As I wrote in response to Thinking Friend Vern Barnet’s excellent comments regarding my April 30 blog post, I grew up in a rather fundamentalist/traditionalist Protestant church and denomination. My theological understanding changed through the years, though, with the help of a good professor at William Jewell College (David O. Moore) and good profs/scholars at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (Eric Rust, Dale Moody, and Glenn Hinson).
Advocating a Radiant Center. My theological position changed
progressively, and now I am pleased to identify myself as a progressive
Christian. As one who has long advocated a “radiant center,” I intentionally
sought to avoid the extremes of fundamentalism on the right and liberalism on
the left. That intention is seen in the two books I have written on the subject.*1
In those two books, I had in mind a continuum with five positions: fundamentalism
on the far right and liberalism on the far left. Then, I titled the tenth chapter of the second book “Between Liberalism
and Fundamentalism,” and I concluded with a subsection called “Advocating the
Radiant Center” (pp. 329-330)
Perhaps it is now time to propose only three positions: liberalism,
the radiant center, and fundamentalism, with the center constituting half of
the spectrum and the extremes only one-fourth each. On such a scale, I now
place myself on the left side of the broad middle, rejecting the extremes of
liberalism but being as far as possible from the extremes of fundamentalism.
Introducing ProgressiveChristianity.org. Mark
Sandlin is a Presbyterian pastor of a small church in North Carolina, but a
prominent shaper of progressive Christianity. He is the president and
co-executive director of ProgressiveChristianity.org. On that website, Sandlin articulates
“The Core Values of Progressive Christianity.”*2
First, though, please bear in mind that a key difference between
progressive Christianity and evangelical Christianity is that the former
emphasizes the importance of this world where is the latter tends to be “otherworldly,”
emphasizing the importance of “saving souls” for everlasting life in Heaven. Progressive
Christianity, however, primarily stresses the importance of life on earth now,
helping people to flourish (with the “abundant life” Jesus promised) in this
present world.*3
Here are some of the values Sandlin postulates:
* We [progressive Christians] believe God is Love, not a distant
evaluator.
* Jesus shows us what Love looks like in human form.
* The Bible is a living conversation and we’re invited into it.
* Salvation
is about becoming whole, not escaping earth.
* Other religions hold wisdom too and that doesn’t threaten our faith.
Introducing Doubter’s Parish. Martin Thielen is a former Southern Baptist who
became the pastor of a large Methodist church. He graduated from The Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary in 1982 (20 years after I did) and later received
a D.Min. degree from Midwestern Baptist Seminary in Kansas City.
Since his retirement from the 8,000 member megachurch, he created a
website called Doubter’s Parish. He posts only one article a month, but I
have found them to be well worth reading. Here are some of what he said about
progressive Christianity in his April 7 post titled “A Life-Giving Alternative
to Religious-Right Religion” (see
here; the image above is at the top of that website,
but is location of that church sign is undesignated).
Thielen writes, “Thankfully, we don’t have to choose between
religious-right religion and no religion at all. There is an alternative. It’s
called progressive Christianity. And we need it now more than ever.” Here are a
few of the fourteen benefits he says that kind of faith embraces:
* Progressive Christianity emphasizes grace
over judgment.
* Progressive Christianity is committed to
social justice.
* Progressive Christianity prioritizes
Christian living over doctrinal conformity.
* Progressive Christianity practices inclusion rather than exclusion.
* Progressive Christianity seeks to follow the
example and teachings of Jesus.
* Progressive Christianity majors on living a
life of love.
Since my faith now resonates significantly with the values and
characteristics given by Sandlin and Thielen, I am pleased to say that I am (or
seek to be) a progressive Christian.
_____
*2 I encourage you to click on the following link to that website and see how progressive Christianity is portrayed there: https://progressivechristianity.org/.
