No, not at all. “Fundamentalism dominates Protestant radio, and often dominates the public perception of Protestantism in the U.S. generally. So don’t judge all Protestants by the ones you hear n the radio.”
That’s why. Your words.
You said in a later post that you were a fundamentalist. . . .
Which?
No, I used him because in fact that was one of the two Christian radio stations I remember listening to in NJ.
Of historic Protestant theology? Yes, pretty much. Chuck Colson would be closest, but he is a relatively shallow thinker, for all his virtues. I don’t know who “Raoel Reese” is, but I found a “Raul Ries” on Google, who appears to be Calvary Chapel–certainly not mainstream historic Protestantism. Dobson is a pop psychologist–you surely don’t seriously think that he represents the best Protestant theology has to offer? Swindoll is a Southern Baptist preacher. McArthur represents a rather odd dispensationalist variant of neo-Puritan conservative Calvinism.
Please understand that I’m responding to your initial statement about how frustrated you are with Protestantism. I’m not claiming that the guys you mentioned have no value. The ones I know about (all except Reese) are all smart guys and yes, they represent relatively serious , respectable aspects of popular American evangelicalism. They do not represent the best Protestantism has to offer, except perhaps for Colson in a popularizing, relatively shallow way. And any tradition (or, in the case of Protestantism, loose family of traditions) should be judged by the best it has to offer.
Or the falsehood, which is more to the point here. You can get truth from the names you mentioned, no doubt, along of course with error. But to be sure that the error is endemic to Protestantism as a whole you would need to engage seriously with the very best theologians Protestantism has to offer.
Similarly, I’m in conversation on Facebook with an ex-Catholic who thinks he has adequately studied Catholicism because he’s read books by Pat Madrid, Karl Keating, etc. (I ran into him on Dave Armstrong’s page.) I’m trying to persuade him that these authors, fine though they are in their own way, do not scratch the surface of what Catholicism has to offer.
Not being convinced is not an assumption
Now that is an assumption. Special revelation has nothing to do with it. I just know that there’s more to Protestantism than you will ever learn from MacArthur, Swindoll, Dobson, or even Colson. Not by special revelation but simply because I have studied the subject.
And I’m happy for you. But that does not make you an expert in Protestant theology. Protestantism is much shallower than Catholicism, theologically speaking, but there are still depths that it would take at least one very intense lifetime of study to sound.
Edwin