[May 2002 journal entry]
For the past several weeks, I have substituted for a Presbyterian Church (USA) pastor/friend in facilitating a discussion group he has been leading on ‘Being Presbyterian (USA) in the Bible-Belt’. The participants represent a wide variety of denominational experiences. I have introduced the following interpretations for discussion:
The TULIP acronym. The participants’ first guesses re this acronym included such ideas as Love, Tolerance, Unity, . . . I had to identify and explain each letter/concept – i.e., Total depravity, Unconditional election, Limited atonement, Irresistible grace, Perseverance of the saints. I traced the history of this theological ‘line in the sand’ to the Synod of Dort (1618-19) and the Westminster Assembly (1643-48) (from which came the Westminster Confession). I then related the adoption of TULIP theology to the history/interests of the Presbyterian tradition, explaining that the underlying assumptions of TULIP theology include (1) a pre-modern/pre-scientific worldview and (2) absolute/comprehensive divine sovereignty. We discussed such consequences of TULIP theology as (1) a desperately low view of human nature, (2) a deep suspicion of human inquiry/questioning, (3) an indifference to and devaluing of the present, (4) a preoccupation with an otherworldly existence, (5) . . . . Using the ‘seeds’ metaphor and filling in a timeline of seminal thinkers/events beginning in the 1100s, I pointed the participants to the revolutionary ideas that took root in education, politics, economics, history, art, literature, science, philosophy, theology. I proposed that the Synod of Dort and the Westminster Assembly represented attempts by the dominant voices at those meetings to (from their perspective) weed the garden before losing the garden to the weeds. I pointed out that other Protestant traditions as well as the Roman Catholic tradition acted in similarly obstructionist ways. As we continued to fill out the timeline to the present, the participants saw clearly that they live (and, to varying degrees, think) in tension/conflict with the stances taken at Synod of Dort and the Westminster Assembly. I then turned the participants’ attention to a core challenge to the TULIP theological paradigm that surfaced in the aftermath of the Synod of Dort and the Westminster Assembly – i.e., the concept/problem of ‘innocent’ suffering (noting that the realities of human suffering were not new but the ‘innocent’ interpretation of such suffering was new).