Christian Post: Evangelicals Should Be Gospel Centered, Not Salvation Centered, Theologian Says
Evangelical Christianity has been shaped by a "salvation culture," but should strive for a "Gospel culture," says Dr. Scot McKnight, professor of religious studies at Northern Seminary.
"The Gospel of salvation has produced what I call a 'salvation culture' – a culture marked by who's in and who's out. So a very strong sense of 'we are the in group and others are the out group.' ... A 'Gospel culture' is a culture shaped by following Jesus, by living under Jesus as King. A 'Gospel culture' includes personal salvation, but it includes so much more," McKnight said in an interview with The Christian Post. ...
...McKnight noted that even in the "great commission," (Matthew 28:19-20) the emphasis is not on getting people to make decisions, but on making disciples.
"It didn't say, 'go and get people to make decisions.' It said 'make disciples.' How? Teaching them to observe everything I have commanded. So the goal is to get people to become disciples of Jesus by obeying all that Jesus taught."
Getting Western evangelicals to change from a salvation culture to a Gospel culture would be difficult, McKnight believes, because the salvation culture represents a core part of evangelical identity. But the good news is that renewal is also a core part of evangelical identity. ...
The opening line in an evangelical's approach is usually "Are you saved?".
Posted by: ZZMike | Jun 16, 2012 at 09:11 PM
And I'd affirm that this is a good question but too often stop with who does the saving and what we are saved FROM without saying who we are saved TO and what mission we have been called to. Scot is right when he insists that the gospel is about so much more than personal salvation.
Posted by: Michael W Kruse | Jun 16, 2012 at 10:14 PM