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Peter Murphy's avatar

Unlike the narrative of another Abrahamic religion, God has not sent a man to tell us about a book, but has given us a book that tells us about a man. I cherish the book because it was instrumental in leading me to the Man. The God we love, serve and obey is a living God. Not a book.

To be clear, this is not meant to be critical of Islam or the holy book of the people of Islam or their prophet, but to distinguish the two regarding a fundamental difference. The bibliolatry of certain fundamentalist groups has more in common with historic Islam than with historic Christianity.

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Mike Chu's avatar

Dr. Bird, while I understand why you want to defend Andy Stanley's take, thinking that there is some alignment with his view on Scripture with yours, but after several years of once following his teachings and even defending him myself, I have come to realize that there are trends in his theology that are concerning.

His book, Irresistible, contains bits and pieces that I realize I could not ignore. Particular, pg. 93, 110-11, and other sections where Stanley emphasized how the Old Testament Scriptures were fulfilled in Jesus, and thus, while they are inspired, it does not mean they hold any authority anymore towards the Christian. He attempts to break down the relevance of the OT Scriptures by nuancing that yes, it is part of our Canon, but that Canon was created well after Church, and the Church did fine without the OT Scriptures for a long time.

On pg. 155-158, he would make this statement:

"Jesus treated the Hebrew Scriptures as authoritative. Paul insisted they were God-breathed. Peter believed Jewish writers were carried along by the Holy Spirit. But they never claimed their faith was based on the integrity of the documents themselves."

This was part of his conclusion that it was a mistake for the Church to have taken in the OT Scriptures, that were Jewish, and make them apart of our faith as Christians.

Other Biblical scholars such as Carmen Imes, and Brent Strawn, have noticed this devaluation of the OT from Stanley's writings, sermons. Strawn's book, "The OT is Dying" goes into the danger of losing OT familiarity, something of which Stanley in his church sermons for the last couple of years has trended towards.

Finally, his view on the OT has eventually led to his church's partnering with Matthew Vines' Reformation Project back in Feb 2023, hosting a conference that pushed Side A open and affirming theology, something of which Stanley admitted his church had been doing for the past decade quietly. This was also around the same time when Stanley's views on the OT began to become more prominent in his books, appearing in Deep and Wide, in his sermons, and later in Irresistible.

I say all this as a once fan of Stanley's work, but over the years, especially when I realized his views on Acts 15, the Jerusalem Council, did not mesh with the research from other scholars who did not see the Council as addressing tableside fellowship, but something more profound and deeper to the unity of Jew and Gentile, I began to reexamine how I understood what Stanley was doing.

Anyhows, please accept this as a gentile pushback. I used to be a defender of Stanley, but have had to take a step back and reexamine his works across the board.

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