Evangelicalism has lost credibility. It can only blame itself. We are watching its unmasking.
Evangelicalism is a disorganized, ecumenical alliance of Christians with traditional beliefs, the necessity of a personal experience with God in Christ (new birth), and as a movement it (previously) had a strong commitment to evangelism.
But, evangelicalism has become a noisy cymbal with a pestering “look at me” call for attention. What it wants others to see is not what they see, and what it doesn’t see the rest observe. It’s ugly.
Theology is never meant to be a set of beliefs disconnected from a serious life, but evangelicalism’s claims to possess final truth about the Lord Jesus Christ is systemically denied by the immoralities and inconsistencies of its confessors. It is deconstructing.
There was a time when evangelicalism was carried along by a deserved, general social and even some political respect: Americans were “Christian” and respected the various Christian denominations. Priests got hat tips, pastors were asked to pray at high school gatherings, and churches had social honor. Evangelicals were part of that social world.
{Photo by Sammy Williams on Unsplash}
Not today.
Now all Christians are in the dock, all churches are called before the judge, and they are now being asked to prove themselves innocent, and they can’t. Evangelicalism has been unmasked. That social respect was raptured and all that it can do is commit to a Jesus-shaped authentic life, which takes lives and time to reveal. If undertaken, it will take time for social respect to return. A generation of watching a living theology may work the change needed.
For now, the old advantage evangelicalism had in society through its heritage has evaporated under the scorching heat of undeniable evidence of its corruption.
with pastor and priest failures. Many of them power abuses. Many of them money-grubbing. Many of them sexual predations. The reports of priests in the Roman Catholic Church in the USA, with noteworthy tellings in Boston, morphed into widespread suspicion of intentional duplicity played out on Sunday mornings but unmasked behind closed doors. The stories sicken. Southern Baptist pastors and deacons were unmasked in The Houston Chronicle and everyone could see the mendacity and hypocrisy of the pastors, and churches protected their names instead of offering healing to the wounded (mostly) women. Because of systemic corruption of power and sexual predation, no SBC pastor today can assume the general respect once reserved for a “man of the cloth.” Add to this the failures of well-known megachurch celebrity pastors, like Mark Driscoll, Bill Hybels, and James Macdonald, exacerbated the suspicions and generated scorn and cynicism.
To use a fishing term, the jig is up, evangelicalism. Time to hand in the keys. You’ve been unmasked.
Alongside pastor failures is a widespread, unacknowledged, unrepented complicity in various forms of racism. At times evangelicalism’s racism breaks forth into hideous displays of ethnic and racial claims to white supremacy, at other times into insensitive, intentional acts of condescension, and at all times there is a system at work that props up power at the expense of African, Asian, and Latin Americans.
Unmasked yet again. Many evangelicals deny complicity while Southern Baptist leaders as well as theologians like Owen Strachan want to deny the use of academic disciplines designed to unmask complicity.
The gospel opens the door and welcomes to the table for all, not just our type, our race, our ethnic group, our economic group, and our educational achievements. It is not just colonial America or Jim Crow that were complicit. No. Our system was built on the backs of the marginalized by the powers that were and that be, and those most benefiting from those powers are called to acknowledge complicity and work to end it. However they work at it, work they must. (Tweets and social media are not the work we have in mind.)
When the mask of obsession by some with Critical Race Theory is removed we discover powermongering white men, men stained by an incomprehensible insensitivity to sexual abuse of children and women, met in the establishment by either a refusal to investigate the allegations or a rigged investigation that determined in advance a face-saving no matter what happened. Those claiming moral superiority and theological integrity cannot justify the moral contradiction of despising discoveries of racism while defending male sexual predators.
Speaking of power, evangelicals have accommodated themselves and their integrity to the Republican party. The commonly repeated number of 80% is no lie. The alignment, made visible to the whole world when southern Democrats swung from Carter to Reagan, is a mask that when lifted reveals a Christian faith more shaped by politics than its theology. The 20%, that is, those who vote for the other candidate, sense a dis-welcome in the 80% churches. The gospel claim for “all” is unmasked as a gospel for “all who vote like us.” Ryan Burge’s The Nones has now shown that evangelicalism is more a politics than a theology, and Kristin Kobes Du Mez’s Jesus and John Wayne pulls down the mask far enough for us to observe that evangelicalism is led too often by too many as a masculinist culture and not a Jesus-life shaped culture of tov or Christoformity. Beth Allison Barr, in The Making of Biblical Womanhood, shows that the claims by complementarians, who ride on the masculinist wagon, can be challenged both by church history and by the Bible itself. The disgusting treatment by masculinist males of Aimee Byrd, who unmasked – or un-wall-papered – a cultural script, deepens the case against the white male powermongerers of masculinist evangelicalism. See her book Recovering from Biblical Manhood and Womanhood. Cheap trick and ad hominem and scare-tactic reviews both fail to convince and unmask the reviewers.
The unmasking pains anyone who cares about the vision Jesus gave us. It’s not about wokeness. It’s about Jesus and it’s about discipleship.
It’s hard to see how such persons can be called followers of a Jesus who eschewed money, who turned from power and against the powers by revealing the power of self-denial and the cross, and who taught the way of life was to find the broken and bind the wounded and restore such persons to the table with him. His cross was for others, a cross that unmasked the powers and absorbed it in order to redeem.
Powermongerers are not following Jesus. Using power for others is the way of Jesus.
Then there’s the annual charade called the Southern Baptist Convention, this year made densely duplicitous by the leaked information about the “Executive Committee.” Power and racism and politics emerge with force in this annual parade with some peacocking and strutting around in hope of election to more power. It all makes one wonder if all the emperor’s clothes have not already been burned up by those who want control.
They will get their power and control but their churches will need more than social distancing to occupy their vast rows of pews.
Tear Down These Walls: Following Jesus into Deeper Unity
This book addresses the problem of the myriad divisions within the church and in our personal relationships. Until we resolve how to live John 17:21-24 I do not think we will see the fruit that should come from our mission. Jesus plainly says the world will “know” when we are one.
The implications to personal faith are many:
mission?
This book expresses a core conviction of my life and work rooted in Jesus’ own words.
The Transforming Fire of Divine Love: My Long Slow Journey into the Love of God
1. The problem that I address in The Transforming Fire of Divine Love is the misconception that so many Christians have of who God really is. We must always begin with a right view of God. Faith flows from how we see (and understand) God. Errors exit regarding divine love that range from one end of a spectrum to the other. Theology has often given us ideas that cloud our perception of God. We must develop a robust theology of divine love if we would learn to love the world.
2. The implications for personal faith here are many but the biggest is the starting point from which we can move into a much deeper relationship with the mystery of the divine. Modern evangelicalism stresses a type of rational faith that follows an outline in which we choose to know God like we would choose to study and make an investment in our monetary future. This is a transactional faith, not a transformational faith. What is missing is the faith that transforms.
3. Christ followers should should ask “Who is God?” We have been asking “What is God for centuries? But God is not a what but a very personal who. What has surprised me about this new book is that many say it opened their heart to new ways of praying, serving and thinking about God. What encourages me is that this is precisely why I wanted readers to see in this book. My concern is that some readers will be defensive without
actually wrestling with the book.
Costly Love: The Way to True Unity for All the Followers of Jesus
This book addresses the problems posed about how we can love others, even our enemies. Scripture says we should walk in love, embrace love in our daily lives and serve Christians and non-Christians with a deeper fulness of love flowing in and through us. Jesus said so much about this that is frankly hard to see how we do not embrace what he said and live it. The problem we now face is non-Christians, and former Christians, know we are to love but they do not see it in our churches. They feel condemned and rejected.
Christians leaders need to know how to help people see and live the love of Christ. This book seeks to help this to happen.