Categories
Church Gospel Society Theology

Evangelical: What’s in a name?


There is a growing disdain for the term ‘evangelical’. This is not merely because evangelical is a pejorative term used by non-Christians. Nor is it merely because there are people who used to identify as evangelicals, but now call themselves exangelicals. But the term ‘evangelical’ has become associated with a political lobby group that is viewed as supporting the Trump presidency, which support is seen as unethical. 

The problem with the label ‘evangelical’ is that it’s pretty elastic depending on who is doing the stretching. On the one hand, there is the scholarly study of evangelicals which trace them back to the Enlightenment (Bebbington), or beyond (Haykin and Stewart). On the other hand, ‘evangelical’ has come to be defined in modern journalism as anyone who is non- Catholic and non-mainline Protestant. Even this latter elasticity can be stretched further to include evangelical Catholics and evangelical renewal movements in liberal mainline denominations. 

So what do we do with this elastic label? Some are ceasing to call themselves evangelical. Others are at least questioning what it means to be self-identified by the label. What is an evangelical to do? Let me offer three ways that over-stretched evangelicals can recover their integrity. 

Pick Theology over Sociology

Nobody would care if evangelicals had no social influence. But in the US evangelicals still have a large, if waning voice in society. So it is tempting to adopt a sociological approach to being an evangelical. This may mean that following social practices but doesn’t require you to confess anything definitive regarding theology. 

Picking theology over sociology is the better move. ‘Prosperity Gospel’preachers have false understandings of the doctrine of salvation, so their ‘gospel’ is not the same as the historic Christian gospel. Therefore, on a theological basis, prosperity gospel preachers are not “evangelicals”, even if the media mislabels them as such. 

Picking theology over sociology works in a different way as well. For those with a distaste for the American (and therefore McDonaldized) evangelical sub-culture, they may be tempted to jettison the evangelical label. Their distaste for middle-America Jesus culture may make them want to be affiliated somewhere else. 

But this is where high church Presbyterians, Anglicans, or others are in danger of denying their brothers and sisters who believe the essential bulk of what they confess. As well, they can deny their own history, or at least be selective about it. For example, the catholicity of Scottish Presbyterians like Chalmers, M’Cheyne and the Bonar brothers was matched with the mission-sending efforts of Calvinistic Baptists, William Carey and Andrew Fuller. The history of revived Calvinism saw the advance of evangelicals from Anglican, Presbyterian and Baptist denominations

Pick the Rabble Outside the Camp

The tough part about belonging to a local church or to a denomination or movement is feeling the crushing reality that your crowd is populated with fools, idiots and goofballs. Such associations are not great for winning friends and influencing people. In fact, the wisdom of today says that you should drop anyone who isn’t advancing you and your interests. 

But when you start pointing fingers at the folly of others it’s easy to have the fingers pointing back at you. Being associated with true-believing evangelicals means that you are in the company of the foolish, among whom you likely are chief. In fact, God “chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise” (1 Cor 1:27). 

So we have to be careful lest we disdain the not-yet sanctified fools who we will spend eternity with. Even in this life, we choose to metaphorically leave the inner ring (CS Lewis) and suffer outside the camp (Heb 13:13). It is in this refuse heap (Ex 29:14) that all of the fools for Christ’s sake congregate. Believers are saved by faith alone, yet such a faith that never remains alone. Therefore we can confidently speak of right doctrine and right practice as indicators for who is suffering outside the camp with Jesus. 

Choosing to Give Grace to Evangelical Folly

When Christians can cherish biblical truths that have been confessed through the ages, they can have the confidence to discuss and debate with each other about the issues that Christians have always been less clear about. This means we have to do something like a theological triage (Mohler), but it means more. It also means that as evangelicals get caught up in temporary manias (from Napoleon as Antichrist, to pro-Trump/never-Trump), we need to extend each other the grace— the undeserved favour, that will esteem the important confessions of faith which we know others possess, while lovingly critiquing their errors as we see them, and welcoming their watchfulness over our own. 

So should we abandon the label ‘evangelical’? I don’t think so. It’s a good term when it is well defined. As we strive for that definition in each generation, we have the opportunity to remember that there are many people going to heaven with whom we disagree. We also know that there are many people who think they are going to heaven, whose gospel is not sufficient to save them. It is for these confused people we must strive to bring true gospel clarity. 


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unsplash-logoTyler Callahan

 

Categories
Church Clint Gospel Spiritual Growth

What Does Being Converted or Deconverted Mean?

When people claim to be deconverted from Christianity, it has to make you wonder what they were converted to in the first place. If you can Instagram your deconversion, was your conversion only carrying the metaphysical weight of a tweet?

Life on its own terms

Thirty years ago, theologian David Wells wrote about the secular materialism of the West stating, “Affirming God means little, denying him means little; understanding life on its own terms is everything.” (Turning To God, 119).

When you look at the deconversion stories, you have to conclude that they are declarations that “understanding life on its own terms is everything”. Deconversions are the ultimate statement of self-expression. Normally they involve a repudiation of the past, a breaking of former allegiances, and a realignment of their values about right and wrong.

Deconversions are rightly named because they have all the elements of conversion, only in a self-defined, self-directed, self-orbiting way.

Biblical Conversion in the Modern World.

If the deconversions are merely conversions in reverse, it demands that we ask two questions. First, what is biblical conversion in the modern world (the subtitle of Wells’ book quoted above)? Second, were the deconverted really biblically converted at all?

Biblical conversion is the response to Jesus’ command, “repent and believe in the gospel” (Mark 1:15). This response is experientially ours, but it reveals a prior supernatural work done by God (see Romans 8:29-30), causing a person to be born “again” or “from above” (John 3:1-21). The church can see in a sinner’s life a visible shift from heeding themselves to heeding God.

Unseen and Seen

This shift can only take place due to God’s unseen regenerating action, which is publicly evidenced in a conscious turning to God. Anthony Hoekema wrote:

In regeneration the sinful principle of the old life is already replaced by the holy principle of the new life. But it is only in conversion that this transition penetrates into the conscious life, turning it into a new and Godward direction. The sinner consciously forsakes the old sinful life and turns to a life in communion with and devoted to God.

Saved By Grace, 120.

Conversion will then consciously assume a new way of thinking (Rom 6:11), having turned one’s mind from sin to Christ. Doing this roots conversion in believing repentance or metanoia (Gr.). And conversion rooted in this distinct, God-ward change of mind brings angelic joy as Jesus said:

there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance.

Luke 15:7

So we can conclude that biblical conversion is a divine work expressed in the conscious turn from sin and self to God and his gospel. Mark Dever lists the various conversions in the New Testament from Paul to Lydia and says, “Each of them turns, trusts, and follows. That’s conversion.” (What is a Healthy Church, 86).

Were the Deconverted Really Converted?

If we can confess what biblical conversions are, then how can there be deconversions? The doctrine of apostasy comes into play here. Deconversions are a trendy way of describing what the bible calls “falling away” (Hebrews 6:4-6). Deconversions are pubic revelations that a person was in fact one of the unfruitful soils which didn’t produce lasting fruit (cf. Matt 13:18-22). Instead, the visible ‘growth’ doesn’t last and it “falls away”. The lasting fruit is not an indication of how God might have blessed others through that person, but whether they continued on in saving belief to the end of their days.

Between the inner life and the outward profession of allegiance, there is a mystery which only God knows clearly. Many times the professing convert has had no supernatural work done in their life, but only a sociological shift. Other times, a person who slips away from the Christian walk may be a backsliding believer whom God will bring back to himself. Nevertheless, what is secret and known only to God will be revealed, if not in this life, then in the life to come at the judgement seat (2 Cor 5:10).

The Tentative Conclusion

When the professing believer, forsakes Christ and his people we must draw a tentative conclusion. We must conclude that as John says:

They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would have continued with us. But they went out, that it might become plain that they all are not of us.

1 John 2:19

Our conclusion is tentative, only in the sense that God is the one who looks on the heart (1 Sam 16:7). He has the definitive assessment. Jesus laid out the definitive assessment of converts or non-converts in an awe and fear-inducing statement:

 Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’

Matthew 7:21-23

Although deconversion testimonies can be shared with the ease of an Instagram posting, true conversion reveals an enduring faith that can only be described as a gift of God’s free grace (Eph 2:8-10).

Pray for the deconverted to escape

Pray for the professedly deconverted, that they would “come to their senses and escape from the snare of the devil, after being captured by him to do his will.” (2 Tim 2:26).



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