Trinity and Christian Life
Within the contemporary religious landscape, the term "evangelical" is often used as a catch-all category for conservative Protestantism and a powerful political voting bloc. But is this modern movement an accurate reflection of historic orthodoxy? In this episode, we trace the origins of evangelicalism from the transatlantic Great Awakenings to its modern crisis of consumerism. We dive into how the church growth movement of the 1970s and 1980s actively downplayed traditional theology to appeal to the unchurched, transforming the profound message of salvation into a therapeutic product packaged by modern corporate marketing. Listeners will discover: * How the integration of charismatic practices and intense political partisanship fundamentally altered the movement's identity, causing the umbrella to cover everyone from rigorous Calvinists to health-and-wealth televangelists. * The devastating critique of the "seeker-sensitive" model, which theologian Carl R. Trueman categorizes as a culturally compliant "modern Pelagianism". * Why disillusioned younger believers, starved for historical and intellectual depth, are increasingly abandoning megachurches for the historical roots of confessional Protestantism and Eastern Orthodoxy. * The crucial difference between the kerygma (the objective gospel proclamation) and the didache (moral instruction), and why conflating the two reduces the gospel to mere moralism without saving power. Join us as we explore how reclaiming the true watershed of biblical Christianity requires a divestment from consumerist machinery, a return to rigorous catechesis, and an unwavering commitment to the unapologetic gospel of Jesus Christ.
139 episodios
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