Onward Christian Soldiers?: One Pastor’s Journey from Fundamentalism to Discipleship
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About this ebook
Derek J. Cheek
Derek J. Cheek has been the pastor at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Olean, New York, since 2004. Prior to that he served congregations in Missouri and Ohio. He holds a BA in theology/Greek from Cedarville University, an MA in literature from Wright State University, an MDiv from Concordia Theological Seminary, and a DMin from Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry. Derek served as a mainframe applications analyst for the US Department of Defense from 1991–94. He is married to Patty, has three adult daughters, and a grown step-daughter. Derek enjoys Irish and Scottish culture, and can often be found wearing a kilt at Celtic festivals . . . and occasionally at church.
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Onward Christian Soldiers? - Derek J. Cheek
Onward Christian Soldiers?
One Pastor’s Journey from Fundamentalism to Discipleship
Derek J. Cheek
10537.pngOnward Christian Soldiers?
One Pastor’s Journey from Fundamentalism to Discipleship
Copyright © 2018 Derek J. Cheek. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
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paperback isbn: 978-1-5326-4965-3
hardcover isbn: 978-1-5326-4966-0
ebook isbn: 978-1-5326-4967-7
Manufactured in the U.S.A. 09/17/15
All scripture references are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, © copyright 1989 Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1: Fairy Tales
Aren’t Just for Children
Chapter 2: A Uniquely American Error
Chapter 3: The Breath of God
Chapter 4: Politics, Jesus’ Style
Chapter 5: A Discussion of the Rapture
Chapter 6: Thy Kingdom Come
Chapter 7: It’s a Nice Day for a White Wedding
Chapter 8: Is Your God Mean?
Chapter 9: Let’s Go to Hell
Chapter 10: What Metric Are We Using?
Chapter 11: A Simple Question
Bibliography
This book is dedicated to all who have been wounded
by congregations and ministers who have lead with
legalism and judgmentalism,
rather than the grace, mercy, and love of God seen in Jesus Christ.
Kyrie eleison!
Acknowledgements
Rev. Jerry leFeber, who has always been a mentor and soul friend;
Cohort brothers Rev. Dr. Mike Branscombe, Rev. Dr. Mike Philliber, and
Rev. Paul Rebelo, with whom I’ve spent untold hours honing my beliefs and practices . . . and there may have been some cigars and scotch, too!
Rev. Phil Esala, who stood at the beginning of my journey into the ministry and always pointed me to Jesus as the ground of all we do;
Mr. Tim Alexander, who suggested many vital editorial and thematic improvements;
Rev. Dan Buringrud, who read versions of this text and offered advice;
Mrs. Gert Yohe, Mrs. Roxane Struchen, and Mrs. Theresa Heinz, who have always pushed me to justify my thoughts with scriptural support and pastoral care;
Rev. Dr. Bruce Levine, whose thoughtfulness has made me think deeper;
Rev. Marie Meeks; the Very Rev. Fr. Greg Dobson, VF; Rev. Dan McDowell; Rev. Phil Houghton, Rev. LaMont Higgenbottom; Fr. Tony Salim, Rev. Kim Rossi, and Rev. Susan Block, clergy colleagues whose advice and friendship has always been unquestioned—may every minister have such companions!
This book was proofread and edited by Sue Zebrosky, her keen eye and diligent help have vastly improved it. Thanks!
Introduction
I thought the purpose of education was to learn to think for yourself.
—John Keating in Dead Poet’s Society
¹
He most lives who thinks most,feels the noblest,acts the best.
—Philip James Bailey
²
Christianity is under assault in the United States of America. But not so much by those whom we are frequently told are trying to destroy it: people who say happy holidays
instead of a hearty merry Christmas,
or those who support LGBTQ equality, or even by those who are pro-choice. Christianity isn’t being assailed by people who supposedly hate
Christ³ nearly so much as by those who call themselves his followers. It’s being harmed far more by many of those who believe with every fiber of their beings that they are serving Jesus the most. It’s beset by Christians whose Christianity is defined more by what (and who) they are against than what and whom they are for.
In this book I wish to present Christ in a different light from the Christianity of these brothers and sisters. And I’m inviting you to join me. I want to state emphatically, here at the very outset, that I believe those from whom I am differentiating myself are Christians—my spiritual brothers and sisters. I believe they mean well. I respect that they are trying to obey God as they understand him. But I also believe that they have profoundly misunderstood him. The Christ they proclaim is a poor reflection of the Jesus we see in the Bible.
I desire to present Christ in ways that are more faithful to Jesus as we see him in Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. To do that I’m going to come clean: theologically I’m a moderate,
a progressive,
a post-liberal,
a post-evangelical,
or just a garden-variety liberal.
I wish to reclaim the honor in holding well-considered and tempered ideals about Christ-following at a time when so many seem to be running further and faster to a regressive version of Jesus nested in the comfort
of an oversimplified and idealized past.
Many modern American Christians are on a vain quest, seeking to reconstruct idyllic days that were never as tranquil as they imagine (or remember
) . . . at least not for everyone. The orthodoxy
they seek in the past was never as pure as they believe. Furthermore, modern scholarship has revealed data to which our forbearers had no access, and we are responsible to incorporate that knowledge into our discipleship. Rather than clawing our way backwards, or presenting Christianity in terms of what we’re against, I believe followers of Christ should proclaim the positive things we see Jesus teaching: a theology rooted in sacrificial love and built by working to extend dignity and equality to all people.
Consider the words of the apostle Paul: Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves.
⁴ And ponder the message of Pricilla:⁵ [L]et us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing.
⁶ Christianity is practiced best when it is lived. Far too many Christians
have turned it into some sort of test of biblical knowledge.
James addresses this problem in his epistle: What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if someone claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save them? Suppose a brother or a sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,’ but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead. But someone will say, ‘You have faith; I have deeds.’ Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by my deeds.
⁷
I’m painfully aware that writing as I am might seem to be a case of exactly what I’m suggesting we should not be doing! And that may be a fair criticism. I will say this in my defense: while I take issue with fundamentalism and evangelicalism, I am not taking personal issue with individual fundamentalists or evangelicals. I believe the people who embrace those systems of theology are my brothers and sisters in Christ—they’re saved,
to use their terminology. I will offer critiques to some of what they believe, and some of the ways they live out their faith in Christ: what kind of fruit
they are bearing.⁸ I will base my critiques on Scripture, especially passages that feature the actions or clear teachings of our Lord, Jesus. My critique is purely theological, and in no way personal.
I hope this book is read by people who are members of fundamentalist and evangelical congregations. I especially hope that people who already have some misgivings about the theology of their conservative
church home consider the thoughts expressed here. I want to normalize your experience and the fears you likely have in the back of your mind. I want you to know I was you. I have been there—really.
As I passed an early draft of this book to a couple colleagues, they suggested that I own my credentials as a full-fledged fundamentalist-turned-Bible-denying-liberal.
⁹ I had not originally planned to do that. They suggested I can say things directly to the evangelical and fundamentalist branch of the church with an authenticity that most other moderates
lack, because I know by personal experience (existentially) what is proclaimed from the pulpits of many fundamentalist churches and how it makes people feel. I spent over a decade hearing it firsthand. I was educated in their institutions. It was in their colleges and seminaries that I went rogue and became whatever it is I have become. And while it’s true I’m a former-fundamentalist-turned-something, whatever I have become, it isn’t Bible-denying. I would suggest that as I have learned to read the Bible less literally, I have come to understand it more profoundly.
I was raised to be a fundamentalist. I was given a nearly unassailable confidence that what I was taught was the only correct understanding of things. To stray from that one true path
was to risk the eternal torments of hell—truly—or to at least risk being branded unusable
for God’s work in this life. Neither prospect was attractive. Except, in my case, something went wrong in my training. I began doubting the accuracy of many of the claims of my fundamentalist teachers. I wasn’t convinced that eternal death in hell was the ultimate end of people who trusted in Christ, but questioned, for example, creation as the product of seven, literal, twenty-four-hour days. I could see the story of Genesis 1–3 as a metaphor for a God who created through an evolutionary process spanning billions of years. And the more I compared the science of both camps, the more convinced I became that young Earth
¹⁰ proponents were simply wrong. Which led me to more thoroughly investigate the position of Christian theologians who suggest the Genesis creation account was never meant to be taken literally. Their interpretations were both scholarly and refreshing—not to mention deeply reverent toward God.
As time passed, I began to question the very God I was being taught about from fundamentalist and evangelical pulpits and lecterns; he seemed like such a tyrannical jerk. I began to believe that the very approach used by my evangelical and fundamentalist pastors/professors to interpret God’s book was suspect. Their method was leading them to see a malevolent caricature of God—a deity who expresses conditional love, and motivates his worshippers through fear. These are universal hallmarks of abuse. I knew a different God from the angry and intractable version of God they constantly spoke of; I worshipped a God of second, third, and seventy-seventh chances.¹¹ I trusted a God who understood existentially what it is like to be human.¹² My God had a face—Jesus. I simply could not reconcile the wrathful ogre they spoke of with the Jesus I saw in the Gospels. Maybe you can relate?
I had many classmates who had exactly the same misgivings. We frequently spoke about our discomfort with the disconnect we perceived between what we were being taught and what we saw in Jesus in the pages of the New Testament. But most of them marched on. They wanted to fit in above all else. I don’t fault them . . . too much. It is an uncomfortable struggle, one that’s warned against from all positions of authority within fundamentalist and evangelical communities. Venturing into other theological understandings is presented as dangerous and potentially fatal to one’s faith.
What made my path different was what I did with my doubts and questions. Instead of pretending they didn’t exist, and tamping them down out of fear, I began exploring and researching them. I gave my doubts space to breathe. I wrote papers in my undergraduate classes exploring my distresses. I searched for other theories and understandings in different contemporary Christian communities. I dug into the writing of men and women from the distant past to find other explanations for those things that made me squirm. For example, as a sophomore I tackled women’s ordination. Of course, in the mid 1980s all fundamentalists and most evangelicals rejected this idea out of hand. Most still do. But I wanted to know what the Bible and early church actually had to say; I wanted to know why some denominations had begun ordaining women. I had been told, The Bible is clear . . .
and any church that was ordaining women plainly was doing it because they reject the authority of the Scriptures.
It would have been convenient to discover that that was, in fact, the truth. But it was anything but the truth. Once I began talking with them
face to face, I found these supposed Bible-haters
actually used the Scriptures. They also pointed to mosaics and other historical evidence¹³ to suggest the early church had in many places ordained women into the holy ministry!¹⁴ They suggested that female ordination was reasonably common for the first four centuries of Christianity. It seemed to have disappeared about the same time the church was becoming the official religion of the Roman Empire, a time when a lot of things were changing—mostly for the worse! They suggested that they were being more true to the Bible than those who didn’t ordain women. That position squares with the actions and attitudes of Jesus throughout the pages of the Gospels. After all, the person presented as first proclaiming Jesus as risen isn’t a man, but Mary Magdalene.¹⁵
I learned this because I did something few of my colleagues dared to do: I went and listened to them.
I did this for a dozen or more issues that I wanted to explore with input from conservatives and liberals alike. I called and made appointments to interview several pastors from various traditions. I told them what issue I was exploring. I asked if I could sit down with them and discuss their personal (and their denomination’s official) positions on the topic. I asked what other resources they could point me to. I asked each of them the same initial questions, took notes and posed follow up questions that were unique to each. Then I set to work comparing and contrasting the seven to ten points of view I gathered for every question I researched in this way. What I discovered was amazing: these liberals
didn’t hate God or the Bible nearly as much as I had been led to believe. In fact, most of them were pretty passionate about both! They just read and interpreted it all a bit differently from the ways I had been taught.
I was blessed to have professors who, though very conservative
in their personal beliefs, were liberal
enough to welcome this kind of approach. These professors were true scholars, and they helped me to become a good student. They were not always in agreement with my conclusions—generally they weren’t—but none of them ever punished me academically for my conclusions, as long as my process was sound. I greatly appreciate that fact!
Curriculum Vitae
I’ve stated that I was trained as a fundamentalist and an evangelical. Now to firmly establish that fact:
In 1985 I graduated from Heritage Hall Christian School in Muncie, Indiana. This is a well-regarded day school in fundamentalist circles. Following high school, I attended Bob Jones University for a year. Yes, I went there! Most people don’t know that about me. And it was there (in my mind, anyway) that the great unwinding began, and I began moving left on the theological scale.¹⁶ It could have been any one of a thousand things that caused me to begin moving in a progressive direction, but it happened to be the whole no interracial dating
thing, in my case. I got caught up in it. One day I had a lunch in the BJU dining hall with
a young Asian woman. I sat across the table from her and her sister with another White male student. And I got turned in.
I was summoned to the office of Tony Miller, dean of men. I was told to report the other students for similar punishment—something I couldn’t do for the girls, because I didn’t even know their names. I wasn’t interested in them romantically. I was simply talking with them as human beings. And I refused to name my friend, the other guy. Nothing about the whole thing had been a date in my mind.
But that fact meant nothing to either Dr. Miller or me by the point I was sitting in his office. Dr. Miller told me that what I had done was most certainly a sin.
I had offended God by talking with one of the girls in particular (presumably because he was making this into some sort of forbidden romantic liaison). When I asked for a biblical reference establishing this as a sin, he cited 2 Corinthians 6:14: Be ye not unequally yoked together . . . what communion hath light with darkness?
(KJV). Of course, when he quoted this passage to me the ellipsis was not so obvious. But I was familiar with the passage (an ironic thank you
to HHCS!). The full passage reads: Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? and what communion hath light with darkness?
I suggested the passage has an obvious spiritual context. Its scope is limited to partnerships (romantic and financial) between Christians and those who are most decidedly not. It has nothing to do with skin color.
I believe he was caught off guard by my retort. He agreed that some
would argue that, but BJU took the passage more literally, like God intended. I also pointed out that both Moses and Solomon had married Black
women according to the KJV. He was not amused. The rest of the scene unfolded as you might expect: I was officially blacklisted for disrespect. My (already) limited freedoms were seriously curtailed. And my name was included on an actual list posted in every dorm, labeling me as a discipline problem. It was a way to publically shame wayward students and warn
all upright students to steer clear of me and my fellow ne’er-do-wells. But for me the cork was out of the bottle. My casual curiosity was now injected with the steroids of blatant hypocrisy.¹⁷ I can literally remember thinking: If they are willing to lie about the biblical rationale for this . . . what else are they lying to me about?
I’m sure I became a positive menace as I began questioning many things that were prohibited, things that had sat uneasily with me for years: rock music, movies, playing cards, tobacco, alcohol, cursing, the democratic party . . . well, you get the point. I was on a quest. And what I learned in those first few months only inspired me to keep digging. Both what I had been told the Bible was clear about,
and what many of my teachers and pastors had claimed science
says, were all seriously skewed. It didn’t take much work in BJU’s own library to determine that.
I completed my year at BJU and transferred to Cedarville College¹⁸ (now University), in Ohio. This is where I found a more fertile ground for inquiry. I had examined many of the more superficial practices while at Bob Jones. At Cedarville I began to inquire into the very tenets of my faith. I examined the doctrines of election, free will, the atonement, communion, baptism and several others. This stuff is boring to most people, and I get that. But I loved it! I also began learning what