When I say RAM, I’m not talking about random-access memory, but about what is called Religious Affections Ministries, which is essentially Scott Aniol, with some help from a few like-minded men he has recruited to help with blog posts. Scott has written at least two books on the subject of worship, and one of them is required reading in a class I have taught. Recently online a RAM truckload of criticism has been dumped on RAM (so far here and here), which RAM has answered (so far here and here). There are a lot of background occurrences that have stirred this recent flurry of conflict, so I’m going to weigh in on everything, because I have some analysis that could be helpful, I believe (after I started writing this, I noticed that Aaron Blumer has provided a pretty good background for the conflict here).
Now Scott Aniol has joined a Southern Baptist Church and is an elder there, while teaching at a Southern Baptist seminary, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary (I had already written about this here). When I think about Scott’s doing of this, I could see how he could justify it to himself. The seminary is an academic setting, so it doesn’t count as “fellowship.” It’s academia. It’s a new fundamentalist argument regarding separation. He has priorities for a church. Calvinist. Liturgical. Conservative. He’s found that in his new church. He subordinates the SBC cooperative program, the lack of separation, and even faulty eschatology to those priorities. I’m guessing that if the church was Calvinist, Liturgical, Conservative, and King James Only, the latter would be a deal breaker. It’s how it works today. Many people function like Scott is, which isn’t an excuse. There are churches around with a better hermeneutic and better separation, but I believe Scott is choosing where he thinks he can worship God the best, according to his view of the world. How Scott is practicing should not offend most of his critics. He’s taking a fundamentalist and gospel-centered approach. His church is right on the fundamentals and the gospel, so the other things don’t matter so much as it relates to his understanding of unity. That he’s getting criticized by those as being inconsistent doesn’t make any sense to me.
So then why do I think that being SBC is wrong? Here’s why. SBC is rife with false worship and so Scott fellowships with it. The cooperative program means he’s in fellowship with it. He’s indifferent in his separation. That dishonors and disrespects God in contradiction to Scott’s stated philosophy. When criticism points at Northland for its new worship philosophy, it blows up in Scott’s face. They can hardly criticize Northland when Scott has chosen to be some place else that is worse.
All the problems above stem mainly from a faulty ecclesiology. They see the true church as all believers, even though that’s not how it reads in the New Testament. Because of that, they see a necessity of unity with all believers. This means they rank doctrines and make their decisions of fellowship based upon their priorities. The Bible doesn’t teach this. God is One and doesn’t contradict Himself. A biblical theology will be internally consistent. It can be because the same God wrote it. A universal church belief results in all the contradictions. Some of the liturgy favorable to RAM looks Protestant and Catholic over on the formalistic side of professing Christianity. I’m not against liturgy, intentional worship, planning for an excellent offering to God like a well-planned and then well-served meal. I see too much Protestant and therefore Catholic influence on RAM that parallels with its ecclesiology. If RAM can’t or won’t separate, it will never be able to preserve biblical worship. It will be a short-lived mini-movement in a very small branch of fundamentalism.
RAM is selectively culturally conservative. I’ve harped on this for years now. If you are going to take a consistent world view, that starts with one God, and, therefore, one truth, goodness, and beauty, you will look at more than music. I’m sure that the RAM guys are more conservative than most of fundamentalism all the way around on cultural issues, but they aren’t in a few obvious ways. Modern versions and gender neutral dress clash with their foundational world view. It’s not consistent.
One Bible with one set of Words is one truth. That fits with one God. This is the view of historic, conservative Christianity. I see the RAM clash with this as a bow to modernity. Designed gender distinctions in dress, the way biblical churches always practiced, relates to one goodness. Goodness doesn’t change. If our culture had designed into its changes a new definition of male or female dress, I could understand a change, but it hasn’t. It has erased the distinction as a bow to modernity. This is not conservative Christianity. RAM does not practice a consistent world view. This makes RAM less credible to me. It’s not a faithful, premodern practice.
Conclusion
Nevertheless, despite my criticisms, I want to reiterate the value of RAM. The truths will edify you and lead you to more biblical thinking on worship. There’s very little online of which you can accept everything, but for the one emphasis at RAM, you will be helped greatly.
. . . but for the one emphasis at RAM, you will be helped greatly.
I think that's what some critics don't understand. RAM addresses a specific set of issues. It doesn't claim to encompass the whole of Christianity. As you point out, that's what churches are for.
David,
On the other hand, if you are looking for a representative for RA, you want someone consistent on them, and Scott has put himself in a position now to receive criticism because of those inconsistencies. That isn't helpful. I am telling people, in essence, to separate what he says from some of what he does. Maybe he is consistent with what he does. He never ever addresses it. I would like to at least see it addressed because it is strange to me (although I'm the strange bird) ;-D.