Some Thoughts on The Importance of the Doctrine of the Church —
Or How I introduced My Ecclesiology Course to Students
I understand that ecclesiology is not everyone’s favorite topic. No doubt it is the least read section in any systematic theology text—and that is not merely because the doctrine of the church usually comes at the end of the volume. For a host of reasons American Christians tend not to be interested in the topic. But after serving as a pastor and professor for over forty years, I have come to believe that ecclesiology is one of the most important topics for our time and well worth thinking about.
Here are the main points for consideration I made whenever introducing the topic to Reformed seminarians.
First, during my post-seminary days I taught graduate systematic theology and apologetics courses to mostly “five-sola” evangelical students at the Simon Greenleaf School of Law (now the Trinity Law School in Santa Ana, CA). Berkhof’s Systematic Theology was my text. I always dreaded coming to the closing chapters on the doctrine of the church because the class was filled with students who came from various evangelical churches. Many were professing Christians but had no ties to any church. Many were still in mainline Protestant churches but were soon to leave. Others stayed in the churches in which they were raised, or they followed the crowd to a celebrity pastor. Many of these students had picked their churches for reasons that had little if anything to do with ecclesiology or doctrine. Reading Berkhof pulled the church rug out from under their feet.
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