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What is an evangelical?
What is an "evangelical" Christian? We are members of the
National Association of Evangelicals, and we have called ourselves an evangelical
denomination. When we use this word to describe ourselves, what are we saying?
"Evangelical" comes from the Greek word for
"gospel," so we might expect that an evangelical Christian puts a high priority
on the gospel but this is not always the way the word is used. In some places, evangelical
simply means Protestant; in others places it practically means Pentecostal. Some people
want to define the term narrowly and others more broadly. Some people desire this label;
others despise it.
Sociologists use the term evangelical for believers and churches
that are more conservative than average. This segment of Christianity is growing (though
that says nothing about its theological accuracy), and its members report more commitment
to their faith and more involvement in their churches. This category includes churches
that belong to the NAE as well as congregations and individuals that are in mainline
Protestant denominations or in the Roman Catholic tradition.
Evangelical is often distinguished from "fundamentalist"
a term that originally meant Christians who believed in five major fundamentals of
the faith, but which eventually came to be associated with ultraconservatives who were
against scholarly studies, against new translations, against anything new, and generally
against anyone who wasnt a fundamentalist. Some of the more opinionated
fundamentalists gave conservative Christianity a bad name, and in the 1950s moderate
conservatives began to group themselves under the "evangelical" label to give
themselves some verbal distance from their right-wing cousins.
So what is an evangelical? Alister McGrath, an evangelical Anglican,
offered six major distinctives of evangelical Christianity: 1) The supreme authority of
Scripture, 2) Jesus Christ as incarnate God, 3) the Holy Spirit, 4) personal conversion,
5) evangelism, and 6) the importance of the Christian community (Evangelicalism and the
Future of Christianity, InterVarsity Press, 1995, pp. 55-56). These six beliefs are
not a hard and fast boundary, but in general they serve to mark the boundary between
evangelicalism and mainstream Protestantism. (A different list of beliefs and practices
would be needed to describe the boundary between evangelicalism and fundamentalism.)
Evangelicals have much in common, yet are fragmented, often by
doctrine. Though they all accept the authority of the Bible, they interpret it in
different ways. Some baptize infants, some stress predestination, some speak in tongues,
some insist on a specific form of governance, some emphasize social work. Perhaps this
variety is better than enforced conformity, but it can make Christianity appear to be
obsessed with trivialities and indeed, sometimes we Christians do get distracted by
such issues.
As you know, I have repeatedly noted our need to emphasize the main
things, not peripheral matters. We can and do have beliefs about the periphery, but we
must not emphasize them so much that we create barriers, as if people who dont agree
with us could not possibly be converted. We of all people should know that it is possible
for Christians to be wrong about important matters, and we should understand the need to
be charitable toward others who serve Christ as best they know how.
For these reasons, we strive to keep our central beliefs relatively
simple, rather than lengthening our list of whats "essential."
I found a recent book by John Stott particularly refreshing: Evangelical
Truth: A Personal Plea for Unity, Integrity and Faithfulness (InterVarsity, 1999).
Stott has been an evangelical leader in England for 50 years, so he is well acquainted
with theological diversity, and he has consistently advocated patience and peace.
So in this months letter, I thought Id do something a
little different, and highlight some of the key points that he makes in his book. Stott
distills the essentials of evangelicalism down to three doctrines: revelation from God,
the redemption of Christ, and the transformation that comes from the Holy Spirit.
The gospel is tightly connected to these three priorities it is
revealed by God, centers on the cross of Christ, and is effective through the work of the
Holy Spirit. Stott uses 1 Corinthians 15:1-5 to make these six points about the gospel: 1)
it is about Christ, 2) it is based on the Scriptures, 3) it is rooted in history, 4) it
proclaims a theological significance to Jesus death, 5) it is the message of the
apostles, and 6) it is personal, in that people receive it, take their stand on it, hold
on to it, and are saved by it.
The death of Jesus is of central importance. The ceremony that Jesus
gave us to remember him is a memorial of his death. That is how he wanted to be
remembered, and that is indeed the most distinctive feature of the Christian faith. Jesus
died for us, for our sins. There are several theories of why his death saves us,
but Scripture repeatedly says that we are saved through his death he died for us,
for our sins. Stott puts it this way: "Christ died as our substitute
instead of us so that we might not have to die for our sins
but he also died
as our representative, so that when he died we died with him" (p. 81).
Justification is the theological link between Christs crucifixion
and our salvation. Because of what Christ did on the cross, we can be justified
counted as righteous accepted by God completely forgiven our sins no
longer counted against us. (Scripture uses a variety of words to convey the idea.) Stott
sees five important aspects of justification: 1) it comes by grace, 2) it is based on
Christs death, 3) we must be "in Christ" united to him and his
church, 4) it is received by faith and faith is not a "work" that earns
our salvation. "Faith has no function but to receive what grace freely offers"
(p. 78) and 5) justification is given so that we are led by the Holy Spirit in a new life
"created in Christ Jesus to do good works" (Eph. 2:10).
Faith and works are both enabled by the Holy Spirit, the third
essential element of evangelical faith. Christian life begins with a spiritual rebirth, a
regeneration. The Holy Spirit comes into us and we are born anew, born of the Spirit, born
from above. We have been given a new life, and the Spirit within us assures us that we are
indeed Gods children. We can know, we can have confidence, we can be sure, because
our salvation does not rest upon our fallible performance, but upon the work Christ has
already finished.
But there is still work being done in our lives, the work of the Holy
Spirit leading us in a life of obedience and good works. There is work being done in the
church, the body of believers. Evangelicals do not have a sophisticated theology of the
church, but the church is important in evangelical life and faith. It is important in our
worship, our ministry to one another, and our mission to the world around us.
Fundamentalists often retreat from the world, viewing the church as a
place of safety in which they may hide from the evils around them. In decades past,
evangelicals often fell into this fortress mentality, too, but this has been changing.
Evangelicals now average higher levels of social involvement than either
fundamentalists or mainstream Protestants. They are taking seriously Jesus command
to love your neighbor, and they are making a difference for the kingdom through the good
works that we are called to do.
This side of Jesus return, evangelicals will probably never have
organizational unity. We will always come to different conclusions on peripheral
doctrines, and we will always have different denominations promoting those different
conclusions. These doctrines may be important, but they should never become so important
that they become our focus, nor should they be mental barriers that prevent us from
recognizing other believers as Christians. They should not prevent us from worshipping
with and working with people who share the essentials of the faith: respect for Gods
revelation, a trust in salvation by grace based on Christs crucifixion, and a
recognition of the necessity of the Holy Spirit working in our lives.
Christianity has a tremendous depth, touching on a wide variety of
human endeavors and ideas. It has enormous complexity, for those who want to plumb its
depths, but at its heart it is simple. There is a basic "core" Christianity
a belief that we can be set right with God through the death of Jesus Christ, as
revealed in the Scriptures. Salvation does not depend on the kind of clothes we wear, the
days we meet on, whether we drink coffee, whether we interpret the millennium literally or
figuratively, our understanding of predestination, or a host of other issues that
Christians are sometimes concerned about. It is not wrong to study such matters, but we
need to keep our focus clear.
Friends, my prayers are with you. The task is not easy, the hours we
work are not short, and the truth is not always easy to understand. But the rewards are
great, both in this life and the next. Thanks for your support.
Joseph Tkach
Editors note: If you are interested in the history and
definition of fundamentalism and evangelicalism, here are a few sources you might consult,
and a few quotes from them:
"Evangelicalism. A movement in North American Christianity
that emphasizes the classical Protestant doctrines of salvation, the church and the
authority of the Scriptures, but in the American context it is characterized by stress on
a personal experience of the grace of God, usually termed the new birth or
conversion" (B.L. Shelley, in Dictionary of Christianity in America, edited by
Daniel Reid (InterVarsity, 1990), p. 413).
"Evangelicalism. A movement in modern Christianity emphasizing
the gospel of forgiveness and regeneration through personal faith in Jesus Christ, and
affirming orthodox doctrines" (Millard J. Erickson, Concise Dictionary of
Christian Theology (Baker, 1986), p. 52.)
"Evangelicalism. A modern Christian movement which transcends
confessional and denominational boundaries to emphasize conformity to the basic principles
of the Christian faith and a missionary outreach of compassion and urgency
.
"The term first came into use during the Reformation to
distinguish Protestants from Roman Catholics, and it stressed the centrality of Christ,
grace, faith and Scripture
. Even today evangelical is synonymous with
Protestant in much of Europe" (Richard V. Pierard, in New 20th-Century
Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, 2nd edition, edited by J.D. Douglas
(Baker, 1991), p. 311).
"Fundamentalism. Movement which first took shape primarily in
the United States as a protest of conservative Protestants against theological modernism
in the early 20th century. In reaction to more naturalistic theologies,
fundamentalists emphasized certain fundamental doctrines such as the inerrancy of
Scripture, the virgin birth of Christ, substitutionary atonement, the resurrection of
Christ, and the second coming. (The exact list of these fundamentals has
varied)" George Marsden, in J.D. Douglas, p. 345).
"Fundamentalism. A movement organized in the early twentieth
century to defend orthodox Protestant Christianity against the challenges of theological
liberalism, higher criticism of the Bible, evolution and other modernisms judged to be
harmful to traditional faith
. During the 1950s Norman Furniss and Ray Ginger defined
fundamentalism primarily in terms of its pervasive anti-intellectualism, as seen in its
opposition to evolution and other kinds of modern thought" (T.P. Weber, in Reid, pp.
461-462).
"After the controversies of the 1920s, many fundamentalists
withdrew from major American denominations and formed their own networks of
organizations" (Marsden, p. 346).
"The years after World War 2 saw a dramatic turn-around. In the
judgment of many conservative Protestants, fundamentalism had reached unacceptable
positions in its resistance to American culture" (Shelley, p. 416).
"Around the time of World War II, some elements within the
conservative or fundamentalist party grew dissatisfied with their isolation and wish to
see a more broadly based cultural, theological, and ecclesiastical engagement. Describing
themselves as evangelicals, they set out to build coalitions of cooperation in
evangelism, missionary work, and unity against liberalism" (Pierard, p. 312).
"Within a broad unity based on commitment to the Bible as its religious authority
and on the gospel of Christs saving work as the churchs central message, we
can identify at least seven evangelical traditions of faith:
Evangelicals in the Reformation tradition, primarily Lutheran and
Reformed Christians.
Wesleyan evangelicals, such as the Church of the Nazarene
Pentecostal and charismatic evangelicals, such as the Assemblies of God
Black evangelicals, with their own distinctive witness to the gospel
The countercultural churches (sometimes called Peace Churches), such as
the evangelical Quakers and Mennonites
Several traditionally white Southern denominations, led by the Southern
Baptists
The spiritual heirs of fundamentalism found in independent churches and
many parachurch agencies" (Shelley, p. 416).
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