With regard to state mandates directed at churches, I completely
support the rejection of state authority. The state has no business in the
affairs of the Church but unfortunately the Church (generally speaking) has
confused the issue on at least two fronts.
Calling for a Return to the Doctrinal Ideals and Kingdom Ethics of the First Reformation
20 July 2020
The Membership-Marriage Fallacy and Other Ecclesiastical Sophisms
The introduction to this article is not unsound. We must be
part of a congregation but the question of 'joining' begs the question with
regard to a denominational polity.
16 July 2020
Membership Chaos within the Confessional Presbyterian Context (Part 2)
As you pursue
communicant membership, rest assured that he who has begun a good work in you
will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ (Phil. 1:6). “May the
God of peace himself sanctify you completely, and may your whole spirit and
soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. He who
calls you is faithful; he will surely do it” (1 Thess. 5:23–24). Amen.
Apart from the terminology and conceptualisation of
'communicant membership', the statement is not unsound. And yet it is lacking.
To be fair it was not the author's intent to provide an exhaustive statement
and yet I think this is important. He rightly emphasizes the need for good
works and the Philippian exhortation is tied to the concept of perseverance –
an idea that permeates the New Testament and yet must be distinguished from the
deduced and popular but erroneous concept of eternal security.
Membership Chaos within the Confessional Presbyterian Context (Part 1)
This brief statement on membership caught my eye while
perusing New Horizons, the OPC
monthly that I continue to follow even though I departed the OPC about twenty
years ago. My early Christian days were in connection with that denomination
and while I would never even consider regularly attending another one – I still
follow its trajectory and movements and though the numbers grow fewer, there
are still people I know (or knew) within its fold.
01 July 2020
Anabaptist Storm Clouds on the Horizon (Part 4)
Returning to the
conservative Mennonites, the legalism of the Amish seems to be diluted (though
still present) and largely replaced with a spirit of capitulation. This is what
I think of when I see conservative Mennonites inviting John Stonestreet to
speak. Have things gone that badly in their community, with their youth that
they're willing to hear a culture-sanctifying, worldly, compromised Evangelical
leader who regularly promotes feminism to come and teach them about how to
navigate the world of technology and the computer age?
Anabaptist Storm Clouds on the Horizon (Part 3)
Some factions such as
those associated with the founding of Sattler College have openly embraced
mainstream life with its technology and economic order. Though still reckoned
among the conservative Anabaptist spectrum, this shift in attitude represents
an embrace of a nascent Dominionism. This inclusion of its conception of
vocation in which one's daily occupation is a holy Kingdom-oriented task has
landed them in a place not too distant from the world-compromised and affected liberals
who in the post-war era sought an activist role within society.
Anabaptist Storm Clouds on the Horizon (Part 2)
In some post-war
Mennonite circles apolitical nonresistance was transformed into tacit
uncritical endorsement of the world system. The war was a crisis for these
movements which fragmented them and sent the various factions in different
directions and yet both liberal and conservative groups (perhaps for different
reasons) embraced secular education.
Anabaptist Storm Clouds on the Horizon (Part 1)
In December 2019 I was
visiting the Mennonite website for The
Sword and Trumpet and was rather stunned to find that their Spring 2020
colloquy was hosting John Stonestreet of BreakPoint. He was to address the
conservative Mennonite assemblage on issues of media and technology.
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