No Place for Truth Quotes
No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
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David F. Wells899 ratings, 4.28 average rating, 109 reviews
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“In our postmodern culture which is TV dominated, image sensitive, and morally vacuous, personality is everything and character is increasingly irrelevant.”
― No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
― No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
“The disappearance of theology from the life of the Church, and the orchestration of that disappearance by some of its leaders, is hard to miss today, but oddly enough, not easy to prove. It is hard to miss in the evangelical world--in the vacuous worship that is so prevalent, for example, in the shift form God to the self as the central focus of faith, in the psychologized preaching that follows this shift, in the erosion of its conviction, in its strident pragmatism, in its inability to think incisively about the culture, in its reveling in the irrational.”
― No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
― No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
“Evangelicals now stand among those who are on easiest terms with the world, for they have lost their capacity for dissent.”
― No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
― No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
“Let us not think, I said, that we really have a choice between having a theology and not having one. We all have our theologies, for we all have a way of putting things together in our own minds that, if we are Christian, has a shape that arises from our knowledge of God and his Word. We might not be conscious of the process. Indeed, we frequently are not. But at the very least we will organize our perceptions into some sort of pattern that seems to make sense to us. The question at issue, then, is not whether we will have a theology but whether it will be a good or bad one, whether we will become conscious of our thinking processes or not, and, more particularly, whether we will learn to bring all of our thoughts into obedience to Christ or not. The biblical authors had a theology in this sense, after all, and so too did Jesus. He explained himself in terms of biblical revelation, understood his life and work in relation to God, and viewed all of life from this perspective. He had a
worldview that originated in the purposes and character of his Father and that informed everything he said and did.”
― No Place for Truth or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
worldview that originated in the purposes and character of his Father and that informed everything he said and did.”
― No Place for Truth or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
“Descartes argued “I think, therefore I am,” and people after Freud translated that into the modern vernacular by saying, “I feel, therefore I am a self”; modern evangelicals of the relational type seem to have added their own quirk to it by saying that “I feel religiously, therefore I am a self.” The search for the religious self then becomes a search for religious good feelings. But the problem with making good feelings the end for which one is searching is, as Henry Fairlie argues, that it is possible to feel good about oneself, even religiously, “in states of total vacuity, euphoria, intoxication, and self-indulgence, and it is even possible when we are doing wrong and know what we are doing.” This kind of self-fascination is by no means an excrescence of an otherwise robust sector of religious life. It is at the very center of evangelicalism.”
― No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
― No Place for Truth: or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?
