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Home > 2007 > AugustChristianity Today, August, 2007  |   |  
Global Prognosis
Attack Dogs of Christendom
Is this how to bring grace and savor to a crumbling civilization?



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When atheist Sam Harris wrote his 2004 bestseller The End of Faith, a radical attack on religious belief in any form, he was prepared for strong rebuttals from Christians.

What may have surprised him was the vitriol in which many of the emails and letters were couched. The most hostile messages came from Christians (not Muslims or Hindus). "The truth is," he explained in the forward to his latest bestseller, Letter to a Christian Nation, "that many who claim to be transformed by God's love are deeply, even murderously, intolerant of criticism."

"How do I know this?" he asked rhetorically. "The most disturbed of my correspondents always cite chapter and verse." Indeed, Letter to a Christian Nation is his response to those vituperative critics and yet another weapon in the armory of people hostile to Christianity.

I am not surprised that Harris attracted negative feedback. What disturbs me, however, is the extent to which some Christians have turned themselves into the self-appointed attack dogs of Christendom. They seem determined to savage not only opponents of Christianity, but also fellow believers of whose doctrinal positions they disapprove.

A troll through the Internet reveals websites so drenched in sarcasm and animosity that an agnostic, or a follower of another faith tradition interested in what it means to become a Christian, might be permanently disillusioned.

None of the major figures of American Protestantism in the past quarter-century have been spared from attack, from Billy Graham to Rick Warren, from Tim LaHaye to Robert Schuller. The attacks, moreover, are not reasoned or modestly couched criticism, but blasts of ire determined to discredit beyond redemption the targets of the criticism.

The angriest websites are those belonging to small, but disturbingly visible, fundamentalist Protestant groups outraged that fellow Protestants appear to be holding out a welcoming hand to Catholics or Orthodox Christians.

Leading the charge against alleged ecumenists is Apprising Ministries (AM), a New Hampshire-based group whose leader is Southern Baptist pastor Ken Silva. Rick Warren, according to AM, is a "milquetoast." Schuller and the late Norman Vincent Peale are "the devil's duo." Richard Foster (a leading Quaker writer on Christian spirituality), Brian McLaren (a leader in the emerging church movement), and Joel Osteen (pastor of Lakewood Church in Houston) are "vipers of new evangelicalism" and "whitewashed tombs." Through the Web, such commentary gains a global audience—Christian and non-Christian.

Somewhat less intemperate, but scarcely less hard-hitting, is Way of Life Literature, whose website features books with titles like Billy Graham and Rome, The Pentecostal and Charismatic Movement, and Contemporary Christian Music. Having a book written about you is not necessarily a compliment at the Way of Life website. Tim LaHaye, co-author of the Left Behind novels, has, allegedly with his wife Beverly LaHaye, "a long history of extreme ecumenism." The story gets worse: Compounding his awfulness, LaHaye supposedly joined hands with three other near-unmentionables—Oral Roberts and Charles and Frances Hunter—at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of Charisma magazine, a "dangerous, unscriptural publication."

Then there is Pat Robertson, "one of the greatest deceivers in the church world today," and that hand-clasper with "Romanists" and "modernists," Elizabeth Elliot, widow of the martyred missionary in Ecuador, Jim Elliot. Elliot's great offense? Refusing "to separate from heretics." Oh, I forgot to mention: Elizabeth Elliot has compounded her sin by being a life-long Episcopalian.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 111 comments.See all comments
Dirk   Posted: August 27, 2007 1:12 PM
I am sorry that the Christianity Today poll that accompanies this article does not distinguish between criticizing ideas, theology, trends, and so on and critizicing person, name calling, peripheral "hand shaking" and so on. Of course Christians can disagree with one another and do so publicly. It is what they criticize and how they do it that's at stake. I once heard Norman Vincent Peale (at the Crystal Cathedral) preach a straightforward old fashioned blood atonement gospel message. That man was my brother. But he also had other ideas about which I am less than enthusiastic. He is and was, nevertheless, still my brother.

Rev. Austin Miles   Posted: September 01, 2007 3:56 PM
I can certainly relate to attack-dog Christianity. The attacks on me by Christians were so vicious that they could only have been spawned from the pits of hell. It was so bad that I eventually left the ministry, church and God. Several years later I came back into ministry, this time, with my eyes totally on God and not on man. I well understand, from my own experience, how and why there are so many people who hate Christians and don't want them in sight anywhere.

Jesus was kind to us sinners. Go and do the same.   Posted: August 27, 2007 4:58 PM
Timely article. Raises the difference between "zeal" and "over-zealous" to the point of angry and evil and unforgiving; rubbing noses of opponents into gravel until they submit especially when supposedly teaching about the "good news" of Christ. It just does not work to spread such a dark message! God is lenient and light and patient with his people and his wrath is aimed at where we stand in relation to the commandments, not whether we adhere strictly to one or the other denomenation. Any Christian secure in his/her salvation must work unceasingly to spread the good news of Jesus and it is good news, not about unforgiveness and strident intolerance. It is not all about doom and gloom and anger and vitriol. Legalist hardliners want people to subit to their modern inquisition and quote the bible exactly as they see it before they treat others to their reward of forgiveness. This comes out of the tone they use, not out of chapter and verse. We may all be sinners but Jesus was kind to us.

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