Plus: The Not-So-New Ecumenism
A recent initiative is structured to exclude evangelicals in the mainline
Thomas C. Oden | posted 8/05/2002 12:00AM
A flurry of new acronyms is appearing on the ecumenical stage: ACR (The Association for Church Renewal); CCT (Christian Churches Together in the U.S.A.); FCFONA (Foundation for a Conference on Faith and Order in North America); GCF (Global Christian Forum). All affect evangelicals.
These acronyms represent attempts to transcend and to some extent replace, redefine, or reconfigure the older acronyms of the NCC (National Council of Churches) and the WCC (World Council of Churches), the carriers of ecumenical vitalities and viruses during their last 50 years.
The Global Christian Forum appears to look beyond the WCC to include evangelicals, Pentecostals, Roman Catholics and, in a more prominent way, the Orthodox. It met in Pasadena on June 20-24. The North American Faith and Order Foundation appears to be replacing the old NCC-controlled North American Conference on Faith and Order with a new organization that is independent of the NCC. It met at Notre Dame in November 2001. Christian Churches Together in the U.S.A. proposes a new beginning for American ecumenism with some limited evangelical inclusion, but ignoring most evangelical efforts of the last quarter century within the mainline denominations. It met in Chicago on April 4-6.
Evangelicals in North America receive reports of ecumenical activities with a wary eye, even if they intend to be inclusive of evangelicals and Pentecostals and more respectful of ancient ecumenical teaching.
In particular, evangelicals of Confessing and Renewing movements within the mainline churches should thoughtfully answer the CCT 's statement "An Invitation to a Journey." CCT thinking is based on a dense misunderstanding of the evangelical reality within the mainline (the statement is posted on the NCC website at www.NCCcusa.org/news/02news48.html).
For more than a quarter century, more than 30 evangelical organizations have steadily defended classic Christian teaching and sought inclusion of evangelicals, traditionalists, and biblically orthodox Christians within the mainline. They have been coordinated by the Association for Church Renewal (cooperating informally since 1979 and formally organized in 1996). None of these organizations or their representatives were invited to participate in CCT. Evangelicals remain the unrepresented voices, yet they constitute 30 to 50 percent of the mainline lay membership.
Many of those who signed the CCT "Invitation" are those who led the old ecumenism astray. The invitation appears to be extended not by Christian leaders or laity, but by Christian churches themselves, assuming that they duly and fairly represent their memberships. Yet the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), the United Methodist Church, the United Church of Canada, and the United Church of Christ are all profoundly divided between unrepresented evangelicals and over-represented liberals.
This is not the post-NCC post-WCC "New Ecumenism" for which many traditional believers have hoped. It is a restatement of the old ecumenism that has every indication of continuing to be latitudinarian in doctrine, hierarchical in ecclesiology, soft on the sexual revolution, and with a strong bias toward a heavily regulated economy.
CCT is an invitation to churches ("We invite all churches") to join a select organization of churches. This is vastly different from a call to unity based on apostolic truth. And it is not addressed to renewing and confessing movements within the wayward mainline churches that are now beginning to seek a deeper grounding in ancient ecumenical teaching.
August 5 2002, Vol. 46, No. 9