Andy Gill's blog
 
6 People who Should Be Banned from  Evangelicalism
 
 
What does it mean to be “evangelical”? 
What must you believe? 
What must you reject?
 
Can you be  an evangelical Christian and believe… 
…in evolution?
…that Hell is only  temporary?
…that all people, even those in Hell can/will eventually be  saved?
…that people from other religions can be saved without even knowing  it?
…that the atonement is not about God’s wrath being  poured out on Jesus in 
our place?
…that Scripture is errant? 
I think many evangelicals would say “no” to most—maybe  even all—of 
these. That’s why, in an attempt to protect the name  of evangelicalism (or, 
more 
accurately, to keep certain ideologies in  power), some of the most 
prominent leaders within evangelicalism have made  it their responsibility to 
publicly denounce those with whom they disagree on  issues like these. 
To be clear, I have no problem with publicly  denouncing ideologies (that 
is, after all, what I’m doing right now). I also  believe it is, at times, 
necessary to publicly call out false teachers. However,  one must fully 
consider whether they promote a different gospel before coming  forward with 
such 
a bold claim. 
But, I’m not talking about denouncing ideas or  exposing real false 
teachers. I’m talking about needless schisms and  inconsistent, prideful 
exclusivism.
 
Self-appointed gatekeepers of evangelicalism tear  apart what could be a 
noble, diverse movement of the Spirit. In _what critics have affectionately 
named,  “excommunitweets,”_ 
(http://www.jacoblupfer.com/blog/2014/4/1/world-vision-evangelical-authority-and-tweeted-excommunications)
 these gatekeepers 
take it upon themselves to pronounce who  is “in” and who is “out” of 
orthodox Christianity. 
_In a previous post_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/03/01/the-evangelical-castle/)  I’ve 
listed a few of the people tossed  out of the 
evangelical community for their  
slightly-divergent-yet-still-completely-orthodox 
beliefs. As a moderate  evangelical, I’ve found myself on a few occasions, 
directly or indirectly,  accused of not following Christ and even heresy. 
By the standards of these gatekeepers, the definition  of “evangelical” is 
becoming so narrow that it really doesn’t describe anyone  but themselves. 
As I’ve said before, evangelicalism is shrinking, and pretty  soon even the 
gatekeepers will have to bid themselves “farewell” due to their  inability 
to meet their own standards.
 
That, or they will continue to reshape the definition  so that it will 
describe exactly (and only) what they believe. 
(Probably the latter.) 
So, if we are going to be consistent, then I think  it’s time to weed out 
all of the heretics—especially those  who have the most influence—not just 
Rob Bell, Rachel Held Evans, or World  Vision. 
For starters, I suggest these 6:
 
 
1. C.S. Lewis: Guilty of Inclusivism and  rejecting the Penal 
Substitutionary Atonement theory
Perhaps the most celebrated Christian writer of the last  century, C.S. 
Lewis is respected by most Christians, no matter what theological  corner they 
occupy. And that’s what confuses me. Lewis was no evangelical by the  
standards of modern evangelical spokespersons. Lewis’ seven-volume, fictional  
masterpiece, The Chronicles of Narnia, reveals Lewis’ belief that  it is 
possible for people in other religions to inherit the Kingdom of God  without 
knowing it._1_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-from-evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consistency/#fn-784-1)
  
Lewis also rejects the Penal Substitutionary theory of  the atonement, 
which states that Christ “diverted” God’s wrath toward us and  took it upon 
himself. Instead, in part three of Chronicles, Lewis  describes what is called 
the “Christus Victor” view of the atonement, which  holds that the cross is 
not an image of God’s wrath against us, diverted to his  son, but it was 
the defeat of evil through an act of selfless love. _Here_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAlPPz1_4Bw)  is a video of Greg Boyd giving a 
good description 
of  that view using Lewis’ imagery. 
2. Martin Luther: Guilty of rejecting biblical  inerrancy
Where would evangelicalism be without Martin Luther? He is  the father of 
the Reformation and the champion ofSola Scriptura. 
_According to one evangelical leader_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2013/12/28/biblical-inerrancy-al-mohler-and-the-classical-view-of-inerrancy/)
 
, inerrancy,  “…is the only position that is fully compatible with  the 
claim that every word of Scripture is fully inspired and thus fully true and  
trustworthy.” To the dismay of every evangelical Calvinist  (including the 
one who made the above statement), I fear I must be the  bearer of bad news 
that Martin Luther apparently didn’t believe the Bible  is fully inspired, 
true, or trustworthy. 
Speaking of inaccuracies in the books of Chronicles,  he states,
“When one often reads that great numbers of people were slain—for  
example, eighty thousand—I believe that hardly one thousand were actually  
killed.”
_2_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-from-evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consistency/#fn-784-2)
  
With that in mind, maybe it’s time we vote Mr.  Luther off of the 
evangelical island. 
3. St. Augustine: Guilty of rejecting a literal reading of the  Creation 
Story

In his work, The Literal Meaning of  Genesis, Augustine (to put it bluntly) 
thought Christians who took the  Creation Story literally were a 
laughingstock and looked like idiots among  non-Christians because they denied 
science 
and reason. This is Augustine,  people…the one to whom we can give credit 
for the doctrines of original sin and  Hell as eternal conscious torment 
(which are at the core of reformed  theology). 
Here is his statement:
“It not infrequently happens that  something about the earth…may be known 
with the greatest certainty by reasoning  or by experience, even by one who 
is not a Christian. It is too  disgraceful and ruinous, though, and greatly 
to be avoided, that he [the  non-Christian] should hear a Christian speaking 
so idiotically on these matters,  and as if in accord with Christian 
writings, that he might say that he could  scarcely keep from laughing when he 
saw 
how totally in error they  are. In view of this and in keeping it in mind 
constantly while  dealing with the book of Genesis, I have, insofar as I was 
able, explained in  detail and set forth for consideration the meanings of 
obscure passages, taking  care not to affirm rashly some one meaning to the 
prejudice of another and  perhaps better explanation” (emphasis mine)._3_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-fro
m-evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consistency/#fn-784-3)  
Few are the pulpits he would be allowed to fill among  conservative 
churches in our day. 
4. William Barclay: Guilty of Universalism
I’ve seen William Barclay’s iconic little blue  commentaries on the 
shelves of many pastors. I find it odd, however, that Rob  Bell would be 
utterly 
rejected for holding essentially the same belief as this  celebrated 
theologian. 
Barclay writes,
“I am a convinced universalist. I  believe that in the end all men will be 
gathered into the love of God…the choice  is whether we accept God’s offer 
and invitation willingly, or take the long and  terrible way round through 
ages of purification.”_4_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-from-evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consistency/#fn-
784-4)  
In that work, Barclay also lists early church fathers,  Origen and Gregory 
of Nyssa, as two other Christian Universalists. 
5. John Stott: Guilty of Annihilationism
John Stott is one of the great evangelical Christian  thinkers of the last 
generation. Stott rejected the view that Hell is eternal  conscious torment 
of the wicked and suggested, instead, that the unrepentant  cease to exist 
after enduring the penalty for their sins. 
He wrote,
“I believe that the ultimate annihilation  of the wicked should at least be 
accepted as a legitimate, biblically founded  alternative to their eternal 
conscious torment.”_5_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-from-evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consistency/#fn-78
4-5)  
6. Billy Graham: Guilty of  Inclusivism
Billy Graham is, perhaps, the epitome of the  evangelical identity. 
Or, so we thought… 
Like C.S. Lewis, Graham believes that those who do not  hear of Christ may, 
indeed, be saved without explicitly confessing him as  Lord. 
In a 1997 interview with Robert Schuller, Graham  said, 
“I think that everybody that loves or knows Christ, whether  they are 
conscious of it or not, they are members of the body of Christ. . . .  [God] is 
calling people out of the world for his name, whether they come from  the 
Muslim world, or the Buddhist world or the Christian world, or the  
non-believing world, they are members of the Body of Christ because they have  
been 
called by God. They may not even know the name of Jesus but they know in  their 
hearts that they need something that they don’t have, and they turn to the  
only light they have, and I think that they are saved and they are going to 
be  with us in heaven.” (This statement starts at 1:18 in _this video_ 
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=axxlXy6bLH0) ) 
##### 
After we finish with these most  important aspects of what it means to be 
evangelical, we can focus  on weeding out people for less important things, 
such as their immorality:  George Whitefield’s lobbying for slavery, Martin 
Luther’s hatred of Jews, John  Calvin’s approval of burning heretics at the 
stake, etc. etc. 
Now, I’m sure you, as well as I, find it ridiculous to  reject these great 
and godly people. Which is why it’s amazing to me, the things  we ignore in 
order to protect ourselves from the truth. We want our “heroes of  the faith”
 to be perfect in theology and conduct, so we ignore or justify the  parts 
we don’t like. 
We all do it. 
So, maybe it’s time to extend a bit more loving  kindness to the 
evolutionists, to those who reject inerrancy, to those who take  the Bible 
literally 
when it says that God will redeem all people to himself, to  the Rob Bells 
and the World Visions. 
For those of us on the moderate-progressive side:  maybe we can find it in 
ourselves to turn the other cheek and forgive those who  wish us gone. Then, 
when we find someone who will accept us–”heresy” and all,  let’s embrace 
and learn from them. 
For fun: Here is _a  list of universalistic quotes from our early church 
fathers. _ (http://www.tentmaker.org/Quotes/churchfathersquotes.htm)  
 
    1.  See the conversation between Emeth and Aslan in “The Last  Battle” 
in The Chronicles of Narnia (New York:  HarperTrophy, 1984), 204-206. _↩_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-f
rom-evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consistency/#fnref-784-1)   
    2.  As quoted in Marcel Sarot, “Christian Fundamentalism as a  Reaction 
to the Enlightenment as Illustrated by the Case of Biblical  Inerrancy”  
(2011), 
_http://www.academia.edu/4006242/Sarot_M.2011._Christian_fundamentalism_as_a_reaction_to_the_Enlightenment_
 
(http://www.academia.edu/4006242/Sarot_M._2011_._Christian_fundamentalism_as_a_reaction_to_the_Enlightenment)
  
(Accessed  April 16, 2014), 5. _↩_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-from-evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consisten
cy/#fnref-784-2)   
    3.  
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegorical_interpretations_of_Genesis#cite_ref-17 
_↩_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-from-evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consistency/#fnref-784-3
)   
    4.  William Barclay: A Spiritual Autobiography, pg  65–67, William B 
Eerdmans Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, 1977. (Read  excerpt _here_ 
(http://www.auburn.edu/~allenkc/barclay1.html) ) _↩_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-from-evangelicalism-or-a-lesso
n-in-consistency/#fnref-784-4)   
    5.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annihilationism#cite_note-40 _↩_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/2014/04/16/6-people-who-should-be-banned-from-
evangelicalism-or-a-lesson-in-consistency/#fnref-784-5)  
Guest Post By Tylor Standley who writes and blogs on issues of faith over  
at _http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com_ 
(http://tylorstandley.wordpress.com/) 

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