Discovering the Church, the Culture, and the Truth
August 25th, 2009

Dangers of the young “New Calvinist”

There’s a good bit of press surrounding the idea of “The New Calvinist.” The buzz started after Time Magazine gave a name to the idea and deemed it one of the “10 Ideas Changing the World Right Now.” The issue was further pushed in the press by the numerous replies from what the article labeled as the fore-runners of the movement.

I think smarter and more involved people than myself can comment on the actual idea of “New Calvinism,” what I do believe I am well qualified to speak about are the dangers I have seen emerge from the new reformed movement because I am reformed in theology, I live on a Christian university campus and get to see these dangers lived out every day, and because all of these warnings come out of self-realizations from the past four months. So here are some detrimental details I’ve observed that we must be very cautious of in the young, new Calvinist:

1) Pride: Upon arriving at College I was bombarded by reformed theology, I had it shoved in my face by people who called themselves Calvinists. I even attended a ministry on campus where I was asked what I thought of predestination and eternal security… before I was asked my name. After the first week of school I swore I would never be reformed. By the first week of my Sophomore year I would candidly call myself a Calvinist, engage in frequent conversations about limited atonement, and make fun of anyone who didn’t read out of an ESV as if I were Steve Jobs asking the Bill Gates of the world why he couldn’t get with the program. The result: I gave good theology a bad name.

It wasn’t until I got very annoyed with a young “missionary” in India who thought it was more important to talk about the Jewish traditions and contexts behind the prodigal son than to use it as a tool to present the message of Jesus that I realized I was disgusted with what I had become, repented of putting my drive for intellect and knowledge before my need for love and wisdom, and started asking the Spirit to interpret scripture for me rather than depend on my own human knowledge.

2) The Approach: Do I really love people and want people to know Jesus more deeply or do I just want them to understand and agree with my theology? Do I care more about Jesus’ words or Paul’s words? Do I talk and blog more about Jesus and His love or the theology behind the Nicene Creed? Am I more concerned about leading people to Jesus or away from other teachers I deem theologically unsound? While these things do matter, I always have to ask myself what matters more. Doctrine is important, very important. But we often use it to alienate people rather than lead them into a deeper understanding and relationship with Christ

3) The Name: Any person who titles himself a Calvinist sends off red flag to me. As believers, we belong to Christ. Not Calvin. We are Christians. Not Calvinists. Not Arminionist. Our theology is one or the other, but our belief is not in any man, organization, our system of beliefs, it is in Jesus.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, The Church, Theology | No Comments » | Tags: ,
April 13th, 2009

Because the Biblical model is just not enough…

In his recent post as to why he joined the Emergent Church Movement, Thomas Turner states:

I joined Emergent Village because they are the only people talking while the rest of the Christian world seems to be shouting or vexed. I joined Emergent Village because I wanted to be part of a group of people who did not all look like me, talk like me, and believe the exact same doctrine, theology, or philosophy as I do. I wanted to be part of the larger whole of Christianity as it exists in such a diverse group as the emergent church.

The first issue I have is that Turner implies that every other belief system in the Christian world is violently pushing their beliefs. The statement that ” the rest of the Christian world seems to be shouting or vexed” is, on top of being elitist in nature, dangerous and relays a hurtful message about the Christian community as a whole.

The next obvious flawed belief behind Turner holds is that he wants to be a part of a church that has varied “doctrine, theology, [and] philosophy.” That’s funny, seeing as how all of Paul’s letters are written with the intent of purifying the DNA of the churches. He saught to unite them in sound doctrine and theology. That was their purpose.

March 29th, 2009

Nightline face-off: existence of Satan

Mark Driscoll and Deepak Chorpa argue the existence of Satan while Carlton Pearson sits by and proves he’s a moron on Nightline. This is definitely worth a watch. I’ve already viewed it 3 times.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, Theology | No Comments » | Tags: , ,
February 28th, 2009

Hermenutic fail.

I have Emergent Village in my agregator but I typically try to avoid it. I started reading Elaine Heath’s post on love and the avoidance of self-centeredness and found myself cheering her on… until it got to this…

“A hermeneutic of love means that God looks at human sin “with pity and not with blame,” because God sees the complexity of sin and wounds… With the hermeneutic of love I see others’ sin the way Jesus does, not as insurmountable obstacles or permanent stains, but as the consequences of life in a broken world. I see the full power of resurrection for them, before it ever happens. This means I believe in the potential for their healing as well as their forgiveness. “

This is partly right. God does seek to redeem us through the sacrifice of His son Jesus Christ. But God hates sin. Sin is not “the consequences of life in a broken world,” it is the choice to be independent from God. We should forgive and love sinners unconditionally, but we should never downplay what sin is and how detestabe it is to God.

February 20th, 2009

God’s love and forgiveness

Of the many questions I wrestled with this summer one was is did God really forgive sinners? Since forgiveness implies pardoning a wrong, even if it is undeserved. Yet God required a payment for our sins. So is it forgiveness or acceptance of atonement?

John Piper addresses and answers yet another of my questions in this amazing piece on God’s “unconditional” Love.

Thoughts?

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, Theology | No Comments » | Tags: , ,
February 10th, 2009

Another miss from Emergent Village.

Nic Patton over at Emergent Village has just posted another piece of lofty, stupid, and heretical bullcrap.

The downside of this myth is that other approaches to truth, the personal, the emotional, the traditional, the individual or imaginative for example, are sidelined, if not vilified. Where we apply this thinking to theology, “correct” ways of biblical interpretation (almost always handed to us from an authority above), create heretical no-go areas and taboos within communities, which leave little space for questioning, doubt, or personal exploration. Inevitably, at time of crisis, individuals who cannot in good conscience “tow the line” are given an ultimatum: Our way, or the highway. This is usually in the name of a larger truth, to which the subtleties of the individual and their particular circumstances must submit.

Put another way, the particular has, under the modern consensus, been ousted by the general. The individual by the prevailing orthodoxy, the creative by the correct, and the emerging by the entrenched. Take away the particular and you are left with knowledge in place of wisdom.

Is Mr. Patton implying that by defining and believing in such a thing as an unchanging Truth that we are closed minded? Well, that actually sounds like a pillar of any true faith to me. Is he really implying that we abandon our knowledge for more emotional and imaginitive ways of belief… like the middle ages? Well, that sounds like misticism and not theology to me. That sounds like a wishy-washy way of compromise. Does this really lead to “knowledge in place of wisdom?” There are definites. There are pillars of the faith that are not meant to be challenged. This is bad theology.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Theology | 4 Comments » | Tags: ,













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