Scott Allen, president of
Disciple Nations Alliance, compares the current social justice movement
within Protestant churches today with the Social Gospel movement in the
early 20th century. According to Allen, "advocates of the Social
Gospel believed the church should be engaged in the culture, fighting against
injustice and working to uplift the impoverished and downtrodden—all admirable
goals. The problem was they unwittingly allowed secular assumptions to inform
their theology of cultural engagement."
Fundamentalists reacted
to the Social Gospel movement by emphasizing the preaching of the
Gospel and individual soul salvation largely to the exclusion of involvement
in social issues. Consequently, the evangelical church was caught
unprepared to deal with emerging social issues of the latter half of the 20th
century with a biblical worldview--issues like racial injustice and sexual
morality.
Allen applauds evangelical
social justice champions for caring about social issues like poverty, racism,
and the refugee crisis. Because of this commitment, he believes the
evangelical church can avoid the unfortunate sacred-secular dichotomy that
resulted from its reaction to the Social Gospel movement.
But Allen is deeply concerned
about the evangelical church because it has uncritically "absorbed
many of the assumptions and much of the language of the social justice
movement—assumptions that veer sharply from a Biblical worldview. As a
result, they find themselves unwittingly syncretized to a false religion, one
that works against the very thing they purport to champion—genuine
justice."
I would encourage you to read
Scott Allen's complete article, “History Repeats
Itself.” Then, please respond with your thoughts and insights in "Comments" below.
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