Thu, Jul. 01, 2010 Posted: 11:30 AM EDT
An annual Christian music festival has drawn unexpected controversy
over one of its featured speakers – Jim Wallis.
Though Wallis is among some 58 speakers this year at Lifest, some
local Christians have protested his appearance and one sponsor recently
pulled its support.
"After researching extensively the words and published positions
of Jim Wallis and his organization, Sojourners Magazine, and seeking
fervently the guidance of the Holy Spirit in prayer, we believe the
social justice message and agenda they promote is a seed of secular
humanism, seeking an unholy alliance between the Church and
Government," Q90 FM, a Christian radio station based in De Pere,
Wis., stated.
For months, Lifest founder Bob Lenz has been in conversations with
local pastors and others who raised concerns over featuring Wallis –
who is considered a progressive Christian – at the popular Lifest,
which kicks off July 7 in Oshkosh, Wis.
By including Wallis in the speaker line-up, some accused the festival
of compromising the Gospel. Crosstalk radio host Ingrid Schlueter
expressed her opposition to presenting Wallis as "a credible
Christian leader" and said youth are in "spiritual peril"
if they attend the five-day event.
"There is spiritual danger here," she said. Youth will be
"sitting under the tutelage of a religious and political radical
who is ... hostile to the biblical Gospel."
Mary Danielson of Calvary Chapel in Appleton, Wis., said Wallis
claims to be an evangelical pastor, but is merely using Scripture to
"justify his radicalism."
"He does not hold to the central tenets of biblical Christianity
but he reads a brand of social justice into the Bible," Danielson
said on Crosstalk radio.
Responding to the uproar, Wallis, who also serves as a spiritual
adviser to President Obama, released a statement, saying: "Let me
be very clear that we believe in the separation of church and state. We
believe the church and the government are able to best fulfill their
roles when they function separately and apart from institutional
intrusion.
"However, that does not mean we believe in the separation of
values from public life."
"The biblical definition of social justice has to do with
helping bring about God's Kingdom on earth as it is in heaven, just as
Jesus taught us to pray," Wallis said, according to The
Post-Crescent. "And in a world where half the population lives in
poverty, there is a great need for God's Kingdom to be more fully
present."
Lenz has tried to calm the storm by reaffirming Lifest's purpose,
which is to preach the Gospel, bring people to Jesus and promote unity
among believers on the core issue of the Gospel.
"My concern is that the people who have raised their voices the
loudest are drawing attention away from the true purpose of
Lifest," he said. "We hope you will be a part of putting it
back in focus from the moment the gates open."
"When we bring someone in to speak at Lifest, I promise from the
best we know that this person loves Jesus and is pursuing a relationship
with Him, and that this person, as far as we know, is also living out
the Gospel," Lenz explained.
Lenz does not agree with all of Wallis' politics or even some of his
"non-essential theology," but he said he cannot remove him
from the line-up based on the accusations that have been made.
He assured supporters that Wallis will being sharing "the true
Gospel, his conversion, and a call for us, the church, to take on our
responsibility for the poor."
"I know Jim Wallis. Jim Wallis loves Jesus," he added.
"I would have no hesitation having my kids, young Christians, and
seekers alike hear his message. It’s a message that I feel the church
desperately needs to hear."
In another measure of reassuring supporters, Lenz added endorsements
from various evangelicals who support Wallis.
"Agree or disagree – Jim Wallis touches your heart, stretches
your mind, and challenges your values," stated Leith Anderson,
president of National Association of Evangelicals. "He thunders
like an Old Testament prophet, yet he is gentle and gracious. With a
heart for people and a dream for a better tomorrow, Jim Wallis looks
tough times in the eye and talks of hope."
Q90 FM, meanwhile, noted that they are not calling for a boycott of
Lifest and they do not consider Wallis an enemy. "We just have a
fundamental disagreement on the wisdom of bringing Mr. Wallis to
Lifest," the radio station said.
Lifest 2010 will take place July 7-11 and feature dozens of speakers
and over 100 musical artists and performers. Other speakers scheduled to
appear include evangelist Luis Palau, abortion survivor Gianna Jessen,
Bo Boshers with Willow Creek Association, and Tiger McLuen of Bethel
University. Some 15,000 people are expected to attend.