• Home
    • Search
    • Donations
    • Recent Messages
    • Monthly Specials
  • Radio
    • Broadcast Calendar
    • Station Locater
    • Daily Archive
    • Weeked Archive
    • Free Radio Offers
    • Podcast
  • Meet
    • Grace to You
    • John MacArthur
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright Policy
  • International Resources
    • Canada
    • Europe
    • India
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Study Guides
    • Sermons
    • Sermon Series
    • Bible Book Studies
    • Questions
    • Positions
    • Daily Devotion
    • Videos
    • TV Station Locater
    • Translated Resources
  • Shop
    • Audio Lessons
    • Audio Series
    • Audio Bible Study
    • Bible Q&A
    • Bible Study Books
    • Bibles
    • Booklets
    • Books
    • Commentaries
    • DVDs
    • Software
    • Spanish Audio Lessons
    • Spanish Books
    • Translated Products
  •  
  • Tuesday, February 09, 2010
  • sitemap close panel
  • blog
  • |
  • enews
  • |
  • mail
  • |
  • contact
  • |
  • donate
  •  
Articles Books Positions Sermons
Bible Book Studies Daily Devotion Questions Study Guides
Bible Introductions Portraits of Grace Sermon Series
 
Decrease Font SizeIncrease Font Size
PDF  |  
Email  |  
Print  |  
Share   |  
Download: High Quality  |  Low Quality

The Manhattan Declaration


Code: A390



John MacArthur

Here are the main reasons I am not signing the Manhattan Declaration, even though a few men whom I love and respect have already affixed their names to it:

• Although I obviously agree with the document’s opposition to same-sex marriage, abortion, and other key moral problems threatening our culture, the document falls far short of identifying the one true and ultimate remedy for all of humanity’s moral ills: the gospel. The gospel is barely mentioned in the Declaration. At one point the statement rightly acknowledges, “It is our duty to proclaim the Gospel of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in its fullness, both in season and out of season”—and then adds an encouraging wish: “May God help us not to fail in that duty.” Yet the gospel itself is nowhere presented (much less explained) in the document or any of the accompanying literature. Indeed, that would be a practical impossibility because of the contradictory views held by the broad range of signatories regarding what the gospel teaches and what it means to be a Christian.

• This is precisely where the document fails most egregiously. It assumes from the start that all signatories are fellow Christians whose only differences have to do with the fact that they represent distinct “communities.” Points of disagreement are tacitly acknowledged but are described as “historic lines of ecclesial differences” rather than fundamental conflicts of doctrine and conviction with regard to the gospel and the question of which teachings are essential to authentic Christianity.

• Instead of acknowledging the true depth of our differences, the implicit assumption (from the start of the document until its final paragraph) is that Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, Protestant Evangelicals and others all share a common faith in and a common commitment to the gospel’s essential claims. The document repeatedly employs expressions like “we [and] our fellow believers”; “As Christians, we . . .”; and “we claim the heritage of . . . Christians.” That seriously muddles the lines of demarcation between authentic biblical Christianity and various apostate traditions.

• The Declaration therefore constitutes a formal avowal of brotherhood between Evangelical signatories and purveyors of different gospels. That is the stated intention of some of the key signatories, and it’s hard to see how secular readers could possibly view it in any other light. Thus for the sake of issuing a manifesto decrying certain moral and political issues, the Declaration obscures both the importance of the gospel and the very substance of the gospel message.

• This is neither a novel approach nor a strategic stand for evangelicals to take. It ought to be clear to all that the agenda behind the recent flurry of proclamations and moral pronouncements we’ve seen promoting ecumenical co-belligerence is the viewpoint Charles Colson has been championing for more than two decades. (It is not without significance that his name is nearly always at the head of the list of drafters when these statements are issued.) He explained his agenda in his 1994 book The Body, in which he argued that the only truly essential doctrines of authentic Christian truth are those spelled out in the Apostles’ and Nicene creeds. I responded to that argument at length in Reckless Faith. I stand by what I wrote then.

In short, support for The Manhattan Declaration would not only contradict the stance I have taken since long before the original “Evangelicals and Catholics Together” document was issued; it would also tacitly relegate the very essence of gospel truth to the level of a secondary issue. That is the wrong way—perhaps the very worst way—for evangelicals to address the moral and political crises of our time. Anything that silences, sidelines, or relegates the gospel to secondary status is antithetical to the principles we affirm when we call ourselves evangelicals.


 

related products

link-prev
  • "Irreconcilable Differences: Catholics, Evangelicals, and the New Quest for Unity"

    Irreconcilable Differences: Catholics, Evangelicals, and the New Quest for Unity
    (Audio Series)

link-next
 

related resources

link-prev
  • "Evangelicals and Catholics Together"

    Evangelicals and Catholics Together
    (Articles)

  • "Irreconcilable Differences: Catholics, Evangelicals, and the New Quest for Unity, Parts 1-3"

    Irreconcilable Differences: Catholics, Evangelicals, and the New Quest for Unity, Parts 1-3
    (Sermons)

  • "Irreconcilable Differences: Catholics, Evangelicals, and the New Quest for Unity, Parts 4-6"

    Irreconcilable Differences: Catholics, Evangelicals, and the New Quest for Unity, Parts 4-6
    (Sermons)

  • "How can a true work of the Holy Spirit be distinguished from that which is false?"

    How can a true work of the Holy Spirit be distinguished from that which is false?
    (Questions)

link-next
 

Email:    Password:

     

Assign Topics

As you may have noticed, we have a HUGE number of transcripts that we’d like to organize under topic headings (which will significantly improve your search experience). So, if you’re interested in lending a hand, we could really use your help! Here’s how it works:

Make sure you’re logged in to assign a topic to a sermon. Once you assign a topic, others will have an opportunity to vote on your topic recommendation. That’ll help us as we vet the topic headings that are ultimately assigned. Many thanks (ahead of time) for your help!

Report Typos in this Resource

Typo:

Context (sentence or paragraph):

    
Why are there errors in the sermon transcript archive? Don’t you guys check these?
Click here.
Report Typo
GraceToYou
login
  • welcome
  • radio
  • meet
  • resources
  • shop
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • Feedback
  • RSS
  • Mailing List
  • Blog
Facebook Twitter

© 1969-2010. Grace to You. All rights reserved.

Email:     Password: