(Letter 26, Sept 15, 1953)
But God
who is the God of mercies, even now has not altogether cast off the
human race. We must not despair. And among us are not an inconsiderable
number now returning to the faith. For my part, I believe we ought to
work not only at spreading the Gospel (that certainly) but also to a
certain preparation for the Gospel. It is necessary to recall many to
the law of nature before we talk about God. For Christ promises
forgiveness of sins, but what is that to those who, since they do not
know the law of nature, do not know that they have sinned? Who will take
medicine unless he knows he is in the grip of a disease? Moral
relativity is the enemy we have to overcome before we tackle atheism. I
would almost dare to say, “First let us make the younger generation good
pagans, and afterwards let us make them Christians.”
Lewis is absolutely right. We must make them good pagans before we can make them Christians. In other words, we must strip away the exterior veneer of Christianity from this paganism being spewed forth by liberal Christianity and the me-centered preaching and teaching that dominates so many successful preachers today and call it what it is. It is not an authentic version of Christianity paganism sure and true. Only when we are convinced of our sin and living the lament of its darkness and death can the Spirit speak to us the sweet hope of Christ and His redemptive work in the Gospel. It is exactly the Law in its raw force that is absent from so much preaching today and repentance has become simply living at ease with the person you are. Lewis is framing the secularization of the world and its potential redemption precisely in the Lutheran frame of Law and Gospel. In other words, you do not have to be Lutheran to speak in those terms and to recognize the value of this very Lutheran way of speaking.
2 comments:
Agreed. And how will the truly pagan know there is sin if the Christian-pagans don't?
um, maybe
But while the Law is seldom preached strongly, the Gospel is completely absent in much modern preaching. I listen to a lot of sermons as I prepare mine each week and in what passes for conservative evangelicalism today week will pass before the pastor even mentions the death of Christ as anything other than motivation to commit one's life to God and to live a more fulfilled life.
It is true that the Law that is preached today is not preached in its raw power but the first casualty was the Gospel. It died in most of these churches before the Law.
The liberal churches of our day began their descent when they first moved the atoning work of Christ and His resurrection from the dead from its central place in Christianity. The ELCA did not become what it is today by first proclaiming sinful lifestyles. It began with first denying the inspiration of Scripture and making the doctrine of the resurrection optional.
the conservative evangelical churches of today are following their example, not by formal declaration but by the simple absence of the Gospel in their preaching and teaching.
When the Gospel is absent then the Law must be reduced in power - much as the Pharisees were guilty of doing in Christ's day when they reduced the Law to that which was achievable by man.
To strip away the veneer from the paganism of liberal Christianity we must also maintain the clear proclamation of what they first dismissed - the atoning death and resurrection of Christ.
Only when we continue to proclaim clear Gospel can we ALSO present the Law in its raw power.
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