Larry Rogier: Here’s My Take On Piper and Warren
Warren and Piper both had significant problems long before this became public back in February. This invitation hasn’t changed any of that. If you think it has, then you aren’t thinking clearly.
Why is it that we think Piper can have more influence through a book or a downloaded sermon than we can through weekly teaching and preaching in our churches? Do we really think our preaching and teaching is that bad?
When meat isn’t being served on Sunday/Wednesday, people who are hungry are going to try to find some spiritual sustenance, so I say- Yes, some preaching/teaching really is that bad- they know it and resent the ‘success’ of men they despise and instead of taking note of what is and is not Scriptural/beneficial, they just sit on the sidelines and mock. It’s like a 6th grade playground out there sometimes.
Perhaps the greatest failure in evangelicalism and fundamentalism is the failure to teach discernment, or perhaps the failure to believe that other people have discernment.
I agree- people who don’t want to be grounded are inevitably going to be led astray- you can’t treat a congregation like they are toddlers who need to be corralled and controlled. Folks who are growing and grounded are not going to be straining at gnats and swallowing camels, so it’s ok to ‘let’ them peruse and absorb information from a variety of sources.
Other than that, the similarities between our views are striking ;) ;) :bigsmile:
Seriously, I just have never gotten the emotional connection to Piper which is such a draw to so many YF’s. They begin by overlooking his theology — but I think that quickly changes to accepting pieces of his theology for many of them.
My church showed Piper’s “Christian hedonism” videos in Sunday School. I must say they left me scratching my head at why there is such a fascination with him right now. I understand the concept of something filling a vacuum, as Susan alludes to, but there is just so much better material available than Piper’s, IMHO.
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
[Paul J. Scharf]…
My church showed Piper’s “Christian hedonism” videos in Sunday School. I must say they left me scratching my head at why there is such a fascination with him right now. I understand the concept of something filling a vacuum, as Susan alludes to, but there is just so much better material available than Piper’s, IMHO.
I agree that there is better material, but some of the men with the best material don’t have marketing know-how, or the desire to be widely published… which I understand, but by the same token, good quality material is needed, and IMO an effort made by churches to help the authors they might have in their congregations get their stuff published.
[Susan R] I agree that there is better material, but some of the men with the best material don’t have marketing know-how, or the desire to be widely published… which I understand, but by the same token, good quality material is needed, and IMO an effort made by churches to help the authors they might have in their congregations get their stuff published.Susan, I agree with your statements and am all for more and better publishing and marketing — but I think the issue related to Piper with YF’s may be more theological in nature than it is related to the availability of better materials. As I search the Web — even just one site such as SermonAudio.com — or take one trip to a GOOD Christian bookstore, the term that often comes to mind is “sensory overload.” There is more good stuff available than I could ever comprehend making use of.
I tend to think the issue with Piper is YF’s who are not grounded theologically in any one particular direction — especially not toward traditional dispensationalism — who are attempting to fill the theological vacuum they find in fundamentalism. For reasons that escape me, they find Piper to be a fascinating subject — maybe it is that mysterious tag of “Reformed Baptist” which first draws them in — I don’t know, I don’t get it.
Actually, if you think about it, Piper and Warren are the perfect fit. They come from different points on the spectrum, but each brings a contemporary vocabulary and new approach to ministry and theology which seems to “scratch the itch” of YF’s and many others. Maybe they have finally found each other!! 8-)
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
[Paul J. Scharf]I think most young people (I am a young person) are looking for a comprehensive vision - some idea or set of values by which they can order their lives. During my time in Fundamentalism, I either didn’t notice that there was one, or the one that did hold sway was ugly, such as “winning souls.” Piper’s Christian Hedonism is attractive because it’s profound enough to pass for an ultimate goal and broad enough to comprehend all of the aspects of life. Seeing the supremacy of God in Christ is something that Christians desperately need, and it’s natural that people who hear that for the first time from Piper would be grateful to him. By the way, I am Reformed, and I don’t consider Piper Reformed.
I tend to think the issue with Piper is YF’s who are not grounded theologically in any one particular direction — especially not toward traditional dispensationalism — who are attempting to fill the theological vacuum they find in fundamentalism. For reasons that escape me, they find Piper to be a fascinating subject — maybe it is that mysterious tag of “Reformed Baptist” which first draws them in — I don’t know, I don’t get it.
My Blog: http://dearreaderblog.com
Cor meum tibi offero Domine prompte et sincere. ~ John Calvin
IMO, the reason that you are seeing some YF abandoning a dispensational hermanutic has little to do with Piper. I know of several that grew up within dispensationalism but were turned off by LaHay’s Left Behind series and/or John Hagee’s accesses. I agree that these men both have some bad excesses, I just haven’t abandoned it.
Roger Carlson, PastorBerean Baptist Church
Anyone who would turn from a dispensational (literal) hermeneutic and go to Piper — because of the Left Behind series — probably wasn’t grounded in it to begin with…
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
[Paul J. Scharf]
I tend to think the issue with Piper is YF’s who are not grounded theologically in any one particular direction — especially not toward traditional dispensationalism — who are attempting to fill the theological vacuum they find in fundamentalism. For reasons that escape me, they find Piper to be a fascinating subject — maybe it is that mysterious tag of “Reformed Baptist” which first draws them in — I don’t know, I don’t get it.
I’m not as young as a YF, but I would say that “theological grounding” didn’t occur in very many fundamental churches in spite of strong preaching (which often could be summarized as “what we believe — good; what others believe — bad”). In some cases that might not be quite fair. It’s not that those men didn’t preach the Bible — many did. However, the presuppositions for dispensationalism, or you name it, were not really mentioned or dealt with as the preacher’s particular lens was applied to the scripture.
As soon as the younger people are eventually exposed to what are apparently solid believers from a different tradition (What? You mean they’re not apostate just because they don’t believe like my church does?) or other Christian writings, they immediately want to seek out some of what is out there,just because they are hungry, have had enough of preaching that even though from scripture, somehow always seems to turn around to the same topics, rules, and traditions, and are looking to see if what they have been taught is right.
The advent of electronic communication and access to books ordered from the internet, etc., has only accelerated this. Younger believers are exposed to that much more than they used to be. I don’t think the YFs are really all that different from younger believers seeking meaning in their lives (as Charlie mentioned) in the preceding generations. They just have a way to get more info, share it with others, and get together in ways unimagined in previous generations.
The reactions to all this new teaching and information will continue to be a complete spectrum. Some will leave what they’ve been taught, some will modify it, and some will be strengthened in what they believe. However, as long as many churches put up with shallow preaching and and wrong emphasis (traditions of men) in their teaching, they should come to expect more and more “falling away” from what was taught in the church. The tragedy is that some will go out and get completely away from the faith or go to something that is apostate but with more “order.” The flip side is that some will go on to something better, strengthened in the faith.
The only way to keep men like Piper from having an undesired influence on the church people is to feed them properly (ground them theologically), so they have good discernment before they ever encounter those mens’ writings (which are written well, and often doctrinally richer than what they have been getting).
Dave Barnhart
[Paul J. Scharf]
Anyone who would turn from a dispensational (literal) hermeneutic and go to Piper — because of the Left Behind series — probably wasn’t grounded in it to begin with…
Yeah, and for those who didn’t understand that those books were fiction, I think it’s fair to say they didn’t have much grounding in anything …
Dave Barnhart
[Paul J. Scharf][Susan R] I agree that there is better material, but some of the men with the best material don’t have marketing know-how, or the desire to be widely published… which I understand, but by the same token, good quality material is needed, and IMO an effort made by churches to help the authors they might have in their congregations get their stuff published.Susan, I agree with your statements and am all for more and better publishing and marketing — but I think the issue related to Piper with YF’s may be more theological in nature than it is related to the availability of better materials. As I search the Web — even just one site such as SermonAudio.com — or take one trip to a GOOD Christian bookstore, the term that often comes to mind is “sensory overload.” There is more good stuff available than I could ever comprehend making use of.
True- but it’s more than just availability, it’s also about presentation. I think folks today equate quality with a sort of professionalism. For instance, literature that is printed in color on glossy paper is often going to be thought of as ‘better’ by virtue of first impression, not content. Haven’t we discussed on SI the ‘cheesiness’ of alot of inspirational fiction and ‘Christian’ movies? If someone has a good schtick, folks will buy into it.
Piper and a few other popular authors/speakers have a polished, modern air about them that appeals to modern consumers looking for more bang for their buck. It sounds a bit materialistic and shallow, but those are two adjective that pretty much apply to American Christianity, IMO. Warren’s pragmatism is just the thing to draw folks who love Clark Howard and HGTV and Reader’s Digest.
In any case, I thought Larry’s assessment was fair and most likely accurate.
All good points — but I still think there is a larger theological component to it. Piper’s Covenant Theology/Post-Trib., etc. approach apparently carries an air of sophistication to YF’s who are looking for something “deeper.” My question is, “Why Piper?” (Someone said he is to this generation what MacArthur was to mine 20 years ago. If that is true, what does it say for the current and future state of fundamentalism??)
Also, my questions are meant to be a bit rhetorical — shame on us for creating such a climate. To paraphrase a famous historian, “There is no excuse for a boring sermon or theology lesson.”
Charlie — Interesting points…Perhaps you could tell us how Piper is viewed in the PCA, or why you don’t consider him Reformed…
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
Hey, let’s not go way deep. Piper makes his better-quality stuff more widely available at a better price than most. That strengthens his appeal.
"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
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