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Historically,
we have worked our way through the Godhead to find our excuses:
In the 10th century it was ostensibly an issue over the relationship
of the Father to the Son and the Holy Spirit which split the
church between the East and West. In the 15th century the
split which arose from the Protestant reformation was largely
over the work of Christ. In the late 19th and early 20th century
Pentecostal split, it was over the Holy Spirit. And now, at
the beginning of the 21st century, we are awaiting a further
significant split, this time centred on human identity, and,
specifically, sexuality.
However, dressing
up all of the splits in the church as issues of crucial theological
truth where people had, in the tradition established by Moses,
to choose between life and death, makes them out to be more
honourable and admirable than they are. One lecturer I had
(of an ecumenical bent) put them all down to human sin. This
always wound up us dyed-in-the-wool evangelicals, but what
he said is undoubtedly true, and the sin in each split was
not all on one side, nor truth all on the other (our) side.
The contemporary
theological landscape for each of the historic splits in the
church was merely the backdrop against which a much more ignoble
drama of human personality, politics and power was played
out, with the church getting sucked into the world's, and,
if you want to put it in such terms, Satan's agenda. The tenth
century split was not primarily about the Godhead at all,
but a tug of war between eastern and western power-blocks.
The 15th century reformation was as much about the abuse of
power by the central authorities of the church, and a resistance
to that by various individuals for various reasons (the English
reformation being the most obvious case in point), using the
interpretation of different parts of scripture as an excuse
(a process which has continued within Protestant evangelicalism
to the present day). The Pentecostal split was again as much
an issue of personalities and social class as it was about
theology.
But each split
has left each "side" theologically and experientially
impoverished and less able to respond biblically and holistically
to the full range of issues affecting humanity. Not just babies
get thrown out with the bath water in each instance, but entire
generations
The cross of Christ is emptied of its power.
And so what will
be the fall-out of the expected split between liberal and
conservative on the issue of human sexuality, or "pelvic
politics" as one colleague memorably dubbed it recently?
The thought that the church might yet again split and so dilute
its witness to the world over something that is not central
to the gospel fills me with despair. In this, once again,
we are buying into the world's agenda and analysis rather
than a biblical one. It was Freud who introduced the idea
that our sexuality was central to our human identity, not
Jesus or any biblical writer. For those who argue that the
Bible repeatedly cautions against sexual immorality, I would
affirm that, but would remind them that Jesus says next to
nothing on the issue, and the Bible as a whole is infinitely
more interested in issues such as poverty and social justice.
If we are going to split, let's do it over how we use our
money, because that is an issue Jesus spoke about more frequently
and is more representative of biblical priorities.
It isn't a matter
of splitting hairs; human sexuality is a key question in the
modern world, but to split the church over it is sinful, because
while we split with one another over human sexuality, humanity,
whatever their sexuality, goes to hell
David Campton
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