In part I (See May 17th article) I presented very basic and generalized reasons why I believe Christians remain defeated in almost every cultural arena of life. Many Christian Worldview Network readers responded to my article and expanded on this idea, an excellent job too, I might add. It was exciting and very refreshing to see how readers thought through my points and added so much rich input.
In my many years of teaching, preaching, and writing I have had one underlying goal: To make people think. If people agree with me, that’s fine. If they disagree, I can handle it. If they get mad, it’s ok as long as they are moved to think and think biblically. In any case, I’ve done my job.
Thinking is a lost art and reasoning from Scripture is alien to many Christians. This is sad, dangerous, and further adds to our pattern of defeat. There seems to be an anti-intellectual bias in much that comes out of the Christian community. This is unfortunate.
Contrary to popular belief it is not unspiritual to think. Scripture has a lot to say about thinking, reasoning, and using our minds in the Lord’s service.[1] So what’s our problem? Why are we not good thinkers?
Some years ago Harry Blamires wrote a book, The Christian Mind: How Should a Christian Think. The very first sentence in his book is “There is no longer a Christian mind.” I agree. This still remains true. Our Christian thinking has become secularized, spiritualized, and homogenized. This is why, among Christians, there is little consensus about anything.
Christians cannot even agree on what I think are the no-brainer issues such as the death penalty, abortion, and homosexuality. Beyond that some are not even sure the Bible is the only Word of God. If they are sure, then they don’t agree whether it is infallible, literal, or figurative. It’s a wonder we get anything accomplished at all.
Less I digress too far, let me return to the main point, our continuing defeat. There is one potent and pervasive belief in the Christian world that is adding fuel to our spiritual and social anemia. It has done more to propel our losses than any one thing I can think of at the moment.
Most evangelicals hold this belief. Incredible emotion is attached to it and yet few can adequately defend their position when properly challenged. The thinking is that “the Apostle Paul believed it and so do I”. By the way, Paul didn’t but that’s another story.
I take a strong position on this point. I am convinced that this belief has done, and is doing more to retard proper Christian activism than communism, humanism, feminism, and all the other isms combined. Any guess where I am going with this?
I speak of eschatology, our current[2] end-times theology. I specifically target the popularized version of the end times as propagated by Tim LaHaye, Hal Lindsey, and others.
Now before anybody rounds up the posse, let me say a few things. Personally, I am not going to try to sway you to my belief on the end times. What I believe doesn’t matter. And, I don’t care what you believe, even if you align yourself with Tim and Hal. Does this surprise you?
What I do care about and will go to the mattress over[3] is whether or not your eschatology keeps you from performing your Christian cultural responsibilities. Let’s just be real about this. It’s virtually impossible for one to be motivated to fix government, clean up the porn, save babies, or anything else if they are convinced Jesus is coming back this week.[4] Most evangelicals do believe Jesus is coming back real soon, if not this week, the next. This overriding presupposition has become the obsession of the modern church[5] It has done more to paralyze the church than any other factor.
Here is the catch. Jesus doesn’t give us the option of giving up and waiting for the end to come. He knows human nature. It’s much easier to talk about it and wait than doing what needs to be done. Jesus cuts us off at the pass. I think this is clear from John 21: 20ff:
Peter turned and saw the disciple whom Jesus loved following them, the one who had been reclining at the table close to him and had said, “Lord who is it that is going to betray you?” When Peter saw him, he said to Jesus, “Lord what about this man?” Jesus said to him, “If it is my will that he remain until I come, what is that to you? Follow me!”
I just returned from speaking in Las Vegas. One of the church members and myself hit a Starbucks after church to dialogue further about the things of God. He shared with me about another church member’s roommate who is around forty years old. This man doesn’t work. He just goes to “spiritual” events and meetings. Why doesn’t he work? It’s the end of the world, of course. He sees no future in it. A book could be written with countless similar examples of eschatological paralysis.
Let me sum up. Our eschatology is killing us, demotivating us. The very doctrine that should give us hope for the future, is robbing us of it.
Our hope is not in the rapture. It never was. Our hope is in the resurrection. Our hope is in being obedient to God and seeing our lives and our culture transform in this world, this side of the grave.
Whether Jesus comes back today, tomorrow, or a thousand years in the future should not be our focus. Our focus ought to be on being good godly cultural stewards. We should be ready at all times but working in the Kingdom at the same time.
This is what I think. What about you? Should I dare write a Part III?
[1] For just a few Scriptural references to biblical thinking see Mark 12:30, Isaiah 1:18ff, Joshua 1:8, Acts 17:16ff.
[2] I use the word “current” because various eschatological views have waxed and waned over the millennia. The current dominant dispensational premillennial view really came into vogue beginning in the 19th century. The Scoffield Bible and Hal Lindsey’s books added greatly to the view’s popularity and dominance in the mid-twentieth century. Of course nothing has done more to help this view than Tim LaHaye’s Left Behind series.
[3] Forgive me. I just had to use at least one Godfather reference like the big time writers.
[4] I don’t have the time and space here to submit examples but I can site many where people have told me honestly that they won’t get involved because the end is near. I had a relative cancel his life insurance and terminate his daughter’s college fund for the same reason. This was in 1983. Well, we are still here and so is he.I do appreciate the fact that he was acting on his beliefs while most would hedge their bets. For example, many churches that regularly preach the end is here are also building family life centers. For who I wonder?
[5] Check out Gary DeMar’s great book, Last Days Madness: The Obsession of the Modern Church.
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Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/31/06 12:24:22 PM
Age 51, TX
Ralph,
It seems you equate a belief in the rapture with a failure to live the Christian life. Looking forward to an event does not equal a failure to live life fully. In fact, it is normal for one who is looking forward to an event to have it impact their life - a wedding, an award (Scripture has tons about future rewards), a possible impending loss or judgment, etc. If some choose to be lazy or unmotivated, that is about them and not what the Scripture teaches concerning a view of eschatology. I Jn 2:28 links the expectant looking forward to His appearing to appropriate present day response, understanding it is a normal thing for a healthy believer. Note that is true regardless of what eschatology view you hold. Would you care to respond to this passage? Click here to reply to this post
Re: Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 06/02/06 04:24:10 PM
Age 58, GA
Thanks for your feedback and I wholeheartedly agree with you or we agree with each other. I, of course, generalized in my article and said I didn't care what view one holds unless it paralyzes one from doing and living as he should before God. Keep in mind I've been teaching this for decades and have witnessed first hand the negative affect that presmillennialism has on too many, certainly not all. If I had the space I could detail example after example. Maybe what I'm saying is the modern believer does not hold to the healthy view that you present in 1 John. Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/26/06 01:52:45 PM
Age 42, NC
I would say that your article almost got it, but did not go far enough. The rabbit trail everyone will run down is pre-trib, mid-trib or post-trib rapture, but that is only a part of the why we seem to be so defeated. Another major part is we (I speak of born again believers of the Body of Christ) have allowed our selves to get comfortable in our gilded cages we call church. We (now I speak as in the visible church) no longer go out and engage our society in the public arena. We have gotten so comfortable in our pews and our positions in the four walls of our churches that we are disconnected from the real world. We have forgotten that the assembling of ourselves is to build one another up in order to go, and be a witness for Jesus Christ in the public arena.
No matter what your flavor of end-times events, we are to be about our Fathers business. If we love Jesus as much as we say we love Jesusthen instead of hiding in the bunker we will be out on the battlefield. Then when we come together we will encourage one another, lift up one another and be refreshed for the battle ahead. Unfortunately what we have (I paint with a broad stroke here) in our churches is an attitude of apathy and laziness, not knowing the Scriptures as they apply to the individual believer. We, in fact, have weekly meetings at our religious social clubs. We are all about inviting the world into our club house and letting our hired gun preach to them, but we no longer see it is our responsibility to go and be a witness, and preach the gospel. Too many are content to get into heaven by even the skin of their teeth and thats enough. (I fear for such as these given what Jesus says of those go-getters in Mathew 7:22, depart from me ye workers of iniquity.) Click here to reply to this post
Re: Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/31/06 11:32:09 AM
Age 72, OH
you said:
Its virtually impossible for one to be motivated to fix government, clean up the porn, save babies, or anything else if they are convinced Jesus is coming back this week.[4] Most evangelicals do believe Jesus is coming back real soon, if not this week, the next. This overriding presupposition has become the obsession of the modern church[5] It has done more to paralyze the church than any other factor.>>>>>
Although I do believe is some social action by Christians, the scriptures do not tell us to "fix" Government. Jesus did not come to do that nor did he advocate it. We are to preach the Gospel. We are also instructed in the scriptures to watch for the return of Christ but not at the expence of neglecting the reaching of the lost.
Bill Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/26/06 07:07:53 AM
Age 44, UK
Thank you, Ralph, for a great article. It seems you have stirred up quite a reaction. Well done! Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/25/06 12:04:18 PM
Age 59, OK
Your article met its intended purpose for me. It made me think. My husband, pastor of a church of about 200, has been frustrated by the lack of commitment on the part of so many in our community. He is a member of a the local ministerial alliance group and speaks often with other pastors in our community. He also is in contact with missionaries and pastors in other states and countries. The problems you confront seem to be universal among Bible believing churches. We are hemorrhaging Christian workers in our churches. Our ability to work to further the kingdom and bring honor to God is draining away and we feel impotent to stop it. Nothing we do ebbs the flow. It is a slow, defeating, and demoralizing path. It was said some years ago that 10% of the people in a church did 90% of the work. It must be about 6 to 7% doing 95% of the work now. That holds true in our community. Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/25/06 12:03:50 PM
Age 51, NY
In China prior to the takeover of Mao, the Christian leadership emphasised that Christians were not appointed for wrath and that they would be raptured before the tribulation. Their teaching did not prepare their congregations for the trial that lie ahead. Yet they insisted that God was leading them into this area of prophesy. Since we now know the fruit of their teaching, shall we make the same mistake? Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/25/06 10:44:11 AM
Age 46, LA
I believe there will always be Christians who are distracted from an effective faith walk by a preoccupation with the end times. I went through a brief phase like that myself. But I feel like Christians on the whole are finally beginning to wake up from the real lie that has crippled the church in our day and time -- the separation of Church and State.
The gentleman from New Jersey illustrated this quite well with his commentary on this article: "I'd sure rather the right-wing theocrat fascists sit and do nothing than seek to impose dominance on the rest of us politically like you guys are doing now." Now that the Church is awakening from the political coma it has been in and is taking responsibility to exert itself in the political arena, those who have run the show and derailed the United States of America from her Christian roots are running scared.
Christians have stayed out of politics for far too long, believing that God didn't want them to sully themselves with such activities, when God Himself instituted the idea of civil government. He put in place the family, the church, and the civil government. And civil government will only be as godly and righteous as those who run it. While I would never claim that every Christian should run for political office, we should certainly participate in our government. This participation doesn't have to stop us from pursuing other callings God has given us on an individual level, such as evangelism, missionary work, and discipleship, but we do have a measure of responsibility to exercise good citizenship by voting and letting our voices be heard on the issues that matter to God's heart, like abortion, homosexuality, gambling, and the like. Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/25/06 07:04:45 AM
Age 57, VA
Although I agree that an imbalanced emphasis on the rapture could paralyze some, I do believe those SAME ones are lazy and looking for excuses anyway. I believe they are the compromisers anyway. I do however think there are tons of Christians who also believe in the Rapture, but who ARE about their Father's business. I believe that as those Christians disciple other Christians to be servants of Christ, they will change others and their sphere of influence and a part of the world around them. Unfortunately, I believe the bigger pattern of defeat, known as materialism, entertainment, the cares of this world, the deceitfulness of riches and the lust for other things has created many, many compromising so called Christians, who can easily find (heap to themselves) teachers who will support them and encourage them in those same things. They walk the fence whispering, "Not me, Lord, send someone else. You know I am too busy, too new in you, too wrapped up in my own problems or my kids problems, while audibly and in front of others, they spout out, "Praise God, I am blessed and highly favored, a Kings Kid, an Ambassador for Christ." They are more hearers and spouters of the Word rather than doers! It is a sign of the times and a result of "the love of pleasure rather than the love of God." Unfortunately, these same Christians are lured into and corralled into Pastor's own "pleasure houses" or entertainment halls and concert halls to be held captive and mesmerized by all the hoopla and then told THAT is the spiritual diet that will sustain them. And they can't wait to go back for more! The focus is the happy, uplifting message they are going to receive rather than a convicting and life changing "talking to" they might receive instead. The scripture says everyone who thirsts, come ye to the water, come ye to the water come buy and eat." Instead of coming and getting washed by the water of the Word and receiving the living water that will make them thirst no more, they are coming and getting polluted by the rancid run off from the streets of this world which is being cleverly bottled and sold as the real thing, with NO possibility of ever quenching their thirst; but, rather causing them to crave more and more of the pollution and pleasure of this world. No one can change the world by being like it and enjoying it! Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/25/06 12:03:06 AM
Age 47, HI
WOW...loved the article mostly for the great feedback discussion. You achieved your goal of having intellectual banter amongst christians. I agree with you...we need to be waiting for our resurrection not rapture. As for the disparity between saving the world spiritually or politically I think both are important. It all involves people and all we need to do even when fighting for social justice is to love everyone into His kingdom...face it we have the ONLY good news for the world today.
aloha ke Akua Click here to reply to this post
Re: Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/25/06 07:18:05 AM
Age 58, GA
Thanks for your comments. I'm afraid the many who posted really didn't get it. They resorted to defending their church, their experience, or their eschatology. But, as you said, I got them thinking and that's half the fun. Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/24/06 10:10:03 PM
Age 54, NJ
I'd sure rather the right-wing theocrat fascists sit and do nothing than seek to impose dominance on the rest of us politically like you guys are doing now. Click here to reply to this post
Re: Christians and Their Pattern of Defeat (Part II)
Posted On: 05/24/06 08:12:32 PM
Age 32, NJ
I have seen people paralyzed from quite a few different eschatological posistions. Jesus was very firm about tarrying until He comes back. I have come to the conclusion, similar to what one poster said, that we should live like we're going home any second, but plan like we're going to be here for a while. There may not be another chance to let your light shine before men, so let it shine. Click here to reply to this post