All about Grace
New Member
I can agree with what you say here to an extent. I would argue that the "blind loyalty" to the convention is a misnomer. Reason being: the resurgence. The resurgence took place b/c the pew people were not loyal to the point of blindness. I honestly believe if the resurgence had not taken place, most SB would have left the convention.This is my understanding of the resurgence. I agree with you. The resurgence did come from the pew when people found out what was going on. The problem was that they didn’t know what was going on. There was a blind loyalty to the convention and to the coop. They were sending money to the cooperative without any accountability for it. That is one of the problems with the SBC. However, to say I don’t understand is simply wrong. I agree with you. Had they been keeping proper accountability with their money, that would have never happened, at least under the guise of the Southern Baptists.
On a side note, I almost find it humorous to hear IFBers speak of blind loyalty. I know nothing of your personal history or preferences, but my years associated with IFB churches taught me such blind loyalty that to question an authority figure was to bring on the spiritual she-bears. The whole "divine blood" & KJVO theories are little more than displays of blind loyalty. Blind loyalty knows no denominational boundaries.
Again, I can agree with most of what you are saying here. My problem in this discussion is when we attempt to make the peripheral-central. I would suggest that the cardinal doctrines are very limited in number. Therefore I must allow for diversity on any issue beyond the essentials. If you want to discuss what is essential, I am willing.I think this would be a great conversation. False doctrine would be a good place to begin. However, if you are not willing to discuss it, not much will be accomplished. False doctrine is anything contrary to Scripture and Scripture is the judge of that. Where someone can be shown to be in violation of Scripture, they should be confronted, exposed, and separated from if they refuse to repent. The discussion is about what is essential or central vs. what is peripheral. For instance, we can different on textual issues of the Greek text; we cannot differ on inspiration and inerrancy. One is clearly revealed; the other is not. We can differ on the timing of the rapture; we cannot differ on fact of the second coming.
Even in your example of inspiration and inerrancy, there is such a diverse opinion in the evangelical circle as to the exact definition of the word inerrancy that a dogmatic definition lends itself to the biases and beliefs one's own presuppositions. Don't get me wrong here, I believe in full inerrancy and spend much of my forum time on other sites debating its importance, but at the same time, I am not ready to keep CS Lewis or FF Bruce outside the evangelical circle b/c their view on inerrancy differs from mine.
Oranges and apples comparison. Early "new evangelicalism" was simply a return to the evangelical movement of the prior century. As I stated earlier, it has evolved into something different, but the earliest movement was an effort to combat protestant liberalism by returning to the evangelical roots of the Reformation.With due respect, I think that if you take time to explicate the new evangelical position, you will find that it is not a revival of the reformation movement. Fundamentalism/evangelicalism was; new evangelicalism was a departure from that. Fundamentalism/evangelicalism stood firmly in the line of historic separatist principles that lead men of the reformation out of the church of false doctrine and caused them to stand up to her.
How come every branch of fundamentalism calls itself the "historic" element? Once again, one can see why the term evangelical is so popular. If there is one term that is equally as undefined as evangelical, it has to be the term fundamentalist. If a fundamentalist is one that adheres to doctrines defined in The Fundamentals, count me in. However the term has evolved to include much more.This is a misunderstanding of fundamentalism. There are many groups who call themselves fundamentalists who are not historic fundamentalists, which is why I specifically use that term. I am a historic fundamentalist, not a neo- or pseudo-fundamentalists. In essence, I am an evangelical, in the historic sense. I would argue that the vast majority of the SBC is not that, as can be demonstrated from their associations and tolerances. I don’t have time to go into that now but I would enjoy the conversation later. I must run to a prior commitment.
I would be very interested in seeing your demonstration of how the majority of the SBC falls outside the parameters of what it means to be a historic evangelical.