What happens when a professing church becomes more concerned with pleasing men and bowing to the current cultural fads than with pleasing God and ârightly handling the word of truthâ (2 Timothy 2:15)? Well, what happens is a quick slide into error, false teaching, andâeventuallyâapostasy. And thatâs happening to so many denominations right before our eyes. Consider this headline: âChurch of England explores gender neutral God.â
According to reports, âthe Church of England will look into the use of gender neutral terms to refer to God in prayersâ after âa priest asked about developing more inclusive language in authorised forms of worship and sought options for those who wish to speak of God in a ânon-gendered way.ââ Reportedly, a church spokesperson said,
Christians have recognised since ancient times that God is neither male nor female. . . . Yet the variety of ways of addressing and describing God found in scripture has not always been reflected in our worship.
Now, this spokesperson is either intentionally or ignorantly misrepresenting what Christians from âancient timesâ have believed. No, God is not male or female in the human way we think of sex and gender. After all, âGod is spiritâ (John 4:24) and doesnât have a body like us. But recognizing that God isnât like us isnât the same as saying God âis neither male nor femaleâ because God has chosen to reveal himself to usâand he did so in the masculine! As we write in (the Answers In Genesis) statement of faith,
The Triune God has revealed himself in Scripture in the male gender with masculine pronouns and masculine titles such as Father, Son, God, King, Priest, and Prophet (Psalm 5:2; Matthew 28:19; John 14:26).
And, no, there are not (as the Church of England spokesperson claims) varieties of ways (in the way he means it!) of addressing and describing the biblical God that Christians havenât used in our worship, because God did not reveal himself to mankind in a gender-neutral or feminine way. He chose to reveal himself in the masculine, culminating, of course, in the arrival of the God-man (not God-woman or God-nonbinary person!). And this isnât some trifling point! Adam, the first man, is the head of the human race, and in him we all sinned and now die. Jesus came as the âlast Adam,â who, through his death, brings life to all who will believe. Since death came into the world by a man, the atonement for death needed to be paid by a man (see 1 Corinthians 15).
Now, the priest asking the church to consider âgender neutralâ liturgy is seeking such language for those âwho wish to speak of God in a ânon-gendered way.ââ But waitâisnât our culture supposedly all about using each personâs preferred terms, pronouns, and titles? Isnât ignoring their preferred pronouns and instead using the ones we prefer âtransphobicâ and âhatefulâ? But these people want to do the very same thing to God by ignoring how he has revealed himself and calling him whatever they want!
This just shows that those requesting this new liturgy donât really believe God is who he says he is. I would go so far as to say that many leaders in this denomination donât care how God has chosen to reveal himself because they probably donât truly believe he even exists. They donât really care about God at all.
What they really care about is their own opinions about the world and therefore about God. And those in leadership care about catering to the depraved philosophies of our day so they can appear âinclusiveâ and âlovingâ (by our worldâs definitions)âitâs fear of men, rather than fear of God! And it does no one any good!
Those coming to these âgender neutralâ church services are not going to hear the biblical gospelâthe most important message, which saves people for eternity!âexplained. Think about it: if a leader or congregation is too afraid to use the pronouns and titles God has chosen for himself because some might be offended, they certainly arenât going to preach the message that everyone is a sinner and that they cannot do anything to save themselves! Thatâs the most offensive message of all!
This question of who gets to decide which pronouns we use for God (and for people, made male or female in his image) comes down to a question of authority: is God or is man the ultimate authority? If we start with Godâs Word, then God is the authority and we refer to him in the way he has chosen to reveal himself to us. If weâre the authority, then Godâs Word doesnât matter, and we can do whatever we want!
Ultimately, regardless of whether we allow the Bible to be the authority in our lives or not, God is the authority. And he will have the final say in judgment on those who twist his Word and lead others astray into sin and false teaching. Now, if that is you, repent today, trust Christ for salvation, and obey his Word.
2 Corinthians 11:13-15 KJV â âFor such are false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves into the apostles of Christ. And no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light. Therefore it is no great thing if his ministers also be transformed as the ministers of righteousness; whose end shall be according to their works.â
2 Peter 2:1 KJV â âBut there were false prophets also among the people, even as there shall be false teachers among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction.â
You can learn more about the titles and imagery God has used to reveal himself to usâand find answers to the feminist biblical revisionism that says God is or can be a woman or gender-neutralâin this excellent article by AiGâUKâs Simon Turpin, âIs God Male or Female?â Itâs sad we even have to deal with such an issue in the church!
