Monday, July 10, 2023

The Biggest Theological Changes I’ve Seen in My Lifetime

Perhaps this needs to be seven posts rather than one, but at this point I am just listing and briefly describing what I consider to be the biggest theological changes I have seen in my lifetime—and these are not my personal shifts but what I’ve observed in the broad spectrum of Christianity. 

#1 – Widespread rejection of Hell. I list this first because of its impact on the following changes. Emphasis on Hell was not only long the emphasis of Protestantism but of Roman Catholicism as well.

One of the most well-known Protestant sermons was Jonathan Edwards’s 1741 sermon “Sinners in the Hand of an Angry God.” And early in the 19th century, revivalist preachers in the U.S. became known for their “fire and brimstone” sermons. That was still quite common when I was a boy/youth.

The Roman Catholic Church also taught for centuries that everyone who was not baptized as a Catholic was bound to go to Hell when they died. That position was drastically changed by the Second Vatican Council (1962~65).

And while emphasis on Hell is still much a part of conservative evangelicalism, in Protestant Christianity at large that emphasis has been quite widely rejected, or at least conspicuously ignored.

#2 – Growing de-emphasis on Heaven. For far different reasons, but related to the above, is what seems to me to be a significant decrease in the emphasis on Heaven in 21st century Christianity. Heaven isn’t particularly denied, it just isn’t talked about nearly as much as it used to be.

The Great Awakenings and evangelical preaching of the 18th~20th centuries was about being “saved” from Hell in order to go to Heaven after death. In the early decades of my life the “afterlife” was of primary concern in most of Christianity, but that no longer seems to be the case.  

#3 – Drastic decrease in world mission activity. Although it was never just for that purpose, the desire to save people from Hell in order that they could go to Heaven was long a major motivation for world mission activity of most Christian denominations.

When I went to Japan as a Baptist missionary in 1966, there were not only conservative missionaries of various denominations, many of which were more conservative than Southern Baptists then, but also many from the more “liberal” Protestant denominations as well as Roman Catholics.

Some of the most prominent Christian schools in Japan were founded by Catholic, Anglican, and “mainstream” Protestant missionaries. But by the time I left Japan in 2004, there were hardly any Christian missionaries left other than Southern Baptists and other conservative evangelicals.

#4 – Emphasis on life in the here and now. Closely related to #2 above is the growing emphasis on the importance of life in this world now. Even the understanding of the Kingdom of God has broadly changed from being focused upon the world to come to a feature of the world we live in now.

Contemporary Christianity seems to have increasingly embraced the traditional Jewish position of “salvation” not being “about going to heaven after death but about the flourishing of life in the present.”*

For example, emphasis on flourishing in the present has for many years now been a part of the reflections of two popular theological thinkers I greatly respect, “emergent” Protestant public theologian and author Brian McLaren and Catholic (Franciscan) priest Richard Rohr.

5) De-emphasis and even rejection of substitutionary atonement. Since the blog post I made six years ago today was about that doctrinal belief (see here), I won’t elaborate on this point more now.

6) Change in views related to sexual ethics. Because of the perceived clear positions of the Bible and the teachings of the Church, both Protestant and Catholic Christianity long-held negative judgments against divorce, cohabitation, and homosexuality.

While there were always many “deviations,” Christianity long held to a strong belief in the sanctity of marriage, which meant lifetime monogamous marriage of a man and a woman with no intimate sexual relations condoned outside of such a marriage.

In spite of strong emphasis on the traditional position by some Christians, broadly speaking, to a large extent Christianity now seems no longer to speak out against divorce or pre-marital sexual relations, and there continues to be greater acceptance of the rights of LGBTQ people.

  7) Growth in ecumenical relations, including deep ecumenism. There is a long history of Christian ecumenism—but an even longer history of Christian denominational “tribalism,” which is what I mostly saw in my younger years.

But during my lifetime there has been not only an ever-increasing move toward Christian denominations working together, a movement from exclusivity to inclusivity, but also an increase in what is sometimes called “deep ecumenism,” Christianity working with other religious traditions.**

What would you readers add or subtract from this list? And which of these do I need to write more about?

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* These words are from Jeorg Rieger in his book Theology in the Capitalocene (2022), which I plan to introduce more fully in the last blog post planned for this month.

** According to Chat GPT, “deep ecumenism” is a term coined by Wayne Teasdale (1945~2004), a Catholic lay monk. His book The Mystic Heart: Discovering a Universal Spirituality in the World’s Religions (1999) “is considered a seminal work in the field of deep ecumenism.” (I think I heard that term before 1999, though.)

Matthew Fox, former Catholic and now Episcopal priest, posted a “daily meditation” entitled “What Is Deep Ecumenism? Why Now?” on Oct. 18, 2021

21 comments:

  1. As is usually the case when I make a blog post early on Monday morning, responses are slow coming in. In fact, the only one received to this point is from Thinking Friend Eric Dollard in Chicago, who makes the following pertinent comments:

    "Thanks, Leroy, for your observations about theological changes in "mainstream" Christianity. I do not believe that most of these changes have so far affected conservative evangelical churches, but they are clearly evident in the ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America)..

    "I cannot speak to number 3 (missionary activity) as I have very little knowledge about this item. In the many sermons I have heard from Lutheran pulpits, hell is never mentioned and heaven rarely. The emphasis is clearly on the 'here and now' (your fourth point). In the face of declining membership, the ELCA (along with other mainstream churches) is trying to be more inclusive, and this certainly includes outreach to the LGBTQ+ community.

    "As for a heightened ecumenism, the ELCA is now in communion with several other Protestant denominations including the Episcopal Church, the PCUSA, the RCA, and the UCC. There is a combined Lutheran-Presbyterian congregation in Lenexa (Kaw Prairie Community Church). I should add that the pastor at Wicker Park Lutheran Church is a big fan of Richard Rohr."

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    1. Thanks for your comments, Eric, and in spite of you being the first to comment, I am responding to you last (at this point). Sorry about that.

      As I have indicated in some of my responses below, certainly the seven changes I have listed have not been present for the most part in conservative evangelicalism, which has generally opposed most of all of those changes and continues to do so.

      With regard to #3, in my early years in Japan I became acquainted with some very fine Lutheran missionaries from the U.S. Currently, there are two Lutheran universities and a Lutheran seminary in Japan, and all three are partially or perhaps largely the due to the presence of Lutheran missionaries. I don't know this for sure, but my guess is it has been quite a long time since the last Lutheran career missionary left Japan.

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  2. Thank you, Leroy, for this insightful blog post. A couple of brief comments on your #4 and #7.

    Regarding #4, liberation theology comes to mind, with its emphasis on improving the lives of the poor and the oppressed, and their biblical interpretation of God being on the side of the poor and the oppressed.

    Regarding #7, I prefer the term interfaith relations/dialogue concerning the relationship of Christianity with other religions. Ecumenism is refers only to denominational relationships within Christianity. Jewish-Christian relations/dialogues have improved remarkably after the Shoah. For example, Mainline Protestants and Roman Catholics have made significant statements concerning Jewish-Christian relations.

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    1. Thanks for your comments on #4 and #7, Garth. I agree with your reference to liberation theology being directly connected to #4, and I think it has made a significant impact on modern theology in spite of its criticism by those in the Catholic hierarchy as well as by many conservative Protestants. Regarding #7, I would encourage you to consider what is often termed "deep ecumenism," for it is largely the same as your preferred term.

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  3. The above comments regarding # 4 and # 7 are mine.

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  4. I think the shift can be described primarily as the shift from hereafter to here and now. I've pretty well been along for the ride. When I saw the title "A Generous Orthodoxy" for McClaren's book, I thought, "Yeah, sure!" I was pleasantly surprised upon reading it. I can't remember ever really and truly believing in eternal torment in the fires of hell. I've never been fond of rattlesnakes, and had no qualms about killing them, but I can remember thinking that, even if I had the power to do so, I would not consign even a rattlesnake to eternal torment in the fires of hell. And I doubted that I was more generous than God.

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    1. Thanks for your powerful comments, Charles. I think your understanding is certainly that of the bulk of Christians today except for the conservative evangelicals who would strongly disagree. Just today I saw the following article on the Christian Post blogsite stressing the reality of Hell and the falsehood of universalism.
      https://www.christianpost.com/voices/do-all-dogs-and-people-really-go-to-heaven.html

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    2. If there are no animals in heaven, then heaven must be inferior to earth at its creation. God saw everything he had made, and behold, it was good, real good!

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    3. Charles, I have no trouble agreeing that all God's creation was good. But that doesn't mean that it was/is eternal. I can't imagine heaven being a realm of physical existence with people (and dogs and other pets) living with physical bodies such as they have now. I take very seriously the emphasis of 1 Corinthians 15:44 on "spiritual bodies" and the words of v. 50 that says, "Flesh and blood can’t inherit God’s kingdom."

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  5. I received two other comments by email between 10 and 11 this morning. The first of those two was from Thinking Friend Glenn Hinson in Kentucky, who wrote,

    "I think those seven accurately reflect the conservatives context you have worked in, Leroy. Others that I have observed would include: (1) recognizing the importance of relating faith to the worldview we derive from our science; (2) giving greater attention to humanity, even viewing the world as God’s “body;” (3) recognizing the authenticity of other faiths besides the Judea-Christian (which is more than your 'deep ecumenism')."

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    1. Thanks for your comments and suggestions, Dr. Hinson. Let me respond briefly, to your three points: 1) fuller acceptance of the scientific worldview certainly brought about theological changes, but it seems to me that except for conservative denominations, including Southern Baptists, that had largely been done before 1950 (when my theological awareness began to develop). That shift was one of the reasons for the emergence of fundamentalism in the 1910s and early 1920s but perhaps was largely over by 1925 in "mainline" denominations as the Scopes trial marked the beginning of the decline of early fundamentalism.

      2) I think you comments here are directly related to my #4 above, but what perhaps should be added is the emphasis not only on human life in the here and now but the whole physical world, which Sallie McFague (1933~2019) referred to as God's body. This is a recent theological emphasis that has important ramifications for ecological issues, and that has certainly been a theological change in my lifetime.

      3) My understanding of "deep ecumenism" includes what you mentioned.

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  6. And then these comments from Thinking Friend Jerry Jumper, a former Southern Baptist in southwest Missouri:

    "There is one other change in my lifetime. My dad, and most other adults in the 1950s and 60s, were adamant in their fundamental belief in separation of church and state. Now it would appear many evangelicals especially are more inclined to support a partnership of church and state, and even some want church to be preeminent over the state."

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    1. Thanks for your comments, Jerry. While separation of church and state was traditionally not held by Roman Catholics, Anglicans, or even Lutherans or Presbyterians (Calvinists), that was long a strong emphasis by Baptists in this country from the 1630s until recent times. That has certainly changed with Southern Baptist denominational and institutional leaders in the decades since 1980.

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  7. A local Thinking Friend who is even older than I sent this brief comment:

    "All in my lifetime too. Wonder what’s next? 'Theology not relevant at all?'”

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    1. Yes, in society as a whole, and even among those who grew up in Christian homes, I think there is far less interest in theological issues than there used to be. This matter is directly related to the blog article on apatheism that I am planning to write and post next week.

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  8. The intellectual ground is shifting under all of us, and the changes described reflect the results of the shift. Consider, as one example, the long shift in viewpoint from classical theology with the Earth at the center of the universe, to the heliocentric view of Copernicus, to the discovery of the scope of the Milky Way, to the more recent discovery that there are huge numbers of galaxies similar to the Milky Way spread across unimaginable stretches of space and time. Finding we are just specks on a speck in a cloud of specks leaves us needing a re-evaluation of what and where we are. Jesus always told us "And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." (John 8:32), but we are now finding depths in that statement that our forefathers rarely suspected.

    One of the early theological struggles is described by Paul in Romans 14:1-7. Some are "strong" in faith and can eat anything and treat all days as the same. Others are "weak" in faith and restrict both diet and Sabbath. He calls on all of us to think things through, and then do it for the glory of God. Two thousand years later we are finally catching up with Paul. Where will it end? It will not end. What might end is popular Christianity, because the Grand Inquisitor urge is strong, and droves of young Christians are being driven out of the churches and into the wilderness. This is how God calls the prophets. We live in interesting times.

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    1. Thanks, as always, for your thought-provoking comments, Craig.

      Regarding the end of your second paragraph, it seems to be a real shame to me that so many young Christians are leaving churches (and saying they are "being driven out" may be a little too strong) without realizing that there have been significant changes in Christian theology in the broad sweep of Christianity and they don't have to assume that the conservative (traditional) ideas of many churches/denominations is all that is available to them.

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  9. Yesterday afternoon, local Thinking Friend Bill Ryan sent me the following comments by email:

    "I found your list interesting, although not having experienced the Baptist culture some of it was not familiar. Your comment about ecumenism, however, hit home, as that was very much a part of my own experience and active participation, particularly in the Consultation on Church Union. When I was a pastor, the churches I served all studied this effort and were quite interested in the direction that COCU was designed to go. However, now ecumenism seems dead and churches of traditional Protestant denominations are becoming more congregational rather than connectional, even separating from their own denominations and becoming 'community' congregations or 'evangelical' in name and self-description. Roman Catholics seem to have backed away from Protestant and Orthodox communions as well. The World Council of Churches is almost unknown or at least insignificant among grass-roots congregations, pastors, et al. There's a retrenching going on rather than an 'outreaching.' At least this is my observation."

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    1. Thanks for your comments, Bill. I was a bit surprised, though, that you thought some of what I wrote was particularly related to "Baptist" culture." In the Southern Baptist Convention, which still is the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S., most of these changes have not taken place. So from my perspective, these are important theological changes that have taken place in the broad sweep of Christianity, but for the most part not in the Southern Baptist Convention and other conservative evangelical denominations.

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  10. I was happy to receive the following comments this morning from my daughter Karen, who is a professor of Religious Studies:

    "I found this really interesting. I would also add the rise of feminist theology & the emergence of feminist-influenced Christianity, along with the backlash in the development of fundamentalist forms of complementarianism and biblical patriarchy. That was a major polarizing development that preceded the divisions over sexuality."

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    1. Thanks, Karen, for sending these comments. Certainly, what you suggested could easily be included as an eighth change. But except for much conservative evangelicalism (including the Southern Baptist Convention) which still hasn't made that change, more broadly (and even including some evangelicalism, especially Pentecostalism), that change was taking place before 1950.

      Catherine Booth (1829~1890), the "mother" of the Salvation Army, is said to have been a more widely heard preacher in Great Britain than her husband William. And Aimee McPherson (1890~1944) was a Canadian Pentecostal evangelist and media celebrity in the 1920s and 1930s, famous for founding the Foursquare Church. And when I was a boy, the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Grant City would have an out-of-town woman preacher as a guest speaker from time to time. True, we Southern Baptists seemed to think that was a bit weird, but our Christian Church friends, such as our neighbors who lived on the adjoining farm, seemed to think having a woman preacher was perfectly acceptable.

      But still, the change you suggest has taken place much more widely in the past few decades than it did before 1950.

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