THE EVANGELICAL CHURCH IS BREAKING APART [View all]
The election of the elders of an evangelical church is usually an uncontroversial, even unifying event. But this summer, at an influential megachurch in Northern Virginia, something went badly wrong. A trio of elders didnt receive 75 percent of the vote, the threshold necessary to be installed.
"A small group of people, inside and outside this church, coordinated a divisive effort to use disinformation in order to persuade others to vote these men down as part of a broader effort to take control of this church, David Platt, a 43-year-old minister at McLean Bible Church and a best-selling author, charged in a July 4 sermon.
Platt said church members had been misled, having been told, among other things, that the three individuals nominated to be elders would advocate selling the church building to Muslims, who would convert it into a mosque. In a second vote on July 18, all three nominees cleared the threshold. But that hardly resolved the conflict. Members of the church filed a lawsuit, claiming that the conduct of the election violated the churchs constitution.
Platt, who is theologically conservative, had been accused in the months before the vote by a small but zealous group within his church of wokeness and being left of center, of pushing a social justice agenda and promoting critical race theory, and of attempting to purge conservative members. A Facebook page and a right-wing website have targeted Platt and his leadership. For his part, Platt, speaking to his congregation, described an email that was circulated claiming, MBC is no longer McLean Bible Church, that its now Melanin Bible Church.
What happened at McLean Bible Church is happening all over the evangelical world. Influential figures such as the theologian Russell Moore and the Bible teacher Beth Moore felt compelled to leave the Southern Baptist Convention; both were targeted by right-wing elements within the SBC. The Christian Post, an online evangelical newspaper, published an op-ed by one of its contributors criticizing religious conservatives like Platt, Russell Moore, Beth Moore, and Ed Stetzer, the executive director of the Wheaton College Billy Graham Center, as progressive Christian figures who commonly champion leftist ideology. In a matter of months, four pastors resigned from Bethlehem Baptist Church, a flagship church in Minneapolis. One of those pastors, Bryan Pickering, cited mistreatment by elders, domineering leadership, bullying, and spiritual abuse and a toxic culture. Political conflicts are hardly the whole reason for the turmoil, but according to news accounts, they played a significant role, particularly on matters having to do with race.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/10/evangelical-trump-christians-politics/620469/
As the author explains, evangelicals have adopted a form of political Christianity, where the Jesus of the Bible has been replaced by a rugged, masculine xenophobic Jesus, this has been going on for a long time, but has greatly accelerated due to trumpism. Its ironic that the very people who complain about cultural creep, have constructed a version of Christianity based on politics and white, southern culture.
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