In December of last year, the ultra liberal United Church of
Christ launched a 1.7 million dollar television outreach campaign
with its controversial Night Club ad. The ad begins
with two burly night-club bouncers working the ropes in front of
a church. When a same-sex couple approaches the church, they are
forbidden entrance and told by the bouncers to step aside.
Afterward, the screen goes black and a message reads, Jesus
didnt turn people away ... Neither do we. According
to Rev. Ben Guess, the United Church of Christs news
service director, the ad is intended to show his churchs
policy of radical inclusion.
Inclusion is a hot-button word repeatedly pushed
with glee by todays politically-correct world. No longer
meaning a group or organizations acceptance of everyone
meeting their requirements, sharing their values, and committed
to their purpose, todays version of inclusion demands
unquestioning acceptance of everybody by everyone into everything.
Such radical inclusion threatens to eliminate the
distinctiveness of all things and to reduce all things to where
they defy description and are devoid of meaning. For instance, if
todays radical inclusion is applied to the
church, the church will cease to be the church. Instead of being
the Body of Christ, which is made up of believers in Him, the
church, overrun by unbelievers possessing neither Christian
convictions nor commitment to Christ, will become something else
entirely. In the end, the church will lose its distinct identity
and divine purpose by being reduced to meaninglessness in order
to accommodate and include everyone.
Although it is true that Christ never turns anyone away who
comes to Him on His terms (see John 6:37; Matthew 16:24; Luke 14:26-33),
it is equally true that He will never lower the terms for anyone.
When the Rich Young Ruler refused Christs terms, Christ
refused to lower the bar to accommodate and include the Rich
Young Ruler (Mark 10: 17-22). Instead, Christ stood silently by
while the Rich Young Ruler walked away sad and grieved. In the
end, the Rich Young Ruler was excluded from the Kingdom of God by
his own refusal to submit to Christs Lordship. Likewise, it
is not Christ, but mens refusal to confess Him as Lord that
excludes them from the Kingdom of God (Romans 10:9-10).
I dont know of any church that has bouncers who turn
sincere people away from their church services. All true churches
of Jesus Christ are open for anyone to attend. Church membership,
on the other hand, is a different matter. It must be exclusive,
lest the church cease to be the church and lose its distinct
identity and divine purpose. If they continue to insist upon
championing radical inclusion rather than the cause
of Christ, maybe its time for the United Church of Christ
to stop calling itself a church!
Don Walton is founder of Time for Truth Ministries. For
more information, visit www.timefortruth.org