08.08.2015 Views

Christian Unity (the book) - The Maranatha Community

Christian Unity (the book) - The Maranatha Community

Christian Unity (the book) - The Maranatha Community

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

and so I have some golden opportunities to inculcate a more balancedview.’ 162<strong>The</strong> Charismatic Movement held a ground-breaking ga<strong>the</strong>ring of <strong>Christian</strong>s ofvarious denominations in Kansas City in 1977, all from within <strong>the</strong> movement,but including representatives of Episcopal, Methodist, Lu<strong>the</strong>ran, Presbyterian,Baptist, Roman Catholic and o<strong>the</strong>r denominations.Between <strong>the</strong> 1950s and 1980s, Billy Graham, an American Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Baptistminister, preached to enormous crowds through his worldwide ‘Crusades’. In<strong>the</strong> UK he not only brought toge<strong>the</strong>r Evangelical <strong>Christian</strong>s from manydenominations, but earned <strong>the</strong> respect of church leaders who were notEvangelical. It can even be demonstrated that his influence throughout thoseyears was such that <strong>the</strong> number of ordinands in Evangelical Colleges increased.When Graham began his Evangelical ministry, for some years he was anti-Catholic, and Catholics on <strong>the</strong> whole were not at all disposed to support him.Yet in 1981 he had an interview with Pope John Paul II, and by that time hewas glad to include Roman Catholics on his Crusades and accept <strong>the</strong> support ofCatholic Churches.Some Protestants regard his change of heart as a betrayal of <strong>the</strong> Gospel. Howcould a thorough Evangelical like Graham conscientiously have fellowship withCatholics who held unbiblical doctrines? In <strong>the</strong> next chapter we shall look atthis issue.For Evangelicals, Billy Graham and his Evangelistic Association were unitinginfluences in promoting worldwide mission. In 1974 an International Congresson World Evangelisation was held in Lausanne, Switzerland. <strong>The</strong>re were 2,500delegates from about 150 nations meeting under Graham as honoraryChairman ‘to frame a Biblical declaration on evangelism – (and) state what <strong>the</strong>relationship is between evangelism and social responsibility.’ 163Out of this Congress came <strong>the</strong> Lausanne Covenant, drawn up under <strong>the</strong>leadership of <strong>the</strong> Anglican John Stott and signed by most delegates. <strong>The</strong>Covenant was to work toward ‘<strong>the</strong> whole church (taking) <strong>the</strong> whole gospel to<strong>the</strong> whole world.’ <strong>The</strong> Covenant represented a very wide spectrum of162Massey, Richard, Ano<strong>the</strong>r Springtime, Highland Books, 1992, pp 173ff.163Dictionary of <strong>the</strong> Ecumenical Movement, ed Lossky, Nicholas et al, WCC Publishing,Geneva/William B Eerdmans Publishing Co, 1991, p 594.Page 174

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!