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The Rise of Extreme Tolerance...Continued from page 1

John MacArthur

Grace to You

At the "Emergent Convention" in 2004, a gathering of some eleven hundred leaders in the Emerging Church movement, Doug Pagitt, pastor of Solomon's Porch (an Emergent community in Minneapolis), told the gathering, "Preaching is broken." He suggests that a completely open conversation where all participants are seen as equals is better suited to a postmodern culture. "Why do I get to speak for 30 minutes and you don't?" he asked. "A sermon is often a violent act," he declared. "It's violence toward the will of the people who have to sit there and take it."2

Rudy Carrasco, a Pasadena-based Emergent pastor, agreed that preaching is simply too one-sided, too authoritative, and too rigid for postmodern times. "Every day, every week, there's stuff that pops up in life, and it's not resolved, just crazy and confusing and painful. When people come across with three answers, and they know everything, and they have this iron sheen about them, I'm turned off. Period. I'm just turned off. And I think that's not unique to me."3

Many in the church, caught up in the spirit of the age, think Christians should never take an uncompromising stand, should never argue about anything. We're not supposed to engage in polemics. I hear this frequently: "Why don't you just state the truth in positive terms and ignore the view you disagree with? Why not steer clear of controversy, forget the negatives, and present everything affirmatively?"

That ethos is why it is no longer permissible to deal with biblical issues in a straightforward and uncompromising fashion. Those who dare to take an unpopular stand, declare truth in a definitive way-or worst of all, express disagreement with someone else's teaching-will inevitably be marked as troublesome. Compromise has become a virtue while devotion to truth has become offensive.

But many of the issues being compromised within the evangelical movement today are not questionable. Scripture speaks very clearly against homosexuality, for example. The Christian position on adultery is not at all vague. The question of whether a believer ought to marry an unbeliever is spelled out with perfect clarity. Scripture quite plainly forbids any Christian to take another Christian to court. Selfishness and pride are explicitly identified as sins. These are not gray areas. There is no room for compromise here.

Nevertheless, I constantly hear every one of those issues treated as a gray area-on Christian radio, on Christian television, and in Christian literature. People want all such matters to be negotiable. And too many Christian leaders willingly oblige. They hesitate to speak with authority on matters where Scripture is plain. The lines of distinction between truth and error, wisdom and foolishness, church and world are being systematically obliterated by such means.

The world needs Christians who embrace an antithetical worldview, a biblical mindset that answers questions of truth and morality in terms of black and white. Why? Because there is no salvation without absolute, unshakeable truth. Compromising, changing, tolerant opinions don't provide answers for the "crazy and confusing and painful" issues that confront pastor Carrasco every day. Only truth saves and sanctifies and gives hope.

What's needed today is a generation of men and women who will take a stand on biblical truth. People like that fear the Lord, not men, and will find power and courage from the Lord to uphold His truth in an age of extreme tolerance.

Adapted from The Truth War, © 2007 by John MacArthur.

______________________________________________________________________

1 D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Preaching and Preachers (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1971), 15-16.
2 Tom Allen, "Postmoderns Value Authenticity, Not Authority," The Baptist Standard, July 8, 2004.
3 Ibid.

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Most Recent User Comments
twowords
7/14/2009 5:45 PM
I think we need to go back to the bible for this answer. The answer I find is that there were no preachers, Jesus was a teacher and so were the disciples and apostles. If we look at text the disciples call Jesus "teacher" and when you read the books and letters they talk about teaching about the CHRIST and who he was and what he did. In no part does it talk about preaching just teaching. Taking a verse from the bible and preaching about it instead of using the whole part is the problem,to do so dilutes and changes the whole. Jesus taught in whole using parables we should not take one verse from a parable and preach, we should use the whole to teach as he did. If we use the whole then tolerence and what is correct will over come being PC and actually bring more people to Jesus instead of making them run away or water it down to feel good for what they are doing. Jesus is here for the masses not just the few who tell you what Jesus is about or how to worship him.
giladan
7/10/2009 1:06 PM
I think the Apostle Paul said it best when he said if I or anyone else preach to you a gospel other than what you originally received let them be accursed.
hanaaadib
7/9/2009 9:39 AM
I live in Egypt and dont have much choice as to which church to join. I was born into the coptic orthodox church which is not very likely to become 'tolerant' to new doctrines yet I'm not really comfortable there; I believe in the sacraments especially communion, baptism and marriage yet I'm uncomfortable with what I perceive as legalism (e.g. if you dont fast every wed and fri youre not allowed to communion) I'm also uncomfortable with all the talking to deceased saints and asking for their prayers and visiting their relics. This doesnt mean the post modern ideology hasnt penetrated the egyptian church; I was actually handed norman vincent peele by a priest, only I didnt finish reading it because for some reason it didnt feel right. The same happened with the 'purpose driven life'. I need guidance I'm far from being a mature christian and I cant trust myself to discern the voice of the Holy Spirit within me. I'm not even sure if christianity.com is with or against postmodernism.
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