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Monday, October 11, 2004

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>>  With Bishops Like This, Who Needs Heretics?

The Episcopal Church is in big trouble, and the larger Anglican
Communion appears poised to offer the American church an
ultimatum--return to a biblical standard of sexuality, or get out. While
analysts and church historians debate the significance of this
denomination's present trouble, along comes a little book that tells us
everything we need to know about how the Episcopal Church USA was
brought to this disaster.

Retired Bishop Bennett J. Sims is the author of Why Bush Must Go: A
Bishop's Faith-Based Challenge, published just in time for the 2004
presidential elections. The little book never lives up to its title, for
Bishop Sims tells us far more about himself and his bizarre theological
pilgrimage than about President George W. Bush. Nevertheless, for all
the wrong reasons, this book offers genuine illumination concerning the
peril of theological liberalism.

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Bishop Sims served as bishop of Atlanta from 1972 to 1984, earning a
reputation as a progressive within the Episcopal Church and experiencing
no small amount of controversy within his own diocese. After his
retirement, he served as founding president of the Institute for Servant
Leadership at Emory University. A U.S. Navy officer during World War II,
Bishop Sims is an energetic man of ideas. Sadly, this book shows that
his ideas are both profoundly wrong and powerfully dangerous.

Bishop Sims begins his convoluted argument by citing his experience
during World War II. At that time, the United States was engaged in a
noble war under a noble president. Now, Bishop Sims laments that the
United States has become an imperial power determined to despoil the
world, exert its own power, and glorify its leadership. "By contrast
with the years of my military service (1943-1946), my country now
pursues policies that exacerbate the peril to God's world by an
imperialist violence that the great religions have long repudiated," he
asserts. If his fellow Americans do not accept his argument and change
their ways, "the planet and all forms of its life face a darkening
horizon."

>From the very beginning, Bishop Sims frames his argument in the context
of an eccentric view of human history. According to the Bishop, human
consciousness has been evolving for the last 100,000 years, and has now
reached "a massive point of turning." Even though President George W.
Bush and the War on Terror are unfortunate developments, he is certain
that history is moving towards an era of global negotiation and peace.
"Following millennia of violence as the prime conflict resolution
mechanism, human sensitivity is now moving toward a renewal of an even
older recourse to nonviolence as the way to compose the inevitable
clashes of personal and public wills," he insists.

According to the Bishop's historiography, archaeology and paleontology
have traced "the emergence of advanced human consciousness" in a series
of sequential patterns that have moved from a long period of prehistoric
cooperation to the last six thousand years of competition and violence.
Bishop Sims wants to call humanity to a new third age of collaboration
and continued evolutionary consciousness. Standing in the way of this
vision is President George W. Bush and his insistence on framing the War
on Terror as a battle between good and evil. Nevertheless, Bishop Sims
finds hope even in the present, seeing grounds for optimism "in the
growing worldwide revulsion from superpower swagger and an aroused
conviction that violence only compounds the very violence it seeks to
subdue."

A good many Episcopalians might be shocked to know that the prime
authorities Bishop Sims cites for his argument are individuals such as
Carl Jung and the Dalai Lama and a series of New Age theorists.

Before turning to Bishop Sims' favorite authorities, perhaps we should
ask an obvious question: What about the Bible? Clearly, Bishop Sims
simply places the Bible within the process of human consciousness in
evolutionary development. Far from believing in the inerrancy and
infallibility of Scripture, Bishop Sims holds to a basically
naturalistic worldview. He raises the miracle accounts in the Gospels,
for example, only to dismiss them as "editorial additions by the writers
in the early believing community." The Gospel writers offered the
miracle accounts as "exaggerations characteristic of literature that
seeks to commend and exalt history's high heroes." Jesus would not have
wanted such aggrandizement, Bishop Sims insists, for instead of
exercising power over creation, Jesus represented the power of
collaborative peacemaking and nonviolence.

All this ties back to Bishop Sims' understanding of two different
approaches to power. As he explains, "There are two antithetical power
motifs in the religions of the world: the conventional dominator drive
and the visionary collaborative ideal." Unsurprisingly, Bishop Sims
identifies the first motif with fundamentalism. "It is locked into an
old and ebbing form of human consciousness," the Bishop urges, but its
continuing power is demonstrated in the current "fundamentalist" regime
of President George W. Bush.

Where does the Bishop get his understanding and worldview? His main
authority appears to be New Age writer Riane Eisler, author of The
Chalice and the Blade. Eisler, along with Harvard anthropologist William
Ury and the late Jesuit mystic Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, provide the
Bishop with the ideological framework for his thesis and worldview.
Sadly, the Bishop seems to have no understanding of the fact that Riane
Eisler is a New Age writer whose work is not taken seriously in the
academic world and whose theories on everything from history to feminism
to sex have more in common with Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code than with
serious scholarship. Not slowed down in the least, Bishop Sims charges
on to use his central insight of an evolving consciousness to suggest
that humanity must overcome its fundamentalist preoccupation with truth
and power and move on to the collaborative future of servant leadership,
world peace, endless negotiation, and a utopia of full sexual inclusion.

The gaping holes in the Bishop's thought will be obvious to anyone who
picks up this short treatise. Amazingly, he picks and chooses among
anthropological theories to suggest that human beings lived peaceably
with one another for "93 percent of our 100,000 years as sapiential
humans." Ignoring for the moment his naive acceptance of evolutionary
theory, one can only wonder how Bishop Sims would explain the fact that
so many of the skulls analyzed by paleontologists bear the marks of axe
blades and spears.

In another section, the Bishop cites anthropologist Richard Leakey as
suggesting that it was the cultivation of land that led to war, human
struggle, and endless conflict. Accepting Bishop Sims' argument at face
value, it would seem that we should go back to a prehistoric era, cease
cultivating the land, and starve to death, rather than to face the
threat of competition.

But that would be to dismiss Bishop Sims' analysis without a closer
look. For the Bishop goes on to explain that human kind is moving
through three different developmental phases. The first and longest of
these phases was the childhood of humanity, a period that lasted, he
argues, until the modern age. Modernity represents the adolescence of
humanity, an awkward period of war, competition, and conflict that is
marked by the rise of a male-dominated worldview and a suppression of
minorities, especially women and homosexuals. President George W. Bush,
who is actually cited very rarely in the book, is criticized as a
representative of humanity's adolescence, leading a naive crusade and
seeking to build his own evil empire. Bishop Sims points toward a third
and more promising age, the adulthood of humanity, a period that began
with the end of World War II, he argues. Of course this means that
President George W. Bush and his fellow "fundamentalists" represent the
forces of evil that are standing in the way of humanity's evolving
consciousness.

"Fundamentalist religion is cast in the ancient male-dominant tradition
and is preoccupied with an imminent and violent end to the world," the
Bishop argues. Fundamentalists believe, for example, in human depravity
and in the exclusivity of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Bishop Sims wants
nothing to do with the idea that faith in Jesus Christ is necessary for
salvation. This belief, he argues, "represents the sharp exclusivist
character of fundamentalist preaching and teaching--some of it impatient
for an immediate world's end, some of it grimly patient for a victorious
evangelism that will eventuate in a world-embracing Christian church."

The "faith alternative" Bishop Sims proposes "is an evolutionist
understanding of God's will and action in the world." Bishop Sims cites
the new physics as proposed, for example, by Buddhist monk Thich Nhat
Hahn, focused upon "interbeing."

Looking to the promise of the future, the Bishop points with pride to
his own garage, in which sits a "Prius," a small hybrid-fueled
automobile from Japan. "There is something pleasingly 'spiritual' about
that car," the Bishop reflects. "It stands as an outward and visible
sign of an inward and spiritual grace--an irreversible shift in the soul
of contemporary humanity." His Prius, he excitedly remarks, "is only the
first mass-produced 'hybrid' vehicle to honor the cries of the earth."
Just imagine that as an advertising slogan!

While Bishop Sims sings the praises of his Prius and calls upon
Americans to remove President George W. Bush from office, he also points
to a new age of sexual liberation. In a bizarre twist, Bishop Sims was
the author of the 1977 prohibition on the ordination of homosexuals
adopted by the General Convention of the Episcopal Church, USA. The
Bishop now says that he has repented of his former argument, and has now
come "to a firm conclusion almost the reverse of my earlier view."
Bishop Sims now believes that homosexuality is "an ontological
characteristic, as birth bestowed as skin color and gender identity in
the overwhelming majority of gay men and women." Thus, Bishop Sims now
insists that homosexuality is "natural" for homosexuals, "as natural as
my maleness and creeping baldness."

Now Bishop Sims opposes the very policy he helped to formulate, and he
is making up for lost time by serving as a speaker, writer, and activist
on behalf of the homosexual movement. He was one of the bishops present
to celebrate the consecration of Gene Robinson as the Episcopal Church's
first openly gay bishop.

While faithful conservatives within the Episcopal Church pray for
reformation and recovery, Bishop Sims points to an irresistible future
of what he styles inclusivity and liberation.  "We have responded in
nonviolence to the just demands of black sisters and brothers, women in
Holy Orders, liturgical reform, and same-sex oriented men and women as
disciples and leaders among us.  Our next step into the moral courage of
the first three centuries of the Christian odyssey will be our nascent
readiness to repudiate war."

Just when you think the book cannot possibly be worse than it appears,
Bishop Sims actually turns Christian orthodoxy on its head, championing
the cause of Pelagius and accusing Augustine of Hippo of heresy. 
Pelagius, a fifth-century heretic, taught that human beings were born in
innocence.  He was opposed by Augustine, the greatest theologian of the
early church, and Pelagius' heresies were condemned as antithetical to
the Gospel.  Now, many centuries later, Bishop Sims finds Pelagius'
views of human goodness far more attractive than Augustine's biblical
view of human sinfulness.

This absurd theological retrogression allows Bishop Sims to completely
redefine the Gospel, reformulate the church's understanding of Jesus
Christ, and substitute New Age psychology for New Testament theology. 


With this little book, Bishop Bennett J. Sims has given us a portrait of
theological confusion, the wreckage of doctrinal liberalism, and the
nonsense of New Age fantasies masquerading as serious thought. This goes
a long way towards explaining how the Episcopal Church found its way
into its current crisis.  With bishops like this, who needs heretics?

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
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