There was a point very briefly between thirty and forty years ago when there was a great awakening In all the Western churches, then special interest groups hi-jacked the process. Vatican II had opened the doors and windows of the Roman Church, Lutherans were examining their confessional theology, Presbyterians were enliveniing and rediscovering their liturgical roots, Methodists brought out a new Hymnal and Book of Worship and began covenanting with Presbyterians and the United Church of Christ to seek the reunification of Christ's Church. A broader base of understanding began to grow. Lectionaries were revised and a common three year Lectionary among the major Protestant denominations, together with Roman Catholics increased the reading of the Bible and use of the Psalms in worship. Lutherans began to talk to one another and to Roman Catholics and Anglicans, ethnic divisions began to disolve. Even while this was happening other groups began to crystalize, becoming more dogmatic in their parochialism, more alienated and polarized in their viewponts. As these broke off and splintered they drew with them other conservatives, afraid of the changes which had taken place and fearful of more change yet to take place. Their withdrawal made the apostasy they feared inevitable, there was no longer any stabilizing force in the mainstream, the conservative voice became more isolated. The Charismatic renewal and other renewal ministries such as Cursillo, Koinonia, Faith Alive, and ecumenical ministries (COCU) which held and hold so much promise became increasingly open to a false enthusiasm, evangelical rigidity, and speculative theology. Christians once again withdrew from one another in distrust. Instant bible scholarship and a new literalism produced disastrous results. Ships tore loose from their moorings and foundered in the turbulent waters, many lost their compasses. All these churches once again need to find the One who is asleep within their boat, and remember the entire fleet has but one Captain, the Lord Jesus Christ.
We crucify Jesus, day by day,
In the things we do,
And the words we say.
His Body, the Church laid out
Upon the cross of the world;
We drive wedges, sharp and cruel,
Not merely to affix the corpse thereto
In caricature of execution, redemption's tool,
But to sever the limbs, break bones in two.
We see atonement, purchased thereby,
Only applicable to our particular crumb
As if the whole loaf were not sanctified,
But only "the elect" for whom He died.
In our perfection we deny
Both benefit and necessity
And allow no grace but what we mediate
Loving our Lord, while our brother we hate.
If only Peter, more perfect he,
And Paul less irascible he might be
Each an apostle fit for Jesus' choice,
But neither these days would find voice
In a church ruled by image instead of Lord,
Innocent of need for living Word.
2007-06-09 14:47:16
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answer #1
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answered by Fr. Al 6
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What does Protestantism need (or all of Christianity for that matter)? In one word: objectivity. That is a turn from subjectivity to objectivity.
A return to the principles of the Lutheran Reformation. I believe many of the treasures of the Lutheran Reformation have been all but lost, if not actively thrown away, ignored, spit on, forgotten or twisted.
Christianity as a whole would benefit from a wider understanding of the theology of the Cross, the doctrine of Vocation, Two Kingdoms theology. I've just had these clarified for me in the last couple years & they have not only helped me in my struggles, but helped me to defend my faith & answer questions from other Christians who are starving for objective truth!
Sola Gratia, Sola Fide, Sola Scriptura! Soli De Gloria!
2007-06-08 17:23:33
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answer #2
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answered by Sakurachan 3
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As usual, Sakurahn is right on the money.
All denominations, not just the protestant ones, need to return to Scripture and objective interpretation. Interpretation of Scripture MUST be kept in the context intended by the writer, and human reason kept completely out of it.
Even us confessional Lutherans occasionally (actually continually) need to look at our selves in the context of scripture.
2007-06-09 00:44:30
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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You can list all of the church. Not just protestant. If it doesn't center around Jesus, then forget it. We have been given access to God through Jesus. The church seems to have gotten caught up in ritual more so than worship. So my thought of reform is getting back to our roots. Doing what Jesus first showed us and then told us to do.
2007-06-08 15:34:42
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answer #4
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answered by JohnFromNC 7
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