ORTHODOXY IS NOT OPTIONAL

PMW 2024-033 by Barton J. GingerichFork in road

Gentry note: This is a helpful article on the importance of maintaining orthodoxy.

Richard John Neuhaus (1936-2009), the conservative Lutheran-turned-Catholic cleric and writer, originated what would become known as Neuhaus’ Law. Deeply aware of social dynamics and theological truth, he claimed, “Where orthodoxy is optional, orthodoxy will sooner or later be proscribed.” As our own culture continues its unsettling spiritual trajectory, Neuhaus’ Law keeps playing itself out over and over again in church bodies and other Christian institutions.

Now, there are many voices that insist otherwise. What we need, they say, is some kind of expansive tolerance. In days gone by, this meant downplaying the historical accuracy and certain theological claims of the Bible in favor of what Friedrich Schleiermacher would define as true piety, which was a religious feeling of absolute and utter dependance on God. As long as someone felt and expressed that inner feeling communally, he could entertain all sorts of doubts about the Bible.


Openness Unhindered (by Rosaria Butterfield)

Dr. Butterfield goes to great lengths to clarify some of today’s key controversies. She also traces their history and defines the terms that have become second nature today-even going back to God’s original design for marriage and sexuality as found in the Bible. She cuts to the heart of the problems and points the way to the solution.

See more study materials at: www.KennethGentry.com


Of course, these days, the target for skepticism has shifted to the moral realm, where one finds different variants of “inclusive orthodoxy.” Rather than scoff at the historic creeds, members of the clergy and laity alike express ambivalence or outright reject biblical teachings on sex. These are the majority of today’s revisionists. They earn that label because they wish to revise something that Biblical Christians have traditionally held for all the Church’s existence. Fewer today have hang-ups about “the supernatural,” but they certainly frown upon opposition to licentiousness, which is framed as self-realization through sexual expression.

But that is not where the fight between revisionists and orthodox believers who maintain biblical positions typically starts. The first demand of the revisionist is to live and let live—to allow for clergymen and laymen alike to disagree on matters of fundamental doctrine or sexual morality. And, typically, that involves changing denominational stances and statements in various synods, councils, assemblies, or conventions. The insistent promise is that there is “room for everyone” in the big tent of whatever ecclesiastical body or ministry the revisionist finds himself a member.

And, oftentimes, “moderates” of whatever group is in question seek to avoid bad feelings, conflict, and all-around unpleasantness. Like all good secularists and worshipers of therapeutic feel-goodism, moderates understand that, if we’re fighting over religion, we’re doing something wrong, and not because the heretics started the fire. Such moderate souls, of course, are formed over decades with bad catechesis, weak preaching, and worldliness. Accruing approval from the unbelieving world becomes increasingly paramount. And moderates often honestly believe that their denomination and their ministries can exempt themselves from Neuhaus’ Law, even if they’ve never even heard of the man or his ideas. They function under the assumption that finding a third way is always possible.


Why I Left Full-Preterism (by Samuel M. Frost)

Former leader in Full Preterist movement, Samuel M. Frost, gives his testimony and theological reasoning as to why he left the heretical movement. Good warning to others tempted to leave orthodox Christianity.

See more study materials at: KennethGentry.com


But Neuhaus’ Law remains unbroken. Just look at the Presbyterian Church (USA). For a decade, the PCUSA has allowed for same-sex marriage. Now, there is proposed legislation for the upcoming General Assembly that would bar ordination candidates who are not LGBTQ-affirming. Of course, the affirming position was typically sold as “making room” for various minorities that were pushed out by knuckle-dragging fundamentalists. Now, the shoe is on the other foot. Forces are working to kick out anyone who does not comply with revisionist sexuality. Orthodoxy hasn’t just become optional; it must be proscribed.

Now, whenever voices make a push to make orthodoxy optional, the faithful have a choice: to relent or to fight. And, if they fight, they will inevitably be painted as Big Meanies. When Christian colleges fire liberalizing faculty members, or when denominational authorities uphold church discipline against pastoral officers who violate ordination vows via heretical teaching or unrepentant sin, they are the ones cast as villains. The innovators who breached the trust of the institution—who changed it in fundamental ways that conform to the wider culture, adopted positions irreconcilable with the religious institution’s principles, and refused to leave—are typically portrayed as heroes. Revisionism feigns neutrality and victimhood, only to take over and drive out that which is right once it accesses levers of power….

To continue reading full article to here: https://wng.org/opinions/orthodoxy-is-not-optional-1710640893


The Divorce of Israel: A Redemptive-Historical Interpretation of Revelationimage
This long-awaited commentary is now at the printer and should be available for the public in late April, 2024. It is an 1800 page, two-volume deeply exegetical, academic commentary on the Bible’s most mysterious book.

Go here: https://www.kennethgentry.com/the-divorce-of-israel-2-vols-by-gentry-pre-publication-offer/

See more study materials at: www.KennethGentry.com

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