Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Welcome To The Culture War, Pastor Tim Keller
The Federalist ^ | 02/13/2023 | Elle Purnell

Posted on 02/13/2023 11:03:32 AM PST by SeekAndFind

We have yet to see the Keller Center’s fruit, but we can hope it will meet the cultural and moral fights on the political battlegrounds they’ve fallen on.

“The historical Christian positions on social issues do not fit into contemporary political alignments,” wrote superstar Presbyterian pastor Tim Keller in a September 2018 op-ed for The New York Times titled “How Do Christians Fit Into the Two-Party System? They Don’t.” Keller, who pastors a large church in New York City and has long characterized his intended approach to evangelism as “winsome,” has been critiqued by other thinkers such as James R. Wood and Aaron Renn for taking an approach that “did not denounce secular culture, but confidently engaged that culture on its own terms in a pluralistic public square,” as Renn put it.

But last week’s announcement of a Keller Center for Cultural Apologetics, a project of Keller and The Gospel Coalition, offers hope that Keller is more intentionally engaging the reality of the culture war.

Tim Keller and the ‘Neutral World’

Keller has rightly earned his place as a leader in the modern evangelical church. While I haven’t digested every book and sermon of his, I’ve gleaned wise insight on the Christian life in the numerous ones I have read and listened to.

But Keller would be the first to admit he’s not all-knowing — and the way a shrinking Western church should engage the increasingly militant culture around it is fair game for debate. Keller himself has acknowledged that his approach to evangelism and cultural engagement is not a “one size fits all” approach for every generation or society. Throughout his ministry, though, he has conveyed a wariness of political alignments (though not politics itself).

His NYT op-ed is representative of his approach to politics as a Christian — which, in modern America, means his approach to the culture war. While Keller admits that certain moral issues that have been political throughout history, such as slavery, do have necessary biblical battle lines, he offers care of the poor as an example of a political issue for which either side can find biblical reasoning. “Most political positions are not matters of biblical command but of practical wisdom,” he says.

Last April, Keller made a similar argument in a long Twitter thread that included this point:

I know abortion is a sin, but the Bible doesn’t tell me the best political policy to decrease or end abortion in this country, nor which political or legal policies are most effective to that end. The current political parties will say that their policy most aligns morally with the Bible, but we are allowed to debate that and so our churches should not have disunity over debatable political differences!

That might have been a sound point during the Clinton administration, when you could agree on minimizing abortion and still disagree over whether the best avenue was banning it or making it “safe, legal, and rare.” But today, one of the two parties has proudly adopted a stance that encourages women to “shout your abortion,” no longer in the shameful corners of the party but in the mainstream. Last year, 219 out of 220 House Democrats voted for a radical bill that would effectively legalize abortion on demand throughout all nine months of pregnancy, wiping out state protections for the unborn. No serious person is arguing that such a stance aligns with the Bible.

The mindset Keller has expressed — that most political positions aren’t absolute spiritual battlegrounds — was accurate in yesterday’s sanctuaries (and for most of Keller’s career, considering he planted Redeemer Presbyterian Church in 1989). It reflects what Renn calls the “neutral world” in what he’s dubbed the “three worlds of evangelism.” Following the pre-1990s “positive world,” in which most of Western culture looked favorably at Christianity and its values, the “neutral world” reigned until roughly a decade ago, when Western society’s attitude toward Christianity soured into a “negative world.”

In a neutral world where the most controversial political topics were tax cuts or foreign policy, the apartisan approach Keller has espoused was likely wise for the average Christian. However, American politics in the past decade has ceased to be chiefly about policies like taxes or welfare spending or even immigration — issues on which Christians can make good-faith arguments for a variety of political stances.

Fighting a Culture War in a Hostile World

Now, in Renn’s “negative world,” the political left has become the party of celebrating abortion on demand until birth; of chopping off the breasts and genitals of confused, manipulated children and ripping them from their objecting parents’ custody; of inflaming hatred based solely on the color of a person’s skin; of obliterating the nuclear family; and of inundating schoolchildren with pornographic books and the performances of cross-dressing male strippers. America’s leftist factions have used the highest office of law enforcement to terrorize a pro-life pastor, shuttered church gatherings, and continue to demand that Christians proclaiming simple truths like God’s design for marriage be excommunicated from their jobs and public discourse.

America is neck-deep in a culture war, and some of the most prolific instigators of it are in our highest political offices. Keller’s right that no political party is perfect and that Christians should not make an idol of a party or of politics in general. But unless we go the way of the early 20th-century fundamentalists, we’re going to have to meet the cultural onslaught — and some of the biggest arenas of the cultural fight have been made political. I’m sure Keller would agree that it shouldn’t be a partisan position to protect kindergarteners from being coached into sexual confusion by their teachers, but alas, that is where the political left has chosen to draw its battle lines.

With the announcement of the Keller Center, there’s hope Keller and The Gospel Coalition are catching up to what time it is. Keller’s narration in the announcement video mirrors the language of Renn’s “three worlds” almost verbatim:

We now live in a post-Christendom culture. For at least a thousand years, Western culture has been what you might call Christendom culture. Even if most people were not devout Christians, there was a positive understanding of Christianity in the culture. … The culture instilled in people a certain amount of background beliefs that the Bible assumes. … [But] now, you’re in, how do you win people to Christ in a post-Christendom era? And the church does not have any idea how to do it.

The concept of a “post-Christendom West” isn’t a new idea for Keller, who published a book three years ago titled “How to Reach the West Again.” In it, he expressed a similar point about the growing hostility of Western culture, but maintained that “When the church, in the interests of acquiring political power, aligns too much with the current age’s secular left or right, it is sapped of both spiritual power and credibility with non-Christians.”

As recently as last week, Keller criticized evangelicals who are “turning to a political project of regaining power in order to expel secular people from places of cultural influence.” While Christians should not seek out power for power’s sake, we should defend the vulnerable from the harmful lies and agendas of those in positions of cultural authority.

Jesus rejected the zealotry of those who expected him to overthrow the Roman empire, but He also denounced the faux moralism of the Pharisees, the prominent cultural leaders of the society in which he lived. That faux moralism has a parallel in today’s false gospels that actively promote sin in the name of “inclusivity” or “a woman’s right to choose” — and one of the chief avenues perpetuating those false gospels is political.

We have yet to see the Keller Center’s fruit, but we can hope it will meet the cultural and moral fights on the political battlegrounds they’ve fallen on, and not shy away from them out of fear of the appearance of political allegiances. Among other things, the Keller Center declares its mission is to assist “Pastors seeking help applying gospel truth to complex cultural issues” and “Professors, teachers, authors, and thought leaders seeking to identify and critique the contradictions and lies of modern secular culture.”

Those “complex cultural issues” have reached a point where a Christian’s perspective — one that reveres the sanctity of life, the sacred duty of rearing and protecting children, and the created purposes and differences between men and women that reflect the love Christ himself has for the church — is interpreted as not just a political view, but political extremism.

I hope Keller, whom I admire as a theologian, will use the project to boldly meet the cultural onslaught where the righteousness and redemption of Christ are so desperately needed, and the conviction of the church is so often desperately lacking. By the grace of God, such an endeavor would be a worthy one.


Elle Purnell is an assistant editor at The Federalist, and received her B.A. in government from Patrick Henry College with a minor in journalism.


TOPICS: Evangelical Christian; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: culturewar; timkeller

1 posted on 02/13/2023 11:03:32 AM PST by SeekAndFind
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind

Keller will take the coward’s way out, I am certain.


2 posted on 02/13/2023 11:06:50 AM PST by alstewartfan ("She looks like she's 19 years old, sitting there like a lady with her legs crossed." Creepy Joe)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind

Keller is woke - https://disntr.com/?s=Keller+


3 posted on 02/13/2023 11:13:32 AM PST by Perseverando (Antifa, BLM, RINOs, Islamonazis, Marxists, Commucrats, DemoKKKrats: It's a Godlessness disorder!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind

[But] now, you’re in, how do you win people to Christ in a post-Christendom era? And the church does not have any idea how to do it.
= = =

I’ll wade in here.
No, the Church does not have any idea. The Church is to become the pure Bride of Christ.

I Peter:

1Wives, in the same way, submit yourselves to your husbands, so that even if they refuse to believe the word, they will be won over without words by the behavior of their wives

2when they see your pure and reverent demeanor.

(Note the wife does not have an ‘action plan’ to win her husband.)

14But even if you should suffer for what is right, you are blessed. “Do not fear what they fear; do not be shaken.”

15But in your hearts sanctify Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give a defense to everyone who asks you the reason for the hope that is in you. But respond with gentleness and respect,

16keeping a clear conscience, so that those who slander you may be put to shame by your good behavior in Christ.

17For it is better, if it is God’s will, to suffer for doing good than for doing evil.

(This implies to me, currently, that maybe the World is to see my pure and reverent demeanor. And that will win them (those who may be won). Not some ‘action plan’ of the Church. We are just getting started toward The Church as Jesus wants it. There will be falling away, disagreements, false doctrines and teachers, etc. Then The True Church will act with the Spiritual power seen in Acts. And ‘win’ those who may be won. - - My opinion. I welcome discussion.)


4 posted on 02/13/2023 11:23:35 AM PST by Scrambler Bob
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind

Is he even a Christian? Only God knows his heart


5 posted on 02/13/2023 12:11:12 PM PST by Nashcash
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind; xzins
[But] now, you’re in, how do you win people to Christ in a post-Christendom era? And the church does not have any idea how to do it.

Um… maybe just preach the gospel?

But people need to know they are sinners and need to repent. Christians need to be salt and light. They need to identify sins and call people to repentance. Our modern culture does not recognize sin. They take pride in their sinful behavior and those people are more committed to their sins than Christians are in calling out those sins and leading them to repentance.

Mainline denominations have not only been infiltrated by unrepentant sinners, but they are being run by them.

Keller is a mainline Protestant preacher. Is he committed or compromised?

6 posted on 02/13/2023 1:07:55 PM PST by P-Marlowe (I got the <ΙΧΘΥΣ>< variant. Catch it. John 3:16)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind
We now live in a post-Christendom culture. For at least a thousand years, Western culture has been what you might call Christendom culture. Even if most people were not devout Christians, there was a positive understanding of Christianity in the culture. … The culture instilled in people a certain amount of background beliefs that the Bible assumes. … [But] now, you’re in, how do you win people to Christ in a post-Christendom era? And the church does not have any idea how to do it.

What an indictment of the church of today.

We need to get back to making disciples and preaching the gospel and the inerrancy of Scripture.

You can't legislate morality and can't change behavior by passing laws.

The only solution is a regenerated spirit.

7 posted on 02/13/2023 1:26:36 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith…)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: metmom; xzins
You can't legislate morality and can't change behavior by passing laws.

All laws are intended to legislate morality and to change people’s behavior.

Can you name one that doesn’t?

8 posted on 02/13/2023 2:14:42 PM PST by P-Marlowe (I got the <ΙΧΘΥΣ>< variant. Catch it. John 3:16)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind
As recently as last week, Keller criticized evangelicals who are “turning to a political project of regaining power in order to expel secular people from places of cultural influence.”

This is typical commie underhandedness from Tim Keller. Christians should want everyone in a position of cultural influence in our society to be Christian. This is precisely what God wants, why would we who are servants of God want anything different?

9 posted on 02/13/2023 3:46:47 PM PST by Tom in SFCA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: P-Marlowe

Laws just give the justice system teeth to prosecute law breakers.

And perhaps people really do think they can legislate morality, or that laws are intended to.

But really, just whose behavior is ever changed by laws? Only those who don’t need them because they fear the consequences. Criminals certainly don’t care if their behavior is legal or not. They know it’s not and they don’t care. The laws don’t stop them.


10 posted on 02/13/2023 3:48:34 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith…)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind
“The historical Christian positions on social issues do not fit into contemporary political alignments,” wrote superstar Presbyterian pastor Tim Keller in a September 2018 op-ed for The New York Times...

This is a lie. Leftism is of Satan. The Democrat Party is a leftist institution. Christians must renounce the Democrat Party.

The GOP is corrupt as an institution (as are all human institutions) and there are numerous God-hating criminals among the most influential Republicans today, but the GOP as a whole is not an institution devoted to advancing an anti-God ideology as is the Democrat Party.

11 posted on 02/13/2023 3:52:40 PM PST by Tom in SFCA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: metmom
But really, just whose behavior is ever changed by laws?

Making homosexual marriages illegal again would prevent people from marrying same-sex partners. Making "gender reassignment" surgeries illegal for minors would prevent minors from receiving such surgeries. Making abortion illegal would prevent most abortions. Etc. Most people want to obey the law and thereby stay out of trouble.

12 posted on 02/13/2023 3:57:45 PM PST by Tom in SFCA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: metmom; xzins
Laws just give the justice system teeth to prosecute law breakers.

You can’t have a law breaker without a law.

The cliché that you can’t legislate morality is demonstrably false. That’s what laws do. They are intended to promote the morality of the legislators. There is no law on the books that you can point to that doesn’t, in one way or another, legislate morality.

If you think there is, then point one out.

13 posted on 02/13/2023 5:11:14 PM PST by P-Marlowe (I got the <ΙΧΘΥΣ>< variant. Catch it. John 3:16)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: metmom

Jeremiah 6:14
They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly, saying, Peace, peace; when there is no peace


14 posted on 02/13/2023 6:24:27 PM PST by Theophilus (It's fake and defective)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind

Keller is smart, he is a believer, and he is a NY/ CT snob.

Anything that smacks of flyover country is anathema to him. Too bad he can’t tell his enemies from his friends.


15 posted on 02/13/2023 7:58:16 PM PST by nicollo ("I said no!")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: P-Marlowe; SeekAndFind; metmom

Mainline protestantism is thyatira if it isn’t mystery babylon. I say this as a self-removed united methodist ordained elder. It is a different gospel, a doctrine of demons. “Come out of her, My people, lest you participate in her plagues.”


16 posted on 02/14/2023 5:06:43 AM PST by xzins (Retired US Army chaplain. Support our troops by praying for their victory. )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: P-Marlowe; metmom

Every law is based on some moral position. I can’t think of one that isn’t.


17 posted on 02/14/2023 5:15:19 AM PST by xzins (Retired US Army chaplain. Support our troops by praying for their victory. )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson