The Bankruptcy of Evangelical Theology
Conclusion to
Rewriting God: Updating Theological Language
Part 4
by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
God is love.
God, who is in process with the world,
is drawing all things deeper into life.
Introduction
In itself, I had learned a lot of good and helpful things from fundamental and evangelical theology. But I also had learned too many unhelpful boundary markers and apologetical defenses in my evangelical faith. A faith which has sadly blossomed into deep suspicion and identity crisis in the 21st Century.
Earlier, I had stated my feelings of betrayal by my former faith in my last article, Rewriting God: Updating Theological Language, Part 2, having said the following:
...In hindsight, having left before Trumpian evangelicalism had become a thing (me: 2009/11 v trumpisim: 2015/16), I am glad I left my former faith's once bannered halls of propositional truths claimed as timeless and everlasting... whose outcome has been shown in the spiritual bankruptcy of trumpian supremacy... and not in the love of an everlasting God founded in the observable witness, works, and love of Jesus Christ, the Son of God and, in Jesus' own terms of himself, the Son of Man, remade in God's image.Ten years later, in 2025, evangelical trumpism has evidently not repented of the evil it is doing to the oppressed and unloved in America - nor of the harm and evil it is doing across the world in Ukraine (Putin's kind of Christian Orthodoxy) - nor has it repented of the destruction Israel has done to the Palestinian people across the Gaza region - nor in America's trade wars with the world evoked in mistrust, suspicion, one-sided accusations and indictments.This kind of Christianity is the kind to flee from, shun, be rid of, burn up, and cast away. It is hateful, unhelpful, unattractive, and isolating. This is not how Jesus lived in the world and it is not how the gospel of Christ is to reach out into the world. It is of the devil, dressed in sheep's clothing, and altogether heinous.Statedly, it seems that evangelicals have been paying lip service to God over the decades and not dedicating in their hearts truly to God nor to Jesus as they said they were. Their prayer and repentance rally in Washington D.C. in 2015 was a lie enunciated before the world by their words and actions in trumpian hate.Sadly, the evangelical religion of most of my life has betrayed it's real self as bigoted, discriminatory, and bent on returning to the imperial religion of its day - even if it means following the devil himself with his many corrupt and lawless trumpian minions. To all this I say, Good Riddance.
I then proceeded to show how process theology rethinks the deep and rich history of the Christian church over the many millennia hoping to show that with a new philosophical and theological foundation provided by process philosophy and theology, that a better form of Jesus Christianity could be enunciated. One that is more embracing of mankind and re-centered in love; that with such a processually-based faith founded in Christ-centeredness it might not become the catastrophe that fundamental/evangelical theology has become.
The Incarnational-Redemptive Model in Jesus
Explanatory link found here |
Here's the $64 dollar question: Not whether the New Testament in Jesus is true (I believe it is) but what does it mean. Evangelicalism had gotten itself wrapped up in defending the truthfulness of the bible (sic, infallible, inerrant, etc) rather than exploring what Jesus and his disciples were saying.
Instead of investigating how God's incarnational-redemptive enactment was meaningful to the world, evangelicalism got caught up in uplifting the exaltation-kingdom theologies of Judaism's political-religious crisis in it's displacement by Rome. Translated, evangelical's have forgotten both Jesus and Jesus' gospel and have poured themselves into their own story of what political-religious freedom looks like to themselves. In short, it looks ugly, bigoted, abrasive, discriminatory, oppressive, fascist, and unlike Jesus' incarnational-redemptive story.
Let's Revisit "God's Plan for the Ages"
Despite the incorrect evangelical assessment found here, process theology restores God's Plan for the Ages which the evangelical tradition has abandoned for it's own political-religious earthly kingdom under trumpism.
And what is that plan? I asked ChatGPT and got this:
Conclusion
Myself to ChatGPT
So if we are to rethink theology for a Processual Age, what might that be?
ChatGPT
Absolutely — here’s a concluding, integrative statement that ties together all the spirit and substance of our last several discussions about rethinking theology for a Processual Age, especially around your insight of an incarnational-redemptive lure:
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