Gospel Coalition 13 April 2022
Where Are Evangelicalism’s Boundary
Lines?
Review: ‘Gospel People’ by Michael Reeves
APRIL 13, 2022 | KENNETH STEWART
In 1762, a preacher of the First Great Awakening (or Evangelical Revival), Thomas
Haweis (1734–1820), authored Evangelical Principles and Practices. It was, he
said, an attempt to “obviate the manifold misconceptions and misrepresentations
which the author of them has lain under. . . . They will best serve to declare what
those doctrines are which he, as a minister of the gospel, has sought to inculcate.”
Florid prose? Indeed! Yet in fact, Haweis was battling “bad press” against
evangelicalism. At intervals ever since, evangelicals have been doing as Haweis
did (in fewer words, mercifully).
Michael Reeves—theologian, author, and president of Union School of Theology
in the U.K.—is aware of this noble (and necessary) literary tradition. We find him
drawing freely on earlier works of this type by notables such as J. C. Ryle (1816–
1900), author of Knots Untied (1877); Martyn Lloyd-Jones (1899–1981), author of
What is an Evangelical? (1992); and John Stott (1929–2011), author of Evangelical
Truth (1999). Does this mean there is in fact an “industry” for such works and that
Reeves, with his book Gospel People: A Call for Evangelical Integrity, is simply the
latest of this type? In a word, no.
Describing and Delineating Evangelicalism
Books like Gospel People serve two purposes: description and delineation. There’s
a need for evangelical Christianity to be described—it’s distinguishable from other
forms of Christianity not so much by its different doctrinal beliefs as by the weight
or emphasis we place on respective beliefs. The convictions of biblical authority,
Jesus as humanity’s only Savior, and the need for personal regeneration are not
held solely by evangelicals, but we assign heightened importance to these truths.
Onlookers need to grasp this difference.
There’s also a need for delineation, the drawing of boundary lines. From about
the year 1860 (when the higher criticism of the Bible began to claim respectability
Gospel Coalition 13 April 2022
with the release of Essays and Reviews), evangelical Christianity has had an
attrition problem. Self-described evangelical leaders and followers embraced
views of Christ, the Scriptures, human origins, and the world’s religions that are at
variance with historic Christianity, and yet didn’t relinquish the term
“evangelical.” In that period of “downgrade” it was this leaching process that
required the introduction of the modifying adjectives which are still being coined:
liberal evangelical, broad evangelical, conservative evangelical, open evangelical,
post-evangelical.
Self-described evangelical leaders and
followers embraced views that are at variance
with historic Christianity, and yet didn’t
relinquish the term ‘evangelical.’
Definition and delineation are never done once and for all. Ryle was not simply
repeating Haweis; Lloyd-Jones and Stott were not simply repeating Ryle. Changes
in society and changes in the theological world require that definition and
delineation be carried on—and that is what Michael Reeves has attempted in
Gospel People. In North America, we have only to reflect on how the term
“evangelical” has come to be associated in the public mind with strident politics
and obstinate opinions about COVID-19 to grasp how vital definition and
delineation remain for us today. Things at the fringe of evangelical Christianity are
discrediting the whole movement.
More Nuance
The question naturally arises: How effective has Reeves been in his definition and
delineation? We need to recognize that how Reeves defines and delineates
evangelicalism will depend on where he stands on the wide spectrum of
evangelical opinion. I’m left with the impression that Reeves tries to function as a
“centrist” or at least “center-right” evangelical. While trying hard to maintain a
“big tent,” he wants that canvas to have clear edges.
Gospel Coalition 13 April 2022
Reeves shows a determination to ensure space within this evangelical family for
all who identify with its distinctive concerns, which he identifies across four
opening chapters. Under this tent belong convinced believers and congregations
across the range of Protestant denominations: Anglican, Baptist, Presbyterian,
and Methodist. Such a coalition is desirable and possible for centrist Reeves
because we can draw distinctions between primary doctrines (about which there
can be no wavering) and others of secondary importance where we might agree
to differ. But we have to acknowledge that this “big tent” approach has
limitations, and I want to draw attention to two.
First, evangelical Christians are increasingly found outside the more familiar
Anglican, Baptist, Presbyterian, and Methodist traditions in independent (and
often unaffiliated) congregations. They’re often quite content with this
arrangement, so they must be given a reason why they should come under the
tent Reeves has identified, with its defined edges. In North America (and, I expect
also, the U.K.) the burgeoning “new” church movements (e.g., Vineyard, Calvary
Chapel, Harvest, the many independent charismatic churches) do not necessarily
fall into line with longer-established evangelical traditions. Statistically, a lot of
evangelicalism’s growth is happening in these settings.
In the U.S. at least, the bad press about politicized or anti-vax evangelicals is more
often than not focused on this constituency. I think Gospel People could have
taken more seriously the challenge of enfolding and holding accountable this
expanding group. Its weakness is not theological liberalism, but its lack of checks
and balances. Don’t tell them that they are not “Gospel People.” In other words,
Reeves uses the term as a means of uniting people who see it as he sees it; but he
has no monopoly on the use of this terminology (though it is a positive concept as
he employs it).
A good proportion of Christians and
congregations self-identifying as evangelical
will not endorse the crisp definitions he puts
forward as markers of our position.
Gospel Coalition 13 April 2022
Second, for all his determination to occupy a centrist or right-of-center vantage
point (which I also identify with), Reeves in Gospel People doesn’t adequately
come to terms with the fact that a good proportion of Christians and
congregations self-identifying as evangelical will not endorse the crisp definitions
he puts forward as markers of our position.
This has been a problem since at least J. C. Ryle’s day. We might call them “broad”
evangelicals. Think here of the interesting book edited by Mark Labberton, Still
Evangelical (IVP, 2018). These broadly-evangelical Christians do not accept that
conservative evangelicals should function as the gatekeepers of the evangelical
movement. These Christians, like the first group named (above), will not agree to
any suggestion that the descriptor, “Gospel People” is inapplicable to them. They
maintain that more elastic definitions of evangelicalism will serve just as well.
In sum, Reeves has written a useful, timely, and necessary book. But in these two
respects, more nuance is needed.
Kenneth J. Stewart is emeritus professor of theological studies in Covenant College, Lookout Mountain,
Georgia. He wrote Ten Myths About Calvinism: Recovering the Breadth of the Reformed Tradition (IVP,
2011) and In Search of Ancient Roots: The Christian Past and the Evangelical Identity Crisis (IVP, 2017).
His most recent title is the co-edited Reformed and Evangelical Across Four Centuries (Eerdmans, 2022).