When Tranformationalisms Collide

Our friendly but misguided theonomic sparring partner, Rabbi Bret, is a delegate to the Christian Reformed Church’s Synod. Let that sink in.

Amazing!

True to his voluble ways, Bret is peppering his blog with updates on the affairs of Synod. Having spent four years in the CRC and seen how Reformed-world-and-life-viewism of a left-leaning sort transformed that once vigorous church into a communion that ordained women, sponsored contemporary worship, and shied away from TULIP, I was wondering when Bret’s views on women, American politics, and the Christian magistracy would catch up with him in the progressive CRC. Now we know. It is not going so well.

Here is part of Bret’s post from Day 1 of Synod.

Question

Is our goal to be a Christian nation?

Answer – No, Our Kingdom is not of this world.”

Bret

Observation – Then if our goal is to not be a Christian nation therefore all that is left is a goal that our nation would be non-Christian, right?

Answer – “No.”

Bret

Huh?

Now this is coming from people whose motto is …. “Transforming lives and communities worldwide.”

So, we are for “Transforming lives and communities worldwide,” but we are against the goal of a nation being transformed from non-Christian to Christian?

Now, some contended, “Well, we only want to speak as the Church to these issues.” I quite understand that but it should still be the goal of every Christian that the Gospel would have such impact among his countrymen that the nation itself could be rightly considered Christian.

I then asked … “If our goal is to be a Christian nation then what is that Christian nation modeled on except Ancient Israel? What other theocracy do we model a Christian nation on if not the theocracy of ancient Israel?:

Answer,

The laws of Old Testament Israel are not for today.

I also learned that the metaphors of salt and light are soft metaphors that indicate that we should not be to belligerent in our contending for Christ. I thought … “you know … I’m not to sure how soft and non-belligerent darkness considers light to be when the light is beating the stuffing out of darkness’s attempt to smother everything.

I guess soft people discover soft metaphors.

I can certainly sympathize with Bret’s confusion about the CRC’s understanding of transformationalism. It is the classic difference between soft and hard theonomy. Both want a Christian society/nation/culture, but go to different parts of the Bible (or mind, as in worldview) for it.

Today comes word that Bret has been misquoted in different Michigan newspapers’ coverage of Synod. However accurate those reports or Bret’s denials may be, one thing is clear: Bret will not be silent. (Not to be missed is that the CRC is doing its best impersonation of the U.S. Senate by debating global warming and illegal immigration.)

I am all for Bret’s causing a little commotion at Synod. As much as I benefitted from the CRC during our sojourn, I am also saddened that worldviewism cost the church its heritage of Reformed confessionalism.

At the same time, I’m not all that bothered to see Bret struggling with his left-leaning communion. If he had bothered to heed the teaching of his two-kingdom targets at Westminster California, many of whom had experience opposing the liberal drift of the CRC, he would have known where transformationalism leads.

13 thoughts on “When Tranformationalisms Collide

  1. What exactly is “worldviewism”? Who are it’s primary spokesmen and what books do you read about it in? I’m unfamiliar with it or this term.

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  2. Hello Dr. Hart,

    Is the CRC’s loss of confessionalism due to worldviewism argued for and/or examined in more detail in print anywhere?

    Thanks,

    Bryce

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  3. Mark, check out the books by Al Wolters (Creation Regained), Brian Walsh and Richard Middleton, and David Naugles’ history of worldview.

    Bryce, I don’t know of any good history on the recent history of the CRC.

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  4. Watching funda-evangelicals fight with progressive-evangelicals would rock the casbah if it weren’t so sad and discouraging. Sigh.

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  5. Al Wolter’s book was required reading during my days at Calvin. Transformationalism runs deep, and largely unchallenged, in the CRC.

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  6. David Van Drunen’s new book on two-kingdom theology and the natural law has a good, historically contextualized response to “Creation Regained.”

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  7. Bret has given you a cool nickname – you could go by DuGnos now, which would seriously up your street cred.

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  8. Global warming is a serious concern. individuals count it out or just don’t really think about it at all. While it might not be having a direct impact on us correct now in our everyday lives, or so people believe, it will definitely be an concern for our children. What do you believe?

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