Nobody has to say that Scripture is wrong. All the liberal has to ask is if Scripture is fully believable on every point or that there might be another interpretation or another perspective equally valid to the one that has been believed and taught since the beginning of Christianity. Are all the miracles of Christ factual and historically true or might they simply be stories to make a point? Nobody is really saying that the miracles are not true -- God forbid -- but that they do not have to be true to do what they were designed to do. Nobody needs to say that they were fabricated but simply illustrations of the principles that matter and always matter more than truthfulness. This is the real danger of God's Word in the hands of liberals. The Bart Ehrmans of this world simply raise questions about whether what has always been believed is the only way to take God's Word or interpret the events of the Biblical narrative. That is enough.
Nobody has to say that doctrine has been wrong all these years and that the creeds are not reliable. No, indeed. All that needs to be said is that what is being preserved and proclaimed are not events or facts or history but principles of love, well illustrated and symbolized by the words of these affirmations. The creed is not wrong but neither are the words to be taken at face value. The Virgin Birth is a prime example. It is proclaimed not because it is literally true but because it preserves the mythology of Christ's appearance out of nowhere and His unique status as the Son of God. You can say it on Sunday morning without being bound to it as facts or history or truth. What is being preserved is the idea of it all and not the specific words and their literal meaning. It would certainly be wrong to dispense with them but there is no need to do so if you simply view them as symbolic words and not as words tied to actual facts or events.
Nobody has to say that it was wrong all these years to affirm that God made them male and female or that marriage and family as traditionally defined are normative in the eyes of God. No, indeed. You simply suggest that what we have today was not known in ancient times and therefore could not have been condemned or affirmed. You blame it on the institutional sin that is the convenient scapegoat of nearly everything bad and refer to the enlightened state of things today in which women, gays, lesbians, trans, and the whole plethora of the alphabet used to define the diversity of sexual desire and gender were repressed by the patriarchal and hypocritical institutions propped up by sin in in the past. But no more. No, we have moved beyond these simplistic and tainted positions to see things that were never seen or granted legitimacy in the past. Jesus would surely not have said anything against what we are affirming today because His Gospel is generally a liberation to feel and be who you feel you are or want to be. Right?
The liberal Trojan Horse is to let the past stand and simply to move on. It happens in religion, in history, in sociology, in psychology, and nearly everywhere else. The danger is not that what was believed will be contradicted but that it will be written off as simply naive or out of date or one of many interpretations. The liberal will use the same vocabulary but redefine the words. In the end the damage will have been done without directly disagreeing with anything. Sure, some liberals have the courage or the integrity to admit that things are changing but most are content to let things evolve gradually as the past and its witness is moved aside and the possibilities of the present and future stand as legitimate and authoritative in their own right. Ambiguity will end up doing all the work that open contradiction and dispute cannot safely do.






