ChristianWalkOnline

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Liberalism As Atheism?

It Takes One To Know One--Liberalism As Atheism

By Albert Mohler And Taken From Albert Mohler.com.

"It takes one to know one," quipped historian Eugene Genovese, then an atheist and Marxist. He was referring to liberal Protestant theologians, whom he believed to be closet atheists. As Genovese observed, "When I read much Protestant theology and religious history today, I have the warm feeling that I am in the company of fellow nonbelievers."

Genovese's comment rang prophetic when Gerd Ludemann, a prominent German theologian, declared a few years ago, "I no longer describe myself as a Christian." A professor of New Testament and director of the Institute of Early Christian Studies at Gottingen University in Germany, Ludemann has provoked the faithful and denied essential Christian doctrines for many years.

With amazing directness, Ludemann has denied the resurrection of Jesus, the virgin birth, and eventually the totality of the Gospel. Claiming to practice theology as a "scientific discipline," Ludemann (who taught for several years at the Vanderbilt Divinity School) has sought to debunk or discredit the Bible as an authoritative source for Christian theology.

In his influential book Heretics (1995), Ludemann sought to demonstrate that the heretics were right all along, and that the Christian church had conjured a supernatural Jesus to further its own cause. In What Really Happened to Jesus (1995) he argued, "We can no longer take the statements about the resurrection of Jesus literally." Lest anyone miss his point, Ludemann continued, "So let us say quite specifically: the tomb of Jesus was not empty but full, and his body did not disappear, but rotted away."

Nevertheless, Ludemann argued that Christianity could be rescued from its naive supernaturalism by focusing on the moral teachings of Jesus. Later, Ludemann gave an interview to the German magazine Evangelische Kommentare in which he stated that the Bible's portrayal of Jesus is a "fairy-tale world which we cannot enter."

In that same interview he denied the sinlessness of Jesus, explaining that, if Jesus was truly human, "we must grant that he was neither sinless or without error." The church, he argued, must give up its faith in the "risen Lord" and settle for Jesus as a mere human being, but one from whom much can be learned.

In later writings, Ludemann argued that Jesus was conceived as the product of a rape, and stated clearly that he could no longer "take my stand on the Apostles' Creed" or any other historic confession of faith. He continued, however, to teach as an official member of the theology faculty--a post which requires the certification of the Lutheran church in Germany.

Gerd Ludemann's theological search-and-destroy mission eventually ran him down a blind alley. As he told the Swiss Protestant news agency Reformierter Pressedienst, he has come to a new realization. "A Christian is someone who prays to Christ and believes in what is promised by Christian doctrine. So I asked myself: 'Do I pray to Jesus? Do I pray to the God of the Bible?' And I don't do that. Quite the reverse."

Having come face to face with his unbelief, Ludemann has now turned his guns on church bureaucrats and liberal theologians. Many church officials, Ludemann claims, no longer believe in the creeds, but simply "interpret" the words into meaninglessness. Liberal theologians, he asserts, try to reformulate Christian doctrine into something they can believe, and still claim to be Christians. He now describes liberal theology as "contemptible."

Looking back on the whole project of liberal theology, Professor Ludemann offered an amazing reflection: "I don't think Christians know what they mean when they proclaim Jesus as Lord of the world. That is a massive claim. If you took that seriously, you would probably have to be a fundamentalist. If you can't be a fundamentalist, then you should give up Christianity for the sake of honesty."

Professor Gerd Ludemann reveals much about the true state of modern liberal theology. One core doctrine after another has fallen by liberal denial--all in the name of salvaging the faith in the modern age. The game is now reaching its end stage. Having denied virtually every essential doctrine, the liberals are holding an empty bag. As Ludemann suggests, they should give up their claim on Christianity for the sake of honesty.

Professor Ludemann is now a formidable foe of liberal theology, but he is also one of its victims. He said that he plans to pick up his teaching career from a "post-Christian" perspective, now that he knows "what I am and what I am not." Should his liberal colleagues attempt to remove him from the theology faculty as a "post-Christian," Ludemann may respond with Genovese's quip: "It takes one to know one."

Taken From Albert Mohler.com.

 

7:17:58 PM    comment []

Hollywood, Wall Street, Heaven?

The Lost Sense Of The Eternal

Taken From The Book The Law of Rewards By Permission From Randy Alcorn.
 
A startling thing has happened among Western Christians.  Many of us habitually think and act as if there were no eternity - or as if what we do in this present life has no eternal consequences.
 
How many sermons about heaven and hell have most of us heard lately?  How many modern gospel booklets even mention the words heaven and hell? The trend is to focus on our present circumstances instead of our eternal future.  Yet Scripture states that eternal realities should influence the character of our present life, right down to every word we speak and every action we take (James 2:12; 2 Peter 3:11-12).
 
In those rare times when we do seriously consider the afterlife, it seems strange or dreamlike, so otherworldly as to be unreal.  
 
Satan deceives us into thinking of the afterlife as a ghostlike existence, while Scripture portrays it in very tangible and earthly ways.  He deceives us in order to turn our minds away from the wonders of heaven, our true home, and set them on things that will not matter in eternity.
 
So we come back to "reality" - our present lives and possessions that we can see, hear, touch, feel, and taste.  Things are real.  Now is real.  We return to the pressing business of the day, that which is immediately relevant, those all-important matters of the present.  These might include what's happening in Hollywood, on Wall Street, in Washington or London, or in the NFL or NBA; or what new self-help technique can make us beautiful or happy; or how we can decorate our house; or what kind of car we want to buy; or where we can get a low-interest loan.  We live as if these shadowlands were the real world, the ultimate reality.  But Scripture tells us they are not.
  • Romans 14:10-12:  You, then, why do you judge your brother? Or why do you look down on your brother? For we will all stand before God's judgment seat. It is written: " 'As surely as I live,' says the Lord, 'every knee will bow before me; every tongue will confess to God.' "So then, each of us will give an account of himself to God.
  • Luke 12:48:  But the one who does not know and does things deserving punishment will be beaten with few blows. From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked.
The Bible tells us we are pilgrims, strangers, aliens, ambassadors working far from home (Hebrews 11:13; 2 Corinthians 5:20).  Our citizenship is in heaven (Philippians 3:30).  But we've become so attached to this world that we live for the wrong kingdom.  We forget our true home, built for us by our bridegroom (John 14:1-2).  Paul said, "I desire to depart and be with Christ, which is better by far" (Philippians 1:23).
 
C.S. Lewis said, "Our Father refreshes us on the journey with some pleasant inns, but will not encourage us to mistake them for home."  Too many of us spend our lives mistaking these temporary residences for our true home.  But our home is in another place - and each day we are one day closer to it.
 
God says this life is so brief that we are like grass that grows up in the morning and wilts in the afternoon (Isaiah 40:6-8).  Our existence here is but "mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes" (James 4:14).
 
When my friend Leona Brown discovered she had only a short time to live, she told me of radical changes in her perspective.  "The most striking thing that's happened," she said, "is that I find myself totally uninterested in all the conversations about material things.  Things used to matter to me, but now I find my thoughts are never on possessions, but always on Christ and people.  I consider it a privilege that I can live each day, knowing I will die soon.  What a difference it makes!"
 
Recently another dying friend told me with a smile, "I don't buy jumbo shampoo like I used to.  I don't buy green bananas."  She knew where she was going.  And she knew she wouldn't be here much longer.  Neither will we.
 
David prayed: 
"Show me, O LORD, my life's end and the number of my days; let me know how fleeting is my life.  
 
You have made my days a mere handbreadth; the span of my years is as nothing before you. Each man's life is but a breath. Selah
 
Man is a mere phantom as he goes to and fro: He bustles about, but only in vain; he heaps up wealth, not knowing who will get it.
 
"But now, Lord, what do I look for?  My hope is in you.
Because this life is so brief, we might conclude that it's inconsequential.  Our lives may seem like pebbles dropped in a pond.  They create ripples for a moment, tiny wrinkles that smooth out, then they are gone forever.  Abandoned tombstones with names no one remembers are stark reminders of our eventual anonymity in this world.  What do you know about your great-great grandparents?  What will your great-grandchildren know about you?
 
Our brief stay here may appear unimportant, but nothing could be further from the truth.  The Bible tells us that although others may not remember us or care what our lives here have been, God will remember perfectly, and he cares very much - so much that the door to eternity swings on the hinges of our present lives.
 
The Bible tells us that this life lays the foundation upon which eternal life is built.  Eternity will hold for us what we have invested our life on earth.  Scripture make clear that the one central business of this life is to prepare for the next.
 
 

7:06:52 AM    comment []

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