Bishop Spong is the leading voice within modern
progressive Christianity, attempting to make Christianity
relevant to todays world, said Dixon Sutherland,
director of Stetson Universitys Institute for Christian
Ethics. He went on to declare, The exposure of students to
probably the most formative leader of progressive thinking within
Christianity today is an important part of our educational
mission.
That fascinating little piece of advertising is found at the
Web site of Stetson University, a private university located in
DeLand.
Of course, that introduction of retired Episcopal Bishop John
Shelby Spong is a bit understated, since the bishop is known
throughout the world for having denied virtually every major
doctrine of the Christian faith, and has become something of a
parody of theological liberalism.
What makes the Stetson University announcement all the more
interesting is the fact that Bishop Spong was invited to the
university in order to deliver a lecture on human sexuality and
then to serve as the major speaker for the universitys
Twentieth Annual Florida Winter Pastors School.
According to the on-line registration form for the conference,
the event sold out.
The bishops visit to Florida caught the attention of the
Orlando Sentinel. In an article written by reporter Loraine OConnell,
Spong is quoted as stating: Sex without any sort of loving
relationship is always wrong. Its appropriate only inside
commitment. Whats the level of commitment? For me, its
marriage. The reporter was fully aware that this might
sound like Bishop Spong was abandoning his endorsement of pre-marital
sex, so she quickly corrected any misunderstanding. Spongs
fans neednt fear that hes backpedaling. Although
marriage is his preferred level of commitment, he says, expecting
young people to remain celibate until marriage isnt
realistic. Teaching them to treat sexuality with respect is.
Over the last 20 years or so, the Right Reverend John Shelby
Spong has served as a minstrel for postmodern Christianity. After
serving from 1976 to 2000 as bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of
Newark, New Jersey, Spong hit the lecture circuit and has become
a media personality and provocateur. His books garner immediate
media attention, though his methodology of theological
sensationalism is running out of steam. Now that he has denied
virtually every imaginable doctrine revealed in the Bible, there
must be very little room for further denial.
In successive books, Spong has denied the incarnation, the
miracles as recorded in Scripture, the virgin birth of Christ, a
salvific purpose for the crucifixion, the bodily resurrection,
and an entire series of truths long cherished by the church. He
sees the Bible as an essentially human book that is filled with
foibles and faults, and thus argues that it is not to be taken
seriously as Gods authoritative message to the church.
The God I know is not concrete or specific, Spong
has written. This God is rather shrouded in mystery,
wonder, and awe. The deeper I journey into this divine presence,
the less any literalized phrases, including the phrases of the
Christian creed, seem relevant. The God I know can only be
pointed to; this God can never be enclosed by propositional
statements.
Thus, Spong denies the authority and truthfulness of the
historic Christian creeds and has been about the task of
revising, remodeling and transforming Christianity into an
entirely new system of faith and meaning.
Biblical Christianity simply makes no sense to Bishop Spong.
The biblical account of Jesus return to heaven was
based upon the ancient idea that the sky was the abode of God and
that it was up. A literal ascension makes no sense to
those of us who live on this side of Copernicus, Galileo, and the
space age. Indeed, the very word up is a meaningless concept in
our time.
In Spongs view, God is largely a human construct. He has
abandoned theismthe basic belief in a personal Godand
has moved beyond theism to embrace new God
images. In Why Christianity Must Change or Die,
the bishop explained: There is no God external to life.
God, rather, is the inescapable depth and center of all that is.
God is not a being superior to all other
beings. God is the Ground of Being itself. And much flows from
this starting place. The artifacts of the faith of the past must
be understood in a new way if they are to accompany us beyond the
exile, and those that cannot be understood differently will have
to be laid aside. Time will inform us as to which is which.
Just before the end of last year, I debated Bishop Spong on
Lee Strobels program, Faith Under Fire,
broadcast on PAX television. In that context, Bishop Spong
presented his understanding clearly. There is no human
being that can know the reality of God. There is no inerrant
Bible. There is no true Church. There is no corner on the market
of salvation. There is no faith once delivered to the saints.
Those are all human attempts to minister to the human securityneed
to believe that we possess the truth. Its only those people
who believe they possess the truth who want to have inquisitions
or do heresy hunts or start religious wars or persecute people
who disagree with them. I think thats the dark and demonic
side of religion, and I think we would do well to be rid of that.
Most Americans are probably aware of Bishop Spong as an
advocate for sexual revolution. His 1988 book, Living in Sin?:
A Bishop Rethinks Sexuality, was a declaration of war upon
the churchs historic understanding of human sexuality.
Spong pulled no punches, rejecting the Bible as an adequate guide
to human sexuality and insisting that the ancient Scriptures are
simply too out of date to be relevant in todays world. The
bishop simply takes the sexual revolution as a fact and insists
that Christianity must change its sexual ethic or be consigned to
the dustbin of cultural history.
Furthermore, he insists the churchs sole concern in this
time of revolutionary sexuality is to witness the expansion
of that gray area bounded by promiscuity on the one side and sex
only inside marriage on the other. As he expanded, Most
people will live inside this area of relativity, of uncertainty,
of various levels of commitment and various kinds of sexual
practices. It will be in the gray area that new values will need
to be formulated.
Accordingly, the bishop argued for the full acceptance and
normalization of homosexual behavior. Contemporary research
is today uncovering new facts that are producing a rising
conviction that homosexuality, far from being a sickness, sin,
perversion, or unnatural act, is a healthy, natural, and
affirming form of human sexuality for some people.
What about the Bibles clear statements about the
sinfulness of homosexuality? Certainly there are biblical
passages that seem quite specific in their condemnation of
homosexual activity, the bishop conceded. Nevertheless, he
employed a postmodern relativizing of the text to get around that
awkward reality. When Paul condemned homosexuality in Romans 1,
It was an unnatural act for a heterosexual person to engage
in homosexual behavior, he [Paul] argued. He did not or perhaps
could not imagine a life in which the affections of a male might
be naturally directed to another male.
Had the Apostle Paul been enlightened by modern
notions of sexual orientation, Spong implies that he certainly
would have changed his position. On the other hand, Spong
elsewhere has argued that the Apostle Pauls clear
condemnation of homosexuality indicates that he may indeed have
been a closeted homosexual himself.
Once Spong argued that the Bibles condemnation of
homosexuality could be overcome, it was a short jump to argue
that homosexuals should be eagerly welcomed into the church and
its ministry, and that liturgical rites for the blessing of same
sex unions should be developed and embraced. Once the
naturalness of majority and minority orientations is established,
and the expectation of celibacy for gay and lesbian people is
removed, the question of the moment will then become, Spong
insists, How does a gay or lesbian person lead a
responsible sexual life? Celibacy, he argues, is simply too
much to ask.
Spong clearly revels in his role as provocateur and lightning
rod for controversy. I am not likely to be burned at the
stake, he has commented, insisting that he is confident the
church will inevitably move in his direction.
Meanwhile, this directs even greater attention to the fact
that Stetson University invited Spong to be a major speaker at an
event that was presumably intended to equip and inspire Christian
pastors. The schools Continuing Education Department
acknowledged the fact that the bishop had both admirers and
detractors. His admirers acclaim his legacy as a teaching
bishop who makes contemporary theology accessible to the ordinary
laypersonhes considered a champion of an inclusive
faith by many both inside and outside the Christian church.
On the other hand, His challenges to the church have also
made Bishop Spong the most vilified of modern clergymen. The
target of hostility, fear and death threats, he has been called
anti-Christ, hypocrite and the devil incarnate.
Nevertheless, the university obviously thought that Bishop
Spong would be an absolutely appropriate speaker for its Pastors
School, along with Marcus J. Borg, a member of the infamous
Jesus Seminar, who has denied the bodily
resurrection, miracles, and the historicity of the New Testament.
According to the universitys Web site, A bright
mind is never happy on the sidelines. A bright mind is meant to
be wide open to all the intellectual adventures and encounters.
Participants in Stetson Universitys Pastors School
are certain to encounter an intellectual adventurebut it
will be an adventure in subverting and undermining the Christian
faith.
The irony and tragedy in all this becomes apparent when it is
realized that Stetson University was founded and nurtured by
Baptists in the state of Florida, and championed at one time as
the state institution of the Florida Baptists.
But, as they say, that was then and this is now. Now, Stetson
is simply another private university that sells itself as a
comprehensive university committed to academic excellence and
distinctive, values-centered programs. Elsewhere at the
same site, the school describes itself as a non-sectarian,
comprehensive, private university.
That is light years away from the universitys motto,
Pro Deo et Veritate [For God and Truth].
The bottom line in all this is that Stetson Universityformerly
related to the Florida Baptist Conventionhas invited a
retired Episcopal bishopnow known for his notorious denials
of Christian truthto be the speaker at an event intended to
equip Christian pastors. This is all done in the name of academic
inquiry, no doubt. But who speaks for orthodox Christianity?
Oddly enough, the best response to Bishop Spongs visit
came from a local Episcopal rector who declined to attend the
lectures. Spong is on the fringe of the tradition,
said the Reverend Don Lyon, rector of St. Barnabas Episcopal
Church in DeLand. Hes basically an eastern mystical
pantheist.
As Lyon told the Orlando Sentinel, Ive been a
parish priest for 25 years, and for 25 years he has sought to
deconstruct the historic faith in ways that have been profoundly
damaging to the church.
Reverend Lyon is right, of course. The most tragic aspect of
this entire episode is the damage that is done to the church of
the Lord Jesus Christ.
The state of liberal Protestantism, of Stetson University and
similar institutions, and the world of increasingly post-Christian
spirituality, is made readily apparent once we recognize what it
means that Bishop Spong, rather than Reverend Lyon, was asked to
address the attending pastors. But then, Bishop Spong must have
offered the kind of intellectual adventure those
pastors would prefer. Lets just leave it at that.
R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky. This article is used with
permission from http://mohler.crosswalk.com.