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July 25, 2008
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Theology in the News
No Place for Complacency
David Wells on The Courage to Be Protestant.



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During the last 15 years, David Wells has cried out like a voice in the wilderness against the ills of modern evangelicalism. His latest book, The Courage to Be Protestant, conveys the essence of his argument in four preceding books: No Place for Truth (1993), God in the Wasteland (1994), Losing Our Virtue (1998), and Above All Earthly Pow'rs (2005). Wells, the Andrew Mutch Distinguished Professor of Historical and Systematic Theology at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, spoke with CT editor at large Collin Hansen about "truth-lovers, marketers, and Emergents in the postmodern world."

Why does it take courage to be a Protestant today?

It takes no courage simply to sign up as a Protestant. But Protestantism at its best has been defined by its understanding of biblical truth, and it is that truth that is at odds with both postmodern assumptions and with the operating assumptions of many in evangelical churches. This is a defining moment. The day is long past when anyone can safely go with the evangelical flow. However, swimming upstream is not easy.

Many voices today say evangelicals don't need renewed focus on orthodoxy. They say these beliefs haven't always led to godly behavior, so we should focus on orthopraxy. So why should we still try to get our doctrine right?

Of course orthodoxy can be dead! No one simply professing orthodox beliefs as the Pharisees did is, on that account, saved from the corruptions of their own hearts. But nor are the pragmatists who now dominate the evangelical world and who, however unknowingly, are substituting "acting" for "being." The problem with business know-how and therapeutic savvy, served up at the core of Christian faith, is that so much of it is saturated with cultural assumptions that do not pass biblical muster. Getting our doctrine right means taking into our minds the truth God has given us in his Word so that we might live godly lives by also being culturally savvy.

You argue that liberty on nonessentials has led evangelicals to devalue certain important matters (church government, baptism, eschatology, etc.). Does it necessarily follow that evangelical cooperation will sideline important doctrines?

No, it does not. I still think we need to cooperate with each other but to do so around a commonly held core of truth. What has happened is that the capacity to think about life in biblical terms has begun to disintegrate. That then meant that in this great evangelical coalition are those who doff their hats to the authority of Scripture but really see little relevance for that truth in "doing church" in our contemporary world. The results are now everywhere to be seen in our churches. George Barna's polling numbers make dismal reading. It is not so much that particular doctrines have lost their saliency. Rather, it is the capacity to think about ourselves, our churches, and our world in biblical ways that has been slowly disintegrating.

Surveying the lay of the evangelical land, you write that the term evangelical may need to be abandoned. Indeed, the term loses relevance when some claim the name but do not hold to traditional evangelical doctrines such as justification by faith alone, penal substitution, and the full authority of divinely inspired Scripture. But how could evangelicals avoid this problem, short of submitting to a central authority who determines who's in and who's out? Won't we have the same problem with any other term?

Coalitions are not held together by anything other than their common goals. In the evangelical case, those goals have arisen from their commonly held biblical beliefs. If those break down, or if they lose their weight and saliency, goals cease to be common and the coalition begins to divide. That is what is happening today.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 15 comments. See all comments
Charles    Posted: May 19, 2008 4:48 PM
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This articles points out the self righteous attitude of Wells, who apparently thinks that he has the proper perspective on all matters of faith, protestant or not. Leroy's comment about Wells undercutting his own credibility by crawling into bed with a highly skill Hollywood film matter to turn his book into a movie, DVD or whatever crass commercial end he has in mind is well spot on. That CT itself did not point out the hypocricy of this is a little surprising. Wells is shrill and shallow and ought to be called out for his own crass hypocricy.

Terry    Posted: May 17, 2008 9:33 AM
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I think the main problem is in the authority of the church. Who is the authority? Who has it right? Who can argue with someone who claims the spirit told them the scriptures mean something that in another persons mind may mean something else. The scripture claims the church is the pillar and foundation of truth. How could the truth have several different meanings? Who has the truth? Which church is the pillar of truth, not just a church with the nicest people or the pastor who makes me feel good about God. Keep searching.

evangelical orthodoxy    Posted: May 20, 2008 5:18 AM
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reformation truths is just another orthodoxy. Now it is important to follow the bible but not a as a legalistic cookbook. Instead, we should search the bible for the living Jesus so that he can personally teach us love for God and love for fellow men. When we are delighted with God and delighted with fellow men (and women) then we have the full gospel, through Jesus Christ. I am always worried about evangelicals focussing on knowledge and knowledge of the scriptures as if the following of the bible can be done as a "cookbook". No amount of head-knowledge can save you; just as no amount of orthodox ritual can save you. Only the God who surprises even the educated can save!

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