Blue Herald
10
Sep
Evangelical pastor challenges tradition
by Buck

Author’s progressive attitudes attract followers, confront religious right

Caryle Murphy
The Washington Post
Updated: 4:18 a.m. ET Sept. 10, 2006

church.gifLyndsay Moseley was no longer inspired by the evangelical Christian faith of her youth. As an environmental activist, she believed that it offered little spiritual support for her work and was overly focused on opposing abortion and gay marriage.

Then the 27-year-old District resident discovered Brian D. McLaren of Laurel, one of contemporary Christianity’s hottest authors and founding pastor of Cedar Ridge Community Church in upper Montgomery County.

“He always talks about the environment as a priority when he talks about the church being relevant to the world,” Moseley said. “He’s leading a [spiritual] conversation that needs to happen,” one that “I’ve been hungry for.”

McLaren has emerged as one of the most prominent voices in an increasingly active group of progressive evangelicals who are challenging the theological orthodoxy and political dominance of the religious right. He also is an intellectual guru of “emerging church,” a grass-roots movement among young evangelicals exploring new models of living out their Christian faith.

“When we present Jesus as a pro-war, anti-poor, anti-homosexual, anti-environment, pro-nuclear weapons authority figure draped in an American flag, I think we are making a travesty of the portrait of Jesus we find in the gospels,” McLaren said in a recent interview.

Scot McKnight, a professor of religious studies at Chicago’s North Park University who has studied McLaren’s career, said that “he wants there to be greater cooperation among Christians, and he thinks evangelical Christians have aligned themselves too closely with the Republican Party. He wants to see Christians . . . pursue what is right, regardless of the political party’s platform.”

What makes McLaren’s ideas attractive to progressive evangelicals appalls the more numerous conservatives. Noting that he fails to condemn homosexuality, one conservative Web site called him “A True Son of Lucifer” for ignoring “absolute biblical truth.” And last year, Baptists in Kentucky revoked a speaking invitation after McLaren said that followers of Jesus might not be the only ones to gain salvation.

Full article

Scot McKnight …thinks evangelical Christians have aligned themselves too closely with the Republican Party. Really Scottie? Ya think?? They both do share a winning formula- scare the hell out of everybody. Force people to comply to and ‘obey’ their wishes (and fears). Frauds. All of them.

Man will always have a thirst for knowledge. It’s what moves us forward. Lacking knowledge (and understanding) many have and will continue to turn to religion for answers. (When in doubt, put it in a book and call it gospel!)

McLaren, and others like him, offer a shimmer of hope for the future.

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