Generally, evangelicals do trust the scriptural interpretation of their pastors, otherwise it would be hard to remain in that church with integrity. However, unlike the Catholic Church, there is no magesterial power that can definitively settle a matter.
Yes, thanks ltwin. Your statement above and your “prosperity gospel” example coincide with what is my understanding of how an Evangelical would look at it. I was not suggesting that First Baptist is claiming a final magisterial authority. I was only suggesting that they have taken a step in that direction by holding up their church as a bulwark of orthodoxy.
The further reflection I was trying to communicate is that, knowingly or unknowingly, an Evangelical is instructed in the tradition of teaching of his pastor. He accepts the pastor’s instructions because he himself agrees with at least most of it, as you indicated.
So, in the absence of an objective, authoritative teaching (like the Catechism of the Catholic Church), I would ask: “How does the Evangelical form his set of beliefs by which he measures the teachings of his pastor?” It would seem that those beliefs are formed by the combination of his own reading ability plus instruction he already received in life, perhaps from
other pastors. So, then we have the same song, different verse, where the average Protestant accepts the teachings of earlier pastors or of other Christians who mentored him.
Therefore, it’s still the case that the Evangelical accepts the teachings of someone, past or present, as true. It’s not our job as laypeople to know everything, so we rely on people who can devote more time to studying the truths of God. So, even if we constantly check the pastor’s teaching agains our own reference, and even if we go off and read more verses to put the teaching in context, the pastor makes the case and sets the direction of our spiritual life.
For example, pastors will often say something like, “Don’t take my word for it, read the Bible for yourself.” In other words, pastors encourage their congregants to test everything that they teach and preach against Scripture.
This statement brings up the related but separate topic that within Protestanism, no one can claim to have final authority on doctrine. I know that Pastor Jeffress would not claim it, either. With that said, in light of what I wrote above in this post, wouldn’t it be nice to have a reference like that? Just wonderin…
-JohnPaul