Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Refusing to Learn About God is Like Refusing to Know Your Spouse.

I once was talking to a Christian friend and as it sometimes happens our conversation turned theological in nature. His questions had to do evangelism and calvinism. I gave him a pretty simple honest and strait forward answer. His response after hearing my answer was a short pause and then he said, “I’m sure glad I am a Christian, so I don't have to care about theology.” Now what is theology? Well the word itself means the study of God. In other words theology is learning about God, who he is, what he has done, what he is doing and what he will do. A Christian cannot do much with out running into theology. Saying “Jesus, is the Son of God”, “Jesus died for me.” are all theological statements, the very gospel itself is theology. A Christian cannot be a Christian without theology, theology is knowing God and his Word.


Theology is not independent of scripture, if my theology is not based off of scripture then I should not be believing it.

Some Christian's I talk to think theology is a cold sterile science that seems to bring up things that hold no relevance but just creates division. Good theology is the most relevant thing you can imagine. Theology is knowing our Creator, using the very thing he has given us to understand the Bible, God's divine revelation to us.

Back to my friend who said he was glad he was a Christian so he did not have to care about theology. Could this phrase work in any other situation. Could I say to my wife, “I’m glad I married you so I don’t have to know who you are.” How then is it acceptable for us as Christians to say that knowing our Creator, knowing who our God is, is not important. If this is the case theology is the most relevant, thing for our Christian lives. A rejection of theology is to refuse to know the God who loves us so much that he would send his Son to take the punishment that sinful humans deserved.


Tuesday, May 28, 2013

The Myth of Non-Denominationalism



Its been awhile since my last post, I'm not always the best at keeping up on this blog thing. I've been thinking about the topic of denominationalism/non denominationalism lately and I wanted to write down some of my thoughts here.  I'm sure we have heard people say things around the lines of “Get rid of denominations, we just need to all be one.”  or “I'm anti denominational, we just need to follow the Bible.” I happen to agree with the anti denomination crowd. We should just get rid of denominations and follow the Bible which will make us all Presbyterian.

Now im being facetious when I say that but I mean some truth to it as well. If we are with the denominations that we in for  reasons other than it has the most rocking worship team in town. Then i would fully expect to hear someone say: “We should just get rid of denominations and follow the Bible which will make us all Anglican.” supplant Anglican with Baptist, Lutheran, Catholic as your denominational affiliation requires. The truth is when we say we should get rid of denominations, what we really are saying is they need to end so that my denomination can shine through, and take its rightful place as the one true church in the world.

 I find nothing wrong with this, in fact I would respect someone because at least there honest. I respect someone who is firm in there belief even when I think there wrong. When I meet a Baptist who knows what he believes and why, I assume for him  a perfect world of no denominations would have all Christians beings Baptist, and I can have allot of respect for that. And i hope that he would assume that to me in a perfect non-denominational world all Christians would be baptizing there baby’s, teaching them the Catechism singing the psalter and going to Presbytery meetings for fun. Lets stop living the anti-denomination delusion and come to grips that it is only a  attempt at seeming pious, that is really just a hidden form of denominationalism.

 Even if your one of those Christians who hold to the “Beetles Theology” (All We Weed Is Love) and want us all to stop caring about denominations so much, and to sit around a camp fire singing kumbaya and braiding each others hair. Even then what your really saying is “My denomination (even if its not a official one) is the right one  and you all need to join me, or you will be going against the Bible.” The anti-denominational ruse is really just a veiled way of trying to impose your denomination on someone else, at least back in the day people were honest about the fact they were trying to convert Catholics into Protestants and vice versa.
Now I understand that those that are against denominations are not deceptively and maliciously trying to convert others to there line of thinking. I hope though that I have shown how non-denominationalism is really  not possible.