
Peter Orr
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Mark Driscoll is wrong. I know this is a strong statement; I
would not write it unless I meant it, and could back it up.
Two weeks ago, I never would have said this. Two weeks ago, I
felt some reservations about Mars Hill Church, but still defended
it among my more critical peers. Today, the nicest thing I can say
about Driscoll is, well, he seems passionate - horrifyingly misled,
but passionate - about sharing the Christian gospel. I think.
My support for Driscoll and his church fell away on Sunday, Nov.
6, when Driscoll used the pulpit to spread gross falsehoods to
about 4,500 people who attended his sermon that day. Driscoll made
outright statements about the Roman Catholic Church (RCC) that were
factually false. Furthermore, he made these statements in a very
disrespectful and demeaning manner.
To illustrate this, I’ll outline the false statements
Driscoll made, as well as the actual Catholic theology. All quotes
of Driscoll are taken from the online posting of his sermon, "Jesus
Died to Forgive Us" on the Mars Hill website
(marshillchurch.org).
"The way you and I get justified is through Jesus Christ. How
exactly does this transpire? This is the great debate between
Catholics and Protestants." Driscoll is saying that Protestants are
saved by Jesus Christ, but Catholics disagree. This is false.
According to the "Catechism of the Catholic Church" (CCC),
justification is "the gracious action of God which frees us from
sin and communicates ‘the righteousness of God through faith
in Jesus Christ’ (Romans 3:22)." This is a point on which the
Protestant and Catholic Churches agree. From the beginning,
Driscoll’s entire sermon was built on the platform of a
falsehood.
Driscoll then went on to outline how he thought the Catholic
Church taught salvation, saying, "First, you’re saved by
baptism." Ummm, wrong! As stated above, the RCC believes people are
saved by grace.
To be saved as a Catholic, you do not have to be baptized. The
CCC says "Baptism is the first and chief sacrament of forgiveness
of sins because it unites us with Christ, who died for our sins and
rose for our justification." It is a sacrament, not a requirement,
and it further emphasizes the justifying work of Christ.
Further misconstrued was the sacrament of penance and
reconciliation. Yikes! Driscoll had fun sharing his own take on
this Catholic doctrine. According to him, "Throughout your life
you’ll commit sins, so what you do, you’ll go to the
priest, because the mediator between you and God is the priest, not
Jesus... Not that God would forgive me, the priest would forgive
me."
These sacraments, as defined by the CCC, are "the sacramental
celebration in which, through God’s mercy and forgiveness,
the sinner is reconciled with God and also with the Church,
Christ’s Body, which is wounded by sin."
Sinners are not forgiven by the priest but through God’s
mercy and forgiveness. That is a big difference.
In the CCC’s definition of "mediator" it says, "Jesus
Christ is the ‘one mediator between God and the human
race’ (1 Timothy 2:5). Through his sacrificial offering he
has become high priest and unique mediator who has gained for us
access to God’s saving grace for humanity." This leaves no
room in the Catholic faith for any other mediators. It is said,
plainly and obviously, that Jesus is the only mediator between God
and man. How then, could Driscoll think that the priest was the
mediator?
Moving on to some of the false - and horribly disrespectful -
comments, Driscoll attempted to explain his conception of Catholic
purgatory. "If you commit a pretty bad sin you go to purgatory...
[purgatory is] kind of like going to the airport and missing your
flight... you can’t go anywhere, you can’t get out,
there’s nothing to do and it’s just sort of this
terrible place that you wait till you get picked up to go somewhere
you really want to be."
Oh, make sure to insert riotous laughter of the congregation
right after "missing your flight."
Again, the CCC defines purgatory as: "a state of final
purification after death and before entrance into heaven for those
who died in God’s friendship, but were only imperfectly
purified; a final cleansing of human imperfection before one is
able to enter the joy of heaven." Purgatory is a place with a very
important purpose. It is the last state of sanctification, which
requires suffering (Rom. 5:3-5) of a Christian before they enter
the presence of Christ.
Regarding indulgences, Driscoll offered a theoretical
conversation between a surviving relative and a priest. It went
like this:
Priest: "Aunt Sally is in hell."
Relative: "Well, how much does that cost?"
Priest: "Umm, like, $29.95!"
As entertaining as that was for the Mars Hill congregation, it
had nothing to do with what indulgences truly are in today’s
Catholic Church.
This is clarified greatly at www.catholic.com, where it explains
that it is traditional to give a stipend to a priest performing a
memorial Mass for the dead, a Mass for the benefit of someone in
purgatory. This stipend is usually around $5.
Thus, indulgences are neither a way to "buy your relatives out
of purgatory" or "a money-making bonanza" used to build St.
Peter’s Basilica, as Driscoll accused.
These are just some of the many falsehoods Driscoll propagated
about the Catholic Church. Driscoll’s errors of fact and
entirely unnecessary attitude of childish disrespect require a
correction and apology - if he misleads 4,500 people, he needs to
step up and admit he was wrong in front of 4,500 people.
Or, he could at least apologize to people specifically asking
for an apology.
My friend, fellow Catholic and fellow SPU student, Joe Howard
was at Mars Hill with me. After hearing Driscoll’s sermon, he
sought to find the pastor so he could discuss what he felt were the
errors in it.
Howard instead met Driscoll’s personal assistant who
informed him that Driscoll is too busy writing sermons, teaching,
and formulating theology, to meet with people. Howard was informed
there was a panel of other pastors and volunteers he could talk to,
but not to Driscoll. He was also told that all of Driscoll’s
e-mail is filtered by Driscoll’s assistant, and it is
unlikely Driscoll would see any e-mail Howard wrote about the
sermon.
Howard persisted, against these odds, in his quest for truth
behind the pulpit and e-mailed Driscoll on Tuesday, Nov. 8. He has
yet to hear back from anyone at Mars Hill.
When the factual inaccuracies and disrespectful nature of
Driscoll’s sermon are combined with his inaccessibility, I
can’t help but agree with the group on www.facebook.com
called "Mars Hill: Possibly a Cult."
It frightens me that one of the largest churches in Seattle is
propagating falsehoods and will not accept correction or
criticism.
I have to wonder how many people believed the errors they heard
from Driscoll on Nov. 6.
Does Mars Hill believe Driscoll’s falsehoods, or are they
simply afraid to speak against him?
I, for one, was afraid to too loudly express my opinions during
the service, because the large security guard several feet to my
right was giving me dirty looks.
Wait! Security guards at church? Something seems very, very
wrong with that.
This is all to say, be careful! If Driscoll will so willingly
misconstrue about the beliefs of a church of 1 billion people, how
can we know he is not twisting the Bible, so that it too fits his
personal theology?
With more errors than I can count in one sermon, how many others
does Driscoll regularly tell to his congregation of 4,500? And
worse, do they believe the lies?
I hope not. But after that sermon, I am afraid. Very afraid.
This is not to say that Driscoll is mind-washing people, but I
feel that something is wrong - so wrong that it publicly demands
correction and apology.
So, be careful, critically analyze what you hear at church, and
whatever you do, don’t drink the Kool-Aid.
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