www.nae.org Open in urlscan Pro
132.148.74.230  Public Scan

Submitted URL: http://safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Ft.e2ma.net%2Fclick%2F778lmj%2F3g51dutc%2Fn4wiebb&data=05%7C01%7Cashley.na...
Effective URL: https://www.nae.org/biblical-faith-complex-times/
Submission: On July 18 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

POST /biblical-faith-complex-times/

<form method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data" id="gform_1" action="/biblical-faith-complex-times/" data-formid="1">
  <div class="gform-body gform_body">
    <ul id="gform_fields_1" class="gform_fields top_label form_sublabel_below description_below">
      <li id="field_1_1" class="gfield gfield--type-text gf_left_half gfield_contains_required field_sublabel_below gfield--no-description field_description_below hidden_label gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_1_1"><label
          class="gfield_label gform-field-label" for="input_1_1">First Name<span class="gfield_required"><span class="gfield_required gfield_required_text">(Required)</span></span></label>
        <div class="ginput_container ginput_container_text"><input name="input_1" id="input_1_1" type="text" value="" class="large" placeholder="First Name*" aria-required="true" aria-invalid="false"> </div>
      </li>
      <li id="field_1_2" class="gfield gfield--type-text gf_right_half gfield_contains_required field_sublabel_below gfield--no-description field_description_below hidden_label gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_1_2"><label
          class="gfield_label gform-field-label" for="input_1_2">Last Name<span class="gfield_required"><span class="gfield_required gfield_required_text">(Required)</span></span></label>
        <div class="ginput_container ginput_container_text"><input name="input_2" id="input_1_2" type="text" value="" class="large" placeholder="Last Name*" aria-required="true" aria-invalid="false"> </div>
      </li>
      <li id="field_1_3" class="gfield gfield--type-email gfield_contains_required field_sublabel_below gfield--no-description field_description_below hidden_label gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_1_3"><label
          class="gfield_label gform-field-label" for="input_1_3">Email Address<span class="gfield_required"><span class="gfield_required gfield_required_text">(Required)</span></span></label>
        <div class="ginput_container ginput_container_email">
          <input name="input_3" id="input_1_3" type="text" value="" class="large" placeholder="Email Address*" aria-required="true" aria-invalid="false">
        </div>
      </li>
      <li id="field_1_4" class="gfield gfield--type-captcha gfield--width-full field_sublabel_below gfield--no-description field_description_below hidden_label gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_1_4" data-conditional-logic="hidden"
        style="display: none;"><label class="gfield_label gform-field-label" for="input_1_4">CAPTCHA</label>
        <div id="input_1_4" class="ginput_container ginput_recaptcha gform-initialized" data-sitekey="6LdJ1eIcAAAAAKWcJODN4x1sGtZmBQR38yZOJDKe" data-theme="light" data-tabindex="0" data-badge="">
          <div style="width: 304px; height: 78px;">
            <div><iframe title="reCAPTCHA"
                src="https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api2/anchor?ar=1&amp;k=6LdJ1eIcAAAAAKWcJODN4x1sGtZmBQR38yZOJDKe&amp;co=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubmFlLm9yZzo0NDM.&amp;hl=de&amp;v=iZWPJyR27lB0cR4hL_xOX0GC&amp;theme=light&amp;size=normal&amp;cb=fcr4u6mut62u"
                width="304" height="78" role="presentation" name="a-xrb7kl435ao" frameborder="0" scrolling="no"
                sandbox="allow-forms allow-popups allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-modals allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox"></iframe></div><textarea id="g-recaptcha-response" name="g-recaptcha-response"
              class="g-recaptcha-response" style="width: 250px; height: 40px; border: 1px solid rgb(193, 193, 193); margin: 10px 25px; padding: 0px; resize: none; display: none;"></textarea>
          </div><iframe style="display: none;"></iframe>
        </div>
      </li>
      <li id="field_1_5" class="gfield gfield--type-honeypot gform_validation_container field_sublabel_below gfield--has-description field_description_below gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_1_5"><label
          class="gfield_label gform-field-label" for="input_1_5">Phone</label>
        <div class="ginput_container"><input name="input_5" id="input_1_5" type="text" value=""></div>
        <div class="gfield_description" id="gfield_description_1_5">This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.</div>
      </li>
    </ul>
  </div>
  <div class="gform_footer top_label"> <input type="submit" id="gform_submit_button_1" class="gform_button button" value="Sign Up" onclick="if(window[&quot;gf_submitting_1&quot;]){return false;}  window[&quot;gf_submitting_1&quot;]=true;  "
      onkeypress="if( event.keyCode == 13 ){ if(window[&quot;gf_submitting_1&quot;]){return false;} window[&quot;gf_submitting_1&quot;]=true;  jQuery(&quot;#gform_1&quot;).trigger(&quot;submit&quot;,[true]); }">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="is_submit_1" value="1">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_submit" value="1">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_unique_id" value="">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="state_1" value="WyJbXSIsIjExNGQxNzRiNWI1OGQ1ZDliNzU3MGZlMTBiYjJiMzBjIl0=">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_target_page_number_1" id="gform_target_page_number_1" value="0">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_source_page_number_1" id="gform_source_page_number_1" value="1">
    <input type="hidden" name="gform_field_values" value="">
  </div>
</form>

Text Content

 * Magazine
 * Events
 * Contact

 * About Us
   
   * Mission & Vision
   * Board Leadership
   * NAE Staff
   * Statement of Faith
   * What is an Evangelical?
   * History
 * Membership
   
   * Churches
   * Denominations
   * Nonprofits
   * Schools
 * Resources
   
   * View All
   * Topics
   * Articles
   * Magazines
   * Podcasts
   * Publications
   * Surveys
   * Updates
   * Videos
 * Get Involved
   
   * Attend an Event
   * Take Action
   * Sign Code of Ethics
   * Bless Your Pastor
   * Become a Chaplain
 * 
 * Give
   
   * Giving Day 2023
   * Areas of Impact
   * Become an Ambassador
   * Innovation & Impact Fund
   * Planned Giving
   * Give Now

 * About Us
   
   * Mission & Vision
   * Board Leadership
   * NAE Staff
   * Statement of Faith
   * What is an Evangelical?
   * History
 * Membership
   
   * Churches
   * Denominations
   * Nonprofits
   * Schools
 * Resources
   
   * View All
   * Topics
   * Articles
   * Magazines
   * Podcasts
   * Publications
   * Surveys
   * Updates
   * Videos
 * Get Involved
   
   * Attend an Event
   * Take Action
   * Sign Code of Ethics
   * Bless Your Pastor
   * Become a Chaplain
 * 
 * Give
   
   * Giving Day 2023
   * Areas of Impact
   * Become an Ambassador
   * Innovation & Impact Fund
   * Planned Giving
   * Give Now




POPULAR SEARCHES

Sanctity of Life Gun Violence Racial Justice
View All Articles


BIBLICAL FAITH FOR OUR COMMON LIFE IN COMPLEX TIMES

JULY 3, 2023

by Walter Kim

SPRING/SUMMER 2023

EVANGELICALISM

FAITH

THEOLOGY




HE WAS THE TENNIS VERSION OF YODA—SHORT, OLD, WRINKLED, BUT STRONG WITH THE
FORCE. MY FIRST TENNIS COACH IN HIGH SCHOOL WAS AN ELDERLY MAN WITH ARTHRITIS IN
HIS KNEES AND SHOULDERS. WHENEVER HE STOOD ON THE COURT TO RUN ME THROUGH SOME
DRILLS, THE EMPHASIS WAS INDEED ON ME RUNNING. HE KNEW EVERY ANGLE AND SPIN
POSSIBLE; HE KNEW WHERE TO HIT THE BALL, SO THAT I WOULD DASH FRENETICALLY
AROUND THE COURT ONLY TO RETURN THE BALL EXACTLY BACK TO HIM. THIS IS WHEN THE
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PLAYING TENNIS AND BEING A TENNIS PLAYER BECAME APPARENT. THE
FORMER MAY HAVE VERVE, THE LATTER HAD WISDOM.

Evangelicals believe the gospel reaches into every aspect of life, but we have
been running around the court of culture, desperately trying to swat back the
ideas coming at us. This whack-a-mole response to ideological threats (perceived
or real) is frenetic, sometimes furious, and ultimately futile. What is more
concerning for the honor and mission of Jesus are ways in which Christians are
contributing to making ideological whack-a-mole our national sport.

We need a robust application of biblical faith for our common life in complex
times. Instead of the prevailing metaphor of culture war, in which we defend our
position, attack our opponents, and seek to win ground, a generative metaphor of
culture reconstruction would be more attuned to a Savior who “did not come to be
served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45).


ASSESSING THE MOMENT

While societal transitions have always occurred as one generation gives way to
the next, several unique dimensions mark our current moment. Those under 18 are
the first Americans to be born as a majority-minority generation, creating a
cultural mosaic far more complex than ever before. Furthermore, the longer life
span of Boomers, lower birthrates of subsequent generations, and changing views
on family have introduced new dynamics. Differences are also geographical,
between regions and even neighboring zip codes. And then we consider
civilization more broadly and see that the place of religion has fundamentally
changed. 

The complexities also exist inside the church. In her work “Apostles of Reason,”
historian Molly Worthen explores evangelicalism as a religious movement
responding to specific challenges of modernity. She comments that “three
elemental concerns unite [evangelicals]: how to repair the fracture between
spiritual and rational knowledge; how to assure salvation and a true
relationship with God; and how to resolve the tension between the demands of
personal belief and the constraints of a secularized public square.” 

Those shared concerns, however, do not lead to shared conclusions. The
Bebbington Quadrilateral captures unifying and defining beliefs about Scripture
and salvation, but how spiritual and secular knowledge relate or how Christians
should operate in a pluralistic marketplace of ideas are profoundly unresolved
within evangelicalism. What holds together — or pushes apart — young earth
creationists and evolutionary creationists, or evangelicals who participated in
Black Lives Matter marches and those who are trying to ban CRT? It is easier to
get evangelicals to sign a statement of faith than to agree on an approach to
culture. 

Evangelicals now need to navigate our place in society as a marginal group, or
at least, one among many. How are we to engage culture beyond conflict or
compromise? How can we contribute to our life in a pluralistic society and live
out our commitments to the sovereign claims of Christ over every corner of life?
We need a public theology to lead our public discipleship to impact our public
engagement.


PUBLIC THEOLOGY

Missiologist Lesslie Newbigin proposed that “to affirm the gospel as public
truth is to invite acceptance of a new starting point for thought, the truth of
which will be proved only in the course of a life of reflection and action which
proves itself more adequate to the totality of human experience than its
rivals.”

Public theology works out and applies the Scriptures for the Church within
society as a whole and at a particular time. It is narrower than systematic
theology, which arranges biblical revelation into broad philosophical and
logical categories; it is broader than political theology, which often
concentrates on policy concerns, statecraft and the duties of citizenship. This
comprehensive understanding of faith is already central to the mission of the
National Association of Evangelicals, and the increasing diversity of the NAE’s
network is introducing fresh voices whose questions and contributions are vital
to honoring Jesus more fully.


PUBLIC DISCIPLESHIP

Human beings are not simply individual brains on sticks. Therefore, writing
white papers on public theology will not be enough. We are formed within
intertwined communities ­—families, neighborhoods, schools, churches, sports
teams, social media—who share various practices, beliefs, rituals and ways of
life.

Whether by design or by happenstance, every Christian is being discipled for
their public engagements by cultural influences, but many are not discipled
well. Public discipleship requires resources, events, curated experiences,
collaborative endeavors, networked friendships, and long-term programs that are
responsive to the Holy Spirit and formative in the ways people actually live and
learn. 


PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT

Evangelicals must pursue a cultural redemption that reflects the call to “seek
the peace and prosperity of the city to which I have carried you into exile.
Pray to the LORD for it, because if it prospers, you too will prosper” (Jeremiah
29:7).

Sometimes evangelicals attack the very people they are called to evangelize.
While the gospel as public truth must prophetically challenge society, the
critiques should be tied to the command to love our neighbor. This is not a
marketing ploy to improve the sullied image of evangelicals. It reflects a
fundamental conviction about the witness of the gospel and the way of Christ to
persuade rather than bludgeon people. Public engagement entails working for and
working with others. 


DISCIPLINING THE MIND AND MOUTH

Our intellectual and ethical conundrums are profound. Even when decisive action
is required or Christian convictions must be upheld, today’s technological
advances, biomedical possibilities, racial turmoil, debates about climate
change, and shifting views on sexuality are all matters of immense complexity.
These challenges, and a myriad of others, are boiling over in the context of
deep social discord.

In developing principles and practices of knowing, Christians should show the
kind of intellectual honesty and humility that we are asking of others. We do
not want skeptics to reject the faith based upon simplistic assessments about
church history or Christian theology. It bothers us when skeptics dismiss faith
on the basis of a few articles that they read or a few conversations that
they’ve had.

Conversely, when engaging with non-Christian people and sources of knowledge, we
need discernment to receive what is true, refine what is helpful, reject what is
false, and reimagine what could and should be. This is not easy. And humans
naturally devolve toward the easy.

Doing this hard work demands disciplines of the mind to match the disciplines of
the mouth when James exhorts us to “be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow
to become angry, because human anger does not produce the righteousness that God
desires” (James 1:19—20).

Instead of a whack-a-mole response or a posture of culture war, the Scripture
provides a template for how “to repair the fracture between spiritual and
rational knowledge” and “to resolve the tension between the demands of personal
belief and the constraints of a secularized public square.” The discipleship of
such a biblical theology of knowledge is more a way to think rather than a what
to think. 


CATECHESIS OF COMPLEXITY

The simplicity of our gospel presentation enables us to communicate clearly and
quickly about God’s love, human sin and Christ’s redemption. But what enables
the rapid growth of evangelicalism at times constrains its deeper growth. A
faith so simply explained is too often left simplistic.

The luxury of thinking in this nuanced way of what and how we receive, refine,
reject or reimagine requires time and patience in the study of Scripture and of
society. Discipleship in this manner requires resources, events, curated
experiences, collaborative endeavors, networked friendships, and long-term
programs that are responsive to the Holy Spirit and formative in the ways people
live and learn. 

When my son graduated from high school, I was struck by what his teachers had
asked of him. He studied calculus and physics; he wrote complex arguments about
American history; he learned a second language and world geography. Many high
school students are given complexity, while churches are far too content with a
flannelgraph Jesus, seeking simplicity out of concern to make faith accessible.
Our faith needs a catechesis of complexity.  

SHARE








Walter Kim became the president of the National Association of Evangelicals in
January 2020. He previously served as a pastor at Boston’s historic Park Street
Church and at churches in Vancouver, Canada and Charlottesville, Virginia, as
well as a campus chaplain at Yale University. He preaches, writes and engages in
collaborative leadership to connect the Bible to the intellectual and cultural
issues of the day. He regularly teaches in conferences and classrooms; addresses
faith concerns with elected officials and public institutions; and provides
theological and cultural commentary to leading news outlets. He serves on the
boards of Christianity Today and World Relief and consults with a wide range of
organizations. Kim received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in Near Eastern
Languages and Civilizations, his M.Div. from Regent College in Vancouver, and
his B.A. from Northwestern University. 

SHARE









RELATED RESOURCES



PODCAST

AUGUST 14, 2021


AMY SHERMAN | REIMAGINING YOUR VOCATION

Amy Sherman and Walter Kim

PODCAST

JULY 15, 2021


ROBERT PUTNAM & SHAYLYN ROMNEY GARRETT | MOVING OUR SOCIETY FROM “ME” TO “WE”

Robert Putnam and Walter Kim

ARTICLE

JUNE 21, 2021


DISCIPLESHIP IN THE AGE OF CONSPIRACY THEORIES

Ed Stetzer

PODCAST

JULY 14, 2023


LISA FIELDS | FROM DECONSTRUCTION TO RECONSTRUCTION

Lisa Fields and Walter Kim

ARTICLE

JUNE 27, 2023


EVERY CHANNEL OF CULTURE

Gabe Lyons

ARTICLE

JUNE 26, 2023


COMMON LIFE TOGETHER

Kaitlyn Schiess

ARTICLE

JUNE 22, 2023


IN PURSUIT OF PUBLIC DISCIPLESHIP

Michelle Sanchez

ARTICLE

JUNE 20, 2023


BRIDGING THE SACRED-SECULAR DIVIDE

Tom Nelson

ARTICLE

JUNE 13, 2023


FAR AS THE CURSE IS FOUND

Cullen Rodgers-Gates

VIDEO

JUNE 11, 2023


FOR THE HEALTH OF THE NATION

VIDEO

JUNE 6, 2023


THE GOSPEL IN SOCIETY

Ed Stetzer and Nicole Martin and Eugene Cho and Gabriel Salguero and Walter Kim

VIDEO

APRIL 26, 2023


FULLER FORMATION GROUPS

ARTICLE

MARCH 21, 2023


FAITH THAT FLOURISHES

Walter Kim

ARTICLE

MARCH 20, 2023


HE RESTORES MY SOUL

Santiago “Jimmy” Mellado

ARTICLE

MARCH 19, 2023


HOLISTIC RECONCILIATION AND RESTORATION

Dhati Lewis

PODCAST

MARCH 15, 2023


CURT THOMPSON | EXPLORING SOUL CARE

Curt Thompson and Walter Kim

ARTICLE

MARCH 10, 2023


A COLLECTIVE DEEP BREATH

Kevin McBride

ARTICLE

MARCH 2, 2023


THE SECULAR CREED

Rebecca McLaughlin

VIDEO

FEBRUARY 27, 2023


STIRRING AMONG GOD’S PEOPLE

PODCAST

JANUARY 15, 2023


DERWIN GRAY | REFORMING A DEFORMED GOSPEL

Derwin Gray and Walter Kim

VIDEO

NOVEMBER 2, 2022


MADE TO FLOURISH

PODCAST

OCTOBER 15, 2022


GUS REYES | THE HEARTBEAT OF THE HISPANIC COMMUNITY

Gus Reyes and Walter Kim

ARTICLE

FEBRUARY 11, 2022


THE BIBLE AND BLACK IDENTITY

Esau McCaulley

ARTICLE

FEBRUARY 8, 2022


TOGETHERNESS: A THEOLOGY OF THE UNITY OF THE CHURCH

Joanne Solis-Walker

VIDEO

FEBRUARY 7, 2022


SPIRITUAL FORMATION FOR ADVOCATES

ARTICLE

FEBRUARY 2, 2022


WHERE DO WE FIND OUR IDENTITY?

Ed Stetzer and Andrew MacDonald

PODCAST

JANUARY 15, 2022


SANDRA RICHTER | WHAT SCRIPTURE SAYS ABOUT THE ENVIRONMENT

Sandra Richter and Walter Kim

PODCAST

DECEMBER 15, 2021


RICH VILLODAS | PRAYER IN A HURRIED WORLD

Rich Villodas and Walter Kim

ARTICLE

SEPTEMBER 16, 2021


INTERRUPTED EXPECTATIONS

Walter Kim

ARTICLE

SEPTEMBER 16, 2021


CLADDING VS. HEAVY STONE DISCIPLESHIP

Pete Scazzero

PODCAST

AUGUST 14, 2021


AMY SHERMAN | REIMAGINING YOUR VOCATION

Amy Sherman and Walter Kim

PODCAST

JULY 15, 2021


ROBERT PUTNAM & SHAYLYN ROMNEY GARRETT | MOVING OUR SOCIETY FROM “ME” TO “WE”

Robert Putnam and Walter Kim

ARTICLE

JUNE 21, 2021


DISCIPLESHIP IN THE AGE OF CONSPIRACY THEORIES

Ed Stetzer

PODCAST

JULY 14, 2023


LISA FIELDS | FROM DECONSTRUCTION TO RECONSTRUCTION

Lisa Fields and Walter Kim

ARTICLE

JUNE 27, 2023


EVERY CHANNEL OF CULTURE

Gabe Lyons

ARTICLE

JUNE 26, 2023


COMMON LIFE TOGETHER

Kaitlyn Schiess

 * What is an Evangelical?
 * Statement of Faith
 * For the Health of the Nation
 * Code of Ethics for Pastors

 * FAQs
 * Take Action
 * Jobs
 * Magazine
 * Podcast
 * Resource Use Policy
 * Store
 * Events
 * Contact




STAY IN THE KNOW

Subscribe to receive relevant resources for your ministry and monthly updates on
important issues.

 * First Name(Required)
   
 * Last Name(Required)
   
 * Email Address(Required)
   
 * CAPTCHA
   
 * Phone
   
   This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.



P.O. Box 23269.    Washington, DC 20026.    202.479.0815

© 2023 The National Association of Evangelicals. All rights reserved. Privacy
Policy. Website by Rethink Creative.




Notifications