Posted on 10/05/2016 6:35:12 AM PDT by Gamecock
Pastor Andy Stanley is defending his approach to preaching amid questions from prominent evangelical leaders who contend his methods undermine the Bible's authority and pave the way for unbelief.
In a lengthy article in Outreach magazine on Friday, the pastor of North Point Community Church in Alpharetta, Georgia, responds to his critics and affirms that he believes in biblical inerrancy. What he is doing, he argues, is changing the angle from which he speaks to more effectively engage a post-Christian society, particularly millennials who have left the Church.
Controversy arose in light of Stanley's recent sermon series wherein he argued that because increasing numbers of people in the United States do not lend credence to the Bible, Christians should dispense with the "because the Bible told me so" rationale for believing its truth claims.
Appeals to biblical authority do not translate particularly for millennials who pursue higher education beyond high school, Stanley said.
"The dechurched who grew up in church exit because they find the version of Christianity they've grown up with unconvincing, uninspiring and irrelevant," Stanley said. Moreover, ample evidence exists for the resurrection and the claims Jesus made about Himself even if one does not believe that a worldwide flood took place or Hebrew exodus from Egypt occurred, he said.
But such a tack bothered Southern Baptist Theological Seminary President Al Mohler who wrote last week on his website that defenses of the Christian faith have never been more necessary. And it is impossible to access that faith without the written Word. Stanley, Mohler argued, was "undercutting our only means of knowing Christ and His resurrection from the dead the Bible," and warned that his approach would inexorably lead to "abject disaster" for the Church.
"This is an apologetic disaster and would leave Christians with no authoritative Scripture. Instead, we would be dependent upon historians (among others) to tell us what parts of both testaments we can still believe," Mohler said.
"Those parts will inevitably grow fewer and fewer. This is what must happen when the total trustworthiness, sufficiency, and authority of the Bible is subverted," Mohler continued.
Nothing could be further from the truth, Stanley replied in response to such charges. Mohler and others, he asserted, have misunderstood him.
Although Scripture does not provide guidelines for ministering to a post-Christian world, Stanley notes that at several times in the New Testament readers witness Peter and Paul operating from a different framework and using different language when speaking to Jews or Gentiles.
In Acts 17, for instance, the Apostle Paul addresses the Athenians, and urges them to repent from their idolatry. Yet although he refers to Him, Paul doesn't mention Jesus by name. To some that might seem like an egregious omission, like Paul was leaving out an essential element of the Gospel, when really he knew his audience's frame of reference.
"To say Paul's approach to the Gentiles in Athens differed from his approach to the Jews in Pisidian Antioch would be the understatement of understatements," Stanley said. "But his central message was the same. God has done something in the world on behalf of all humankind."
Stanley insists he is doing a similar thing today.
"So will you consider retooling in order to win some and save some? Are you willing to take a long, hard look at everything you're currently doing through the eyes of the post-Christian? Are you ready to be a student rather than a critic? We don't have time for tribes. We don't have time for the petty disagreements that only those inside our social media circles understand or care about," Stanley said.
"We're losing ground. The most counterproductive thing we can do is criticize and refuse to learn from one another. So come on. If you believe in the bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ, that's all I need to know. And in light of what's at stake, in light of who is at stake, perhaps that's all you need to know as well," he concluded.
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>> “And they were saved the same way as the OT Saints who did not yet see Jesus.” <<
But the Churchians will dispute that fact to the death. It demolishes all of their special theologies.
He did have the OT which he drew upon.
“The NT was penned by people who were witnesses or inspired by God.”
People. Witnesses. Inspired [people}.
They knew what they knew about Jesus from something other than scripture. And the NT was not yet written when they found out.
You’re just proving my point for me. Thanks.
You left out the Holy Spirit's role in this.
“The Hebrew Matthew is the only NT book we know for sure is real.”
There is no original Hebrew Matthew known. None.
“It is the most important of all the messianic writings.”
“Laughable.”
And yet you can’t refute what I said? I don’t even claim to know much about the text in question yet you can’t even make a serious argument for it?
“He was not ever called Jesus or Christ until the 4th century.”
I guess you’ve never read John 19:19-20?
“He was known by his given name by his followers.”
Again, John 19:19-20.
It always amazes how you guys repeatedly demonstrate how little you apparently know or think.
“You left out the Holy Spirit’s role in this.”
No, I didn’t: “Inspired [people}.”
Who do you think did that inspiring?
He did have the OT which he drew upon.
The NT is in the OT:
Luk_24:44 Then He said, “When I was with you before, I told you that everything written about Me in the law of Moses and the prophets and in the Psalms must be fulfilled.”
I didn’t gather that from your post. Thank you for clarifying.
I see that the choir has assembled and are arguing yet again on how to sing the song we’ve been given.
Does it say SATB at the top?
Ahhhh, Cappella!
There is no original of any book of the Bible.
There are many copies of the original gospel of Matthew, which was written in the Hebrew language, as obviously all of the NT writings had to have been.
Matthew is the only NT book that is available to us in the original form. All others are somewhat corrupted by translation into Greek, which is a language that does not perfectly interface with Yehova’s language.
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The oracles of Yehova were committed to Judah, as Paul stated in his letter to the Romans.
**They knew what they knew about Jesus from something other than scripture. And the NT was not yet written when they found out.**
And that is not available to us today. That is why we have the inspired word.
“here are many copies of the original gospel of Matthew, which was written in the Hebrew language...”
No, actually there are none. None has ever been found. There is not a single known ancient copy of Matthew in Hebrew. None.
“And that is not available to us today.”
The Holy Spirit and the Church are still available.
Assuming again??
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No, just logic.
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Keep your own false reality at your pleasure.
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At least one MS copy of the original Hebrew Matthew is known to exist at the Vatican.
Many others are found in Europe, and two are at the Hebrew University.
Stomp your little feet, plug your ears, and go LA, LA, LA, LA, LA, all you wish.
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“Keep your own false reality at your pleasure.”
Again, NONE have ever been found.
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Again, you prove my post!
28 separate complete MS, and one partial MS is “none?”
Denial is thy name!
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