Our generation of Christians seems to reflect this same point. On the first day of class, a student said that he was not "non-denominational," but rather he is "without denomination." (Or something to that effect, Sorry if I got the wording wrong). It interests me that as much as Lewis affirmed this difference, he humble tells of his own membership to a particular denomination. Then, this student in our class may have some insight into Lewis' membership: To attend church, and thrive in Christian fellowship, without falling into the persuasive divisions Christians enjoy so much. I acknowledge that I am assuming the reasoning for this student to reject denomination labels parallel Lewis. In the end, Christians hurt themselves, each other, and seekers. Why would a seeker want to join a church that criticizes and hurts one another? Indeed, I do not escape or exclude myself for driving factions between myself and others.
The conclusion Lewis comes to is that "high Theology…ought never to be treated except by real experts." The point is, it doesn't really matter in the end any way!
I strongly agree with what you said about Christians making too big a deal about denominations. Although I grew up CRC, I don't completely agree with either the CRC or any other denomination. It annoys me when people argue about which denomination is better, especially when they really don't know much about their denomination in the first place.
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