DMcFadden
Puritanboard Commissioner
Whether you agree with him or disagree with him, you really must admire Dr. Scott Clark. His Heidelblog often raises some of the most interesting issues in an engaging way. This is certainly true of his reprinting of a classic blog from 2008: Three Ways of Relating to American Religion | The Heidelblog.
Most of us think in terms of a polarity in American Christianity between "liberal" and "conservative." In his blog, also citing the words of Darryl Hart, he advances the thesis that these are not ALWAYS the most applicable or serviceable filters for evaluating the American church scene.
Hart describes the controversy at WTS as a seeming conflict between two ways of relating to American evangelicalism.
The first group wants to align with the progressive neo-evangelicalism typical of the Fuller of 2013; the second wants to identify with the type of neo-evangelicalism proffered by Carl F.H. Henry in the late 40s and emblematic of the Fuller of that day.
What makes Clark's (and Hart's) comments so interesting is a third way: confessionalism. His proposed modus vivendi maintains that "there is a third way to relate to American religion, however, and that is confessionalism, which is neither liberal nor conservative, but it is what the Reformed Churches have always confessed to be the theology, piety, and practice revealed in the Word of God."
Five years have not dimmed the luminosity of Clark's insights nor the applicability to the current scene. Blessedly, he has put some of these ideas into print in more permanent form for our edification.
Most of us think in terms of a polarity in American Christianity between "liberal" and "conservative." In his blog, also citing the words of Darryl Hart, he advances the thesis that these are not ALWAYS the most applicable or serviceable filters for evaluating the American church scene.
In the case of the struggle between Machen and Modernism in the 1920s and 30s, the the “fundamentalists” had as much or more in common with the “Modernists” than than they had in common with Machen.
Hart describes the controversy at WTS as a seeming conflict between two ways of relating to American evangelicalism.
Apparently what we have here are rival ways of being open to evangelicals, of not being narrowly or parochially Reformed. In effect, WTS is now torn between Scott McKnight, Tim Keller and Richard Mouw's sort of broad evangelicalism and Al Mohler, D. A. Carson and John Piper's sort of Reformed evangelicalism.
The first group wants to align with the progressive neo-evangelicalism typical of the Fuller of 2013; the second wants to identify with the type of neo-evangelicalism proffered by Carl F.H. Henry in the late 40s and emblematic of the Fuller of that day.
What makes Clark's (and Hart's) comments so interesting is a third way: confessionalism. His proposed modus vivendi maintains that "there is a third way to relate to American religion, however, and that is confessionalism, which is neither liberal nor conservative, but it is what the Reformed Churches have always confessed to be the theology, piety, and practice revealed in the Word of God."
Five years have not dimmed the luminosity of Clark's insights nor the applicability to the current scene. Blessedly, he has put some of these ideas into print in more permanent form for our edification.