"Reformed in Doctrine, Charismatic in Ministry, Evangelical in Mission "These three phrases are emblazoned across the top of our Sunday bulletins. But what do they mean? How do they affect the way we live and serve as a local church? Why do we believe that all three must be championed in our day? The following article attempts to explain. For many years the Bible has been treated like a deck of cards. Denominations behave like players in some doctrinal card game where each church holds only a few cards in its hand as it competes with other churches for new members. Every church has its own "doctrinal distinctives" or emphases which may even be reflected in the church's name (e.g. Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, etc.) In addition, churches are grouped into larger camps, based on over-arching values (e.g. Reformed, Charismatic & Evangelical). Such divisions rob every church of its heritage in the whole counsel of God.
Generally speaking, Reformed churches hold tightly to the cards (i.e. the passages of Scripture) that pertain to "the doctrines of grace." They also emphasize the need to guard sound doctrine from error. Charismatic churches hold the cards that relate to the Holy Spirit and His gifts. They emphasize supernatural manifestations of the Holy Spirit. Evangelicals teach the Great Commission, personal evangelism and world missions. They emphasize winning the lost to Christ.
Our analogy breaks down of course, because no true church is void of all interest in the doctrines championed by the others.
But over time, these three camps have drifted farther and farther apart. Today they seem mutually exclusive of one another. What is worse, as each has overemphasized and overreacted to each doctrine, errors have occurred on all sides. As each church pushes its favorite truth to an erroneous extreme, the other churches attempt to distance themselves from those errors and all but abandon some key doctrines. "We don't emphasize election here." Or, "We are not 'seeker sensitive."' Or, "We won't stand for Holy Spirit wildfire." In this way, major passages of God's Word are being abandoned to other churches who, in their zeal, distort them and make them the primary basis of their church's identity. By being taught without the balance that comes from knowing and believing the other doctrines, every church loses out.
IT TAKES ALL THREE!
The situation today requires a Christian to attend three churches just to receive a balanced diet of what the Bible actually teaches- one to enjoy expository Bible teaching and basic Bible doctrine (e.g. a sound Reformed Church), one to experience supernatural ministry (e.g. a sound Charismatic church) and yet another to be equipped to live the Great Commission (e.g. a sound Evangelical church). As long as every church holds only its own limited denominational "hand," no church is "playing with a full deck."
The whole counsel of God has become divided, disjointed and out of balance. Entheos is an attempt to bring these three camps of Bible doctrine back together in one local church. We strive to be biblically Reformed, biblically Charismatic, and biblically evangelical in order to enjoy the benefits and avoid the errors of all three. We want everything that the Bible teaches, but nothing more.
STRENGTHS CAN BECOME WEAKNESSES
The strength of the Reformed pastor can become his weakness. He has such confidence in the truth of the Bible and the sovereignty of God that he distrusts the Spirit of God and becomes fatalistic in his approach to missions. He is cold and academic in his teaching. He closes all opportunities for God to move with power in the church. He "despises prophesy" as "adding to the Scripture." He "forbids speaking in tongues," dismissing it as "wildfire." He is like a man with a massive stone fireplace made up of sound Bible doctrine. But he would rather sit in a cold, dark, empty house than take any chance that the fire might get out of the fireplace, or that careless guests might damage his fine stonework. He does not understand that his precious fireplace has been designed by God to safely hold the blazing fire of God's Holy Spirit for the benefit of many yet to be saved. A fireplace needs a fire.
On the other hand, the strength of the Charismatic pastor can also become his weakness. His confidence in the inspiration of the Holy Spirit can undermine his motivation to do the hard work of Bible study and sound doctrinal preaching of the Gospel. He believes he need only read a passage and "pray through'' until he "feels the anointing." Then he steps into his pulpit to serve up half-baked ideas to an ever-enthusiastic, but doctrinally famished congregation. This pastor is like a man who builds a bonfire in the middle of his living room floor. Though a wonderful stone fireplace stands just a few feet away, he thinks that any attempt to regulate the moving of the Spirit, to limit the use of tongues in the service or to evaluate the content of a given prophesy, (as the Bible clearly commands us to do in 1 Cor. 14:26-33), would somehow "quench the Spirit." He also presumes upon the Holy Spirit in evangelism, failing to explain what God has accomplished for the sinner through Jesus Christ, not taking seriously the fact that the Spirit of God works through the proclamation of the Gospel to save sinners.
Fire belongs in a fireplace. In a similar way, the Evangelical pastor's strength can become his weakness. His desire to reach people for Christ is admirable. But when he compromises God's Word by dumbing down the Gospel and despises God's Spirit by resorting to a "repeat after me" sinners prayer, all in order to get more people to make a decision for Christ, he does everyone a disservice. In his attempts to be "culturally relevant" and "seeker sensitive," he is ashamed of the Gospel, attempting to offer a Savior who is not Lord. Lacking zeal for sound doctrine for fear that God's truth will offend visitors, and lacking faith in the power of the Holy Spirit to convict and convert the lost through the foolishness of the Gospel message, such pastors serve up a diet of short, fluffy, topical messages that produces many false conversions. This is the cause of "nominal Christianity," seen in the growing number of people who attend evangelical churches, but who have yet to be born again, who have only false assurance of salvation, who bear no spiritual fruit, are not zealous for good works and who in fact know very little Bible doctrine!
Such an Evangelical pastor does not understand that without the fireplace of sound doctrine to display God's Truth there can be no knowledge of sin, no true repentance, nor saving faith. Without the fire of the Holy Spirit to confirm God's Word with power in the new birth, there will be no lasting fruit. It is this combination of the fireplace and the fire that provides an ideal context for effective evangelistic ministry.
THE BALANCE OF GOD’S TRUTH
In each camp, the remedy is found in the doctrines monopolized by the other two camps. The entire Bible is for the entire church! What has been lost is the integrity of Truth itself. The major doctrines referred to by the terms Reformed, Charismatic and Evangelical, interact in dynamic ways to check the excesses of one another and maintain proper balance.
By keeping the fire in the fireplace we create a beautiful backdrop of God's power in confirmation of God's Truth as an expression of God's Love. Here we find God's people showing their love for God by the way they love one another. Here we experience passionate worship toward God that is both "in spirit and in truth," and here we discover a confidence in the Gospel that allows us to boldly speak God's truth in love.
All of the Bible doctrines now monopolized and distorted by the three major camps of Protestant Christianity are found in every Bible. They have always been there. They comprise an integrated whole. One group's misunderstanding or misapplication of a doctrine cannot justify the rest of us in ignoring that part of God's Word. All of God's truths are intended to be understood, believed, and obeyed in relation to one another by the entire Body of Christ. In this sense, every church is intended to be "a full deck church" with all of the crucial checks and balances in place. Entheos is an attempt to be just that. Thus far we find the combination to be both refreshing and effective.
- Gregg Harris—June, 2020