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No Pass from Theological Responsibility — The BioLogos Conundrum

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Revmitchell, Nov 14, 2013.

  1. Revmitchell

    Revmitchell Well-Known Member
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    ...On November 8, an article appeared at the BioLogos site that was explicitly addressed to me. The author, Mark Sprinkle, had courteously informed me by e-mail on November 7 that the article would appear the next day. And so it did.

    In his article, Dr. Sprinkle uses the account of Peter and Cornelius from Acts 10 to argue that “our theology is descriptive, not prescriptive; it is our collective and halting attempt to describe in coherent terms what we know of God by what we have seen of His acts and what we have read in His Word—and, above all else, by what we have seen in the acts of the Word, Jesus.” That argument points very clearly in the direction of minimizing theology and doctrine, but it is also false. Unless a church forfeits all doctrinal responsibility, at least some theology is always prescriptive.

    But theology, he argues, “is put to the test not just by our logic, but by the witness of what God is doing in our lives and in the lives of others around the world.” He then states this: “Evidence of the Spirit at work is the only true measure we have of our theology; all other measures, including whether it fits our carefully-reasoned arguments of who is in and who is out, are vanity.”

    That is an interesting statement, but it is nonsensical unless there is some means of evaluating what is and is not authentic evidence of the Spirit at work. And that, of course, would mean some kind of biblical and theological test. The effort to escape theology gets us nowhere.

    Dr. Sprinkle then turns to me specifically, charging that I regard those involved with BioLogos to be “confused Christians” at best. He claims that my criticism of the arguments made by figures associated with BioLogos amount to my effort to limit “God’s ability to redeem and transform whomever He so pleases, in whatever manner He so pleases.” I would greatly appreciate any reference to where I have ever addressed such an issue with reference to BioLogos. There is none. At the same time, Dr. Sprinkle’s unavoidable implication is that God’s Spirit moves in ways contrary to God’s Word — and that I do flatly and energetically reject.

    Dr. Sprinkle writes with concern about “Dr. Mohler’s repeated implications and suggestions, if not outright pronouncements, that I and anyone else who does not reject evolutionary processes are, therefore, not Christian in any but a nominal or diminished way, not authentic followers of Jesus no matter what we say and despite the evidence of the Holy Spirit both in us and working through us.”

    At this point, given the public nature of this statement, I have to ask the only question I know to ask. Can these people read? I defy anyone to locate a single sentence where I have ever questioned the salvation of anyone in any context where I have addressed anything related to BioLogos. I have never questioned their salvation, nor have I attempted to interrogate their hearts. I accept at face value that their ambitions and intentions in their own minds are worthy. I cannot read their souls.

    I can read their words, however. Their theological arguments are published in the public arena. They are not shy about making their proposals, and they call for a radical reformulation of evangelical doctrine. Their assaults upon biblical inerrancy have not been made in private conversations, but in public discourse. Their argument that the Apostle Paul was wrong to believe in an historical Adam and an historical Fall was made in public, as was their denial of common descent through Adam.

    They will have to take responsibility for these arguments. They should expect no less than a spirited debate over their proposals, and it is nothing short of bewildering that they now ask, in effect, for a pass from all theological scrutiny. They accuse conservative evangelicals of driving evangelicalism into an “intellectual cul-de-sac” and into the status of an intellectual “cult,” and then they have the audacity to complain of the “tone” of those who argue that their proposals amount to a theological disaster.

    Virtually every form of theological liberalism arises from an attempt to rescue Christian theology from what is perceived to be an intellectual embarrassment — whether the virgin conception of Christ, the historicity of the miracles recorded in the Bible, or, in our immediate context, the inerrancy of Scripture and the Bible’s account of creation.

    Dr. Sprinkle kindly invites me “to come and see what I see in the hearts and lives of people in the BioLogos community.” I am willing and eager to enter into any conversation that serves the cause of the gospel. But a conversation that serves the cause of the gospel cannot avoid talking about what the gospel is — and that requires theology.

    BioLogos is a movement that asserts theological arguments in the public square in order to convince evangelical Christians to accept their proposals. They now have the audacity to ask for a pass from theological responsibility. That is the one thing they may not have.

    http://www.albertmohler.com/2010/11...ogical-responsibility-the-biologos-conundrum/
     
  2. OldRegular

    OldRegular Well-Known Member

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    The Christian has one inerrant source for his theology, his understanding of God. That is the Bible! It appears from what Dr. Mohler writes above and what I have read about BioLogos that they include extra-biblical sources including "feelings and experiences"!
     
  3. Revmitchell

    Revmitchell Well-Known Member
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    Yea using biologos as a source in a debate over Christian theology is very problematic. Their material is good for puffing up the heart about what one thinks they can discover for themselves but it does nothing to get to the truth. It is for hyper-intellectuals looking to feed the flesh.
     
  4. quantumfaith

    quantumfaith Active Member

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    Pride is no respecter of intellectual boundaries. One can can be "puffed up" with pride and be intellectually simple just as easy as one with intellectual abilities.
     
  5. OldRegular

    OldRegular Well-Known Member

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    That being said is it possible the BioLogos people are "intellectually simple" who are being duped by pseudo science?

    Look at all the "intellectually simple" people who are being duped by the Word of Faith movement, a pseudo Gospel if there ever was one, and its charlatans!
     
  6. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    A "double minded man" can expect to receive nothing from the Lord in way of wisdom, as I fear too many christians try to worship at both alter of revealtion/scriptures truths, and that of the sacred cows of science, such as evolution!
     
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