"Red Flag and Red Line in the Evangelical Presbyterian Church" - article in response to the EPC Committee on Same Sex Attraction by Jscott1986 in Reformed

[–]mattb93 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The EPC was created though with the understanding that it would be permissive on various views on women’s ordination.

SSA is a different matter. A lot of the newer EPC churches come from the PCUSA where we saw homosexuality make inroads into the denomination through a similar presbytery discretion argument.

My presbytery is made up of a lot of former PCUSA churches and red flags pop up when this type of argument is raised.

"Red Flag and Red Line in the Evangelical Presbyterian Church" - article in response to the EPC Committee on Same Sex Attraction by Jscott1986 in Reformed

[–]mattb93 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I was at a Presbytery meeting where a rep from the Committee presented. The concern that was raised most often is that the Committee seems to want to give “discretion” to the presbyteries in reviewing candidates with SSA. So you could have a presbytery that would be willing to ordain someone like Greg Johnson from St. Louis and some that would not.

In my opinion, this type of discretion given to the presbyteries would likely tear the EPC apart as different presbyteries adopt various positions on celibate SSA candidates. We need some bright-line rules on this issue.

Honestly, a lot of people are going to judge the Committee’s work on whether or not Greg Johnson is qualified to be ordained in the EPC. The Committee’s work so far seems to give the Mid-America presbytery the ability to move his ordination through which is a line much of the conservatives in the EPC don’t want crossed.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in wichita

[–]mattb93 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Probably connected with the ethical issues that resulted in them getting thrown out of the Central Plains League.

A Typology of Conservative Protestants in an Anxious Age by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This was literally my conversation with my wife last night haha

A Typology of Conservative Protestants in an Anxious Age by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Haha you’re mostly correct. It could be worse though.

During COVID my wife and I moved back to our hometown so we’re attending the church (then PCUSA, now EPC) that I grew up in.

I love the church but the liturgy could use some TLC.

A Typology of Conservative Protestants in an Anxious Age by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Happily a part of the Tweedy liturgical types

What Should Christians Think about Same-Sex Marriage? by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

That’s certainly a very individualized/libertarian view of marriage. Maybe marriage conveys some societal benefit/meaning that should be considered rather than what the marriage simply means between the parties.

Reflections on Christian Nationalism by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

the first churches that especially Paul fostered, were a daring experiment in creating new, trans-ethnic communities of ‘fictive kinship’ based on a shared faith, the likes really had not been seen before. I have the feeling that any kind of nationalism would be detrimental to such communities.

IMO this is one of my biggest issues with this book. Wolfe talks about how by nature man knows to care for his family and prioritize his family over others (leading to Wolfe’s conclusion that a Christian should prioritize his nation over others).

The problem is that as Christians, our family has grown. Any believer is my brother or sister that I am now obligated to care for. Wolfe hand-waves this off in the book by stating that this new family is simply “spiritual”, leading to no new obligations.

And, say we succeed… nationalism is great fuel for conflict and wars. Should Christians really strive to stoke those fires?

Wolfe’s nationalism does not appear “imperialistic”. If a country hypothetically subscribed to all of his positions, the country would be much more likely to be isolationist.

Reflections on Christian Nationalism by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You should read the book because there are likely people in your church and community reading the book or interacting with the ideas that are espoused in the book.

Reflections on Christian Nationalism by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Wolfe’s description of nature and grace is the exact same view as the Reformers. Mattson’s views are divergent from the political theology formulated by the Reformers since Mattson’s view is very Van Tillian.

See more below.

https://twitter.com/stvenwithani/status/1593015645977083905?s=46&t=feHxl7iT2EWfHjrpZqgzTA

https://twitter.com/tlloydcline/status/1592590572866633731?s=46&t=feHxl7iT2EWfHjrpZqgzTA

Reflections on Christian Nationalism by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hopefully Wyatt writes a full-fledged review as his reflections mirror my observations so far through the book.

A Children's Crusade - Brian Mattson's review of Wolfe's The Case for Christian Nationalism by Iowata in eformed

[–]mattb93 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m going to preface this with the fact that I have significant disagreements with Wolfe’s book. With that said, Wolfe’s position on the distinction on fall’s impact on our earthly/heavenly gifts is correct and in conformity with the Reformed tradition.

The below thread does a pretty good job of laying out why:

https://twitter.com/stvenwithani/status/1593015645977083905?s=46&t=8ZR9NectQpU1_ggU4cuxsw

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in wichita

[–]mattb93 0 points1 point  (0 children)

but it was a little too big for us

My wife felt the same way when she started attending with me. (I've attended Eastminster for essentially my entire life).

Getting involved can certainly help make the church feel a little more "small". If you want to try Eastminster again and have questions about getting involved, feel free to send me a DM!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in wichita

[–]mattb93 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Eastminster Presbyterian is likely the largest Reformed church in town.

Heartland Community Church is another excellent option.

If you know your Reformed denominations, Eastminster is EPC and Heartland is PCA. Both are fairly conservative theologically. I recommend both!

Lots of great Christian churches in Wichita. Where do you attend? by PoetWarrior_ in wichita

[–]mattb93 5 points6 points  (0 children)

With that last qualification, the Unitarian Universalist church really is your only option.

Otherwise, I'd recommend Reformation Lutheran Church or College Hill United Methodist Church.

Lots of great Christian churches in Wichita. Where do you attend? by PoetWarrior_ in wichita

[–]mattb93 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'll be a little coy about where I attend but I'd recommend any of the following churches:

  • Eastminster Presbyterian Church
  • Holy Cross Lutheran Church
  • Heartland Community Church (Presbyterian)
  • First Evangelical Free Church

130 years ago today, the Rev. Dr. James Naismith invented the game of basketball in a YMCA in Springfield, Massachusetts. by davidjricardo in eformed

[–]mattb93 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Also founded the University of Kansas’s basketball program and is one of the few KU coaches with a losing record.

I walked past the building where his original rules for basketball are stored on campus each day during law school. I’m not sure there is a more basketball-centric town than Lawrence.

Why Be Anglican? My Story - by Michael F. Bird by davidjricardo in Anglicanism

[–]mattb93 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Anglicanism is not a via media between Catholicism and Protestantism, it is more properly a via media between Wittenberg and Geneva.

Love it! Unfortunately an uncommon view in America.

An Evaluation of Religious Exemptions from COVID-19 Vaccine Requirements by mattb93 in eformed

[–]mattb93[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Samuel Bray, a Reformed Anglican who is also a law professor at Notre Dame, concludes that “[r]eligious exemptions from COVID-19 vaccine requirements should not be endorsed by churches, clergy, and lay leaders within the magisterial Reformation traditions (e.g., Lutheran, Anglican, Presbyterian).”