A friend passed along a great quote from an Assembly of God leader, Earl G. Creps, formerly the director of the doctor of ministry program at the Assemblies of God Theological Seminary and now a church planter in Berkeley, California. Here is the quote: “The ability to admit that my ideas have a shelf life cultivates a humility that will make following Christ attractive to those walking through this epochal change.”

That is a gem. I wish more leaders had this wonderful ability. I plead for it, seek it with all my heart and encourage everyone I know to embrace the fact that their ideas have a “shelf life.” In some sense, there is a “use by” date on everything we do in this world. At best we should admit that how we understand what we confess really does change, unless we want to say that what we believed twenty or thirty years ago is precisely what we believe today in the same exact way that we believed it then.

CHS I can remember as a young minister reading a quote from the famous Charles H. Spurgeon about never changing anything he believed from his teen years to his death. I do not believe that for a second. I think he meant that he held to the same basic doctrinal system he believed as young man. (I hope that is what he meant and all he meant though I still have my questions.) But even this is not entirely true. This is the same man who chose to become a Baptist when his father and grandfather were paedobaptist ministers. This is the same man who held liberal political views too, in spite of opposition. I think those who use this Spurgeon quote get him wrong when they use this quote to say that they can be trusted because they never changed anything they previously believed. What nonsense. I will tell you who I would not trust—the person who says that they never changed anything they believed!

Related Posts

Comments

  1. Sam July 7, 2009 at 6:36 am

    what Spurgeon said:
    http://www.spurgeon.org/calvinis.htm
    pretty much in the first paragraph.

  2. Jim July 7, 2009 at 8:30 am

    Great point. Charles Hodge wasn’t purely Turretin redivivus either. Makes me wonder about the fantasies of 19th century churchmen. Perhaps better to say they didn’t veer much from a particular trajectory of change (:?
    I’d enjoy learning more about Spurgeon’s paedo-baptist heritage, and his political “liberalism.”
    Thanks for the Creps quote. It points me to exploring more how pentecostal/charismatic movement relates (or doesn’t) to more recent church movements. Hadn’t really thought about it before.

  3. Steve Scott July 7, 2009 at 12:48 pm

    God never changes. So, having arrived at being God means you will never change.

  4. Anthony July 7, 2009 at 9:28 pm

    I can imagine that a person might justify the idea of not changing his or her mind regarding doctrine and truth on the grounds that God is the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow. However, such a person would have to ask if such a quality properly belongs to God alone. Also, it could be asserted that the incarnation means that God has come to a different understanding of his creation, as one on the inside. So, if God can come to a new understanding, how much more his creatures. Of course, through it all his character (Love, Holiness) remains the same.

  5. Joe Heschmeyer July 8, 2009 at 1:56 pm

    John,
    Few things. First, I hope you’re feeling better (I haven’t kept up with your blog as much recently, so it’s possible I missed an announcement).
    Two, I trust only One Person whose views never changed. Although even He “grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men” (Luke 2:52), whatever that means.
    At the point Spurgeon boasts of never changing his views, he’s boasting of never admitting to being wrong on anything of importance, providing we’re understanding him correctly. If so, it’s unparalled nuttiness.
    Hope you’re well, and I’ll say a quick prayer, just in case!

Comments are closed.

My Latest Book!

Use Promo code UNITY for 40% discount!

Recent Articles

Search

Archive