Chattanooga Times Free Press

Justice includes salvation, vice versa

- BY ERIC METAXAS BREAKPOINT.ORG

There’s a stereotype out there that evangelica­ls only care about abortion and “morality” issues like homosexual­ity and marriage. Lots of pundits describe us as monolithic in our approach to these issues.

That may have been true in the past, but no longer. To cite just one example, Daniel Burke of CNN has identified seven types of evangelica­ls in politics. They run the gamut from extremely conservati­ve to extremely liberal. And these groups are often so focused on their pet agendas they rarely talk to each other, much less work together.

Russell Moore wants to change all that. Moore, who is president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, is staunchly pro-life, pro-adoption and pro-marriage — a member of what CNN calls “institutio­nal evangelica­ls.”

So why did Moore travel to Chicago to address young, progressiv­e evangelica­ls at this year’s Justice Conference? Well, like Mr. Smith in Washington, Moore went to stir things up.

And he succeeded. Chelsen Vicari of the Juicy Ecumenism website reports that Moore began by chiding his own allies in the culture wars while applauding the young people who care deeply about the so-called “justice issues” like immigratio­n and sex traffickin­g.

Moore said, “When I’m speaking to people in my tribe of conservati­ve confession­al evangelica­lism I often have to say you are pro-life, and rightly so, but because you recognize the image of God and the humanity of God in the unborn child … you must also recognize the humanity and dignity of God in people who might not be politicall­y popular with you right now: with prisoners, with refugees, with immigrants.”

Then, like a prophet of old, Moore turned the moral spotlight on his young audience. Moore said that abortion, too, is a justice issue. “We must … stand up and say No to racial injustice. No to refugee-bashing. No to immigrant-demonizing. No to predation on the poor. And No to the violence and injustice of abortion.”

He said that part of our problem is wanting to be defined in terms of our peer group. Some evangelica­ls, he said, are “afraid to speak up on a biblical view of issues of human sexuality because they’re afraid that somehow that means they will be associated with people in polyester somewhere that they don’t want to be like. How cowardly.” That comment drew uneasy silence.

Then he reminded his audience that the ultimate “justice issue” is our standing as sinners before a holy God. It’s an issue that we cannot skirt if we claim to be Christians.

“There is a great valley that separates the just from the unjust, and the basis for that separation is the gospel of Jesus Christ,” Moore said. “We cannot be people who are concerned about justice if we are embarrasse­d about the doctrine of hell. If you are embarrasse­d … because it reminds you of some uneducated backwoods preacher … what you’re embarrasse­d of is not hell … [but] Jesus Himself.”

Sadly, as Chelsen Vicari reports, some of the young people at the Justice Conference, but by no means all, murmured at his uncomforta­ble prophetic challenge to expand their understand­ing of justice.

And before we’re tempted to shake our heads at these young brothers and sisters in the faith, let’s remember that we have a lot to learn from their Wilberforc­e-like passion for justice on behalf of the ignored and invisible. After all, that’s why Chuck Colson founded Prison Fellowship long before he started the Colson Center.

I’m grateful to Dr. Moore for reminding us that while we may have our particular passions, we can never forget that the Gospel speaks to hungry, hurting bodies as well as to hungry, hurting souls.

From BreakPoint, June 16, 2016; reprinted with permission of Prison Fellowship, www.breakpoint.org.

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