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Who Decides Proper Christian Theology?
This YouTube
video (the Church of Oprah Exposed) is tremendously disturbing. Is
this video representative of what happens when the group or community
gets together and decides proper theology? Rex
Miller indicates we should trust our people to be on a hero’s
journey searching for truth and significance in life (my
interpretation of what I heard at a recent conference), but
what happens when influential people like Oprah with her “experts”
and credibility redefines who Jesus is? Is there no standard anymore
within the Christian community?
I see this like Dan Brown and his Da Vinci Code confirming in the minds of skeptics that Jesus really is the charlatan they always thought he was; because “now we have proof – Dan Brown’s research claims its truthfulness right on page one.” When is the print media of the Bible a true standard in this generation? Or is proper theology lost and we just have to keep diversifying the church (liberal vs. conservative, infant baptism vs. believers’ baptism, health and wealth gospel vs. theology of the cross, cheap grace vs. costly discipleship, gay bishops vs. homosexuality is a sin, etc.). While denominationalism divides the church (often times for good reason regarding non-essentials or preferences) we still can agree on who Jesus is in our foundational beliefs. In Beauty and the Beast, the village is storming the castle in order to kill the beast. The cartoon musical has a great line, “a hundred Frenchmen can’t be wrong, so kill the beast!” Just because a larger group gets together and says Jesus is NOT only one way to get to God, doesn’t make it proper or acceptable Christian theology. I read this article this morning in Our Daily Bread:
So, here we are in the information age, so much information we often find ourselves in information overload (24 hour news, thousands of magazine choices, more web pages than Google can count, non-stop commercials telling us what we need in order to live a satisfying life). I wonder if the church needs to be more in the business of helping people make sense of the world around them; we need interpretation more than additional information. Read what my friend Chuck Warnock has written on the topic. 4 April 2008 |
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