LexingtonPethead wrote:Not to borrow a phrase from Bill Clinton, but it depends on the context in which you use the word "liberal".
That's true. I meant in reference to his theology.
His political persuasions seem to be that the church hasn't much business running the government (a statement I mostly agree with, since God chooses our leaders for us; in some cases, he uses voting, in others the Supreme Court).
I don't think Camp can blame his being liberal on the church. He can blame it on himself for the decisions he makes and what he chooses to believe. We are all responsible for what we do and what we believe.
This is true. As Matthew noted, however, the church today is not grounded in theology or discipleship. The leadership in the church has the responsibility for educating the flock in the word, not telling them how to vote or run their lives. That's between them and the Lord.
Unfortunately, though, their goal is not an
educated congregation, it is an
emotional congregation. The two aren't diametrically opposed, I don't think, but the church by and large seems more concerned with the sale than actually teaching anything of substance.
Now on the other hand, you could say that a church may be progressive, or dare I say - liberal - if it is open-minded in a biblically sound way in how it reaches the lost.
You lost me right here. I thought Christ said he came to seek and save the lost--and that he did it. (Or what does John 19:30 mean?)
Immediately upon hitting this phrase, you have run into a theological problem. I'm not saying that you are wrong--and I don't want to argue the point. But to take this tack, the church must assume that Jesus didn't really mean what he said--or that his work is somehow left undone (a thought that cannot be Scripturally supported).
In other words, it requires theology to get to this point. We have to go back further, cast aside presuppositions about the gospel, and really learn what it is before we start this.
For example, an aggressive evangelism outreach to the inner city or suburbs. Or it could be a contemporary worship service.
Neither of these particularly bother me, though I think contemporary writers stink (to put in bluntly). Give me the hymn lyrics any day of the week! Again, it's a personal opinion, not gospel truth.
The important thing is that the word is proclaimed as it stands written (not as we want people to hear it, or in a manner that makes more converts). As a whole, the church has lost her appreciation for the power of the Scripture; God tells us that the word is
alive that it is
powerful and that it accomplishes whatever he sends it out to do.
Our job is not to pack the halls of the church. Evangelism is a proclamation, a fishing expedition with
nets, not
bait.
The church I attend here in Lexington could be considered liberal by those definitions. But I assure you, the message and principles are squarely based on the Gospel and is anything but liberal.
With all due respect, a gospel which is centered in the belief of man rather than the faithfulness of Christ is a liberal gospel (and I argue, not the gospel at all).
A theology that uses the word "saved" to mean one thing (eternal life) instead of many things (it is used in a variety of senses and occurs in every tense, with the possible exception of the future perfect) is a liberal theology.
Liberal, as it pertains to our beliefs, should be meant to mean loose or uneducated (both accusations we may level at the political parties in this country, of course) as opposed to immoral. The church on the whole is extremely uneducated about their faith and relies on transient experience rather than the eternal word.
This is why Steve Camp is so upset about CCM. Not because of the musical style, but because theology is neglected in favor of half-truths coated in slick production.
His theology is reformed, pure and simple, and it predates our current church phenomenon by several hundred years. It is a very conservative theology, as best as I can tell.