image Tim Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Manhattan, in his book The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism addressed the common complaint that churches are too exclusive, responds by saying that community can’t be completely inclusive.  If they were they would no longer be a community:

Any community that did not hold its members accountable for specific beliefs and practices would have no corporate identity and would not really be a community at all.  We cannot consider a group exclusive simply because it has standards for its members.  Is there then no way to judge whether a community is open and caring rather than narrow and oppressive?  Yes, there is.  Here is a far better set of tests: Which community has beliefs that lead its members to treat persons in other communities with love and respect – to serve them and meet their needs?  Which community’s beliefs lead it to demonize and attack those who violate their boundaries rather than treating them with kindness, humility, and winsomeness?  We should criticize Christians when they are condemning and ungracious to unbelievers.  But we should not criticize churches when they maintain standards for membership in accord with their beliefs.  Every community must do the same, (p. 40).

You May Also Like

Men and Women: Whose Weaker? Whose Smarter?

From 50 Crucial Questions About Manhood and Womanhood: An Overview of Central…

Christians May Lose Their Legal Defense

Shawn Mathis: Not content with just going after bakers and florists, Christian lawyers is the next target of LGBT activists in the Second Sexual Revolution.

Three Christmas Movies Every Family Should Own

With Christmas upon us here are three Christmas movies that every family should have as part of their DVD/Blueray collection.

Avatar, Mother Earth and Jesus

And while Avatar is just a movie, it is a movie with one overarching theme, “The earth does not belong to us. We belong to the earth.” It is not a subtle theme nor does it pretend to be. Amid the stunning visuals and the familiar plotline is the idea that the creatures which inhabit this mystical land called Pandora exist in a symbiotic relationship to their earth.