By Jim Denison at christianpost.com
This approach hearkens back to the Jewish "hedge around the law." Rabbis in ancient Israel, in their zeal to obey the Law, constructed rules that would keep people from violating Scripture. For instance, they developed 39 categories of regulations regarding the Sabbath-everything from how far you could walk to when you could extinguish a fire. We can do our best to avoid the culture, but doesn't this keep our salt in the saltshaker, our light under a basket (Matthew 5:13-16)?
A second option, according to Niebuhr, is "Christ of Culture." Here we adopt the biases and beliefs of society, wherever they lead us. The Episcopal Church's recent decision to bless same-sex marriages is an example of this posture.
Niebuhr argues for the "Christ transforming Culture" model, where Christians seek to transform society with biblical truth. This seems to me to be both the best and the hardest option. Best, because it obeys Jesus' mandate to "make disciples of all nations" (Matthew 28:19). Hardest, because we must be "in the world but not of it."...
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