This ad will not display on your printed page.

Pastors

  • Send to printerSend to printer
  • |
  • Close this pageClose window
October 28, 2020
The following article is located at: https://www.christianitytoday.com/pastors/1986/spring/86l2072.html
CT Pastors, April 1986
QUESTIONING THE OBVIOUS
Shaking up cherished assumptions isn't just for radicals.
Joel C. Hunter|postedApril 1, 1986

Many of us whose intellectually formative years fell during the 1960s will be scarred for life. Remember those days? We accepted very little at face value. We bucked tradition. We questioned authority. We tweaked the Establishment.

Now, closing in on age forty, I find myself a member of the established clergy. I am conservative in many ways. Yet that old habit of questioning the obvious has never left me. If Hegel was right that history is a matter of normalcy (thesis) being met with its opposite (antithesis) and blending into the answer (synthesis), then when we turn the normal upside down, maybe something better will shake out. Even if nothing better comes, the very shaking will have been fun.

Try it with me on a few "obvious truths." Then you can do it on your own with any other issues.

"Growth Requires Specific Goals"

You have heard it said: Churches that aim at nothing usually hit it.

True enough. Yet holding forth an overall direction for your church's progress is not the same as setting ...

Subscriber access only You have reached the end of this Article Preview

To continue reading, subscribe to Christianity Today magazine. Subscribers have full digital access to CT Pastors articles.

Log InSubscribe

Already a CT subscriber? Log in for full digital access.

Christianity Today

© 2020 Christianity Today