual marriage by focusing on what he didnt say rather than on what he did say. In Matthew 5 Jesus upholds the standard of the Mosaic Law, which is clear in its call for punishing anyone responsible for killing a child in the womb (Exodus 21:22-25). When Jesus wanted to illustrate true greatness, he set a child in the midst of the disciples and said, Of such is the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 19:14). In Matthew 19 Jesus clearly affirmed that marriage is between one man and one woman by validating the story of Adam and Eve, holding it up as the standard for marriage. As for the question of how Jesus would respond to illegal immigrants, Im pretty sure he would tell them to obey the law (cf. Matthew 22:21).
The new voices of evangelicalism sound eerily similar to the old voices of the social gospel movement who moved their churches away from the priority of the gospel in the early 20th Century, focusing instead on positive thinking and welfare as a solution to social ills. The result was empty pews and even emptier hearts. Ill tip my hat to the new constitution, take a bow for the new revolution, then Ill get down on my knees and pray we dont get fooled again (with apologies to Pete Townshend).
An EXCELLENT piece that sheds more light on this issue and why the religious left, as ‘permissive’ as it seems, in reality is preaching LAW not the gospel. A law they themselves do not fulfill either!
Good Advice vs. Good News
http://www.oneplace.com/ministries/The_White_Horse_Inn/archives.asp?bcd=2008-2-10
Folks who focus on man rather than God will be led astray to think as Warren does. Yes, we are to reach out with food, etc. AND the Gospel, but always keep our main focus on Christ else we be led off the narrow way.
My church has shed Purpose Driven madness for a local version of the same illness of looking to change the world - we’re “people driven!” And I am going to meet with the elders next month to explain this to them and request a meeting before the church if need be.
Simply impossible to be an Evangelical and a leftwingtard ~ the mind doesn’t work that way.
Jesus spoke against Adultery and sexual immorality. And I kind of doubt they were doing millions of abortions back in 30 AD.
What a great telecast. So right on. I hope people will take the time to listen.
When we start defining “evangelical” or “fundamentalist” or “born-again” or “christian” to meaning social intitatives or social positions instead of meaning “Bible Believing/Gospel Preaching/Conservative Theological Belief” then those definitions become meaningless. Instead a person should define their faith in terms of the Bible-and “Real (see Literal) belief” in Christ and His Words, and then let their political positions be guided by their faith (and their beliefs).
“Conservatives who vote for McCain are like abused dogs whom keep licking ~their own dried blood from~ their master’s hand”: THERE FIXED IT!!!
You would think... except that in the Emergent Church/postmodern church, the rule of noncontradiction does not apply. You can’t tell them A cannot equal NOT-A in the same time and same circumstances. They talk about quantum physics to try and justify their complete lack of rationality.
Keep us posted!
People driven. Great. Seeking the acclaim of men/social gospel.
Yup.
Though they were doing infanticide, and the church was of course the only ones who tried to save these tossed-out babies.
It;s always bugged me that if one is christian and conservative, one is labeld “evangelical.” As if no one ever actually looked up the meaning of the word.
I think you’re right except on John Macarthur.
We are not called to transform culture. We are called to preach the gospel. Macarthur has not budged on that.
Oh... the booklet on why government can’t save you — Yeah that was one of the things he’s written that I disagreed with. I agree with the title but the way he wrote it suggested that resisting oppression is always wrong. I agree with you there.
But that’s different than the ‘social gospel’ dominionist agenda of using Christ to transform culture.
Yep! So many people don’t understand why we loathe the message of Joel Osteen and Rick Warren etc... because it’s ALL LAW and NO GOSPEL!
I’m sure they never even think of it that way because what it does is substitute man’s law (a certain kind of conformity or niceness) for God’s law. Truth be told, we can’t even fulfill man’s law! Their messages are completely devoid of hope because they contain no gospel, no proclamation of how our debt is paid, which results in being spared the wrath of God, if we will repent and trust in Christ!
I hear ya.
Here’s one for you:
Reading the Bible Again For the First Time: Taking the Bible Seriously But Not Literally
by Marcus J. Borg
http://www.amazon.com/Reading-Bible-Again-First-Time/dp/0060609192
But He did say the final judgement of nations would be whether they fed the hungry, clothed the poor, took in people they didn’t know who needed a home, cared for the sick and minstered to those in prison.
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