Bad PR dies hard. Somehow, the word got out that Christianity is about
moral reform and our inner 2nd-grade, grumpy-pants teacher has been
looking over our shoulders since. Despite the insistence of St. Paul,
Luther, Calvin and a host of other Reformers, faithful laymen and
preachers that we’re free in Christ, we’ve had a 2,000 year battle on
our hands since. There are plenty of bumper sticker falsehoods floating
around and we’ve seen them all. You know, “Do your best, and God does
the rest. “Just follow your heart”. Or America’s favorite (non) verse
“God helps those who help themselves.” The sentiment is always the same,
that our problem can somehow be remedied by some spiritual life
coaching and hard work. But the human problem isn’t solved by barking at
people to get to work climbing the spirituality ladder. We don’t need
to take spiritual vitamins, we need a death and resurrection! Here’s
another Forde-ian surgical strike for your enjoyment from pg 49 of Where God Meets Man: Luther’s Down-To-Earth Approach To The Gospel.
Pelagius was a moral reformer and like all moral reformers he didn’t
want a theology that allowed people to relax. So he said that man must
use his God-given strength to climb the ladder. Sin is not original, it
is only a bad habit that humans have gotten into. It is passed on by
imitation not by heredity. What we must do is bend every effort to
better ourselves and reverse the course of immorality and corruption the
world has taken. To arms against evil!
That was Pelagius’ call. But the church from the beginning has resisted
this call-at least in the precise form in which Pelagius put it. Why?
Because, as St.Augustine-with St. Paul- said, it makes the cross of no
effect. It is a call to man’s pride and pride is the deadliest of
sins-especially when it thinks itself to be busy with religious affairs.
It is a call which completely disregards the fact that it was man’s
moral pride and religious fervor that killed God’s Son. It sets men
climbing the heavenly ladder indeed, but it has no grace.
It only grinds real humanity in the dust. In other words, it does not
take the Grace of God as revealed in the cross at it’s word. There is no
room left for mercy and love. The cross is only an example of moral
striving. It is a complete misreading both of divine action and the
human condition.
Mockingbird
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