Young, Restless & Reformed



Christianity Today latest issue: "Young, Restless, and Reformed: Calvinism is making a comeback--and shaking up the church." Woo-hooo!!

I have been sensing this resurgence for some time and finally, some 'recognition' from CT. Since Malaysia did not have a strong Reformed church presence to begin with (notable exception: Gereja Presbyterian?), it would be more appropriate for me to speak of a "come-in" instead of "comeback".

When I first discovered "Calvinism" during my first year of college (working at Evangel), I almost believed I was a 'lone-ranger'.

Who would have thought it would be 'cool' to be Reformed now? :)

As responses from blogosphere have been pouring in, here is my opinion on the trend in the local scene... (check out one beggar's bread too)

Why is the Reformed faith attractive to the younger generation?

Among the Chinese-speaking churches, the tireless, almost-weekly expository efforts of Stephen Tong ministry has been very influential. He still packs the auditorium at Crown Princess hotel after so many years.

Never heard of him? Think of Stephen Tong as the Billy Graham of the Chinese-speaking churches in Asia for his mass, international evangelistic rallies.

The similarity stops here, however, because ST also preaches like Martyn Lloyd Jones, directs orchestra, designs architecture and engages with culture/philosphy like Carl F Henry.

Some young people in Methodist/Brethren churches took up his call for "reformed movement" and a ministry called "Right Path" started to organise seminars by folks like Dr Sam Ling, Dr Lee Ken Ang and Pastor Wang Fu etc.

Among the English speaking community, like it or not, formally Reformed churches tend to be more 'separatist' and 'cessationist'. There are two families of churches - Bible Presbyterians (Timothy Tow, SH Tow, Jeffrey Khoo) which have their own seminary, distinctly Premillenial and KJV Only. And then you have the Reformed Baptists, which hold to the 1689 London Baptist Confession led by Pastor Poh Boon Sing, who was an Ops Lalang hero.

Being lone ranger, I got acquainted with these dear brethren but decided to go solo again mainly due to the same reasons Scott McKnight listed here. I wished the best for the growth of their ministry and mission but it doesn't take a prophet to make those predictions, really, as history showed that it is very hard to keep people united. Despite the divisions, I believe God is blessing the work as well in raising up close-knit preaching points, some promising youngsters and even trained international students for evangelistic work.

But it is the evangelical Reformed Christians who make a bigger difference. They are "unified around the essentials of evangelicalism but entirely accepting of variant views on non-essentials", to borrow McKnight's phrase. You'd find pockets of them serving quietly in First Baptist, Jalan Imbi Chapel, PJEFC, CDPC and others

And they all go up to 'Jerusalem' once a year at Klang valley Bible Conference :)

They are also more inclined towards the more 'inclusive' model of JI Packer, Francis Schaeffer, Millard Erickson, Wayne Grudem, Jerry Bridges, Sproul, John Piper etc.

Some have a less adversarial attitude (even adopt an eagerly seeking posture) towards charismatic gifts though critical of the excesses of 'health and wealth' gospel.

They can also be found in 'independent' seminaries like Malaysia Bible Seminari and Singapore Bible College.

As I talk to these people, I find three main reasons why Reformed theology as a comprehensive worldview is appealing.

1) Many of them come from a background where personal experience is emphasized to the point of being almost anti-intellectual, anti-theological, anti-propositional. At least, the life of the mind and doctrine and truth have been neglected.

So it is wonderfully refreshing to see a robust and coherent theology when they enter seminary or go overseas. They become disillusioned with shallow preaching and yearn for something 'solid' that engages and encourages to think after God's thoughts

Wow! God's Word is so profound and deep and wide and relevant!

Yet it wud be wrong to accuse them of being 'rationalistic' since Reformed folks like Plantinga, Wolterstoff, Frame, Van Til, Dooyeweerd, Kelly James Clark have always emphasized that reason functions as a 'minister', in service of Scripture, rather than a 'magisterial' use of reason where reason acts as a judge over and above Scripture.

2) A private, dualistic, insular religion separated from the world and culture has NOT been a huge problem for Reformed folks. If anything, they are tempted to be 'too' engaged with such issues (theonomy?)

So an important contribution of the reformed tradition is the cultural mandate, calling the church to reclaim every sphere of life for the Lordship of Christ. Every facet of life is to be lived 'coram Deo' (before the face of God).

Abraham Kuyper wud say that not a square inch on earth that Christ does not claim as His. Rather than just harping on predestination, Calvinism is a comprehensive worldview of life, world and God.

It is here that I find the Malaysian church has been most blessed by a handful of quiet 'Jedi knights' who clear the sewage and keep the streams of evangelism and life flowing...

3) Ironically, some people are very suspicious of 'systematic theology' and putting God in a conceptual 'box'. These folks are big on hermeneutics, exegesis, greek/hebrew languages, exposition etc.

They dun like labels like 'Calvinism' but for all practical purpose, they came to be 'Reformed' through biblical studies!!


I suspect that it has something to do with the voluminous and reliable commentaries of D.A. Carson which graced many a church or seminary library.

But one thing we Calvinists have not been doing extremely well in the past is evangelism. We're just nowhere as effective and zealous as our Arminian brethren :)

What next?

I hope I'd live to see the day when both 'fundamentalist' and 'evangelical' Reformed Christians will plant churches that reach out without selling out. We need to emphasize missionaries and evangelists like William Carey, Spurgeon, David Brainerd, Adoniram Judson, Zwemer, George Whitefield as our role models rather than scholars like Benjamin Warfield, Charles Hodge etc.

hey! Maybe, we can even learn something useful from Marc Driscoll of Mars Hill!

Biblically faithful and culturally relevant.
Gospel demonstrated and declared.
Deeply theological and widely missiological.
Naturally supernatural and supernaturally natural
:D

Also, I hope to see a reformed church that writes contemporary music and lyrics that give Hillsongs and Matt Redman a run for their money :)

Comments

Interesting observations! Seems like the churches in M'sia are vibrant and varied, particularly those that consider themselves Reformed. I agree with you that mainstream young Evangelicals (Reformed) tend to be more open to the charismatic gifts, as well as being more gracious to others who differ in “non-essentials.” I think it works both ways: we should be gracious to others who differ in the non-essentials; nevertheless, we must come to an agreement as to what these are. J

I will be digging deeper into your blog soon!

God bless!

Vincent Chia
Dave said…
Hey Vincent! Thanks for posting the comment, look forward to link up to ur blog too...

In the essentials unity,
In the non-essentials diversity,
In ALL things charity :D
David BC Tan said…
"But one thing we Calvinists have not been doing extremely well in the past is evangelism. We're just nowhere as effective and zealous as our Arminian brethren :)"

Now, isn't that something to chew over. I wonder if it's some subconscious Calvinist position. Would certainly look forward to some thought on our evangelistic deficiency...
Anonymous said…
Hi David,

Been away for a while. Just read your latest entry. I am feeling very encouraged by what I have read. I have been drifting towards the 'Evangelical Reformed' camp for a few years now, and am glad to hear that there is a ground swell in Malaysia following the same path.
Dave said…
David,

Definitely something worth ruminating about... Thanks for your comment.

If I may indulge in a bit of navel gazing self-criticism, many reformed people consciously or unconciously struggle with these questions:

If God is sovereign, why evangelise?

If God is sovereign, why do anything??

The sovereignty of God often has been applied in a way that gives the pastoral effect of 'let go, let God' or 'just be faithful, trust God to do the rest'. It's hard to find hyper-Calvinists around nowadays, but you still hear people getting very nervous about making a special effort to invite people to follow Jesus.

Even 'altar calls' are considered 'Arminian'! Well, I do agree with their concern about giving hyped-up atmosphere where people walk down the aisle in the 'heat of the moment' and never made a real commitment or 'count the cost'... or the folly of equating signed decision cards as 'conversions'.

So we get nervous abt eliciting responses, and the result is we are good at sowing and not-so-good in reaping. If others do the reaping, they probably end up in other churches la... :) Kingdom is wat matters, halleluia!

But surely, we ought to apply the gospel the way the apostles did. And they always give an open, free offer of the gospel invitation without speculating on who's elect and who's not.

imho, a crisp, simple invitation for people to respond at the end of a gospel sermon is appropriate.

(Stephen tong does it all the time but like george whitfield and unlike john wesley, he doesn't start his own 'confessional' churches but allow the 'fruits' to grow in different local churches - that's another 'debate' whether history will be kinder to a Wesley or a Whitefield)

So perhaps I'd like to suggest that we be more sensitive to the pastoral impact of our doctrine and emphasize a different set of heroes - the missionary/evangelist not just the scholars.

Why can't we emulate reformed heroes like Jim Elliot, the famous martyr in ecuador, William Carey the father of modern mission, Spurgeon the prince of preachers, Zwemer 'apostle' to the muslims etc? :)

I notice tat the sovereignty of God can be applied in as a great incentive for action.

Looking at the preaching schedule of Calvin or the CV of Kuyper or the horseback circuit of Whitefield, one cant help but be impressed by how industrious their theology ought to make them.

If God is for us, who can be against us? We cannot lose... ultimately. So let's storm the gates of hell! We can take risk because our Rock is not risky :D

A lot more can be said - JI Packer hit on some nails in a booklet "Evangelism & The Sovereignty of God". Nice book to read.
Dave said…
Paul,

Good to hear from you again, bro!

Yes, it's a strange and sometimes, lonely path (not destination)..

But I'm encouraged by the young seminarians in their 20s i 'met' in US. They are restless about missions and church planting amongst unreached people groups.

Hope to network with them and we walk together :)
Alex Tang said…
Dave,

Don't you know that God hid seven thousands of us calvinists in caves in Malaysia :)

It is interesting to note that you felt so alone and isolated. Well, no more as we are coming out of the woodwork.

You know us Malaysians. Talk about election and predestination and we say 'mana boleh'. In this country "Malaysia boleh'. The only problem is that we do not know we 'boleh apa'.

All is not lost as I see the tulip soon becoming our national flower.

shalom
Leon Jackson said…
National flower? Wow, I don’t know if I could go that far.

I do think however that in our generation, the hope for the local Christian scene (in formulating robust, updated and yet still classical doctrine, philosophy, and socio-economic + cultural engagement in thought and deed) is not going to be the local church but inter-church / para-church ministries, organizations and alliances that are made up of people both embedded in or alienated from the local churches.

Just like the local reformed movement isn’t really a church movement now (I am not counting our local separatist) but an alliance, or a (sometimes technologically enabled) networked consciousness that spans through all sorts of backgrounds. This is well illustrated in the Together for the gospel ministry blog thingy with those 4 guys who are in so many ways so different and yet together-for-the-gospel.
Anonymous said…
Amen Amen Amen Amen Amen Amen Amen!

Tho our foes seemed strong
God didst hid his saints
His will mighty and strong
Render all revolt vain!
Dave said…
Alex, Leon & Anon,

It IS amazing when we see these "hidden" people come out of their Adullam Caves (or Batu Caves??)

Some of them are so young and already reading/writing stuffs I didn't think possible when I was their age. So I'm quite 'bullish' about the future, if we cud direct their restless energy in the right issues

Semper reformanda...
Anonymous said…
Hedonese, thanks for the comment on my site, and alerting me to God's presence in Malaysia! Just wanted to let you know I posted on your article so my readers will get to read it too.
Mejlina Tjoa said…
Nice article link and nice write-up on the recent rise in interest towards reformed theology. Thanks for your faithful updates, Dave. I am sure many people have benefited from your posting. =)
Dave said…
thanks for the input, frens

The CT article is finally available on the net, I'm pleasantly surprised to see Piper featured quite prominently...

This book is MUST READ!
http://www.desiringgod.org/dg/id1.htm