Tuesday, April 21, 2009

The End of Christian America part 2

(I had this 1/2 written and got distracted.....)


Had a great time in Massachusetts last week. Glad to be back.

Made a couple of contacts this morning. Got a lot on the agenda this week, but I want to check in on the ole blog so here I am.

I haven't forgotten about the previous blog about the end of Christianity in America and I wanted to continue my thoughts on the matter....

The kingdom of God operates very differently than the kingdom of this world. We must never, never forget that. In America, we think it's great that we can worship God freely. We think it's great that the church can not only influence law and government, but actually obtain power to run it. To be in charge, on top, and in power, is considered a sign that things are "going well" for the church. Success is measured by how big the group is, how much $$$ you have, and how much pull you have in forming public policy (we call this power).

So what is happening in America today? Church numbers are down and it's "place" in national politics is not what it was 10 years ago. Recent elections show that evangelical/conservative Christians (and their policies) are not as welcome in the political arena as they once were. State sanctioned gay marriage appears inevitable and roe v. wade isn't going anywhere.

So, do the math....the sky is falling. Bad, very bad times for the church.

There are/will be many folks who are not Christian gloating about all that I said above. They will declare victory in America's culture war. They will pronounce dead the church and talk about dancing on it's grave. It's already happening and I expect nothing less from those folks. Using their rules, they won. Good for them.

But here's the thing, the church is called to operate under the values of the Kingdom of GOD. Success in the church is defined very differently and comes under different conditions. Strength is found in weakness and smallness and vulnerability. God moves powerfully from the bottom up, not from the top down.

It all started with that Constantine rascal. Connie is considered a hero by many Christians who evaluate success using the worlds yardstick. He's the guy who made Christianity the state religion in the Roman empire in the early 300's. The emperor before him, Diocletian, was all about persecuting and killing Christians. Under Diocletian, Christians had to do their thing "underground". There was no freedom to worship in those days. They weren't winning elections. They weren't formulating policy. They weren't making rules. They were objects of legislated hate and ridicule.

A couple of intense dreams experienced by new Emperor Constantine changed everything. He became a Christian and made Christianity the state religion. Christianity went from running from the government to being the government overnight. Obviously, more and more people became Christians. Christian morality and ideals became law, and folks were free to worship Jesus openly. We now had the power. We made the rules. The church has valued this place of authority ever since.

And while I can see the positive motives behind such a value. I think it has robbed the church of it's true source of it's power. I think Emperor Constantine's institutionalizing of Christianity emasculated the church.

But this is getting too long......I promise to continue this in another post.....
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Now back to 1 Cor 13:8-13 for me--looks like that passage will be my swan song.....

Thursday, April 9, 2009

The End of Christian America

Brian Miller sent me a link to a Newsweek article titled "The End of Christian America". http://www.newsweek.com/id/192583/page/1

I wanted to comment on a few things it says. I've been thinking about this stuff for some time now.

The hingepoint of the article is the result of a recent survey that found that "the number of Americans who claim no religious affiliation has nearly doubled since 1990, rising from 8 to 15 percent". There were other numbers given to reveal that the number of those claiming to be Christian has gone down during the same time period and that less folks consider America to be a Christian nation.

Should we be scared? depressed?

I'm not. I've been aware of this for some time. I've brought it up in sermons. In all honesty, I see it as a positive trend.

Where do I start?

Well, first off, the number of cultural Christians has greatly decreased. By cultural Christian I mean those who would claim to be Christian but have no real relationship with Jesus. They call themselves Christian, might even go to church (on Easter and Christmas), but there is nothing to speak of regarding genuine faith in Jesus. They were Christian because that was the box they checked. They felt it was important to identify themselves as something, and Christian seemed more appropriate than Muslim or Jewish.

Today, folks are less inclined to feel compelled to identify with a larger group. Plus I would venture to guess that the possible answers to these surveys make it easier to claim no religious affiliation (just a hunch on that one).

I remember growing up seeing the church filled with folks (in my judgmental opinion) had no idea why they were going to church. They just went because it was the thing to do. Well, these folks had kids and their kids have grown up and seen through the empty religious crap and don't feel compelled to identify themselves as something they are not.

So, the end result is less what? Less Christians or less people calling themselves Christian? I'd rather have a committed army of 100 than a lukewarm army of 500. If these numbers indicate the death of anything, it's the death of mainline, cultural Christianity, which the prophets of the Old Testament would heartily welcome.

No problems here. For me less is more. I think the Kingdom of God functions better when it is the underdog. When it is looking up form the bottom, rather than looking down form the top. Which brings be to my next point......

Question: was Emperor Constantine good or bad for the kingdom of God?

I'll make that my next post.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

My Tuesday prayer

This morning I start the process of preparing for next Sundays message. No writing or study or anything like that--just a small prayer, asking God to lead me in the right direction. My prayer is that I would be sensitive to His "prompts", as I believe He will give me more than a few in the next couple of days.

These promptings will come as I live my life. I've got a number of phone calls to make today. It's quite possible God will answer my prayer in one of these conversations. I've got some paperwork to do and things to file. It's possible that one of the papers I'll be holding will contain God's message. Maybe it'll come when I run, or when I'm driving a Northwestern school van....but it will come.

For 10+ years God has faithfully answered my Tuesday prayer. Sure, sometimes He answers it on Saturday night (ugh), but He answers.

My job is to be on the lookout, to be waiting with a sense of vulnerability and hope. I hate to think of all the messages I've missed simply because I wasn't looking.

Thank God for His grace.