What’s Inside
the Trojan Horse?
By
John MacArthur
By God’s grace, I have been the pastor of
the same church now for almost thirty-five years. From that vantage point, I
have witnessed the birth and growth of menacing trends within the church,
several of which have converged under what I would call evangelical
pragmatism–an approach to ministry that is endemic in contemporary
Christianity.
What is pragmatism? Basically it is the philosophy
that results determine meaning, truth, and value – what will work becomes
a more important question than what is true. As Christians, we are called
to
trust
what the Lord says, preach that message to others, and leave the results to
Him. But many have set that aside. Seeking
relevancy and success, they have welcomed the pragmatic approach and have
received the proverbial Trojan Horse.
Let me take a few minutes to explain a little
of the history leading up to the current entrenchment of the pragmatic approach
in the evangelical church and to show you why it isn’t as innocent as it looks.
Recent History
The 1970s, for the most part, were years of
spiritual revival in America. The spread of the gospel through the campuses of
many colleges and universities marked a fresh, energetic movement of the Holy
Spirit to draw people to salvation in Christ. Mass baptisms were conducted in rivers, lakes,
and the ocean, several new versions of the English Bible were released, and Christian publishing and broadcasting
experienced remarkable growth.
Sadly, the fervent evangelical revival
slowed and was overshadowed by the greed and debauchery of the eighties and
nineties. The surrounding culture rejected biblical standards of morality, and
the Church, rather than assert its distinctiveness and call the world to
repentance, softened its stance on holiness. The failure to maintain a
distinctively biblical identity was profound – it led to general spiritual
apathy and a marked decline in church attendance.
Church leaders reacted to the world’s
indifference, not by a return to strong biblical preaching that emphasized sin
and repentance, but by a pragmatic approach to “doing” church–an approach
driven more by marketing, methodology, and perceived results than by biblical
doctrine. The new model of ministry revolved around making sinners feel
comfortable and at ease in the church, then selling them on the benefits of
becoming a Christian. Earlier silence has given way to cultural appeasement and
conformity.
Even the Church’s ministry to its own has
changed. Entertainment has hijacked many pulpits across the country;
contemporary approaches cater to the ever-changing whims of professing
believers; and many local churches have become little more than social clubs
and community centers where the focus is on the
individual’s felt needs. Even on Christian radio, phone-in talk shows, music,
and live psychotherapy are starting to replace Bible teaching as the staple. “Whatever works,” the mantra of
pragmatism, has become the new banner of evangelicalism.
The Down-Grade Controversy
You may be surprised to learn that what we
are now seeing is not new. England’s most famous preacher, Charles Haddon
Spurgeon, dealt with a similar situation more than 100 years ago. Among
churches that were once solid, Spurgeon and other faithful pastors noticed a
conciliatory attitude toward and overt cooperation with the modernist movement.
And what motivated the compromise? They sought to find acceptance by adopting
the “sophisticated” trends of the culture. Does that sound familiar to you?
One article, published anonymously in
Spurgeon’s monthly magazine The Sword and
the Trowel, noted that every revival of true evangelical faith had been
followed within a generation or two by a drift away from sound doctrine,
ultimately leading to wholesale apostasy. The author likened this drifting from
Truth to a downhill slope, and thus labeled it “the down grade.” The inroads of
modernism into the Church killed ninety percent of the mainline denominations
within a generation of Spurgeon’s death. Spurgeon himself, once the celebrated
and adored herald of the Baptist Union, was marginalized by the society and he
eventually withdrew his membership.
The Effects of Pragmatism
Many of today’s church leaders have bought
into the subtlety of pragmatism without recognizing the dangers it poses.
Instead of attacking orthodoxy head on, evangelical pragmatism gives lip service
to the
Truth
while quietly undermining the foundations of doctrine. Instead of exalting
God, it effectively denigrates the things that are precious to Him.
First, there is in vogue today a trend to
make the basis of faith something other than God’s Word. Experience, emotion,
fashion, and popular opinion are often more authoritative than the Bible in determining what many
Christians believe. From private, individual revelation to the blending of
secular psychology with biblical “principles,” Christians are listening to the
voice of the serpent that once told Eve, “God’s Word doesn’t have all the
answers.” Christian counseling reflects that drift, frequently offering no more
than experimental and unscriptural self-help therapy instead of solid answers
from the Bible.
Christian missionary work is often riddled
with pragmatism and compromise, because too many in missions have evidently
concluded that what gets results is more important than what God says. That’s
true among local churches as well. It has become fashionable to forgo the
proclamation and teaching of God’s Word in worship services. Instead, churches
serve up a paltry diet of drama, music, and other forms of entertainment.
Second, evangelical pragmatism tends to move
the focus of faith away from God’s Son. You’ve seen that repeatedly if you
watch much religious television. The health-wealth-and-prosperity gospel
advocated by so many televangelists is the ultimate example of this kind of
fantasy faith. This false gospel appeals unabashedly to the flesh, corrupting
all the promises of Scripture and encouraging greed. It makes material
blessing, not Jesus Christ, the object of the Christian’s desires.
Easy-believism handles
the message differently, but the effect is the same. It is the promise of
forgiveness minus the gospel’s hard demands, the perfect message for
pragmatists. It has done much to popularize “believing” but little to provoke
sincere faith.
Christ is no longer the focus of the
message. While His name is mentioned from time to time, the real focus is
inward, not upward. People are urged to look within; to try to understand
themselves; to come to grips with their problems, their hurts, their
disappointments; to have their needs met, their desires granted, their wants
fulfilled. Nearly all the popular versions of the message encourage and
legitimize a self-centered perspective.
Third, today’s Christianity is infected with
a tendency to view the result of faith as something less than God’s standard of holy living. By downplaying the importance
of holy living – both by precept and by example – the biblical doctrine of
conversion is undermined. Think about it: What more could Satan do to try to
destroy the church than undermining God’s Word, shifting the focus off Christ,
and minimizing holy living?
All those things are happening slowly,
steadily within the Church right now. Tragically, most Christians seem
oblivious to the problems, satisfied with a Christianity that is fashionable and
highly visible. But the true Church must not ignore those threats. If we fight
to maintain doctrinal purity with an emphasis on biblical preaching and
biblical ministry, we can conquer external attacks. But if error is allowed into
the Church, many more churches will slide down the grade to suffer the same
fate as the denominations that listened to, yet ignored, Spurgeon’s impassioned
appeal.
Make it your habitual prayer request that the
Lord would elevate the authority of His Word, the glory of His Son, and the
purity of His people in the evangelical church. May the Lord revive us and
keep us far from the slippery slope of pragmatism.
Widely known for his thorough,
candid approach to teaching God’s Word, John MacArthur
is a fifth-generation pastor, a popular author and conference speaker, and
has served as pastor-teacher of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California
since 1969. He is the president of The Master’s College and The Master’s Seminary,
and has written hundreds of books and study guides, each thoroughly biblical
and practical. Best-selling titles include The
Gospel According to Jesus, The Second
Coming, Ashamed of the Gospel, Twelve Ordinary Men, and The MacArthur
Study Bible, a 1998 ECPA Gold Medallion
recipient. MacArthur is also the president and featured
teacher of Grace to You, the nonprofit organization responsible for developing,
producing, and distributing John’s books, audiocassettes, and the Grace
to You, Grace to You Weekend, and Portraits of Grace radio programs. For more information call
1-800-55-GRACE or visit his web site at www.gty.org.