Hello Midnight,
Originally posted by midnight Target
Exactly which members of the WCC and NCC do not believe in the deity of Christ?
Let's take the United Churches of Christ as an example. It is possible to be a UCC pastor and deny all of what are considered the "fundamentals" of the Christian faith without fear of ecclesiastical discipline. As such, the denomination has ceased to make this a "standing or falling issue." If you are quirky enough to actually believe that Jesus is God, well that's fine, but if you don't, that's fine too. Almost every theological issue, no matter how central it is to the what the Jude called "the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints" is considered something you can have your own private opinion on by denominations like the UCC. As one UCC pastor frankly put it:
"We have significant numbers of clergy who don't believe in God." In fact, there are major portions of the UCC which believe that saying "Jesus is Lord" (which is a biblical doctrine Paul affirms is taught by the Holy Spirit in 1 Cor. 12:3) one is being "divisive" and "judgmental."
In any event, here is an article from a Northern NJ newspaper that shows just how far from a uniform belief in the foundational teachings of scripture the UCC has come (the UCC readily admits that they have no doctrinal consensus or means of ensuring any belief) and then a link to a article discussing briefly the theological implications of that:
Denomination debates declaration of Jesus' divinityWednesday, June 15, 2005
By JOHN CHADWICK
STAFF WRITER
It's a bedrock belief of Christianity - not a topic for debate.
Until now.
A venerable Protestant denomination - at the behest of some of its conservative members - is preparing to vote next month on a measure declaring that Jesus Christ is the Lord, and making it mandatory for clergy to accept his divinity.
It may seem like a slam dunk, but delegates for the 1.3 million-member United Church of Christ may reject the resolution. Several Bergen County pastors, who aren't delegates to the convention, said they expect the measure to fail.
"Religiously speaking, it sounds like apple pie," said the Rev. Raymond Kostulias of the First Congregational Church of Park Ridge. "But there is a judgmental quality to it that implies very strongly that those who do not agree with us are condemned or damned or hopeless - and that's exactly the thing that UCC is against."
Indeed, the United Church of Christ, which traces its independent mind-set back to the Pilgrims and Plymouth Rock, is one of the most liberal and non-hierarchical Protestant churches in the nation.
The denomination, in its official statements, accepts Christ as savior and head of the church, but also approves of balancing Christian doctrine with personal conscience.
"If you join the UCC, you are not given a list of things and asked, 'Do you believe in this?' " said the Rev. Sherry Taylor, who represents the New Jersey churches in the denomination's central Atlantic conference. "There are no tests of faith."
But that brand of Christian liberalism is increasingly under attack from conservatives seeking to reassert the authority of the Bible. The Episcopal and Presbyterian churches, for example, face the threat of schism over gay rights. And the Catholic Church, under Pope John Paul II and now Pope Benedict XVI, has emphasized a more orthodox vision of church teachings.
The handful of United Church of Christ churches that submitted the resolution - including a congregation in Woodbridge - say Christ's divinity is the biggest issue facing the denomination.
The three-page resolution declares that the United Church of Christ is now ridiculed by critics as "Unitarians Considering Christ."
The Woodbridge pastor said the denomination has to get back to basics.
"The whole point of this is that many of these people have a very fuzzy idea of faith in God," said the Rev. Albert W. Kovacs of the Hungarian Reformed Church. "We have significant numbers of clergy who don't believe in God."
A Haworth pastor said the conservatives have a point, though he added that the resolution is unenforceable and a waste of time.
"If you don't offer a risen Christ, you're not offering hope," said the Rev. David Boda-Mercer of First Congregational Church of Haworth. "If people are looking for answers, and they come to us and get a vague non-answer, but great food and musical programs, then I don't think we're helping them."
But others in the denomination disagree. Many Christians, they say, reject a literal interpretation of the Bible and lead full spiritual lives.
"We have people with all sorts of beliefs of what Christianity is - just like society does," said Barb Powell, a spokeswoman for the Cleveland-based denomination. "The difference is that our polity allows us to talk about it and discuss it with one another."
About 1,000 delegates - lay people and clergy - will vote on the measure declaring that the UCC is a "decidedly Christian denomination where Jesus is the Lord." It also requires all of the denomination's clergy to adhere to the doctrine. The convention, or synod, will be held July 1-5 in Atlanta.
The United Church of Christ was created in 1957, merging the Congregational churches associated with the Pilgrims with several other smaller, more conservative denominations made up of German, Hungarian and Swiss immigrants.
The denomination recently launched a provocative advertising campaign - "God is Still Speaking" - portraying the church as an alternative to conservative Christianity.
One commercial showed a church using bouncers to turn away a seemingly gay couple and racial minorities seeking to worship.
"Jesus never turned anyone away," the ad says. "Neither do we."
Conservatives within the denomination object to the campaign. Kovacs, the Woodbridge pastor, said his first complaint is with the title.
"They say, 'God is still speaking, he said. "I believe he's already spoken."
* * *
What it means
What's new: Conservative members of a venerable Christian denomination say the church isn't following the basic beliefs.
What's next: The United Church of Christ will vote in July on a measure by conservatives declaring that Jesus is the Lord.
What they're saying: "We have significant numbers of clergy who don't believe in God." - The Rev. Albert W. Kovacs of Woodbridge
Al Mohler, the President of the Southern Baptist Seminary commented on the controversy, here:
http://www.albertmohler.com/blog_read.php?id=125- SEAGOON