I understand that we don’t want to be lumped in with Westboro Baptist, but which of your 4 points do you feel that they don’t uphold?
The only point I find that they nail is activism (of course, their activities include spreading hate so I doubt that’s what the scholars who first coined the “evangelical quadrilateral” had in mind).
What kind of conversion are they preaching? Not conversion to Jesus Christ. Whose cross is at the center of their faith? Not the cross at Calvary that calls us to love even sinners. Their devotion to the Bible consists of isolating God’s law from His grace, and in that is no devotion at all.
No, I don’t see any evangelical gospel being preached from Westboro Baptist Church’s pulpit. I don’t know that church’s history. Perhaps at one time they might have been preaching the gospel, but in any event,
Ichabod was written over that doorpost long ago.
Or can a church have all the points that define evangelicals and yet not be evangelical? If so, what is the additional criterion (criteria) that the church lacks?
I can see a situation where a church could be in a stage of transition from being fully evangelical to being something less than evangelical. Many of the Mainline Protestant churches went through this process. At least one (the United Methodist Church) is still going through this process.
I enjoyed Olsen’s article as well, the only gap I find in it, is some sort of recognition of “cultural Evangelicals” like “cultural catholics” or “cultural Jews”. There are lots of folks who seem to fit this nomenclature, check out the comments on Rachel Held Evans blog for examples. The consider themselves to have a relationship with Evangelicalism, even if they aren’t actively participating.
That’s a good point. I think the reason why is because historically evangelicals have been very resistant to the idea of a “Cultural Christian.” You either are a Christian or you are not.
In 1741, John Wesley preached a famous sermon entitled
“The Almost Christian” in which he distinguishes an almost Christian from an altogether Christian. An almost Christian, according to Wesley has “a form of godliness; of that godliness which is prescribed in the gospel of Christ; the having the outside of a real Christian. Accordingly, the almost Christian does nothing which the gospel forbids.” The almost Christian also “labours and suffers for the profit of many, that by all means he may help some.”
Furthermore, the almost Christian “uses also the means of grace; yea, all of them, and at all opportunities. He constantly frequents the house of God . . . behaves with seriousness and attention, in every part of that solemn service. More especially, when he approaches the table of the Lord, it is not with a light or careless behaviour, but with an air, gesture, and deportment which speaks nothing else but ‘God be merciful to me a sinner!’” Wesley goes on to say that the almost Christian prays constantly. Finally, the almost Christian, according to Wesley, possesses sincerity, which Wesley defined as “a real, inward principle of religion, from whence these outward actions flow.”
The question which Wesley set out to answer in his sermon was this: “Is it possible that any man living should go so far as this, and, nevertheless, be only almost a Christian?” Wesley’s answer was yes. Wesley himself admits that for a long time he was only almost Christian.
For Wesley, there was more to being altogether Christian:
(1) the love of God, “Such a love is this, as engrosses the whole heart, as rakes up all the affections, as fills the entire capacity of the soul and employs the utmost extent of all its faculties.”
(2) the love of others as ourselves
(3) faith, “whosoever has this faith, which ‘purifies the heart’ (by the power of God, who dwelleth therein) from ‘pride, anger, desire, from all unrighteousness’ from ‘all filthiness of flesh and spirit;’ which fills it with love stronger than death, both to God and to all mankind; love that doeth the works of God, glorying to spend and to be spent for all men, and that endureth with joy, not only the reproach of Christ, the being mocked, despised, and hated of all men, but whatsoever the wisdom of God permits the malice of men or devils to inflict, --whosoever has this faith thus working by love is not almost only, but altogether, a Christian.”
So, it is this evangelical obsession with being altogether rather than almost Christian that still infuses much of our definitions of who are evangelicals. Hopefully, this gives insight into why evangelicals don’t tend to account for “cultural evangelicals” in our own definitions.