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Home/Featured/Evangelicalism’s Last Taboo

Evangelicalism’s Last Taboo

In an age when being nice is the highest virtue, publicly confronting error from a well-known Christian is perhaps the last taboo in contemporary evangelicalism

Written by Todd Pruitt, Ref21 | Friday, October 11, 2013

If you go to the trouble to write a book or gather a large audience to hear you speak then I assume you are seeking buy in (so to speak) from people in other churches. I am highly in favor of good books and good teaching for the wider church. In fact I recommend loads of books. However, I also have the responsibility to protect the men and women I serve from errant preaching and writing to which they have access. I would expect you to have no less of a sense of obligation to your own church.

 

It was bound to happen. Sooner or later, Carl and I would violate one of the vague rules of evangelical decorum.

In a recent edition of our humble little 12 minute podcast, The Mortification of Spin: Bully Pulpit, Carl Trueman and I critiqued comments made by two mega-church pastors at a recent conference. Some of the things these two pastors said were, to us, troubling at best. Actually, in comparison, the response Trueman and I offered ought to be considered quite uncontroversial. And I suppose that would be the case if evangelicalism weren’t such a vaudevillian sideshow.

Certainly, with a title like “Mortification of Spin” Carl and I are not aiming to discuss the merest sort of Christianity upon which everyone from Oprah to Fred Phelps may agree. From time-to-time we are willing to grab hold of some of the “third rails” of contemporary evangelicalism.

Don’t misunderstand. We are not looking for opportunities to offend. We also have no desire to be controversial for the sake of controversy. But the boundaries of what it means to be evangelical have been pushed out so far that to even speak about why Jesus died gets one into hot water with the keepers of the big tent.

There have been some well-meaning brothers who believe the critique Carl and I offer on the above mentioned podcast was “irresponsible and damaging,” that we should have had a conversation with these two pastors and we would likely have found that we “land on the same theological page” with them. To be fair, it was also pointed out that if the two pastors mentioned were truly guilty of “heresy” then indeed they should be called out.

Where to begin? First, it seems odd to label as “irresponsible and damaging” a critique of counsel offered to pastors that was itself irresponsible and damaging. Their council both diminished the sufficiency of Scripture and the role of preaching, and indicated that men and women ought to find God “on their own.” Second, the “have a conversation with them” line of reasoning is, biblically speaking, unnecessary.

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