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The Vanishing Ecclesiology

Dr. James Emery White

Pastor, Ranked Adjunctive Professor of Theology and Culture Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary

In Serious Times, I noted that Christianity used to be rejected by Enlightenment intellectuals because they thought its central beliefs had been disproven by an unchanging and universal truth, meaning science or philosophy, but that today, Christianity tends to be disqualified on the grounds that it argues that an unchanging and universal truth even exists. In other words, a particular faith used to be wrong on the basis of what one perceived to be truth; now a faith is wrong for claiming there is such a thing.

A shift with interesting parallels is occurring in regard to ecclesiology. Traditional forms of church used to be rejected because they were outdated, archaic and irrelevant, or going back to the Reformation, because a particular form or ecclesial idea was found wanting in light of New Testament understandings. But the idea of church itself - not simply the church universal, but the church local - was never rejected. Now the very idea of a local church owning a rightful piece of the kingdom economy is being challenged.

I will not bother to name names or movements, but with renewed vigor pockets within the evangelical world are taking the idea of church to task. Simply put, the doctrine of ecclesiology is being radically revised apart from biblical moorings, or being dismissed as if not a part of biblical orthodoxy at all.

This should not surprise observers of American Evangelicalism, for it is a movement that has been weak on the doctrine of the church from its beginning. Note Carl F.H. Henry's monumental systematic theology. Six volumes, and not a single section on the church. Or in the name of fair play, consider the institution for which I have recently become President, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, arguably the academic flagship of the evangelical world, where there is not a single course which is wholly devoted to the doctrine of the church (though it is embedded in the content of Systematic Theology).

Then there is the parachurch movement. Originally embraced as a way to enlarge the boundaries of God's work beyond the traditional church, for many it has become a substitute entity; often competitive, and occasionally antagonistic. The role of the parachurch has loomed so large in some thinking that it has led some to speak of the "potential" partnership of the church and parachurch, as if it might be a nice option.

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