It is so very important that, in today’s anaemic church, a preacher is known as an evangelical. It is the in thing to be especially in theologically mixed denominations. The idea that these denominations are becoming more evangelical and that there are now more evangelicals in the ministry is a cause of great pride in these churches. And if this were really the case, then the church on earth would be triumphant in its thanksgiving to God for calling such men into its ministry.
But while numerically this is the case in some denominations, the sad reality is that the churches in which they minister have seen no improvement in her spiritual life as a result. It was very disturbing to hear a retired evangelical minister in one of the mainline denominations admit this to me in the Summer of 2011. Many more evangelical ministers, but no improvement in church life!
Now if that does not beg an
obvious question, I do not know what will!
Why does an increase in evangelicals into the ministry not make any difference?
Well, it is all down to what you believe
an evangelical is! Perhaps the reason is
that the church today does not know what an evangelical is! She can longer define an ‘evangelical’!
It is true that there is an
intolerance to defining anything today. The
church has done what the world has propagated – or maybe the world is merely
imitating what the church did from the mid 1800s – and that is, she has
re-written biblical history and theology to fit in with the modern way of thinking;
and this has been imbibed by those who call themselves evangelicals! If ‘grace’ is something so wonderful, so
sublime, so out of this world, that it defies definition, then don’t define it;
and if someone else uses this term, the just accept it, asking no questions. If ‘love’ is such a warm thing to talk about,
then talk about it and don’t define it; then if someone else talks about ove,
then just accept that he means the same by it as you do, and ask no questions.
If the Gospel is the most
wonderful thing in the world, and if a man says he preaches the Gospel, and if
his congregation thinks he preaches the Gospel, and if non-evangelicals,
liberals, ecumenicals, use this precious term, then that’s good. Just accept them as fellow-believers and ask
no awkward or embarrassing questions.
So in preaching, especially if you
are in a denomination that does not know the difference between truth and error,
or who is a Christian and who is not, or even what a Christian is and is not,
then proceed as if everyone who attends your church is a Christian, but throw
in a few Gospel ideas just to keep the unthinking professing evangelicals on
side.
But don’t be too pointed in your
preaching! This could be very costly to
you personally. You don’t want your congregation
to even suspect that you do not think some of them are Christians at all. And you certainly do not want the church
eldership to get the impression that you think this. So keep your preaching very low-key, not too
pointed, and no application. You don’t
want your members, who have professed their faith in Jesus Christ and who have
been accepted as true Christians by the eldership, to start being converted, do
you? You don’t people to start being saved
in your church because that will be to question and challenge the judgement of
the elders. And you can’t have
that!
In a future post, I will seek to
delineate what it is that constitutes an evangelical, just so that there is not
confusion about this precious term.
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