Book Review: “The Ten Commandments of Progressive Christianity"

 
 
 

“The Ten Commandments of Progressive Christianity" by Michael J. Kruger

There is something so wonderful about a book small enough to start and finish in one sitting and dense enough to leave you mulling over the ideas for days, weeks and months. Michael Kruger’s latest book out of Cruciform Press, The Ten Commandments of Progressive Christianity, is exactly that.

In fifty short pages Kruger sums and responds to the major premises of modern liberal Christianity, as they are laid out in Philip Gulley’s book If the Church Were Christian: Rediscovering the Values of Jesus. Relying heavily on J. Gresham Maschen’s classic work, Christianity and Liberalism, Kruger masterfully breaks down Gulley’s ten main principles, recognizing both the slivers of truth in them and the many reasons why they fail to give life and succeed at distorting the Gospel.

In an increasingly liberal/progressive Christian culture, this is a much needed book. The church needs people like Kruger who are willing to be a voice in the wilderness; willing to stand up to liberal claims and to intelligently explain to the church why they just don’t work.

A lot of the tenets of liberal Christianity initially seem very appealing. The gentle, clever and seemingly unconfrontational language they are often cloaked in makes them appear to be the very things Jesus would be about. It is not until you slow down and begin to examine each one through a biblical lens that you start to realize how unbiblical, unloving, and ultimately destructive the tenets are. That slowing down and examining is what Kruger has done here. He has done the hard work for us, and then has packaged it into the simplest and most accessible form possible: a fifty-page book that requires no prior expertise to grasp what is being written

This is a brilliant book. An informing book. A transforming book.

The size, the price and the content makes this one a must-read for every Christian living in the midst of an increasingly liberal Christianity.

Do yourself a favour.

 

Spiritual Devolution

I often hear people speak of the deconstruction of their Christian faith as spiritual evolution. When I hear that title given to it, I wonder, what if it is actually spiritual devolution?

Why do we always think that any movement is forward? Or that going forward is always progress? Or that we are always nearing the correct destination?

What if we are actually just getting more lost?

Why is it that simple faith, clear convictions, unwavering obedience to Jesus’ commands, and white-hot passion for him is the embarrassment? What if this is the real embarrassment: the palatable, shape-shifting, powerless Jesus that we call thinking clearly?

What if fifteen-year-old you was closer to the centre than you think?

Maybe it is worth deconstructing our deconstruction sometimes, instead of just assuming we took down the right building and built a better one.

Maybe not all growth is good growth, and not all movement leads you home.