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August 7, 2008
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Home > 2000 > July (Web-only)Christianity Today, July (Web-only), 2000  |   |  
Drilling the Evangelists on the Evangel
Doctrinal training takes center stage at Amsterdam 2000, while staffers work against theological controversy.



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"Some of us could wish that theology had received a little larger role in the program," said a Christianity Today editorial after the Amsterdam 86 conference of itinerant evangelists. That concern is being answered resoundingly at Amsterdam 2000. Theology and doctrinal training has dominated the first two days of the conference of preaching evangelists (broadened from the itinerant-emphasis conferences in 1983 and 1986 to include church-based evangelists and other missionaries). Though by midday Monday conferees were beginning to hear more practical advice on how to deliver an evangelistic sermon and invitation, almost all of the plenary sessions so far have aimed at making sure the attendees are preaching a biblical theology.Amsterdam 2000 organizers have also formed a theology task group of about 200 attendees. J.I. Packer, Professor of Theology at Regent College and a Christianity Today senior editor, is heading the task group."We must transcend the modern idea of theology as a cluster of separate disciplines to be studied by certain brainy people for educational purposes rather than as a resource for ministry," he told the group.Two other task groups, one for church leaders and another for evangelism strategists, are charged with similar duties for integrating evangelism into areas of congregational life. Representatives of the task groups are working on a statement to issue at the end of the conference. Beeson Divinity School dean Timothy George, a Christianity Today senior editor, is chairing the drafting committee. The statement is not expected to be as significant as other defining evangelical documents (like the Lausanne Covenant at the International Conference on World Evangelism in 1974). At a press conference, Amsterdam 2000 spokesmen seemed not to know one was in process. Drafting committee members were asked not to prepare for the statement beforehand, as Amsterdam 2000 planners want it to uniquely reflect the conference.Meanwhile, theology has dominated the schedule thus far. After introductory messages by Korean Baptist pastor Billy Kim Saturday night and General Secretary of the German National YMCA Ulrich Parzany on the need for evangelism the following morning, Packer took the stage to outline the gospel message."We need to tell the whole truth," said Packer. "Some things we don't take as seriously as we should. … There is a danger of reducing the gospel to the minimum."Packer urged the evangelists to present a comprehensive view of God, humankind, God's kingdom, salvation, fellowship, and heaven. He admitted, however, that "you can't say everything in one sermon." Indeed, Packer, among others, found himself pressed to fit even his message into his allotted 45 minutes. Afterward, most attendees dispersed into smaller seminars on preparing an evangelistic message. Most of these seminars emphasized the priority of having a correct theology and a comprehensive evangelistic message.If the conferences' earlier messages were remedial, assuming that some evangelists could use brushing up of basic evangelical theology, Ravi Zacharias's speech assumed that the evangelists were highly educated. He repeatedly quoted German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, attacked postmodernism, lamented the visual culture's overtaking of the literary culture, and generally gave a speech similar to those he gives on college campuses. John Stott, rector emeritus of London's All Souls Church, continued the theological emphasis Monday morning, urging the evangelists to make study of the Bible their first priority."Ignorance of Scripture," he said, quoting early church father Jerome, "is ignorance of Christ." He later lamented to reporters that "there is growth without depth" in many churches. "Superficiality is everywhere," he said. "our sights should be directed beyond the evangelistic moment into maturity in Christ."But Stott went on to implore the attendees to allow for unity in Christ. "We evangelicals tend to be overly dogmatic," he said. "We need more evangelical confidence in the gospel, and more evangelical humility about what God has not fully revealed." Asked in a press conference what kinds of theological issues evangelicals should be more agnostic about, he noted baptism, church governance, some spiritual gifts, and whether damned souls will be punished consciously for all eternity or eventually annihiliated.Anne Graham Lotz, who followed Stott, began moving the conference away from theological education to spiritual response. "God's word and God's truth is in our heads," she said. "We are called to have God's word in our hearts." And, seeming to deconstruct Zacharias's presentation the night before, Lotz asked, "What's the basic problem of our world? Postmodernism? The dominance of the youth culture? … It's none of these things. The basic problem is sin."





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