
WRF Member Dr. Peter Jensen, General Secretary of GAFCON, Takes Us "Back to the Basics," Part V, "The Power of the Gospel"
Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners. That is what the Bible tells us.
We are commanded to enter the kingdom of God by entrusting ourselves to Christ as our Lord and Saviour. That is, we enter and continue through repentance and faith.
The Canterbury meeting of the Primates made space for the summons to repentance to be heard once more.
Why is this so vital?
A lost world
The issues before us are matters of life and death, of heaven and hell, of judgement and forgiveness. God’s gospel is designed to be preached to all people. The love of God seeks the lost sheep at great cost.
When Jesus came and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth, his chief mission was to save. It is no accident that the cross is the central symbol of Christianity, since it is through his death that salvation comes into the world. Through his resurrection and ascension he now rules over all things. He is the God-man who is the head of our race and the Lord of the universe.
The power of the gospel
The gospel reconciles us to God and prepares us for the age to come. But the same Lord who is the Lord of that age is the Lord of this one too. As men and women are united to Christ by the Spirit of God, so they live for God in this world.
Down through human history, the power of the gospel has been shown not only in the way it saves sinners but also for the way it transforms us and impacts the human societies in which we live. The social power of the gospel has been enormous.
The ‘death’ of God
From the 1960s onwards, a new philosophy has captured the culture, a secularist philosophy based on the idea that there is no God. In a godless world, the individual is god – and we make our own rules. In particular, the sexual revolution – abortion on demand, pornography, permissiveness, easy divorce, cohabitation instead of marriage and the rise of the homosexual life-style, have all flourished.
Alongside atheism has emerged a quest for spirituality. Individuals cultivate the spiritual self, trying to discover the meaning and purpose they lost when they abandoned the God of the Bible.
At the same time, the revolution in communications has created a single world, in which information and opinion and ideology flow easily from one place to another. The secularist gospel is now heard more easily than the Christian gospel.
Mission and culture
Christian evangelists and missionaries are always in the ‘translation’ business. This is part of the genius of Christianity. To preach the gospel we must explain it in ways that the hearer can understand. But the gospel must be true to the Bible. Otherwise, we concede too much to the surrounding culture and distort the truth. Western Christians are grappling with this issue as never before.
The result has been many changes. What we do in church has frequently altered dramatically. Some have experienced revival and fresh enthusiasm. Many are talking about planting new churches while acting with love in communities which are without God and without hope.
On the other hand, some teach that the Spirit of God is leading us to new truths which contradict the Bible. Some no longer talk about judgement and sin. Some see the chief message of the church to be social justice or inclusiveness.
Spreading error
The divisions in North America, which have impacted the rest of the Anglican world, arise from mission. That is, in attempting to communicate the Christian message, some have so compromised that they no longer call for repentance from what the Bible calls sin. This is an incomplete gospel, and one that has lost its saving power. That is why the Anglican crisis is so profound.
If we continue in fellowship, we endorse this flawed gospel. We endanger the rest of the churches as they see no discipline being exercised by the leadership. In the age of the internet, no church is safe from these errors.
Just preach the gospel?
Some would say that those who break fellowship because of the distorted gospel are the ones at fault. They would say that we have succeeded in making so much fuss that all we talk about is sex, rather than Jesus. Furthermore, society no longer has the faintest idea of what the Bible is saying on this subject and cannot be sympathetic to our views. Instead the world labels us bigots and homophobes and we do not get a hearing for Jesus.
They would say that it is better to agree to disagree about the subject, enter a ‘good disagreement’ with each other, maintain unity so that our quarrels do not become the story, and talk about Jesus.
But there are four problems with this argument.
First, it narrows Jesus down so that we are in danger of not teaching the real Jesus who called for repentance from sin.
Second, it forbids us to analyse and expose human sin and idolatry at precisely one of its most obvious points.
Third, it forbids us to do good in our community by offering a far better vision of what it is to be human.
Fourth, it insists that those who refuse to compromise over these matters are the ones at fault and grants a mark of approval to those who distort the gospel.
Fellowship in a false gospel, is not fellowship.
At a time when so much is at stake, what is the Lord summoning us to do? I will address that in the next letter.
The GAFCON movement is a global family of authentic Anglicans standing together to retain and restore the Bible to the heart of the Anglican Communion. Our mission is to guard the unchanging, transforming Gospel of Jesus Christ and to proclaim Him to the world. We are founded on the Bible, bound together by the Jerusalem Statement and Declaration of 2008, and led by a Primates Council, which represents the majority of the world’s Anglicans.
GAFCON works to guard and proclaim the unchanging, transforming Gospel through biblically faithful preaching and teaching which frees our churches to make disciples by clear and certain witness to Jesus Christ in all the world.
The GAFCON journey began in 2008 when moral compromise, doctrinal error and the collapse of biblical witness in parts of the Anglican communion had reached such a level that the leaders of the majority of the world’s Anglicans felt it was necessary to take a united stand for truth. A crowd of more than one thousand witnesses, including Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, clergy and lay leaders gathered in Jerusalem for the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON).
The second conference, GAFCON 2013, was held in Nairobi, Kenya in 2013, at which over 1,300 delegates from 38 nations and 27 Provinces of the Anglican Communion were present. The gathering gave the Primates a mandate, through the Nairobi Communiqué and Commitment, to take forward the work of the GAFCON movement. We look for the prayer and financial support of Anglicans around the world who long for a clear and certain witness to Jesus Christ as Lord.
Further information about the GAFCON movement is available here.
Dr. Peter Jensen, former Anglican Archbishop of Sydney, serves as the General Secretary of GAFCON, and was the opening plenary speaker at the 2006 General Assembly of the World Reformed Fellowship, held in Johannesburg, South Africa. Dr. Jensen is also an individual member of the World Reformed Fellowship.
Dr. Jensen has written a series of reflections following the January 2016 Primates Gathering on the fundamentals underpinning the basis of the Christian faith. Below is the fifth in that series of six thought leadership and teaching papers. The final paper will be posted here on the WRF website as soon as it becomes. All of the items are posted here with the expressed approval of GAFCON.