A century ago the Protestant churches in
North America were divided between those who sought to defend the
confessional integrity of their churches and those who believed that
some form of compromise with the modern worldview was inevitable and
desirable. The latter became known as liberal Protestants, and they
would earn notoriety for denying cardinal doctrines of the Christian
faith, such as the virgin birth, the divinity of Christ, and his
resurrection from the dead. Typically they lauded the morality of the
Gospels while denying anything that might conflict with a scientific
approach to the world.
Yet liberalism in religion covers more
than just the denial of the miraculous. A liberal Christian may be
willing to affirm that Jesus literally walked on the water (Matt.
14:22–33) or rose from the dead, yet he still retains the right as an individual to accept only that which supports his own experience of faith. J. Gresham Machen,
who was forced to combat liberalism within his own Presbyterian Church
in the 1920s and 1930s, well understood the nature of this individualism
and its impact on the larger Christian community. While liberals in his
denomination claimed to accept the authority of Christ, it was a Christ
remade in the image of the cultural prejudices of the day. According to Machen,
“The real authority, for liberalism, can only be ‘the Christian
consciousness’ or ‘Christian experience’ . . . truth can only be that
which ‘helps’ the individual man.”
Of course, experience
varies from one individual to the next, which is the principal
difficulty with this approach. There can be no common faith professed by
a community of Christians, each of whom retains for himself or
herself the sovereign right to decide what he or she can manage to
affirm within the larger deposit of the faith. From this comes the
caricature of the eccentric and barely-believing cleric who crosses his
fingers behind his back while reciting the Nicene Creed, confessing a
shell of the faith while effectively denying its substance.
Is there a connection between this religious liberalism and political
liberalism? There is indeed, and we see it already in the writings of
the seventeenth-century English political philosopher John Locke. In his
Second Treatise on Civil Government,
Locke famously asserts that political authority is rooted in a social
contract among individuals, who establish a civil magistrate to protect
their life, liberty and property. If this civil magistrate fails to live
up to the terms of this contract, the people may take up arms against
him in what Locke euphemistically calls an “appeal to heaven.”
Locke did not limit this social contract to the state but applied it to the institutional church as well. In his Letter Concerning Toleration,
Locke puts forth his own definition of the Church: “A church, then, I
take to be a voluntary society of men, joining themselves together of
their own accord in order to the public worshipping of God in such
manner as they judge acceptable to Him, and effectual to the salvation
of their souls.” While there are undoubtedly many Christians, especially
those in the free-church tradition, who would implicitly agree with
Locke's definition, the mainstream of the Christian tradition has viewed
the Church as the covenant community of those who are called to belong
to Jesus Christ, who is its savior and head.
Moreover, the
gathered church, as distinct from the body of Christ which is more
encompassing, has been generally recognized to be an authoritative
institution with the power to bind and loose on earth (Matt. 16:19,
18:18). As such it is more than the aggregate of its members but is a
divinely-ordained vessel bearing the Gospel to the world and especially
to those who are in Christ.
Tellingly,
the voluntaristic ecclesiology of liberalism is by no means limited to
liberal Protestant denominations here in North America. Even evangelical
churches claiming faithfulness to the Bible implicitly communicate to
their members that their own expressed needs are sovereign and strive to
meet them above all else. Drawing on a consumer model, such
congregations will hold multiple and different styles of worship
services each Sunday to appeal to the varying liturgical tastes of
adherents. If this entails toning down confessional distinctives and
mounting concert-style litur-tainment, so be it.
It is common
these days to hear people claim to be spiritual but not religious. Mere
spirituality leaves the ego in charge, and successful churches try
their best to appeal to this ego. On the other hand, religion implies a certain binding (Latin: religare)
of the person to a particular path of obedience not set by the person
herself. Just as the state is called by God to an irrevocable task of
doing public justice, so also is the institutional church called by God
to proclaim the Gospel in its fullness, administer the sacraments and to
ensure that its members are living up to their calling before the face
of God, who has redeemed them in Jesus Christ.
David T. Koyzis is the author of the award-winning Political Visions and Illusions and We Answer to Another: Authority, Office, and the Image of God. He teaches politics at Redeemer University College. A slightly different version of this was published in Christian Courier.
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