Posted by
Ron on Friday, July 07, 2006 12:45:30 AM
A relationship with Christ is essential. We can have head knowledge and not heart knowledge which is not good. It is, however essential to have knowledge (doctrine). Churches tend to behave how they believe. This article explores the issue of doctrine today in the church.
In his book A Generous Orthodoxy (Zondervan), Brian McLaren makes a
piercing assessment of evangelicals. He says they have focused on
having all the right doctrinal beliefs, but they lead lives that,
often, don’t match those beliefs.
He sums up their mindset
like this: “[O]ne could at least be proud of getting an ‘A’ in
orthodoxy even when one earned a ‘D’ in orthopraxy [the application of
doctrine to one’s life].”
Many Christians think McLaren is on to something.
A
lot of evangelicals affirm doctrines they don’t really believe,
according to Dr. Gregg Ten Elshof, chair of Biola’s undergraduate
philosophy department.
“It's not that they disbelieve what
they affirm,” Ten Elshof said. “It's just that they have no real belief
either way. What they affirm has nothing to do with the way they live."
Dr.
Richard Flory, an associate professor of sociology at Biola, calls the
problem “an intellectualized Christianity, where it stays in your head
and doesn’t work itself out on the ground.”
This can be seen
in some churches, according to Dr. John Hutchison. Hutchison is chair
of the Bible exposition department at Biola’s seminary, Talbot School
of Theology. He said: “There’s been a disillusionment with churches who
pride themselves on teaching very orthodox doctrine, yet you don’t
necessarily see a difference in their members’ lifestyles.”
Multiple
studies have shown, for example, that Christians get divorced as often
as, or more than, non-Christians. Studies have also found that many
Christians, even pastors, regularly view pornography. Evangelical
pollster George Barna said that nine out of 10 born-again Christians
fail to live differently than the rest of the world.
McLaren
thinks many “doctrinally sound” Christians tend to be arrogant,
judgmental and unloving toward non-Christians and, even, Christians who
have different doctrinal views.
In his book Think Like Jesus,
Barna said that many people who claim to be Christians lead lives that
are indistinguishable from non-Christians.
McLaren believes an
answer to this inconsistency is for Christians to shift their focus
from having abstract doctrinal knowledge to leading authentic,
Christlike lives — lives that are characterized by traits like humility
and genuine concern for people.
Many evangelicals have
expressed a similar sentiment that relationships are more important
than doctrine. As the popular catch phrases go: “Christianity isn’t
about head knowledge but heart knowledge” and “it’s not a religion but
a relationship.”
True, Christianity is fundamentally about a
relationship with God. Evangelicals have historically stressed that the
Christian faith is essentially a personal relationship with Jesus
Christ.
Yet it’s precisely because Christianity is a
relationship that doctrine is so important, according to Ben Shin, who
teaches classes on the Bible, hermeneutics and spiritual formation at
Talbot. Shin said that, in any relationship, if you want to grow closer
to the other person then you have to know more about him or her. Read More.