Barefoot in the wilderness
in search of understanding

Setting boundaries

There’s a tendency that I’ve seen quite a lot recently, in online debates, to claim that “being a Christian” necessarily involves assent to a certain set of doctrines. This list may be long or short, and may include some more or less universal Christian beliefs. However, what seems wrong-headed to me about this is the idea that our identity as Christians depends on our doctrine.

We see this in various ways. The most obvious, perhaps, is when certain people are declared to be “obviously not Christian” because of their beliefs – this is seen particularly in arguments about church parties (evangelical/liberal, catholic/protestant etc.) but crops up all over the place. The attitude is also seen in many presentations of the “Gospel”, which consist essentially of a set of doctrines to which we are expected to assent before we can be “saved” – man is sinful, the penalty for sin is death, Jesus built a bridge between man and God etc. etc.

The fundamental error with this whole attitude, it seems to me, is that it puts the cart before the horse. “Being a Christian” is not, and cannot be, primarily about a particular set of doctrines – whatever those doctrines may be. Our Christian faith is, before anything else, about a relationship with God through Christ. The call of the good news to the Christian is “come to Me all you who labour, all you who are weary, all you who are burdened”. Jesus didn’t teach the catechism and then call people – He called (indeed, attracted and compelled) people to follow Him and then educated them in what that meant. The Christian Gospel isn’t doctrine, it’s a Person. Christ is first and last.

For evangelism, this is absolutely crucial. If we approach evangelism with the idea that the task is to convey particular doctrines then we will see it primarily as about talking, proclaiming, teaching. However, this is not the true model. The goal of evangelism is to introduce someone to Christ – and so the task is far more about listening, helping and doing. The task of making Christ known in the world is performed not by talking about Christ but by being Christ to the world. As St Francis once said, “preach the Gospel at all times. When necessary, use words.”

When it comes to judging other Christians, this distinction is even more important. For we simply cannot determine whether someone is truly Christian by what they say. If we were going to do that, we would have had to write off most of the apostles and a great many of the Church’s greatest saints at one time or another. The most we can say is that someone’s understanding is confused or wrong. The reasons for this can range from the fact that they talk in completely different categories (a common problem that is badly underestimated by many people) to genuine mistakes. However, understanding God wrongly doesn’t prove that we are not in relationship with God.

The point here is an idea that I first heard many years ago from Dave Andrews. The question, he said, is one of how we see the Church – is it a bounded set or a centred set? That is, is membership in the Church defined by whether we’re “inside” a certain boundary (creeds or doctrinal statements) or by whether we’re focused on Christ as the centre? Is the Church a circle, within which everyone is saved and outside which no one is saved? Or is the Church a central point (Christ) surrounded by many people, some close and some far away, some moving towards the centre and others moving away? Surely it is far more relevant whether someone is centred on Christ, moving towards Christ, than whether they can assent to intellectual descriptions of a religion? Is it not better to be a murderer who is moving towards Christ than a suburban socialite who is moving away, regardless of which one can assent to the “pure doctrines”?

Indeed, this idea of assent to doctrine smuggles an intellectual arrogance into Christianity – for it means that one’s status as a Christian depends largely on how well we can understand and communicate these doctrines, rather than on how well we actually imitate Christ. And the Christian faith is far more about the doing of Christ’s will than it is about talking about it.

This idea of doctrinal purity also has a corrosive effect on the Christian family. It places human understanding above love – the characteristic that Christ said was to distinguish His Church. Father Jake recently posted something unrelated that contained this quote from Robert G. Certain, a priest (and candidate for bishop) in the Episcopal Church. It is talking about the Anglican view of church authority, which depends on many voices speaking together rather than one voice of central authority.

Since our ancient theology holds that the Holy Spirit guides most clearly in ecumenical council, it is in the deliberations of the Communion that we can find our greatest hope. Any insistence to agree on everything sounds like a call to build a new “Tower of Babel”. In the Bible story, unity of language and purpose led to pride, with the people patting themselves on the back for being so smart. In turn, God decided to destroy the tower and to confuse our language in order to keep us mindful that only God creates anything of lasting significance. Differences remind us that God alone is sovereign – not you, me, theologians or doctrines. Divergent ideas and actions, even heretical ones, will not destroy us, our faith, or Our Lord. But they will lead us to ask more questions, find new answers, correct old errors, and rediscover the depths of the love of God in Christ Jesus.

That is, we cannot prejudge what the result of any debate will be. To insist going in that everyone agrees with me is to deny this truth – it says that God has spoken to me, and everyone else had better listen. It says that I am the teacher and you the pupil; but Jesus said that we have only one teacher (Mat 23:6-8). By contrast, to believe genuinely that God speaks to the church corporately means setting aside personal agendas, however deeply held, before starting the debate. It means allowing God to speak through people we dislike and disagree with. Humility is a Christian virtue – which means that we have to accept the company of those we disagree with even on central issues. We can disagree with them, even vehemently. But we cannot, without the gravest reasons and with the gravest care, declare that someone else isn’t following Christ simply because of that disagreement.

We can say that they are wrong. We cannot say that they are not following Christ.

pax et bonum