I like the Banner editorās list of hopes for the future of the Christian Reformed Church and share almost all of them (āNow What?ā November 2007). But I do have some questions about the one concerning merging back with the Reformed Church in America.
Ideally, I would like to see that also. But what we like ideally should not blind us to some realities. What I have read about the RCAās ecumenical ties should make us raise some concerns. And can we speak about a healthy Kuyperian, Reformed world-and-life view in the RCA? The RCA seems to have left far more room for theological liberalism, and perhaps for fundamentalism as wellāmore than we might care to embrace.
Iām sure we could warmly welcome some sectors of the RCAt. I certainly feel very comfortable with our local RCA congregation. And perhaps the CRC in Michigan feels comfortable with the RCA there, but that isnāt all that matters.
In the same Banner issue, Gayla Postma writes, āThe biggest issue that still divides the two denominations is support for Christian day schoolsā (āThe RCA: Our Closest Friend,ā
p. 16). Isnāt that perhaps symptomatic of something more deeply rooted? Arenāt we sweeping too many issues under the rug when we mention only our difference regarding support for Christian day schools, as if resolving that question removes all obstacles?
Iām not sure how much leadership on exploring these issues with the RCA we can expect from the Banner editor in light of his belief that we should never have broken away from the RCA in the first place. That, incidentally, raises the question of how much we should have celebrated the CRCās 150th birthday. Perhaps we should have mourned 150 years of schism instead.
But where would we have been had there not been a CRC these 150 years? Where would a never-separated Reformed Church have been today? I doubt if that would have been a more orthodox church. And would undoing this split make us increasingly more blandāwhich I believe we have become too much already? Are we content to settle for a lower common denominator to make it work?
Iām not saying that we shouldnāt pursue closer ties with the RCA or that we shouldnāt pursue the possibility of an eventual merger. But let it never be at the cost of truth or at the cost of being truly biblical and Reformed.
About the Author
Adrian Van Geest is a retired minister in the Christian Reformed Church.