Stockholm Syndrome Christianity How Our Christian Leaders Are Failing — And What We Can Do About It
150_West_83rd_Street
Redeemer Presbyterian Church
Photo source: Wikimedia Commons.
News

“Friends with Francis”: How Institutions Devolve

Published at Evolution News
Share
Facebook
Twitter/X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

John West is doing a lot of interesting interviews about his new book, Stockholm Syndrome Christianity. There’s plenty of fascinating stuff in this new one, with interviewer Becket Cook. I was not, for example, familiar with megachurch pastor Andy Stanley who sounds like he’s stumbling down a path toward Marcionism, belittling the Hebrew Bible as the “Obsolete Testament.” 

Dr. West underlines that institutions devolve unless the people who run them are really on top of staying true to their mission. An example is the Christian college where West was a professor for a decade. Or there is another well-known pastor, the late Timothy Keller, with a popular church (pictured above) in Manhattan, who though he also “did a lot of good,” became a “tragic figure” in West’s view. In part, this seemed to follow from his friendship with Francis Collins, which may have colored how he saw the debate about intelligent design. 

Among the temptations we face as humans, friendship — otherwise such a beautiful thing — doesn’t get the attention it deserves. The dynamic, being “friends with Francis,” or fill in the name of some other famous person, is a powerful one. The prestige of your friend rubs off just a little on you. To think your friend could be wrong about a profound subject may be, for some, too much to ask. Oh, my friend Francis is a renowned scientist and such a wonderful Christian. He couldn’t be wrong about that! Watch:

Click here to display content from YouTube.
Learn more in YouTube’s privacy policy.