RESPONSE: This is a great set of questions. I think that the two big issues I see relate to an area of orthopraxis (correct conduct) for believers in America, and an area of orthodoxy (correct belief) for the church overall.
AFFLUENCE
I think the biggest issue with America Christians is our
conduct regarding our stuff. In a word,
Affluence.
My parents served for several years volunteering at a Christian training school for foreign nationals in Hawaii (I know, tough assignment!). They developed many great friendships with people from Asia and Africa. My parents related to me their surprising reaction to American prosperity and material comfort. Almost to a person, their reactions were totally devoid of jealousy or cynicism or spiritual angst over God’s unfair distribution of goods. Instead, to my parents’ shock, their response was almost universally one of pity!
You see, from outside American affluence these foreign Christians
were “unplugged from the Matrix” and like those who took the red pill in the Matrix movie,
they could see something clearly: While
those in the Matrix lived lives of relative comfort, they were also living a
lie, numbed up, oblivious to the real world, and being used to advance a
malevolent purpose about which they were clueless. What a great metaphor for the siren call of
stuff!
Jesus’ metaphor is even better. He said, there would be those who would
receive the gospel, like good seed, but that seeds’ productivity would be
choked out by weeds. Jesus labeled them worry and “the deceit of riches” (Matt
13:22). It’s hard to argue that wealth (and
relative to the world almost ALL American Christians fit in this category) is
seducing us. The result is millions of
Christians numb to what our gospel tells us is the real world: Our next life which is our real life. The result is millions oblivious to our mandate
from Christ which is not to be rich, but to be “rich toward God”. (Luke 12:21)
I don’t argue that a Christian can’t be rich AND rich toward
God. But my judgment is that American
Christians currently pursue wealth as heartily as the world, without any
reflection of how New Testament values ought to inform that pursuit. If we do reflect at all, it often is to align
with some version of the health and wealth Gospel, which turns Christianity into a God-powered program of pain reduction and pleasure expansion. And you don’t need connection to a charismatic
tradition to put a spiritual gloss on love of money either. It’s just an inherent risk of living in the richest
nation on earth.
But I’m afraid this is idolatry, plain and simple (Col 3:5). And it doesn’t apply to the 1% (alone) but to
the rank and file middle class people making up the majority of American
Christendom.
How do we tear down this idol? Well,
prescriptions to impose universal vows of poverty aren’t helpful. Neither is lifelong guilt about something we
can’t control, being born in an affluent country. Three key Christian truths have to be recovered:
- One, God owns “my” stuff, so I need to manage it his way.
- Two, the perspective of heaven says all wealth (and all suffering) is temporal and so a Christian doesn’t get obsessed with either.
- Three, generosity mimics God and no one becomes like Christ without it.
- In the case of some gifted entrepreneurs, unapologetically making as much as they can, after they set a standard of living, in order to give expanding excess income to the purposes of God in the world.
- Running businesses with Gospel principles which might lessen profits in order to create thriving work cultures that act as missions to employees.
- Willingness to downsize a standard of living, in order to leverage the extra time and money to church and family and the poor.
- Openness to get out of the rat race partly or totally and be willing to accept callings to ministry where provision is much more a matter of faith.
- Leveraging affluence (money, cars and homes) for Kingdom stuff, such as fostering, adopting, housing unwed mothers, or welcoming immigrants and the homeless.
- Declaring war on debt.
- this one should be prescribed! No Christian, living by biblical principles would carry the kind of consumer debt average Americans do ($16,000/household).
PLURALISM
With the Church overall, I think the greatest challenge is from
Pluralism and its assault on Christian orthodoxy – specifically the uniqueness
of Jesus' message of Grace.
Social pluralism is, of course, a good thing. It says diverse religions should function tolerantly within the same society. Ideological pluralism however, says that all religious claims are equally true. Therefore, claims to unique knowledge are considered arrogant and inherently wrong.
Social pluralism is, of course, a good thing. It says diverse religions should function tolerantly within the same society. Ideological pluralism however, says that all religious claims are equally true. Therefore, claims to unique knowledge are considered arrogant and inherently wrong.
This would simply be a problem for how to present an
exclusive Christ in an inclusive age, IF the Church weren’t increasingly accepting
ideological pluralism as its new creed.
That’s a much bigger problem.
The “Emergent/ Emerging” controversy in the Church today is very much like
the "Modernist/Fundamentalist" controversy of a hundred years ago. Back then, Mainline denominations tried to
accommodate the Faith to Materialism, and it lead to them giving up on core,
historical, orthodox Christian assumptions – like creation ex nihilo, the
authority of the Bible, the Deity of Jesus, the Atonement etc. The Fundamentalists responded by delineating
and holding fast to the unchanging core essentials of Christian belief.
Today, the Emergent movement, like the Mainliners before them, seeks to accommodate the Faith
to postmodernism. But this is leading it to adopt postmodern ideological
pluralism. Statements of faith in
Emergent churches are considered passé, divisive and truth is never spelled with
a capital “T”. Like the Fundamentalists
before them, the Emerging churches (totally confusing terms, I know) seek to win
Postmoderns to Faith in Christ by rejecting the excesses of modernism, without abandoning, or diminishing the
importance of objective Truth and Christian distinctives.
I sympathize with many of the impulses of the
Emergent Movement. They were alienated
by the mega-church phenomenon where church relationships were
superficial or legalistic. They reacted
against the emphasis on bigness, money, buildings, high-powered worship services and theological
bickering. So they came together around
circles of authentic relationships, candles and sofas. As postmoderns, they gladly reclaimed an
emphasis on mystery in Christian thinking and de-emphasized harsh lines of who
was “in” and who was “out” of the Christian faith.
And that, IMO, is where they started to go sideways and
where the church is at risk.
If this was simply a move toward greater Christian unity,
de-emphasizing the secondary doctrinal issues that often arrogantly keep
Christians apart, recovering simplicity, I would be a fan. The
Christian faith has lots of room for humility regarding our doctrinal stances,
and plenty of areas where we “see in a glass darkly”. Christians can channel this postmodern urge to
rally around what Lewis called “Mere Christianity”. We can go that far – but only that far. For Christianity contains, inescapable truth
claims that define the Faith. Without
them Christianity is quite literally “worthless” to use Paul’s phrase.
In other words, a full accommodation to the postmodern mind which
rejects objective truth, authority, “meta-narratives”, creeds and
doctrine, is impossible – not without de-Christianizing Christianity. And yet, that is exactly what is being tried. Even in less hip, less trendy, more
conservative evangelical traditions, I know of church leaders starting to
accept the fundamental tenant of pluralism: that the Christian faith does
not offer the world unique access to God through Jesus Christ.
The “only way” of Christ is, admittedly, a divisive
idea.
But can one reasonably believe
that Christianity is Christianity without it?
What impelled the first apostles to move across the Mediterranean with
the gospel? Was it an Emergent “doctrine
doesn’t really matter” impulse? No, it was the belief that “there is no other name under heaven, given
among men, by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). Consider the role doctrine played in early Christian
controversies. Clearly the apostles had
no problem calling some ideas “in” and some “out”, and the assumption that other
religions/gods/teachings are false is behind everything you read, from Genesis
to Revelation.
Perhaps the Emergent movement will become like the Mainline
Denominations which have largely made themselves irrelevant by removing the
stakes of involvement. If you tell
people your message is not really needed for salvation and that truth is found
everywhere, why go to your church? Not
surprisingly mainline churches have been declining for decades. It remains to be seen if the Emergent
churches will also flag due to their relativizing of truth. Most still retain the outreach energy of the evangelical
traditions from which they sprang.
Also what may energize this movement away from biblical
orthodoxy is a growing Alliance between “old mainline” and “new emergent” under
the LGBTQ banner. Again there’s a
parallel – when the old mainliners removed the historic gospel, what remained was
a social gospel. Today, Emergents have
rallied to the LGBTQ cause of normalizing homosexuality, which is simply
another social cause that replaces the primary, spiritual mission of New
Testament Christianity.
But that is simply further evidence of the place doctrine, history,
the creeds and Scripture holds in the life of these new Christian communities. This concerns me. Without a strong commitment to all those
things, the Church exchanges its unique Gospel birthright of grace, for a mess
of postmodern, moralistic, relativistic pottage.
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