There are two different streams of Christianity present among us. One is Scriptural Christianity and the other is cultural Christianity. The first is authentic; the second is a pretender. The first looks to the written Word as the final authority. The second holds the Scripture as a truth, but one which is given its authority only as it blends and affirms changing social mores. Scriptural Christianity lives with the tensions inherent within accepting its authority while cultural Christianity erases the tension by compromise.
The two streams have been flowing alongside each other almost from the beginning. There have been times when one would overflow and overwhelm the other, but eventually it seems they separate and once again move in different ways. From the beginning the two have always been incompatible and even now such is true. The Apostle Paul recognized the two separate and divergent streams. Instead of denying the reality of what existed as something other than Scriptural Christianity, he wrote, "Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may discern what is the will of God--what is good and acceptable and true." (Romans 12:2).
One of the real challenges for the church and the believers of this day is to stand fast and to live in submission to the authority of the holy Scripture. Wanting it to say something we want it to say, or not wanting it to say something which we do not want it to say speaks only of our desire for it to speak a word which is comfortable instead of one which creates tension in our life. Too many times we have chosen what makes us feel good, or what seems less likely to offend than to chose an authority which transcends the ever changing cultural mores. Today's mores will change even has as the ones of yesterday. The Word of God; however, is as Isaiah said long ago, "The grass withers, the flower fades; but the Word of our God will stand forever." (Isaiah 4):8)
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