Pastor Buechler writes
...(in) the mainline churches (those who make up the membership of NCC) one sees that there has been a major shift from biblical faithfulness especially with regards abortion, gay/lesbian sex, the estate of marriage, the naming of God, the worship of God, the uniqueness of Jesus Christ the incarnation of God, etc.
I comment:
No, there has not been a "major shift" from "biblical faithfulness," there has been a shift from what some of you declare to be faithfulness. But some of you do not have the last word for all of us.
Perhaps we should be talking not about the death of mainline protestantism but the death of authority in the church. The Bible is ususally held, at least in Lutheran circles, to be the ultimate authority for what is taught and practiced in the church. But what the Bible ultimately teaches is subject to interpretation and as we have seen in our discussions here that interpretation varies from person to person and from group to group with apparently no way to affirm one interpretation as better or more accurate than another other than I think this way even if you don't so I don't have to accept your interpretation. So "revisionists" and "traditionalists" both claim to follow the Bible and arrive at opposit conclusions. How are church people to decide which way to follow? By what appeals to them? By who they like? By what the society around us has decided is the nice position on issues? By who can say the most nice sounding things without really being pinned down to taking a stand? Charles complains when being accused of following a shift away from biblical faithfulness that he is not faithful only to what some say constitutes biblical faithfulness. Yet why should I follow Charles' ideas either, what proof does he offer that his is being more faithful to the Bible than those who dispute his position.
It seems that what we are left with is that there is no authority to say what the church should or should not do. "Traditionalists" are urged to stay as a part of the church as long as they do not cause trouble or get in the way of the "Revisionsit" elite who are leading the church into the glbt agenda. Is this how the big tent operates, all are equal but some are more equal than others and the traditional will be tolerated at best?
Dan
I agree with what you say for the most part. Authority of the church is a big issue and we find a culture that will not tolerate any authority except the unholy trinity of me,myself, and I. The problem is that the main line churches have undermined whatever authority they have had by giving into the culture here and there until they are seen as simply part of the political worldly fabric of society. That authority comes from the Word of God (the written Word found in Scripture), and there was a time when Lutherans actually agreed biblically on the issues of abortion, marriage, sex outside of wedlock, the name of God, the uniqueness of Jesus Christ as the one and only Savior of the world, universal salvation,etc. That has now changed dramatically and that has undermined any authority to speak on any issue really.
Peace in the Lord!
Rob Buechler