Notes from Christian apologist J.P. Moreland
Christians transformed from the most intellectual people in the community to people who separated faith from reason. During this period, there were three Great Awakenings that although “good” in some ways, were harmful because they overemphasized “blind-faith and feeling to the exclusion of thought and mind.”
“[It] should have been both, but instead the mind was laid aside and religion was identified with fervency of emotion and feelings,” explained Moreland. “So the acceptance of the Gospel during these awakenings was understood as a matter of the heart instead of the whole person including the way people think in addition to how they feel.”
Moreland lamented that Christians were the ones who planted 117 of the first 124 universities in the United States “dedicated to the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ and the propagation of truth to the glory of God.”
The apologist also noted that it was common practice among Baptists and occurred occasionally among Methodists to ordain men to lead a local church if they expressed a calling to preach despite their lack of Biblical knowledge.
“That is an expression of an attitude that learning doesn’t have anything to do with discipleship or being a Christian,” said Moreland.
“Instead of faith being a trust in what I have reason to believe is true – where faith is an expression of reason – faith became the polar opposite of reason,” explained Moreland. “So reason instead of being something that helps a person exercise faith – the more you know about God the more you can trust Him – faith, reason, and knowledge became polar opposites.”
“Faith became a simple act of will in the absence of knowledge or reason,” he said. read more here http://www.christianpost.com/article/20061119/23549.htm
