Great letter. I heard about it out here in NC via Truth Talk Live. Stu Jr. is an old college friend of mine. Unfortunately, I was unable to listen, but I did come here to read the letter.
I would add that we should be concerned about Focus on the Family and the current Christian Coalition strategy because, in addition to having been ineffective, and now succeeding in making even more enemies on the left...after all, one day they will be a majority again...but it simply isn't theologically sound.
The principle of Sola Scriptura says that Scripture is our only infallible rule of faith and practice. However, there are other traditions that we can hold to and embrace, as long as they are subject to Scripture and do not define or interpret it for us. As a Southern Baptist, I affirm, in addition to the Second London Baptist Confession of 1689, the 2000 Version of the Baptist Faith and Message which says:
All Christians are under obligation to seek to make the will of Christ supreme in our own lives and in human society. Means and methods used for the improvement of society and the establishment of righteousness among men can be truly and permanently helpful only when they are rooted in the regeneration of the individual by the saving grace of God in Jesus Christ. In the spirit of Christ, Christians should oppose racism, every form of greed, selfishness, and vice, and all forms of sexual immorality, including adultery, homosexuality, and pornography. We should work to provide for the orphaned, the needy, the abused, the aged, the helpless, and the sick. We should speak on behalf of the unborn and contend for the sanctity of all human life from conception to natural death. Every Christian should seek to bring industry, government, and society as a whole under the sway of the principles of righteousness, truth, and brotherly love. In order to promote these ends Christians should be ready to work with all men of good will in any good cause, always being careful to act in the spirit of love without compromising their loyalty to Christ and His truth.
However, two sections afterward it reads, in the section on Religious liberty the means by which the Section on the Social Order should be carried very clearly (Note my emphasis):
God alone is Lord of the conscience, and He has left it free from the doctrines and commandments of men which are contrary to His Word or not contained in it. Church and state should be separate. The state owes to every church protection and full freedom in the pursuit of its spiritual ends. In providing for such freedom no ecclesiastical group or denomination should be favored by the state more than others. Civil government being ordained of God, it is the duty of Christians to render loyal obedience thereto in all things not contrary to the revealed will of God. The church should not resort to the civil power to carry on its work. The gospel of Christ contemplates spiritual means alone for the pursuit of its ends. The state has no right to impose penalties for religious opinions of any kind. The state has no right to impose taxes for the support of any form of religion. A free church in a free state is the Christian ideal, and this implies the right of free and unhindered access to God on the part of all men, and the right to form and propagate opinions in the sphere of religion without interference by the civil power.
The church and state historically have been at odds. With the exception of the first centuries of Christian history, the state has only been strong morally when the Church was at its strongest theologically, during the high marks following the Reformation. During the time from Constantine to the time of the Reformation, from a Protestant perspective, the Church's theology became more and more rife with error, and governments were often as corrupt as the episcopacy of the Roman See. After the Reformation, the Puritans, for example, had a divorce rate of nil, literally. The First Great Awakening had a great impact on the period leading up to the Revolution. From a Protestant perspective, the Church was (aside from that first century) at its strongest theologically, and it remained so until, roughly, the 18th and 19th centuries. All this is to say that the state is only "Christian" morally, when we are at our best in both orthodoxy and orthopraxy. However, today American Protestant evangelicalism bears little resemblance to the theology of the Reformation. We're more influenced by
The Prayer of Jabez and
The Purpose Driven Life than we are
Pilgrim's Progress and
Knowing God . How many of us have curled up with a good theology book or a Christian classic lately? The differences between Protestants and Catholics, who should differ widely on the very content of the gospel itself, are swept under the rug by Focus on the Family when Dr. Dobson made the statement that he merely had significant theological diffferences with Roman Catholics in his radio show about Pope John Paul II's death. If he had been a denominational leader in the SBC or the PCA that would not have been tolerated. Open Theism is rising in its influence. Oneness Pentecostals, who do not affirm the historic Trinitarian formulas (they are modalists) write books and sell music and sing in our churches and all is well, in the name of evangelistic pragmatism. While Calvinists and Arminian Protestants historically get along, most people have no clue that the true heirs of the Reformation are the Calvinists, who alone are monergists as all the Reformers were and as a result make increasingly a-contextual and a-historical statements about their theological foundations as Protestant Christians. The President of Fuller Seminary, an evangelical school writing the preface to a new book by Eerdmans,
A Different Jesus?, authored by Robert Millet, and LDS Apologist, soon to be marketed in
Christian bookstores can write this (context provided):
At the heart of our continuing disagreements, I am convinced, are very basic worldview issues. Judaism and Christianity have been united in their insistence that the Creator and the creation—including God’s human creatures—are divided by an unbridgeable “being” gap. God is the “Wholly Other”—eternal and self-sufficient—who is in a realm of existence that is radically distinct from the creation that was brought into being out of nothing by God’s sovereign decree. On this view of things, to confuse the Creator’s being with anything in his creation is to commit the sin of idolatry. Mormons, on the other hand, talk about God and humans as belonging to the same “species.” Inevitably, then, the differences are described, not in terms of an unbridgeable gap of being, but in the language of “more” and “less.”
This kind of disagreement has profound implications for our understanding of who Jesus Christ is. In traditional Christianity, the question of Christ’s saving power cannot be divorced from how we understand his “being.” If we believe that we are, in our fallenness, totally incapable of earning our own salvation, then the crucial questions are: What would it take to save us? What would a Savior have to be in order to pay the debt for our sin? And, faced with answers given to these questions by teachers who saw Jesus as less than fully God, the church leaders gathered at the Council of Nicea set forth, in 325 A.D., this profound confession of who Jesus is. “We believe,” they wrote, in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only Son of God, begotten from the Father before all ages, God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made; of the same essence as the Father. Through him all things were made.
And only when we acknowledge all of this about him, the Council stipulated, can we move confident to this bold and amazing proclamation: For us and for our salvation he came down from heaven.
As an evangelical Christian I want more than anything else that people—whatever disagreements I might have with them on other matters—know this Jesus personally, as the heaven-sent Savior who left heaven’s throne to come to the manger, and to Gethsemane, and to Calvary, to do for us what we could never do for ourselves. I also know that having a genuine personal relationship with Jesus Christ does not require that we have all our theology straight. All true Christians are on a journey, and until we see the Savior face-to-face we will all see through a glass darkly.
But I also believe with all my heart that theology is important. There is a real danger for all of us that we will define Jesus in such a way that we cannot adequately claim the full salvation that he alone can provide. I think that an open-minded Christian reader of this book will sense that Bob Millet is in fact trusting in the Jesus of the Bible for his salvation. That is certainly my sense. And this is why I find it especially exciting to be in dialogue with him and other LDS friends about what it means to have a theologically adequate understanding of the person and work of the One who alone is mighty to save. I hope that reading this book will inspire many people—traditional Christians as well as Latter-day Saints—with a new motivation for engaging in that eternally significant conversation. (pp. 182-183)
(Remember, Millet is a BYU Professor and a Mormon polytheist, not an evangelical Protestant, Eastern Orthodox, or Catholic.) and folks turn a blind eye or simply don't understand why the Christian Apologetics community is upset. Our own President, who is supposed to be one of us, can get away with talking openly about the truth in Islam, a remark that would have you, me, and every other evangelical Protestant that teaches from Scripture a false teacher of the highest order, and nobody really says anything to admonish this brother. He's the President, yes, but even his allegiance is to a Higher One than his office.
In other words, American evangelical Christianity has curled into a fetal position with regard to its core theology and substituted a salvation by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone for the glory of God alone found in the Scriptures alone for an evangelistic pragmatism that assures converts that pray the sinners prayer that all is well, become confused about its once most core values, and cast its socieital hopes onto the political machine. This is
not New Testament Christianity. This is
not the Christianity of Abraham Kuyper of Hollland, who lead one of the greatest Christian governments in history, this is not the theology, discipleship, evangelism, or even the social order of the Reformation. We have not succeeded because we have lost our way, become so fragmented and disaffected from our biblical and theological heritage, not to mention our historic confessions of faith, that we have lost the fight. It's our fault for not being the Church...not the Church that votes and relies on the state but the Church that understands our Lord, His Word, and our mission and takes this:
The gospel of Christ contemplates spiritual means alone for the pursuit of its ends.
seriously. Only God changes hearts, and only changed hearts change societies. We need a reformation in our own churches, not just a reformation in our government institutions.