Friday, September 08, 2006

A Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future

The call is available at: ancient future worship or christianity today
An interview with Robert Webber, one of the convenors of the group that crafted the call is also on the christianity today site. The list of convenors and editors is at the bottom of the document.

All documents of this type are limited - that is always the problem with words. There are those within the emerging church that want to nothing to do with this type of document; there are other churches / denominations / grouping, as well, that want nothing to do with anything that approaches a creed / confession / statement. There are others whose history and faith has found expression through the generations in creeds and confessions.

Do you see any value for this type of document for the church / Church?
If you do, what is your reaction to this statement?

A Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future:
an appeal to live the biblical narrative.

Prologue
In every age the Holy Spirit calls the church to examine its faithfulness to God's revelation in Jesus Christ, authoritatively recorded in Scripture and handed down through the church. Thus, while we affirm the global strength and vitality of worldwide evangelicalism in our day, we believe the North American expression of evangelicalism needs to be especially sensitive to the new external and internal challenges facing God's people.

These external challenges include the current cultural milieu and the resurgence of religious and political ideologies. The internal challenges include evangelical accommodation to civil religion, rationalism, privatism, and pragmatism. In light of these challenges, we call evangelicals to strengthen their witness through a recovery of the faith articulated by the consensus of the ancient church and its guardians in the traditions of Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, the Protestant Reformation, and the evangelical awakenings. Ancient Christians faced a world of paganism, Gnosticism, and political domination. In the face of heresy and persecution, they understood history through Israel's story, culminating in the death and resurrection of Jesus and the coming of God's kingdom.

Today, as in the ancient era, the church is confronted by a host of master narratives that contradict and compete with the gospel. The pressing question is: Who gets to narrate the world? "The Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future" challenges evangelical Christians to restore the priority of the divinely inspired biblical story of God's acts in history. The narrative of God's kingdom holds eternal implications for the mission of the church, its theological reflection, its public ministries of worship and spirituality, and its life in the world. By engaging these themes, we believe the church will be strengthened to address the issues of our day.

1. On the Primacy of the Biblical Narrative
We call for a return to the priority of the divinely authorized canonical story of the triune God. This story—Creation, Incarnation, and re-creation—was effected by Christ's recapitulation of human history and summarized by the early church in its rules of faith. The gospel-formed content of these rules served as the key to the interpretation of Scripture and its critique of contemporary culture, and thus shaped the church's pastoral ministry. Today, we call evangelicals to turn away from modern theological methods that reduce the gospel to mere propositions, and from contemporary pastoral ministries so compatible with culture that they camouflage God's story or empty it of its cosmic and redemptive meaning. In a world of competing stories, we call evangelicals to recover the truth of God's Word as the story of the world, and to make it the centerpiece of evangelical life.

2. On the Church, the Continuation of God's Narrative
We call evangelicals to take seriously the visible character of the church. We call for a commitment to its mission in the world in fidelity to God's mission (Missio Dei), and for an exploration of the ecumenical implications this has for the unity, holiness, catholicity, and apostolicity of the church. Thus, we call evangelicals to turn away from an individualism that makes the church a mere addendum to God's redemptive plan.

Individualistic evangelicalism has contributed to the current problems of churchless Christianity, redefinitions of the church according to business models, separatist ecclesiologies, and judgmental attitudes toward the church. Therefore, we call evangelicals to recover their place in the community of the Church catholic.

3. On the Church's Theological Reflection on God's Narrative
We call for the church's reflection to remain anchored in the Scriptures in continuity with the theological interpretation learned from the early fathers. Thus, we call evangelicals to turn away from methods that separate theological reflection from the common traditions of the church. These modern methods compartmentalize God's story by analyzing its separate parts, while ignoring God's entire redemptive work as recapitulated in Christ. Anti-historical attitudes also disregard the common biblical and theological legacy of the ancient church.

Such disregard ignores the hermeneutical value of the church's ecumenical creeds. This reduces God's story of the world to one of many competing theologies and impairs the unified witness of the church to God's plan for the history of the world. Therefore, we call evangelicals to unity in "the tradition that has been believed everywhere, always, and by all," as well as to humility and charity in their various Protestant traditions.

4. On the Church's Worship as Telling and Enacting God's Narrative
We call for public worship that sings, preaches, and enacts God's story. We call for a renewed consideration of how God ministers to us in baptism, Eucharist, confession, the laying on of hands, marriage, healing, and through the charisms of the Spirit, for these actions shape our lives and signify the meaning of the world. Thus, we call evangelicals to turn away from forms of worship that focus on God as a mere object of the intellect or that assert the self as the source of worship. Such worship has resulted in lecture-oriented, music-driven, performance-centered, and program-controlled models that do not adequately proclaim God's cosmic redemption. Therefore, we call evangelicals to recover the historic substance of worship of Word and table and to attend to the Christian year, which marks time according to God's saving acts.

5. On Spiritual Formation in the Church as Embodiment of God's Narrative
We call for a catechetical spiritual formation of the people of God that is based firmly on a Trinitarian biblical narrative. We are concerned when spirituality is separated from the story of God and baptism into the life of Christ and his body. Spirituality, made independent from God's story, is often characterized by legalism, mere intellectual knowledge, an overly therapeutic culture, New Age Gnosticism, a dualistic rejection of this world, and a narcissistic preoccupation with one's own experience. These false spiritualities are inadequate for the challenges we face in today's world. Therefore, we call evangelicals to return to a historic spirituality like that taught and practiced in the ancient catechumenate.

6. On the Church's Embodied Life in the World
We call for a cruciform holiness and commitment to God's mission in the world. This embodied holiness affirms life, biblical morality, and appropriate self-denial. It calls us to be faithful stewards of the created order and bold prophets to our contemporary culture. Thus, we call evangelicals to intensify their prophetic voice against forms of indifference to God's gift of life, economic and political injustice, ecological insensitivity, and the failure to champion the poor and marginalized. Too often we have failed to stand prophetically against the culture's captivity to racism, consumerism, political correctness, civil religion, sexism, ethical relativism, violence, and the culture of death. These failures have muted the voice of Christ to the world through his church and detract from God's story of the world, which the church is collectively to embody. Therefore, we call the church to recover its counter-cultural mission to the world.

Epilogue
In sum, we call evangelicals to recover the conviction that God's story shapes the mission of the church to bear witness to God's kingdom and to inform the spiritual foundations of civilization. We set forth this call as an ongoing, open-ended conversation. We are aware that we have our blind spots and weaknesses. Therefore, we encourage evangelicals to engage this call within educational centers, denominations, and local churches through publications and conferences.

We pray that we can move with intention to proclaim a loving, transcendent, triune God who has become involved in our history. In line with Scripture, creed, and tradition, it is our deepest desire to embody God's purposes in the mission of the church through our theological reflection, our worship, our spirituality, and our life in the world, all the while proclaiming that Jesus is Lord over all creation.

This call is issued in the spirit of sic et non; therefore, those who affix their names to this call need not agree with all its content. Rather, its consensus is that these are issues to be discussed in the tradition of semper reformanda as the church faces the new challenges of our time. Over a period of seven months, more than 300 persons have participated via e-mail to write the call. These men and women represent a broad diversity of ethnicity and denominational affiliation. The four theologians who most consistently interacted with the development of the call have been named as theological editors. The board of reference was given the special assignment of overall approval.

Conveners: Robert E. Webber, Myers professor of ministry, Northern Seminary; Philip C. Kenyon, director, Grow Center for Biblical Leadership, Northern Seminary.

Theological Editors: Hans Boersma, Packer professor of theology, Regent College; Howard Snyder, professor of world mission, Asbury Theological Seminary, and university professor of world Christianity, Spring Arbor University; Kevin J. Vanhoozer, research professor of systematic theology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School; D. H. Williams, professor of patristics and historical theology, Baylor University.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"Do you see any value for this type of document for the church / Church?"

Yes. At their best, they focus our attention on what matters, represent the consensus of many wise believers, and help us to discern truth from error by stating things clearly. They can also help us correct our failings. The ecumenical creeds still provide a common rule of faith for all Christians.

"If you do, what is your reaction to this statement?"

Things I support:

1. The emphasis on the central truth, God's story of Creation-Fall-Redemption and his mighty acts in that story. This is the heart of our faith.

2. The call to embrace the universal creeds of the early church and to be mindful of the teachings of the church through the ages as we interpret Scripture.

3. The desire to make God -- what he has done and what he is doing -- the centre of our worship. Observance of the Christian year can help this if it isn't taken so far that it becomes overly restrictive, as I think it is in some traditions.

4. Without venturing interpretations of some of the specific items listed, I agree that the church needs to speak God's truth and live God's morality, which are always counter-cultural on some point. The temptation to become conformed to the world rather than to Christ is ever-present.

Things I oppose:

1. The condemnation of propositional, analytical theology -- this is the Achilles heel of the document. This can't be said enough these days: it is not possible to talk about what God is like or what he has done without propositions. Propositions are absolutely essential to stating and handing down the faith of the apostles. The ancient ecumenical creeds are simply lists of propositions that must be believed. Analysis and reason are and always have been God-given abilities for separating truth from error, not "modern" inventions.

2. Overemphasis on tradition and the ancient church. Normally as evangelicals we have underemphasized this, but the solution is not to stray into a Roman Catholic position where the church tradition itself is infallible. Even the ancient church had flaws. Scripture stands above it and all traditions as the only infallible standard. But yes, we need to listen to those who went before us and correct ourselves by their wisdom too.

3. Vagueness of terms. What do the authors mean by "individualism", "rationalism", and intellectual focus? Depending on how they define these I might agree or disagree with their critiques.

4. Ecumenical relativism (implied). A few passages of the document imply that the entire "visible church" of today, including all the major branches of Christianity, is the true church and should work together. I don't think this is the case: not everything that claims to be the Church is the Church. Sad to say, whole sections of Roman Catholicism, for example, do not teach a true gospel but instead a semi-pagan, semi-polytheistic religion of works. I am quick to add that many Catholics who are true believers deplore this. But my point is that we need to be discerning in our "ecumenicity"; some Christian traditions are more faithful to the Biblical faith than others.