The following things may be said to be marks of an
evangelical. I do not subscribe to the
point of view which describes people as ‘evangelical Christians,’ because there
is no other kind of Christian but an evangelical one. The two terms are co-terminus.
An evangelical is concerned above all else to promote the
glory of God in Christ. What he
believes, how he worships God, his life – these all seek to further God’s
glory.
An evangelical is anxious to preserve the gospel of Christ
for future generations. This is the only
message the world needs to hear, so it has to be preserved at all costs.
An evangelical takes the lessons from history with great
seriousness. Ignorance of history
probably accounts for more errors in the church than anything else.
An evangelical is not only interested in preaching a
positive message, but will also preach the great negatives of the biblical faith. A battery with only one pole is
quite useless to start your car; so a message that is only positive lacks the
power it needs to effect anything for God’s glory or man’s good. He is not afraid of the great negatives of
the Bible, or that may be reasonably derived from its teaching.
An evangelical will neither add anything to Scripture, nor
will he subtract anything from it. He
will not do this by avoiding in Scripture what does not fit in with his own
prejudices. Nor will he see himself
primarily as a denominational man, but as an evangelical first and foremost.
He will be vigilant about the Gospel and about the various
trends that come and go, and will not allow himself to be derailed by these
fads and fashions. As one of God’s
watchmen, he will sound a clear alarm at the first approach of attack on our
like precious faith. Not only does he
distrust reason as the final arbiter in disputes or in the formulation of
doctrine, he uses his reason in his bid to come to terms with the teaching of
the Bible. He approaches his ministry in
a scholarly manner, but he does not see scholarship as the ultimate authority
in matters of religion and theology. He
applies his God-given intellect to think his way through the various offers
that present themselves, usually in the name of scholarship, but he is not
afraid of the scholars or their views.
The true evangelical is the man who preaches the great
salvific doctrines of the Bible with a passion that is contagious. He knows the urgency of the times, and the
uncertainty of another day of grace. He
shows his hearers their lost and helpless condition without Christ and urges
them to trust in Christ alone for eternal salvation. He emphasises the need for the new birth, and
presses upon sinners the indispensability of the death of Christ for salvation.
The evangelical, then, is different from other ‘theological’
people in that he, and he alone, takes biblical revelation with utmost
seriousness. It is he, and he alone, who
seeks to bring glory to the triune God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. And it is he, and he alone, that is genuinely
concerned about the salvation of the world.
Soli Deo Gloria
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