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Moriel Ministries > Teachings > Discernment |
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Evangelical Seminary's Outreach To Mormons Does Not Bridge The Gap By Rob Sivulka Are friendships with Mormons and criticism mutually exclusive? And should all evangelism to Mormons be in the context of friendship? The Salt Lake Theological Seminary Bridges movement1 would answer in the affirmative to both questions. The movement has become quite influential in the minds of many that conduct ministries to Mormon people. In fact, it seems that it has become quite an influential mode of doing any evangelism in our post-modern culture. This movement seems to be manifesting recently in a series of dialogues between an Evangelical and a Mormon. The seminar, video, and workbook produced by Salt Lake Theological Seminary (Bridges: Helping Mormons Understand God's Grace) is an attempt by some local Utah educators and ministers to provide an alternative to traditional confrontational evangelism (evangelism that is primarily concerned about confronting with the gospel truth and not about first building friendships). In fact, traditional confrontational evangelism is not even a legitimate alternative according to this Bridges program. Rather, confrontational evangelism is generally an impediment and ineffective for Mormons coming to the real Christ. Pastor Scott McKinney of Christ Evangelical Free Church in Orem, UT states in the Bridges video curriculum, "We have to be about telling people the good news about what is right with Jesus, not what is wrong with their religion." In addition, Pastor Ross Anderson of the Evangelical Free Church in Roy, UT says in the video, "In our evangelism we put the cart before the horse and we emphasize theological truth first. I think we have to start with the spiritual hunger." Shortly after this he said, "Theological discussions, while they may help them understand me better, or me understand them better, are really not that fruitful in terms of leading someone to Christ." This "spiritual hunger" takes the form of building relational, experiential bridges of friendship. First and foremost, we ought to take them to church, share testimonies, pray with them, and in general, be nice to them. Then, and only then, does one bring in theology or apologetics, but never in a critical way. Referring to Rev. Greg Johnson (Evangelical president of Standing Together Ministries in Salt Lake City, UT), John W. Kennedy states in a recent Christianity Today article, "He believes that evangelicals have a greater potential for influence if they refrain from criticism, and that civil discourse is an essential prelude to a breakthrough."4 John Morehead of Watchman Fellowship in California led a Bridges seminar and said, "Several shared with us afterwards that while they were initially upset by the statement that 'Mormonism is a culture not a cult,' over the course of the day as Bridges unfolded they realized that this approach is indeed the proper one, and will likely be more effective than traditional apologetic ones."5 At an LDS ward in Anaheim, CA on January 10th, 2004, Greg Johnson and Robert Millet (Richard L. Evans Professor of Religious Understanding and Professor of Ancient Scripture at Brigham Young University) conducted a two-hour dialogue. The dialogue was presented before a group of around a thousand Mormons and Evangelicals. They spent a majority of the time talking about their friendship, its intrinsic value, and how they could still be good friends and disagree with each other. They spent the remainder of their dialogue asking each other clarifying questions regarding doctrinal issues. At no point during the dialogue was the other pressed further to make sense of his position, and there was never any criticism of the views presented. This dialogue was certainly not a debate, and there was not a question-answer time. Johnson and Millet are on a 14-city dialogue tour according to the Christianity Today article cited above. They have publicly dialogued with each other on their friendship and religious similarities and differences in such places as BYU, Christian colleges like Westmont, public universities like UCLA, Christian churches, Latter-day Saint (LDS) wards, and LDS institutes of religion such as at Harvard University. They have become good friends over the years, and have developed a desire to encourage and demonstrate to both Evangelicals and Mormons (groups that have been rather abrasive and aloof toward one another) how a respectful dialogue is to take place between the two groups. The dialogue between Johnson and Millet had the Bridges tenor about it. This comes as no surprise since Johnson used to teach the Bridges seminar for Salt Lake Theological Seminary. (It should be noted though that the Johnson-Millet dialogue is an evolving work in progress, and the February 11th, 2004 dialogue at the University of Utah avoided many of the problems associated with this Anaheim dialogue). First and foremost, one got the impression that all evangelism needs to be bridge building. Johnson seemed to run down confrontational evangelism to build his bridges approach in several ways.
In addition to denigrating confrontational evangelism, the dialogue also let Millet get away with too much.
Now Johnson could have pressed Millet's criteria as being arbitrary since not all LDS hold to this, or as self-contradictory since Millet's own belief here is not found stated within these criteria. Johnson could have also tried bringing out the fact that Young claimed that all his sermons were in fact First, the Bible damns Young as a false prophet for this teaching of Adam being God (e.g., Deuteronomy 13:1-5), and Millet certainly would not claim this. Second, Young was once a living prophet who spoke on this topic of Adam in a general conference. Wasn't Young supposed to be listened to, especially when he claimed to have received this from God? In his time, who was more authoritative than Young outside of Christ? And isn't Young still more authoritative than Millet anyway? Third, why are Young and others who followed him wrong and modern prophets right? Was it just because the latter are modern? But whom does this refer to-the fundamentalists (i.e., polygamist prophets that today hold Young's teaching on Adam) or those in the Salt Lake City headquarters? Fourth, what difference do the standard works make for being the final word when the LDS Church has seriously altered them? So something is more authoritative than even the standard works. But according to Millet, we do not have to go along with this more authoritative something or other under certain conditions. Fifth and finally, what this comes down to is that the Spirit will lead His (LDS) Church, and we do not need to know everything. There is no need to determine if this really is the Spirit of the Lord once one has received the "testimony of the Spirit" (i.e., "the burning in the bosom"). The Lord would not lie and steer an individual in the wrong way. With this sort of blind loyalty, it is hard to see what would really count against the LDS Church in principle. Now this may not bother Millet at all, and perhaps Johnson should have pressed Millet simply on how the Bible appears to at least contradict the other standard works. Instead, Johnson explicitly affirmed Millet in certain beliefs when Johnson said, "Millet is the world's greatest authority on what Millet believes." In other words, Johnson didn't want the audience to accuse Millet of not believing certain items that may in fact be generally held by the LDS Church leaders or members when he explicitly denies them. But allowing Millet to be in agreement with Christianity on certain issues that go against the typically assumed LDS beliefs (even if this really is the case8) misses the primary point that Millet may in fact have a problem being associated with a hopelessly false church. In other words, the dialogue focuses on Millet, and how he is really not that bad of a guy. In and of itself, there is nothing wrong with seeking to earn the trust of the LDS individual, and in fact, it is quite commendable. And sometimes this may require certain beliefs and criticisms foundational for conversion to be temporarily withheld for the sake of establishing a deeper friendship. However, if these beliefs and criticisms are always permanently withheld (e.g., "We have to be about telling people the good news about what is right with Jesus, not what is wrong with their religion", "refrain from criticism", etc.) or even distorted in such a way as to placate the other's ears (e.g., "Mormonism is a culture not a cult"), then just how deep and authentic is the friendship? And if in principle any confrontation is ruled out from the beginning of the friendship, then how can the Lord's occasionally surprising will rule? Perhaps the Lord desires an individual to confront and criticize a stranger whether friendship between the two will result or not. The friendship though must never be divorced from truth in the overall scheme of things. And that is why other non-Salt Lake Theological Seminary bridge-building evangelists are free to criticize their friends at any point during the friendship, for "faithful are the wounds of a friend" (Proverbs 27:6) even though a "friend loves at all times" (Prov. 17:17). Friendship becomes over-rated and an idol when it is divorced from the leading of "the Truth". This is the stance of typical traditional evangelism. The Apostle Paul, for example, was not worried about the appearance of eating with the Gentiles as the Apostle Peter was when the Jews showed up (Galatians 2:11ff.). Peter was over-valuing friendship with the Jews and over-valuing their thoughts, and Paul immediately and publicly rebuked Peter because of it. At this particular juncture, Peter had disregarded the truth when he should have stood for it. This is why the relationship between truth and friendship is asymmetrical. There can be truth without friendship, but there should never be friendship without truth. And this is why "the Truth" and "the Prince of Peace" came not to bring "peace, but a sword" to divide.9 The Johnson-Millet dialogue seemed to confuse and bother more people than it helped in its stated desire to demonstrate how an Evangelical-LDS dialogue should take place. First, by not allowing Millet to be pressed it left the unsuspecting very confused, while it left the suspecting very bothered. For the unsuspecting, Millet appeared to be rather similar to an Evangelical. For the suspecting, they were bothered that Millet was not pressed to clarify the nuances between Evangelicals and Mormons on certain key issues. Second, neither good friends nor strangers for that matter are required to let each other get away with this much. Why should all evangelism between two different religious groups really look like this? Is this really "the most effective" method? And effective for what... the intrinsic value of friendship, for having a better chance of having more open and friendly dialogues, or for actually getting people into the kingdom? And should effectiveness be the determining factor as to how we do ministry anyway? Of course if God is not drawing an unregenerate individual to Himself by the exclusive preaching of the Word, perhaps He will do it via an extended friendship.10 But why should we automatically lead our evangelism with an extended friendship that at least initially refrains from criticism simply because some pastor-scientist-micro-managers view this as a "more effective" way? If the mind is just as fallen as the heart, there's no guarantee that either will respond to the gospel or gospel-friendship appropriately at any point in the relationship. Third and finally in this regard, it became rather tedious to hear how much the "we can disagree and still be good friends" card was played. If they really believed this, then why didn't they spend more time just showing the audience? It appeared that there was just too much cowering to LDS sensitivities. In conclusion, an evangelist of either a more confrontational bent or of a more bridge-building bent is not going to want to be needlessly offensive. But both realize that some things are too valuable not to risk being offensive at times. No one likes to be offended by someone banging on one's door in the middle of the night, for example. But if the home is on fire, the offense is understandable. Christ Himself is "a stone of stumbling and a rock of offense" (1 Peter 2:8, KJV), and His disciples are called to "contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints" (Jude 3, NAS emphasis added) as well as to "demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God" (2 Corinthians 10:5, NIV). "Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for in the same way their fathers used to treat the false prophets" (Luke 6:26, NAS). Building bridges with LDS must never be at the expense of perpetually sparing the offensive truth of the gospel, watering it down, distorting it, or not being open for the Lord to use the preaching of His word and rebuking even "out of season" (2 Timothy 4:2).11 R. M. Sivulka Bio: Rob Sivulka has been ministering to Utah since 1982. He is currently a Ph.D. student in philosophy at the University of Utah, and an on-line adjunct professor of philosophy at Rio Salado Community College (Tempe, AZ). He has three degrees from Biola University (B.A. Biblical Studies, M.A. Theological Studies, and M.A. Philosophy of Religion and Ethics), and one from San Diego State University (M.A. End Notes 2 Bridges, Patricipants Workbook, 28. 3 http://www.slts.edu/Press/Main_Street_Plaza.htm 4 Christianity Today http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2004/002/14.18.html 5 Salt Lake Theological Seminary, Newsletter [Winter 2003-04], 3: 6 Journal of Discourses, vol. 1, 50. 7 Ibid., vol. 13, 95. 8 Millet has lately been endearing himself to Evangelicals particularly over his book Grace Works, since it seems, prima facie at least, to uphold sola gratia and sola fide. But at least one well-respected Evangelical researcher of Mormonism says, "Where Dr. Millet really stands on this issue depends on what page you are reading" (Bill McKeever, Mormonism Researched [May/June 2004], 4). 9 Matthew 10:34ff. 10 This is similar to wives being subject to their husbands so that if any are unbelieving they may be won to Christ without a word (1 Peter 3:1). 11 For more on the value of both proper relational and confrontational approaches, see http://www.aaronandstacia.com/aaron/2004/09/ravi-zacharias-is-coming-to-temple-square/ |
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