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Postmodernism

Postmodernism

by Rick Shrader

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This complete paper appeared in the Spring 1999 edition of The Journal of Ministry & Theology, Baptist Bible Seminary, Clarks Summit, PA.

 

When Charles Dickens wrote The Tale of Two Cities depicting the French Revolution, he began with the words, “It was the best of times; it was the worst of times.” Now at the end of that modern period, we may again repeat the words of Dickens. We are glad for the decline in modern and atheistic thought, but a greater foe is approaching on the horizon. While defending the doctrine of faith to our generation, James R. White asks, “Now a new tidal wave, called by the scholars postmodernity, is sweeping across Western thought, undermining the very idea of absolute truth. What should be the response of the Christian church in the face of these waves of philosophical attack?” (The Roman Catholic Controversy, p. 9).

This paper is an attempt to answer that question as well as define Postmodernism in our generation. In an interview, Dennis McCallum responded, “A simple definition of postmodernism is the belief that truth is not discovered, but created. . . No one has more to lose from postmodernism epistemology than Christians.” (focal Point Magazine, Spring, 1997, p. 5).  By the very nature of postmodernism, Christian churches may be falling into this mode without even realizing it. If the modern era has indeed ended, as most think, then we are now postmoderns and the question only remains as to whether we will be postmodernists.

The story is told of three umpires representing the three ages of human history. The first, representing the pre-modern age says, “Three strikes and you’re out and I call ‘em the way they are.” The second umpire, representing the modern age says, “Three strikes and you’re out and I call ‘em the way I see ‘em.” The third umpire, representing the postmodern age says, “Three strikes and you’re out, and they ain’t nothin’ til I call em.” As we look at the approach of postmodernism, this outlook will become all too clear. Truth doesn’t exist except as the individual wants it to exist. As a matter of fact, he can create his own truth.

From the classroom to the television and even to the churches, institutions are asking the audience what they think truth should be and what it should look like, and then marketing their products to the whims of the world. This is the first time in Western Civilization that people are asking not to know and are being obliged by their society. The symbol of this age could easily be the bungee cord. It is a free-fall into nothingness just for the sake of doing it. We had better stop and check if the cord is really hooked to anything solid.

Section 1

The History Of Postmodernism

The Pre-Modern Era

The Time Frame

What most of us learned as “Western Civilization” is the study of the western world before and including the advent of modernism.  Since modernism began in the 16th century with the Enlightenment, brought on by the French Revolution, pre-modernism is that long period of history that led through the Dark Ages, the Reformation and up to the 1700’s.

The Philosophical Foundation

This pre-modern or “classical” era was a mixed bag of beliefs and cultures. Gene Edward Veith, Jr. has included three elements:1

Mythological Paganism was the belief in the supernatural, although it was usually polytheistic.  Most of the mythological traditions contained moralistic stories about the battles of good versus evil.  The good, as defined in the story, almost always triumphed.

Classical Rationalism was the extension of Greek thought and philosophy.  Socrates drank the hemlock as a protest against the mythological worldview.  He reasoned that there must be one supreme God behind all of history.  Plato developed his classical idealism, that the world’s particulars come from the transcendent ideals in the mind of God.  Aristotle argued for first causes and that all causes must be traced back to one supreme First Cause.

Though this era fell far short of Christian belief, it allowed the mind to investigate the world without ruling out the possibility of God.  On Mars Hill, Paul began at this point and introduced them to the truth about God that only divine revelation could bring.

Biblical Theism was the influence of Christianity on the rational mind of the pre-modern era.  Sometimes Christianity brought classical rationalism to its logical conclusion and sometimes Rationalism influenced Christianity too much.  Augustine may have drawn too much on Plato, Aquinas too much on Aristotle.  During the Middle Ages there was a mixture of European pagan culture with Christianity that obscured the gospel message of God’s revelation.  It was not until the 14th and 15th centuries that Christianity returned to its roots.  Whereas “Renaissance humanism rediscovered and reasserted the Greeks; the Reformation rediscovered and reasserted the Bible.”2

Basic Assumptions

For all of its faults, the classical and middle ages carried with it certain assumptions that were rarely challenged:

1.     There is a God (even if it is the god of paganism).

2.     Good and evil exist as present realities which affect our lives.

3.     Man is a sinful creature and sin must be accounted for.

4.     Nature was created by a Creator.

5.     Man is autonomous in the created world.

The Modern Era

The Beginning

Since the terms “modern” and “postmodern” refer to time, it is necessary to set some sort of start and stop for each period.  Thomas Oden says, “By postmodern, we mean the course of actual history following the death of modernity.  By modernity we mean the period, the ideology, and the malaise of the time from 1789 to 1989, from the Bastille to the Berlin Wall.”3  Veith adds,

“The French Revolution exemplifies the triumph of the Enlightenment.  With the destruction of the Bastille, the prison in which the monarchy jailed its political prisoners, the pre-modern world with its feudal loyalties and spiritual hierarchies was guillotined.  The revolutionaries exalted the Rights of Man.  They dismissed Christianity as a relic of the past.  During the course of the revolution, they installed the Goddess of Reason in Notre Dame Cathedral.  In the modern period, human reason would take the place of God, solving all human problems and remaking society along the line of scientific, rational truth.”4

The French Revolution and the Enlightenment meant the beginning of the age of reason.  All supernatural now became superstition.  Man became the highest rational being and the master of his own fate.

The Progression

English Deism became prominent in the 1600s.  Deism denied the possibility of the supernatural.  They did not deny the existence of God but believed rather that God had begun all that exists and then stepped back and let it run without the intrusion of the miraculous.

French Skepticism grew out of the Enlightenment in the 1700s.  As men such as Voltaire turned science into a god, the supernatural was no longer needed.  Science could explain everything and there were no limits as to how far scientific man could lift himself.  The world could now be explained totally by rational laws.

German Rationalism took over the Reformation country in the 1800s.  The German contribution to modernism was to relegate the scriptures to the level of human writings.  The Bible became a totally human book and all supernatural elements were discovered to be human manipulations and compilations of various authors (e.g. JEDP documentary theory).

American Liberalism came across the ocean in the 1900s.  The Enlightenment had come to America as full-blown liberalism.  The existence of God was denied outright, the Bible was not believed to be a divine book and the possibility of miracles was ridiculed.

Basic Assumptions

The assumptions of the old pre-modern age became exactly reversed:

1.     The world as a closed system–All could be explained from cause and effect within the system.

2.     Utilitarian morality–Stealing is wrong but only because it interferes with the balance of economics–Slavery is right because it has economic benefits.

3.     Evolution and natural selection–Nature is self-contained and man is the highest product of the survival of the fittest.

4.     Rationalism and materialism–Only the senses contain “reality.”  “Logical positivism” becomes the law of scientific investigation:  If we cannot see God, he does not exist.

5.     Social sciences and socialism–Marx’s dialectical materialism eradicated individual rights for the sake of the community.

The Postmodern Era

The Beginnings

Carl Henry wrote, “The intensity of ‘anti-modern sentiment’ is seen in the widening use of the term ‘postmodern’ to signal a sweeping move beyond all the intellectual past—ancient, medieval, or modern—into a supposedly new era.”5 The sweeping changes, however, have not come overnight.  Veith presents two precursors from within modernism that have been protesting and setting the stage for a hundred years.6

First.  In reaction to the anti-spiritual and mathematical attitude of the Enlightenment humanism, Romanticism brought back an appreciation for the human and spiritual.  Although God is usually only seen as a “life force” and man is often seen as “one with nature,” “The romantics believed that God is close at hand and intimately involved in the physical world.”7 Romanticism, however, paved the way for today’s postmodern view of life and the world.

Some evangelical believers challenged the romantic worldview, especially in the field of art and literature.  Francis Schaeffer was the best known voice.  In 1968 he wrote Escape From Reason and The God Who Is There.  In 1970 he first published The Church At The End of the 20th Century.  In 1974 he wrote How Should We Then Live? His friend and colleague, H.R. Rookmaaker of the Free University of Amsterdam in 1970 wrote Modern Art and the Death of a Culture.  Even then Rookmaaker wrote, “Perhaps a new culture is growing that can come into being only when the old civilization is completely destroyed.  But if things continue the way they do the new culture will be neither humanist nor Christian.”8

Second.  In reaction to the Enlightenment materialism with its cold humanism and calculating evolution, Existentialism proposed that perhaps there really is no meaning to life.  Individuals create their own meaning for themselves through relativism (wrongly supposed to come from Einstein) that made truth to be truth only if it is relative to one’s situation (“situation ethics” was today’s result).  Today’s “Pro-Choice” movement capitalizes on this now entrenched belief.  Schaeffer wrote that “The only accurate way to describe this [post-Christian] view is that it is a form of neo-orthodox existential theology.”9 Gene Veith proposes, “Existentialism is the philosophical basis for postmodernism.”10

The Predictions

By the end of WW II and with the prosperity of the 1950’s, the stage was set for full-blown rebellion against the old modernism.  Though the winds of change had been blowing for quite a while, a new generation (raised on Freudian psychology, television and Dr. Spock) was ready to have it their way.  In the 1940’s Sir Arnold Toynbee suggested that societies, sooner or later, suffer a certain “schism of the soul.”11

In 1949, George Orwell wrote 1984 in which he predicted America would be taken over by a “Big Brother” from without who would set up a totalitarian oppression.  It didn’t happen.  In fact, the only Big Brother candidate (Russia) collapsed a few years after 1984.  In 1932, Aldous Huxley wrote Brave New World in which he predicted that the day would come when no totalitarian regime would be necessary because we would collapse from within, in apathetic stupor.  Truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance.  Huxley is proving to be right.

In a commencement address, John Silber, President of Boston University, referred to a 75 year old speech by Lord Moulton, an English Judge, entitled “Law and Manners.”12 Moulton divided human actions into three domains.  On one side is law, where we are forced to act a certain way.  On the other side is free choice, where we have complete freedom to act as we please.  In the middle is the domain he called manners.  When the middle ground shrinks into nonexistence, either law will take over or chaos.  Silber was proposing that law lost out in the 1960’s and chaos began its reign.

In 1947, C.S. Lewis objected to new textbooks that were being introduced into English schools.  His response to the new direction of education became his book, The Abolition Of Man.  The first chapter is called, “Men Without Chests.”  He could foresee the day when we would train students with powerful heads, full of information.  We would also develop students with visceral appetites beyond our comprehension.  What is missing is the area in between—the chest!  He says, “The head rules the belly through the chest. . . . In a sort of ghastly simplicity we remove the organ and demand the function.”13 Postmodern man is truly a man with a powerful supply of information, an enormous appetite for lust and selfishness, but possessing no heart, no moral compass to direct the head or stomach.

The Starting Date

Since the postmodern era refers primarily to time, there must have been a starting point where modernism died and postmodernism began.  All would agree that the 1960’s was a great catalyst, if not the turning point itself.  Students began questioning the fruits of modernism; social constructions had not brought internal happiness; the Vietnam War epitomized the evils of capitalism, technology and American democracy.  1968 was known as “The year of the student revolution” when many universities were shut down due to student takeovers.

Veith says,

According to Charles Jencks, the end of modernism and the beginning of postmodernism took place at 3:32 P.M. on July 15, 1972.  At that moment the Pruitt-Igoe housing development in St. Louis, a pinnacle of modernist architecture, was blown up.  Though a prize-winning exemplar of high technology, modernistic aesthetics, and functional design, the project was so impersonal and depressing, so crime-ridden and impossible to patrol, that it was uninhabitable.

The demolition of the Pruitt-Igloe development is a paradigm for postmodernism.  The modern worldview constructs rationally designed systems in which human beings find it impossible to live.  This paradigm applies not so much to housing projects as to philosophical systems and ways of life.14

We have already noted that Thomas Oden places the beginning of postmodernism at the fall of Communism in 1989, a neat 200 years after the Fall of Bastille, beginning the French Revolution in 1789.  He says, “If modernity is a period characterized by a worldview which is now concluding, then whatever it is that comes next in time can plausibly be called postmodernity.  We are pointing not to an ideological program, but rather to a simple succession—what comes next after modernity.”15

Basic Assumptions

1.     Truth and error are no longer relevant terms.  Truth has only been constructed by what someone wrote.  We create our own truth in our own situation.

2.     Culture has become the garden for growing truth.  Whereas culture used to conform to accepted standards of truth, now truth conforms to accepted group culture.

3.     Language must be deconstructed from its oppressive cultural overtones to a non-standard flow of amoral values.

4.     Western Civilization, with its Christian culture, must be discarded and Afro-centricity, with its polytheism and paganism must be reaffirmed.

5.     History has become unknowable since language is meaningless.  The present and the future, both virtual worlds, are the only realities there are.

Conclusion

Whatever time we set for the beginning of postmodernism, it is evident that we are living in a different world than modernism.  All around we see the erosion of truth, morality, commitment, accountability and even realism.  The arts have come to the point of the ridiculous; television deconstructs historical fact and then reconstructs it in the way we want it to be; music has become nonsensical and violent; science is no longer based on evidence but on fantasy; and worst of all, churches are capitulating to a market-driven mentality that mirrors the “truth is what you want it to be” mentality.

Os Guinness concludes,

Yet vague, slippery, and confusing though the term may be, postmodernism is too important to be discarded casually.  For what it gropes to describe is central to the character of our time.  ‘Postmodernism,’ whatever it is, is a term reaching out to describe the outline of a vanishing ‘modern,’ whatever it is.  Both terms are critical for followers of Christ who seek to act, think, and know the world in which we live.16

Section II

The Expressions Of Postmodernism

The Postmodern Culture

If we understand where postmodernism is coming from and where it is going we will begin to see its expressions in every area of our culture.  In 1984, the year of Orwell’s prediction, Francis Schaeffer stated, “Finally, we must not forget that the world is on fire.  We are not only losing the church, but our entire culture as well.  We live in a post-Christian world which is under the judgment of God.”17 Ravi Zacharias, himself Indian born, observed, “What’s happening in the West with the emergence of postmodernism is only what has been in much of Asia for centuries but under different banners.”18 It is the postmodernist himself who wants to convince us that culture is neutral and has no moral connotations.  But that is because a non-Christian culture does not believe in morality, at least to the extent that anything we do, think, say or observe has anything to do with right and wrong.  Morality is relegated to the spiritual level which can only be highly personal and certainly not judged by our actions.  Gene Veith comments, “For all its talk about culture, postmodernism lacks culture since the traditions, beliefs and morals that define culture are all disabled.”19

An Attack On Truth

Perhaps the most identifying mark of postmodernism is its flat denial of the possibility of truth.  With its roots in existentialism, postmodernism maintains that truth is created by a social group for its own purposes and then forced on others in order to manipulate and suppress them.  Postmodernism’s main objective, therefore, is to “deconstruct” this build up of language and society (i.e. “culture”) and liberate the oppressed from the oppressors.  Tim Keller writes, “In this view, all ‘truths’ and ‘facts’ are now in quotation marks.  Claims of objective truth are really just a cover-up for a power play.  Those who claim to have a story true for all are really just trying to get power for their group over other groups”20

The modernist attack on Christianity was to try and prove that the claims of Christianity were false by verifiable (usually “scientific”) standards.  The postmodernist attack is quite different.  David Dockery explains:

Postmodernists would critique Christianity by claiming that Christians think they have the only truth.  The claims of Christianity are rejected because of the appeal to absolute truth.  Absolute truth claims will be dismissed by the postmodernist for being “intolerant” –trying to force one’s beliefs onto other people.  Postmodernists have genuinely given up on the idea of absolute truth.21

Of course, the age-old response to such skewed thinking is, “How can you say absolutely that there is no absolute truth?”   Postmodernists do not care about the apparent contradiction.  The oppressive attitude has been disabled and that is all that matters. A typical statement by a “Repressed Memory Therapist” reveals this agenda, “I don’t care if it’s true.  What actually happened is irrelevant to me.”22 One wonders how such “therapy” could ever help anyone.

The Loss of Identity

If modernism proclaimed the death of God, postmodernism proclaims the death of self.  As strange as that may sound to the remnants of a modernistic society who were born and bred on rugged individualism and humanism, this must be understood if postmodernism is to be understood.

Gene Veith describes the progression of thinking that leads to this loss.

The postmodern mind-set can have a devastating impact on the human personality.  If there are no absolutes, if truth is relative, then there can be no stability, no meaning in life.  If reality is socially constructed, then moral guidelines are only masks for oppressive power and individual identity is an illusion.23

The role-models for such culture become the homeless who choose to live on the streets instead of in shelters; the cyberpunks who live inside a computer in a virtual world where they really do not exist;  the city gangs where identity is lost and rules of society are discarded; or the grunge kids who (while coming from wealthy enough families to afford nice clothing) wear the uniform of the “group” and lose their individual identity.

Francis Schaeffer describes this phenomenon taking place years ago,

This rather reminds me of young people whom we worked with at Berkeley and other universities, including certain Christian colleges, and those who came to us in large numbers with packs on their backs at L’Abri in the 1960s.  They were rebels.  They knew they were, for they wore the rebel’s mark—the worn-out blue jeans.  But they did not seem to notice that the blue jeans had become the mark of accommodation—that indeed, everyone was in blue jeans.24

As we will see, the postmodern person tears away at every foundation that would give him identity.  He would even object to my using “him” in the previous sentence as a preconceived way of oppressing and manipulating women.  The genders are therefore removed and another layer of identity is gone from their world.

The Loss Of Centrality

The loss of identity leads to, and goes hand in hand with, the loss of man’s place in the universe.  Modernism took God from His place as the center of the universe and replaced Him with man himself.  But postmodernism will not allow man to be in that place either.  Zacharias notes, “To the secularist, the Bible cannot be the Word of God, for to grant even that theoretical possibility would be an admission of the supernatural.  That concession by the postmodern person sold out to a naturalistic view of reality would be tantamount to the surrender of his or her world-view of a voiceless universe.”25 Man is rather seen as existing for no designed reason, floating on “the third rock from the sun,” himself a collection of atoms that has no more right to exist than the rock itself.

As a matter of fact, the rock has more right to exist.  Veith, in reviewing Charles Olson’s 1950’s “new non-anthropocentric poetry,” (that man is like any other object in the universe)  points out that this loss of centrality in the world has given rise to both environmentalism and political radicalism.26 Animal rights activists continue to insist that animals have as much right, if not more, (because they are void of oppressive agendas) to space on this rock as humans.  Political activists work to destroy western capitalism which has been responsible for social manipulation and class warfare.

Os Guinness uses Madonna as an example of

“cultural cannibalism practiced today in the name of postmodernism. . . She is the ultimate spin doctor to her own PR, the consummate orchestrator of her own controlled, ever-changing, ever-commercial images.  Call her shameless, call her cheap, call her what you like.  There is no limit to what she will say, do, wear, mock, promote, degrade—all to draw attention to herself and sell her soul along with her latest image and product.”27

This type of meaningless, amoral display is characteristic of a person who sees no sense or meaning to the universe.  She is merely part of aimless existence.  It is all nonsense.  That is why a born and bred postmodernist has no standard of conduct except what is expedient.  Cal Thomas relates that R.C. Sproul said to him that the president’s view of law “echoes the definition of pornography—the test is contemporary community standards, not a transcendent, objective standard.”28 When there is no center and purpose to the world in which we live, there is no standard reason for any behavior.

The Rise Of Metafiction

Postmodernists and postmodern critics use the prefix “meta” to describe postmodernism’s use of cultural tools.  “Metanarratives” are narratives about narratives, or modern man’s ability to write history by building their own ideas on their own previous ideas.  Metafiction is the postmodern cultural phenomenon of “image being everything.”  Fiction is built upon fiction, image upon image, until no one can tell the real from the unreal which is precisely what postmodern writers and producers want.

Television and theater are the supreme postmodern art forms using Metafiction.  Beer commercials begin with a dying man on an island but end with a lively party of dancing girls and cold beer.  A movie begins in an Iowa corn field but eventually has the viewer believing that baseball players from long ago can walk from unreality into reality and play ball.  Your television screen begins with a serious drama but is interrupted by a pink bunny crossing the screen while the narrator says, “still going.”  Michael Jordan actually plays basketball with the Loony Tunes characters while they teach him the advantages of stretch moves impossible in the “people world.”  These are sometimes called “magical realism” or “super realism.”  In either case, they blur the distinction between real and unreal.

The rise of docudramas carries this trend over into news, history and biography.  The film can claim to be based on a real life story but create the details to be what we suppose they might be, or exactly what the audience wants to see.  Did Kennedy really have an affair with Marilyn Monroe?  The audience wants to believe he did and that is the way the movie portrays it.  The fact of the matter may be forever lost in obscurity.  The point is, however, that postmoderns don’t care to know beyond the surface.  It doesn’t matter to them what really happened.  Building fiction upon fiction fits into their worldview much better than fact.

The Postmodern Language

Language is a most important tool to the postmodern person.  Reality resides on the surface of things, and language is a surface tool that “spins” the events in a way that will be best suited for the situation.  For example:

In chapter 6 of Alice in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll revealed the philosophical acumen of Humpty Dumpty when he wrote,

“When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.”

“The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.”

“The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be the master—that’s all . . . When I make a word do a lot of work . . . I always pay it extra.”29

Deconstructionism

To the postmodern, all meaning is socially constructed and must be deconstructed.  Hidden in the text is the agenda of the author.  This agenda has been forced upon society throughout the modern and pre-modern ages.  People today think and act the way they do because of this manipulation of the language by oppressors.

In an interesting book on the comparisons of Nazi fascism to fascism today, Gene Veith writes,

A common theme in postmodernist criticism is “the dissolution of the self”—claiming that the individual is a “fiction,” a creation of bourgeois ideology.  Postmodernists “deconstruct the subject” by attempting to show that human consciousness itself is constituted by social forces and structures of power as embodied in language.  The self cannot escape the “prison-house of language,” through which the culture encodes itself and determines the very structure of what one is able to think.30

Though postmodernists believe that “the world is a text,” and that all of our cultural norms have been designed for us by oppressors, written language is especially suspect.  Your vocabulary has been taught to you by someone else.  The meaning of the words you use have been given to those words by societal forces.  When you write them down on paper, you are writing current meaning upon previous meaning upon older meaning and thus creating “metanarratives.”  Carl Henry notes, “Not only is all meaning held to be subjectively bound up with the knower rather than with text, but words are declared to have still other words as their only referent.  Texts are declared to be intrinsically incapable of conveying truth about some objective reality.31 It is the postmodernist’s purpose, therefore, not to read the language for dictionary meanings, but to discover the biases and oppressive purposes of the writer.

The Hermeneutics of Suspicion

Since metanarratives are full of overtures, deconstructing language takes a special purposed hermeneutic.  We have heard it so long that we have become too used to it.  If the Declaration of Independence declares “all men to be created equal,” it thus excludes women and since Thomas Jefferson owned slaves, it is no doubt a white, European male power play over the rest of society.  Since the Bible uses the masculine pronoun in referring to God the Father, the Bible is merely a history of a male-dominated religion that must be rejected if we care anything about women.

Veith adds some more specifics,

Deconstructionists even analyze the metaphors inherent in scientific language.  To speak of “natural laws” is to use a political metaphor; scientists who formulate “laws” are attempting to impose human political power on the natural order.  Even technical theories, such as the “master molecule theory of DNA functioning,” contain a gender bias (“master” is a male term).  When scientists speak of “unveiling the mystery of the ocean” or “penetrating the secrets of nature,” they are using sexual metaphors—undressing and raping the natural order, which is always conceived in feminine terms.  The so-called scientific objectivity and all of Western science’s technological achievements are “texts” that mask the male desire to subjugate, exploit, and sexually abuse “Mother Nature.”32

In the words of Roger Lundin, “Words are indeed in the saddle and ride mankind.  You pick up the language of contemporary pragmatism, thinking of it as a net to cast across the waters for a great catch; you find, instead, that you get hopelessly entangled in its never-ending web of words.”33

Using Postmodern Literature

Pragmatists such as George Barna merely “go with the flow” of postmodern language and literature.  In an article advocating leaving expository preaching for story-telling, Barna says, “Busters are non-linear, comfortable with contradiction, and inclined to view all religions as equally valid.  The nice thing about telling stories is that no one can say your story isn’t true.”34 Of course, then neither can anyone say your story is true!

Postmodern evangelical literature has flooded the Christian bookstore shelves.  “Christian Fiction” is another way of saying that the story is constructed in a way that the audience will like.  Stories about angels and demons abound in the area of “magical realism.”  Commenting on Latin American authors, Veith notes, “This style, heavily indebted to the popular spirituality of Latin American Catholicism, can be exhilarating in the hands of a master storyteller such as Marquez.  It may well be a method of raising spiritual issues.  Its effect, though, is to blur the distinction between truth and fictionality.”35 Albert Mohler comments, “Thus, the ‘hermeneutics of suspicion’ is now fully in this evangelical tent.”36 It may be standing in the pulpit of fundamental churches as well.

Postmodern Art and Architecture

In 1970, Francis Schaeffer wrote, “In art museums throughout the world, the viewers are at the mercy of the artists.  People, even children, who go through the art galleries are being manipulated whether they know it or not.”37 The modern art of 1970 can’t compare to the postmodern art of the 90s.  If Dante’s seventh circle of Hell is reserved for those who have sinned against art, surely the postmodern artist will find a place there.

Pre-modern Art

During the Middle Ages, most art was “representational” art.  The picture itself was the important thing.  The artist was concerned that the picture on the canvas represented what he saw with the naked eye.  In a fascinating book on art, Veith writes, “At its best, the Middle Ages produced great Christian art, reconciling form and content, integrating artistry and faith.”38 Of Rembrandt’s portrait, Family Group, Veith says, “Rembrandt has drawn a Christian family, not only in its appearance but in its meaning.”39 Such was the purpose of real art.

Modern Art

During the modern period, art became “Impressionistic” and “Abstract.”  Rather than the picture being the important thing, the artist became the important thing.  In a humanist frame of mind, the artist must find the true art within himself.  Art is not what the naked eye sees out there, it is what the artist “feels” inside himself as he expresses his genius on canvas.  No longer can the artist be bound to the rules of the natural world, staying within the lines and matching colors.  The rules must be broken and the modern artist broke all of them.  Schaeffer makes the same case for modern music and literature.40

In 1970, H.R. Rookmaaker, personal friend and consultant of Francis Schaeffer, wrote, “Modern art in its more consistent forms puts a question-mark against all values and principles.  Its anarchist aims of achieving complete human freedom turn all laws and norms into frustrating and deadening prison walls; the only way to deal with them is to destroy them.”41 In destroying the walls (“rules”) of the pre-modern era, modern art left man to himself and the coming of postmodernism.

Postmodern Art

Whereas pre-modern art was representational and modern art was abstract, postmodern art intends to “shock.”  Rather than the picture or the artist being important, the audience becomes the important factor.  Because the world is a “text” and we create our own reality, the only value of an artist’s work is the reaction created in the audience.

Veith says,

The implication is revealing—the standard of shock replaces the standard of beauty.  Concepts such as beauty, order, and meaning are being challenged by the new aesthetic theories in favor of ugliness, randomness, and irrationalism.  The purpose is not to give the audience pleasure, but to assault them with a “decentering” experience.  Art becomes defined as “whatever an artist does.”  As a result, the work of art becomes less important than the artist, a view which encourages posturing, egotism, and self-indulgence instead of artistic excellence.42

In the name of art, we have endured cows being spray-painted so that when they walk about, art is created; King Kong Balloons tied to the Empire State Building; toilets on display in the middle of a stage.  The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) once awarded $20,000 for a work called “The Kiss” in which a pathologist sawed a human head in half, turned the two halves facing each other to resemble a kiss.  And, of course, it gets worse and more vulgar from here.

“Performance Art” is designed to reduce the human to the lowest level and to strip him of any dignity and design.  The more dehumanizing the experience is for the audience, the more successful postmodern art has become.  MTV-style productions are intended to be ugly, violent and nonsensical.  The technological production is far more important than the music.  Rap music is disjointed, animalistic and violent as well.  George Will wrote, “There is an abundance of fine art if you declare that fine art is anything that anyone calling himself an artist calls fine art. . . If I call a tail a leg, how many legs has a dog got?  Five? No, because calling a tail a leg doesn’t make it a leg.”43 And that is what the postmodernist rejects.

Postmodern Architecture

The pre-modern age was an age of representation, as we have said.  John Stackhouse writes, “Christians throughout history, therefore, have wisely paid attention to the erection of structures that would convey a particular message to the community.  Medieval cathedrals spoke eloquently of the devotion of princes, clergy and townspeople to God—and to civic and personal pride.”44 This was not only true of high church traditions but “even Baptists [constructed] church buildings that asserted the moral status of Christianity in an increasingly materialistic culture.”45

Just as modernism changed other areas of art, modern man was typified also by his architecture of steel, glass, skyscrapers, order, industrial looks.  America’s cities at this time are a testimony to modernism as sleek, efficient buildings stretch to the sky and overshadow older, more ornate buildings representing an older age.  Even Christian structures have used modern architecture to find their place in society.  Stackhouse says, “Oral Roberts University and Robert Schuller’s Crystal Cathedral dramatically exemplify a different approach, declaring in their ‘space-age’ architecture of sharp-angled steel, concrete and glass that they are at America’s sophisticated cutting edge.”46

The postmodernist rejects the architecture both of pre-modernism and modernism.  He sees both expressions as those of power and oppression.  As Schaeffer wrote, “He is the man who, about 1960, gave birth to the happenings, and then beyond this the environments. . . In the happenings you are put as it were within the picture.”47 By our time, Schaeffer has proved to be right.  Postmodernists bring man into the building and surround him with facades.  Theme Parks are typical places where we are surrounded by something that looks like another time and place, and yet it is untrue, we are not really there.  Shopping malls often create a certain theme and invite us to walk within this miniature virtual world for a short time.  Even restaurants now must bring us into Mexico to eat Mexican food, or to Italy to eat Italian food.  We enjoy the escape and the attention given to detail, but most of all we enjoy playing with the unrealistic situation.

Postmodern architecture also attacks the patron by exposing contradictions.  By walking inside a building you are likely to see trees, shrubs, gardens and those things that should be outside.  This is a purposed promotion of the environment as the better place to be.

Just as the atrium brings the outside inside, many postmodernist buildings bring the inside outside.  Structural framework such as beams and ventilation ducts may appear on the surface for everyone to see.  An example is the Pompideau Center in Paris, built in 1977.  Support beams, tie rods, and the plumbing appear to be on the outside of the building, painted in bright, garish colors.  The inner workings of the building are visible behind a thin skin of transparent glass.  An escalator snakes along the exterior of the building.  It is as if the building were turned inside out.  The effect is unsettling, like looking at a man but seeing only his insides—his lungs, blood vessels, and red guts.48

This is precisely the postmodern point.  The world is a contradiction and there is no truth, pattern or law that must be followed.  In fact, to follow a pattern is to submit to the manipulation of societal programmers.  Therefore, man is brought into a contradictory, confusing world that is designed to destroy old myths.

Interestingly, postmoderns enjoy refurbishing old structures.  Many older sections of town are revitalized into efficiently working structures.  Old barns, churches, and warehouses are kept intact on the outside and brought up to date on the inside.  Of course, the bathrooms and kitchens are not restored but rather are modernized.  Eclecticism works well for the postmodern because it shows the randomness of man’s life and the lack of priority for any given ethic.

Churches are having to ask themselves how far they can go to accommodate the postmodern thinkers.  Many progressive churches purposely avoid structures that look like traditional churches.  Some take surveys of people to see what they want and what they would like if they came inside.  This is far removed from the older, pre-modern structures purposely designed in the shape of a cross with its “nave” crossed by its “transept.”  When sinners came in, like it or not, they were brought into the “cross” for worship.  Windows were often elevated so the worshiper had to look up for light.  In the postmodern world of art and architecture, there is no meaning and therefore “form” which implies “meaning” is discouraged.

As believers we know that the church is not the structure.  But are we gaining or losing by giving up on good art and architecture?  God commanded the tabernacle to be built for “glory” and “beauty” (Exodus 28:2).  We ought to strive to have the best of both meaning that honors the truth of God, as well as form that lifts our thoughts to the Creator.

Postmodern  Technology

Orwell predicted that by 1984 we would be controlled by computers as a child is controlled by his “Big Brother.”  In 1996 a computer called “Big Blue” tried to control world champion chess player, Garry Kasparov.  Kasparov said that he was playing to “help defend our dignity.”49 Kasparov may have won the chess match (because he could “think” and the computer could not) but the computer may be winning the war!

Definition

Technological wonders such as television, movie theaters, videos and computers have become realities and no state of existence typifies postmodernism better than “virtual reality.”  It is a state of being informed but disconnected; of power without the difficulties of confronting others face to face.  Leonard Payton wrote of technological wonders that they are “made by people who tend not to know one another for people they do not know at all and will probably never meet.”50 Indeed, to a postmodernist, “all reality is virtual reality.”51 Since our existence has no meaning and we are not connected to history or its values by any binding truths, no one can be quite certain where reality and non-reality start and stop.  Francis Schaeffer wrote, “If one has no basis on which to judge, then reality falls apart, fantasy is indistinguishable from reality; there is no value for the human individual, and right and wrong have no meaning.”52 Technology can be a blessing or a curse.  In this regard it is becoming a curse.

Neil Postman has called this technological control, “Technopoly–The submission of all forms of cultural life to the sovereignty of technique and technology.”53 Groothuis, in the same vein as Postman, laments the takeover of our society by such a valueless medium, “When information is conveyed through cyberspace, the medium shapes the message, the messenger, and the receiver.  It shapes the entire culture.”54 A key ingredient is not only the blurring of the fact with the fiction, but the participation by the computer user in this virtual world.  Today, one can actually participate (of course, only virtually) in sporting events, world-wide field trips, and even in virtual eroticism.  In such a world, the viewer is at the mercy of a world created by a technician who probably has only your pocket book in his own mind.  This sort of “power” wielded over the helpless souls of society hasn’t seemed to alarm postmodern activists.

The End Of Writing

Throughout the pre-modern and the modern eras, the print medium was the standard tool for conveying ideas.  God gave us his Bible in print because print is permanent, precise, and is a type of communication that allows one the time and contemplation to grasp its meaning.  Sven Birkerts noted, “Print communication requires the active engagement of the reader’s attention, for reading is fundamentally an act of translation . . . The physical arrangements of print are in accord with our traditional sense of history.”55 This “typographical mind” has been the medium that educated us, allowed us communication with God, gave us the great classic literature of the world, and taught the postmoderns to think.

The 20th century, however, has seen the print medium give way to faster, more titillating and easier forms of communication.  When Samuel Morse first sent a message by electrical impulse from Washington to Baltimore, the information age was born.  Postman says, “The telegraph removed space as an inevitable constraint on the movement of information, and, for the first time, transportation and communication were disengaged from each other.”56 From that point on, information has been removed from its context, and the observer no longer has to be a partaker of the events.  Our “real” world is isolated and separated from the “world over there.”

Technology has played into the hands of postmodernism.  Virtual reality “deconstructs” the “text” not only of written history but also of life itself.  Groothuis writes, “The character of the computer screen, the strange powers of word processing, and the almost ubiquitous Internet tend to reinforce certain postmodernist themes that may undermine Christian sensibilities and a biblical worldview.”57

Virtual Community

We all lament the loss of community as our world moves from the rural life of our grandparents to the urban life of our kids.  We live inside fences, automobiles, garages with electric openers (and closers), cubed work areas, and many other “cocooning” influences.  We are told that the information super highway is our ticket out.  But is it?  David Wells observes, “Our computers are starting to talk to us while our neighbors are becoming more distant and anonymous.”58 Groothuis says, “The notion of community tends to erode under the conditions of postmodernity.  A common social practice called ‘cocooning’ isolates individuals from others by keeping them safe and snug in front of their home entertainment centers and computer screens.”59

Within the computer, on the internet, these individuals who have withdrawn from the real world, are exploring virtual worlds where they can be someone else, do not have to live by anyone’s rules, can experience realms that are otherwise forbidden to them.  Chat rooms become excuses for conversation.  Of course, none of the rules of face-to-face manners and deportment apply, and one can walk away with anonymity and without consequence.  For all of its hype, the “community” created by technology is no community at all.

The Christian Challenge

Believers have always tried to use the medium available to reach the lost world.  Whether radio, television or the computer, we have tried to proclaim a message.  In the postmodernist’s virtual world of technology, certain obvious cautions must be taken.  J. Gresham Machen, in the early fight against Liberalism, reminded us that Christianity must remain based on something that really happened.

“It must certainly be admitted, then, that Christianity does depend upon something that happened; our religion must be abandoned altogether unless at a definite point in history Jesus died as a propitiation for the sins of men.  Christianity is certainly dependent upon history.”60

We cannot present Christ and His atoning work as if it were one of many “virtual” options.  The postmodernist can “accept” Christianity or reject it without ever considering its “reality.”  To him, there would be no contradiction in accepting more than one if not many religions.  Today, we hear of many “faiths” any one of which becomes truth for the one accepting it.

The questions of reaching postmodernists with technology are more serious than simple questions of methodology.  Postman, a believer who teaches at New York University among a postmodern culture writes,

This is serious business, which is why we learn nothing when educators ask, Will students learn mathematics better by computers than by textbooks?  Or when businessmen ask, Through which medium can we sell more products?  Or when preachers ask, Can we reach more people through television than through radio?  Or when politicians ask, How effective are messages sent through different media?  Such questions have an immediate, practical value to those who ask them, but they are diversionary.  They direct our attention away from the serious social, intellectual, and institutional crises that new media foster.61

A.W. Tozer, years ago, sounded a similar warning when he saw the beginnings of postmodern thinking in a technological age,

Failure to see this is the cause of a very serious breakdown in modern evangelicalism. . . We now demand glamour and fast flowing dramatic action.  A generation of Christians reared among push buttons and automatic machines is impatient of slower and less direct methods of reaching their goals.  We have been trying to apply machine-age methods to our relations with God. . . The tragic results of this spirit are all about us.62

If we are to “become all things to all men,” it will take more than keeping up with the postmodern Jones’.  It will take asking ourselves how they think about what they see.  It will take a willingness on our part to present the gospel as true, regardless of how that disturbs a comfortable, unrealistic, virtual world.

Conclusion

The challenge to Christians living in postmodern times is enormous.  If ever we face the danger of the frog in the slowly boiling pot, it is today.  Gene Veith warns, “The end of the modern era opens up genuine opportunities for Biblical Christianity.  However, instead of squarely facing the postmodern condition, many Christians succumb to the postmodernism plaguing the rest of the culture.”63 The pragmatism of the new age is more accessible than ever before.  With people demanding technological marvel, it is easier than ever before for the church to deliver.  And the rewards are immediate and congratulatory.  But as we look at 20th (and 21st) century Christianity, we must ask ourselves if we are holding our link in the historical chain of our faith.  Is our life-changing message still changing lives?

Os Guinness summarizes well,

But perhaps postmodernism’s main challenge to the church is to our central mission as Christians:  following Christ and making him Lord in all of life.  The church cannot become simply another customer center that offers designer religion and catalogue spirituality to the hoppers and shoppers of the modern world.  Followers of Christ are custodians of the faith passed on down the running centuries.  Never must we allow anyone outside or inside the church to become cannibals who devour the truth and meaning of this priceless heritage of faith.  Letting the church be the church and the gospel be the gospel is integral to letting God be God.64

Section III

The Apologetics For Postmodernism

The most important question for any Christian to face is how to reach his own generation.  We understand that the only really important question is the eternal question and understanding our culture has always been a key to reaching the culture.   Douglas Groothuis wrote, “Our souls reflect our worlds and our worlds reflect our souls.  One who aspires to understand the nature of the soul ought, then, to be an auditor of culture.”65 But there have always been disagreements over the appropriate ways to reach each generation in their own culture.

It is easy to ignore the changes in culture and refuse to “become all things to all men” but it is also easy to become what the culture is in order to reach it.  Franky Schaeffer, in 1981, lamented the over-reaction by the new Christian left in reaching this new generation:

Today, we still have this kind of utilitarianism.  However, to complicate matters there is a new breed of utilitarianism, which has come about largely through those who (often for correct reasons) have rebelled against the materialistic consumer-oriented utilitarian activity for activity’s sake position of the church.

Unfortunately, those who have rebelled have latched on to another nineteenth-century phenomenon and have been infiltrated by it and just as damaged as those they have rebelled against.66

It seems to this author that either extreme is wrong.  Nothing is compromised by learning about the culture in which one lives, nor by trying to think like they think.  We cannot retreat out of the world to win the world.  But while learning about our culture, we must not adopt the philosophy and life-style that is contrary to God.  Retreat is wrong and capitulation is wrong, but infiltration with confrontation must be accomplished.

There are four areas in which the Christian must keep the right balance in a postmodern age.

Truth and Reality

The Apostle Paul tells us that we must have “our loins girt about with truth” (Eph 6:14).  God’s Word is filled with the importance of standing for truth as a testimony to God in the world.  We are to “buy the truth and sell it not” (Prov 23:23), that is, we must give everything we have to get it and once we have it, we must not give it up for any price.  The reason for this emphasis on truth in God’s Word is that lying, or being contrary to what is true, is a denial of God’s reality.  We are told that God cannot lie (Titus 1:2) and in fact it would be impossible for such a thing to happen (Heb 6:18).  God’s very nature is truth and our very ministry is “For the truth’s sake, which dwelleth in us, and shall be with us for ever” (2 John 2).  God’s world was a perfectly truthful world until Satan introduced an element that is contrary to God’s nature—a lie (John 8:44).  Man’s selfish nature is inclined to agree with the lies of Satan in opposition to the truth of God.  This opposition may manifest itself in false claims, actions that are contrary to God’s will, thoughts that arise out of a selfish heart, immoral actions contrary to God’s holy character, breaking the laws of the land or any number of “lies.”  The believer simply cannot agree with a lie whether by word or deed.  Such a thing is sin for him because it is contrary to God and the way He made the world.

As our study has shown, never in the history of Christianity has truth been more under attack, not just the truthfulness of certain biblical propositions, but the very existence of truth as a possibility.  Without the possibility of truth, the postmodern man sees no reality in history or science.  Francis Schaeffer, some years ago wrote, “History as history has always presented problems, but as the concept of the possibility of true truth has been lost, the erosion of the line between history and the fantasy the writer wishes to use as history for his own purposes is more and more successful as a tool of manipulation.”67 Believers must not give in to this same manipulation.  Ron Mayers points out, “The individual who says he is a Christian, but does not live like a Christian, actually gives the lie to his own testimony.  Unfortunately, unbelievers interpret this contradiction as an indication of the absence of truth in the claims of Christianity.”68

In reaching the postmodern whether by words and actions or by worship styles and homiletics, Christians must show the reality of God and His hand in this world by displaying an unswerving loyalty to truth.  One recent article lamented, in the onslaught of attacks on truth, that “the church in North America is not answering postmodernists effectively, and we are losing ground so rapidly that many church leaders are ready to join the new postmodern consensus.”69 Such capitulation must never take place.

We must be careful of evangelistic stealth ministries.  If we are trying to draw the postmodern into our churches by presenting the things he likes (music, style, language, technology, etc) while at the same time hiding fundamental Christian practices (prayer, communion, baptism, self-denial, piety), it will backfire on us.  It is not that the postmodern will be turned off by this.  That is the bedrock of his world.  There is no absolute truth and all practices are to be individually selected according to each person’s likes and dislikes.  In an ironic way, Christian ministries that cater to the postmodern’s likes and dislikes, are actually agreeing that Christianity can be taken or left as each individual (or generation) pleases.  These people will stay around as long as it benefits them to do so.

Worship and Immanence

To the postmodern, worship is mere technological symbolism over substance.  We have discovered that in his world the symbols are the substance.  Groothuis writes, “The image is everything because the essence has become unknown and unknowable.”70 Because he sees reality and truth as being constructed at the moment, worship need not go beyond the worship act.  This amounts to worshiping worship.  The more “real” the worship service seems, the less a postmodern person needs or wants anything beyond that.  Some years ago, Vance Havner quoted Newton D. Baker as saying, “The effect of modern inventions has been to immeasurably increase the difficulty of deliberation and contemplation about large and important issues.”71 I believe it was Hitler who was the first to mesmerize audiences with multi-media presentations which made the individual forget his personal struggles and become caught up in the emotion of the moment.

We must proclaim God as transcendent—but not too transcendent.  His ways are not our ways and He is above the limitations of the world.  But He is not so far away that we cannot know Him.  And we must proclaim God as immanent—but not too immanent.  He condescends to men of low estate.  But He is not the world itself, nor the music, nor the emotion of a worship service.  We are not converted by “getting in touch” with the immanent.  C.S. Lewis wrote, “Until a certain spiritual level has been reached, the promise of immortality will always operate as a bribe which vitiates the whole religion and infinitely inflames those very self-regards which religion must cut down and uproot.”72 We must be very careful not to give the sinner what he wants, but rather what he needs.  And usually, in the spiritual realm, what a sinner needs is not at all what he wants.  Pascal wrote centuries ago, “They imagine that such a conversion consists in a worship of God conducted, as they picture it, like some exchange or conversation.”73

Perhaps no word has grown up in our worship services like the word “community.”  Active churches are seeking community among attendees in order to draw them into the “group” and thereby seek a commitment from them.  The fellowship of believers cannot be minimized in the New Testament nor in our churches.  But understanding the postmodern man, we must be careful how the newcomer sees the group relationship.  Francis Schaeffer, a sage of sorts concerning the coming postmodern era, in 1971 warned:

Now we are ready to start talking about the community.  I would stress again, however, that a person does not come into relationship with God when he enters the Christian community, whether it is a local church or any other form of community.  As I have said, the liberals have gone on to promote other concepts of community.  They teach that the only way you can be in relationship to God is when you are in a group.  The modern concept is that you enter into community; in this community there is horizontal relationship; in these small I-Thou relationships you can hope that there is a big I-Thou relationship.

This is not the Christian teaching.  There is no such thing as a Christian community unless it is made up of individuals who are already Christians through the work of Christ.  One can talk about Christian community until one is green, but there will be no Christian community except on the basis of a personal relationship with the personal God through Christ.74

It would be abnormal if Christians did not want to reach the present generation in any way they could.  But because we are also of this postmodern age, we must ask the sobering question:  Are we changing our worship style because it is what will reach the lost?  Or are we changing our worship style because it is what we like?  The early church reached the lost by doing what God wanted them to do in order to worship Him.

Culture and Moral Law

We are coming dangerously close to believing that culture is morally neutral.  Most definitions, however, will necessarily include some word like “expression” or “achievement” to describe the thing called culture.  We ought to remember that the root of culture is “cult.”  It is a society, or at least the norms of a society, that have been formulated by the members of that cult.  That is why John Leo can decry the absence of truth by saying, “This casualness in popular culture is reinforced by trends in the intellectual world which hold that truth is socially constructed and doesn’t exist in the real world.”75 That is why gangs develop strict codes concerning the clothing they wear, language they use and attitudes they must have, because their cult has necessarily created its own culture.  The moral value of such culture is abundantly expressed in the mores developed by the people of that culture.

Culture is the spirit of the age.  It can be a healthy spirit expressed by believers, but because it is the expression of human beings, it is usually a sinful spirit.  The New Testament combines the word “world” (kosmos) with the word “age” (aion) to give us this picture.  We are not to be conformed to the “aion” (Rom 12:2); when we were lost, we walked according to the “aion” of this “world” (Eph 2:2); Demas forsook Paul, having loved “this present aion” or actually, this “now age” (2 Tim 4:10).  We walk in this world, the “kosmos,” because we are creatures here, but we do not walk by its spirit, the “aion.” Peter said we should not be “fashioning ourselves” (1 Pet 1:14) to this world by our selfish desires.

Many secular culture-watchers have argued for postmodernism’s affect on the culture in a moral way.  Steven Connor, professor of English at Birkbeck College, London University writes, “In popular culture as elsewhere, the postmodern condition is not a set of symptons that are simply present in a body of sociological and textual evidence, but a complex effect of the relationship between social practice and the theory that organizes, interprets and legitimates its forms.”76 Edward O. Wilson writes, “If these premises are correct, it follows that one culture is as good as any other in the expression of truth and morality, each in its own special way.”77

Sadly, it is the churches that have been slow to realize and admit that current culture cannot be adapted and used in any way it chooses.  While church leaders have ignored the moral implications of popular culture, other Christian leaders have had to sound the warning.  Ravi Zacharias writes, “History is replete with examples of unscrutinized cultural trends that were uncritically accepted yet brought about dramatic changes of national import . . . Cultures have a purpose, and in the whirlwind of possibilities that confront society, reason dictates that we find justification for the way we think and why we think, beyond chance existence.”78 David Wells writes, “Culture, then, is the outward discipline in which inherited meanings and morality, beliefs and ways of behaving are preserved.  It is that collectively assumed scheme of understanding that defines both what is normal and what meanings we should attach to public behavior.”79 David Chilton, writing about liberal Christian revolutionaries, says, “Revolution is a religious faith.  All men, created in the image of God, are fundamentally religious: all cultural activity is essentially an outgrowth of man’s religious position; for our life and thought are exercised either in obedience to, or rebellion against, God.”80

Though culture is often ignored by unwary believers as having moral significance, the postmodern attaches meaning to almost everything he does as well as to what the church does.  Veith reminds us, “Every cultural artifact is thus construed as a ‘text.’ That is, every human creation is analogous to language.  To use a postmodernist slogan, ‘The world is a text.’  Governments, worldviews, technologies, histories, scientific theories, social customs, and religions are all essentially linguistic constructs.”81 We were better instructed by Robinson Crusoe, watching the cannibals devour their comrades and saying, “whose barbarous customs, were their own disaster, being in them a token indeed of God’s having left them, with the other nations of that part of the world, to such stupidity and to such inhuman courses.”82 We should be so observant of the spirit of our own age.

Normally we react to the situation which we have observed firsthand, especially if we have grown uncomfortable with obvious inconsistencies.  Douglas McLachlan responds to cultural abuses from conservatives:

Fundamentalists have tended to limit the application of Christian truth to personal life styles while failing to see its application to the great cultural issues of our day.    There are occasions when we will have to turn our attention away from such things as hem lines and hair lengths (and there is a place for dealing with modesty in both dress and grooming—Paul and Peter did!) and to focus on such issues as encroaching secularism, avaricious materialism, pervasive evolutionism and defiant feminism.83

In the conservative church-growth scene, however, many are sounding alarms against those who see no difficulty in bringing today’s culture into the church.  William H. Willimon says, “In leaning over to speak to the modern world, I fear we may have fallen in.”84 John MacArthur writes, “The culture around us has declared war on all standards, and the church is unwittingly following suit. . . . It is, once again, a capitulation to the relativism of an existential culture.”85 Francis Schaeffer wrote, “Furthermore, if we acquiesce, we will no longer be the redeeming salt for our culture—a culture which is committed to the concept that both morals and laws are only a matter of cultural orientation, of statistical averages. . . If our reflex action is always accommodation regardless of the centrality of the truth involved, there is something wrong.”86 Groothuis adds, “It is no coincidence that those churches that most readily incorporate elements of contemporary culture into their worship services are also least likely to appreciate the need to confront and to transform contemporary culture according to biblical truth.”87

William Bennett, former chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities and Secretary of Education, as well as the author of many books dealing with culture, writes, “My worry is that people are not unsettled enough; I don’t think we are angry enough.  We have become inured to the cultural rot that is settling in.  Like Paulina, we are getting used to it, even though it is not a good thing to get used to.”88 Perhaps we have lost our zeal for God and gained a zeal for the success that cultural relationships brings.

In 1941, Vance Havner wrote these timely words:

There was Demas, who forsook Paul, having loved this present world.  Doubtless he had started out in dead earnest, maybe with plenty of fire, but the pull of the old life and the charm of the world were too much for him.  Think not, however, of Demas merely as the sort lured away today by dances and movies.  Certainly all that belongs to this present world, but we are in danger of restricting “worldliness” to a few pet evils, forgetting that what is in mind here is the age in which Demas lived.  The spirit of the times got him, and he got into the tempo of it, was carried away with the surge of it.89

Repentance and Faith

A.W. Tozer wrote, “To the question, ‘What must I do to be saved?’ we must learn the correct answer.  To fail here is not to gamble with our souls; it is to guarantee eternal banishment from the face of God.  Here we must be right or be finally lost.”90 This must be our bottom line with the postmodern man.  Here we cannot be content to have learned what it takes to gather people together week after week, to have been culturally savvy enough to attract attention, or to have been well-liked and accepted by our generation.  The postmodern man can follow every demand we make of him, even pray whatever we ask him to pray, and in his mind simply be adding Christianity to the file of other practical self-helps.

If we are truly interested in being “culturally relevant” in the most important thing, we will study our generation to find out how we can bring them to repentance and faith.  If all we are doing is winning their approval we have failed.  It is not success for a Christian simply to “build a church” or “gather a crowd.”   Years ago J. Gresham Machen wrote:

Faith is being exalted so high today that men are being satisfied with any kind of faith, just so it is faith.  It makes no difference what is believed, we are told, just so the blessed attitude of faith is there.  The undogmatic faith, it is said, is better than the dogmatic, because it is purer faith—faith less weakened by the alloy of knowledge.91

The postmodernist may be the easiest sinner to invite to faith that we have seen in two hundred years!  The problem will be whether we can know if that faith is the biblical faith of the New Testament.

To begin with, we must remember that the postmodern man doesn’t regard history as having actually taken place.  As Craig says, “Indeed, it is not clear whether there really is such a thing as the past on a thoroughgoing post-modernist view.”92 Or as Benjamin Woolley writes, “Artificial reality is the authentic postmodern condition, and virtual reality its definitive technological expression . . . . The artificial is the authentic.”93 This is why we are evangelizing on thin ice when we turn our church services into technological playlands for the postmodern’s sake, and then ask him to respond to a real, historical message.  It is existentialism, not Christianity, that talks much about faith but admits we cannot know the historical facts behind the faith.

Connor, in a chapter on postmodern performance, argues that the medium is what is real to a postmodernist, and the message behind the medium has no urgency or reality after the medium is finished.  He writes:

Sound and image are simultaneous with the ‘real’ music that is being performed (although, of course, in the case of most contemporary music the ‘original’ sound is usually itself only an amplified derivation from an initiating signal), even if it remains obvious that what is most real about the event is precisely the fact that it is being projected as mass experience . . . .  In the case of the ‘live’ performance, the desire for originality is a secondary effect of various forms of reproduction.  The intense ‘reality’ of the performance is not something that lies behind the particulars of the setting, the technology and the audience; its reality consists in all of that apparatus of representation.94

The critical point for the presentation of Christianity is that the message of salvation must be believed as historically true regardless of the quality of the medium.  If Adam and Eve did not live, then perhaps we have no real sin for which to repent.  If Jesus Christ did not live, die and resurrect as the Bible says, then there is no Christian message.  Of all the world’s religion, Christianity is the only one that depends solely on a historical miracle being a fact!  Machen wrote, “Salvation does depend upon what happened long ago, but the event of long ago has effects that continue until today.”95 The postmodern man is in a precarious position of denying, or at least doubting, everything in the past and yet still claiming to have faith.  He tells the Christian to “get real” but has bought into the notion (i.e. “Minimalism”) that nothing is real outside of his own mind.

For this man, everything is a “text” which tells him the usability of what he is seeing.  To dress like him, talk like him, play his music and recreate his world inside the church (or even inside the individual Christian life), may well be telling him that the church’s message is no more “real” than his own, individualized message.  This doesn’t mean he won’t like it or commit to it:  it means that he never buys it as really real.

In 1 Corinthians 14, Paul was concerned that when lost people came in the church, they might see the same kind of emotional displays that they saw in their pagan temples and simply add their Christian experience to their pagan experiences.  “But,” he writes, “if all prophesy, and there come in one that believeth not, or one unlearned, he is convinced of all, he is judged of all: and thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest; and so falling down on his face he will worship God, and report that God is in you of a truth” (1 Cor 14:24-25).  We ought to be concerned when the postmodern man comes into our services and is as comfortable there as he is in his own world.

John Knox wrote, “The man, I say, that understands and knows his own corrupt nature and God’s severe judgment, most gladly will receive the free redemption offered by Christ Jesus, which is the only victory that overthrows Satan and his power.”96 We have to trust the power of the gospel message and the work of the Holy Spirit enough to believe that when a man is uncomfortable and feels out of place in church, though he may be far from his world, he is close to the kingdom of God.  This is the path of conviction down which everyone must come if he is to come to Christ.  Yet, to feel uncomfortable is the epitome of wrong for the postmodern man.  Truth does not matter, but protecting one’s space matters most.  The gospel appeal, therefore, is a delicate moment for the postmodernist.

When Machen wrote in 1923, he was writing to the modern man and his social and liberal tendencies.  This excerpt, however, may still be exactly our problem reaching the postmodern man.

The fundamental fault of the modern Church is that she is busily engaged in an absolutely impossible task—she is busily engaged in calling the righteous to repentance.  Modern preachers are trying to bring men into the Church without requiring them to relinquish their pride; they are trying to help men avoid the conviction of sin.  The preacher gets up into the pulpit, opens the Bible, and addresses the congregation somewhat as follows:  ‘You people are very good,’ he says; ‘you respond to every appeal that looks toward the welfare of the community. Now we have in the Bible—especially in the life of Jesus—something so good that we believe it is good enough even for you good people.’  Such is modern preaching.  But it is entirely futile.  Even our Lord did not call the righteous to repentance, and probably we shall be no more successful than He.97

We must not find ourselves agreeing with the postmodern man.  Our stewardship is to preach the wonderful grace of God through the gospel of Jesus Christ.  No generation has been promised that such a task would be easy or popular.  But the call to ministry is a call to the proclamation of truth and to believe that what God asks us to give is exactly what our generation needs.

Conclusion

We are all asked to “be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear” (1 Peter 3:15).  It may be easier to recognize error than to find a way to combat it.  The churches of Jesus Christ must search the Scriptures for truth and then give it out without violating sacred principles.  There will always be room for variation as we take the gospel to the people where we live.  The concern in this section has been that we do not think we are reaching the postmodern man just because we attract him.  The success syndrome may be harder to fight with this generation than ever before simply because this generation can and will follow anything with little or no real commitment.  There must be a telling reason why our churches are as large and active as any time in recent history and yet the commitment levels of those making professions of faith are so low.

When we stand before Christ we will be asked to give account of “how” we built on the foundation, not “how much.”  Our stewardship is to proclaim what our King has given us to proclaim.  It is an awesome task and sometimes we feel inadequate.  But the rewards for faithful service will be worth it all.

The apologist, C.S. Lewis, once finished an argument this way.

One last word.  I have found that nothing is more dangerous to one’s own faith than the work of an apologist.  No doctrine of that Faith seems to me so spectral, so unreal as one that I have just successfully defended in a public debate.  For a moment, you see, it has seemed to rest on oneself: as a result, when you go away from that debate, it seems no stronger than that weak pillar.  That is why we apologists take our lives in our hands and can be saved only by falling back continually from the web of our own arguments, as from our intellectual counters, into the Reality—from Christian apologetics into Christ Himself.  That also is why we need one another’s continual help—oremus pro invice

 


[1] Gene Edward Veith, Jr. Postmodern Times (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1994), 29.

[2] Ibid., 31.

[3] Thomas Oden, “The Death Of Modernity” The Challenge of Postmodernism (Wheaton: BridgePoint Books, 1995), 20.

[4] Veith, Postmodern Times, 27.

[5] Carl F.H. Henry, The Challenge of Postmodernism (Wheaton: BridgePoint Books, 1995), 34.

[6] Veith, Postmodern Times, 35.

[7] Ibid.

[8] H.R. Rookmaaker, Modern Art and the Death of a Culture (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1994), 170.

[9] Francis Schaeffer, The Great Evangelical Disaster (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1992), 49.

[10] Veith, Postmodern Times, 38.

[11] Toynbee, A Study Of History, Quoted by Veith, Postmodern Times, 44.

[12] John Silber, “Will Our Media Moguls Do The Right Thing?”, AFA Journal, September 1995, 16.

[13] C.S. Lewis, The Abolition Of Man (New York: MacMillan Pub. Co., 1955), 34-35.

[14] Veith, Postmodern Times, 39.

[15] Oden, “The Death Of Modernity,” The Challenge Of Postmodernism, 25.

[16] Os Guinness, Fit Bodies, Fat Minds (Grand Rapids: Baker Book, 1994), 102.

[17] Francis Schaeffer, The Great Evangelical Disaster, 90.

[18] Interview with Ravi Zacharias, “Reaching the Happy Thinking Pagan: How Can We Present the Christian   Message to Postmodern People?” Leadership Magazine, Spring 1995, 23.

[19] Veith, Postmodern Times, 86.

[20] Tim Keller, “Preaching Morality in an Amoral Age” Christianity Today, Inc./Leadership Journal, copyright 1996.  Downloaded from AOL, 1/24/96.

[21] David Dockery, “Preface” The Challenge of Postmodernism, 14.

[22] Quoted by John Leo, “True Lies vs. Total Recall” U.S. News & World Report, August 7, 1995.

[23] Gene Veith, Postmodern Times, 72.

[24] Francis Schaeffer, The Great Evangelical Disaster, 98-99.

[25] Ravi Zacharias, Deliver Us From Evil (Dallas:  Word Publishing, 1996), 53.

[26] Gene Veith, Postmodern Times, 74.

[27] Os Guinness, Fit Bodies, Fat Minds, 102-103.

[28] Cal Thomas, “The Gospel According to Bill Should Not Fool Anyone” Ft. Collins Coloradoan, nd.

[29] John Ankerberg & John Weldon, Protestants & Catholics: Do They Now Agree? (Eugene: Harvest House, 1995), 113.

[30] Gene Edward Veith, Jr., Modern Fascism (St. Louis:  Concordia Publishing House, 1993), 37.

[31] Carl F.H. Henry, “Postmodernism: The New Spectre?” The Challenge Of Postmodernism, 36.

[32] Gene Veith, Postmodern Times, 56.

[33] Roger Lundin, “The Pragmatics of Postmodernism” Christian Apologetics in the Postmodern World Phillip, TimothyR. And Okholm, Dennis L., Ed. (Downer’s Grove:  InterVarsity Press, 1995), 32.

[34] Quoted by Steve Rabey, “This Is Not Your Boomer’s Generation” Leadership, Fall 1996, 17.

[35] Gene Veith, Postmodern Times, 132.

[36] Albert Mohler, “Evangelical: What’s in a Name?”  The Coming Evangelical Crisis, John H. Armstrong, Ed. (Chicago:  Moody Press, 1996), 38.

[37] Francis Schaeffer, The Church At The End Of The 20th Century (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1994), 91.

[38] Gene Edward Veith, Jr. State Of The Arts (Wheaton:  Crossway Books, 1991), 54.

[39] Ibid., 60.

[40] In Schaeffer’s book, The God Who Is There, he shows how all of the “fine arts” drop below “the line of despair.”  Just as modern art broke all of the rules of representation on canvass, modern music broke all of the rules of structure and composition.  This was modern man expressing himself as the highest form of evolution, not able to be bound by any laws.

[41] H.R. Rookmaaker, 161.

[42] Veith, The State Of The Arts, 21.

[43] George Will, “The Shocking Bourgeoisie” The Morning After (New York: MacMillan, 1986), 55.

[44] John G. Stackhouse, Jr., “From Architecture To Argument,” Christian Apologetics in a Postmodern World, 40.

[45] Ibid, 41.

[46] Ibid

[47] Francis Schaeffer, The God Who Is There (Downer’s Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1968), 35.

[48] Gene Veith, Postmodern Times, 117.

[49] Quoted by Robert Wright, “Can Machines Think?” Time Magazine, March 25, 1996.

[50] Leonard Payton, “How Shall We Then Sing,” The Coming Evangelical Crisis, 198.

[51] Gene Veith, Postmodern Times, 61.

[52] Francis Schaeffer, The Church At The End Of The Twentieth Century (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1994), 50.

[53] Neil Postman, Technopoly (New York: Vintage Books, 1992), 52.

[54] Douglas Groothuis, The Soul In Cyberspace (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1997), 53.

[55] Quoted by Douglas Groothuis, Ibid., 54.

[56] Neil Postman, Technopoly, 67.

[57] Groothuis, The Soul In Cyberspace, 65.

[58] Quoted by Groothuis, Ibid., 125.

[59] Ibid., 122.

[60] J. Gresham Machen, Christianity And Liberalism (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1977), 121.

[61] Neil Postman, Technopoly, 18-19.

[62] A.W. Tozer, The Pursuit Of God (Harrisburg: Christian Publications, 1958), 69.

[63] Gene Veith, Postmodern Times, 209.

[64] Os Guinness, Fit Bodies, Fat Minds, 110.

[65] Douglas Groothuis, The Soul In CyberSpace, 23.

[66] Franky Schaeffer, Addicted To Mediocrity (Wheaton:  Crossway Books, 1993), 69.

[67] Francis Schaeffer, The Church At The End Of The Twentieth Century,  89.

[68] Ron Mayers, Balanced Apologetics (Grand Rapids:  Kregel, 1984), 58.

[69] Jim Leffel and Dennis McCallum, “The Postmodern Challenge: facing the spirit of the age,” Christian Research Journal, Fall 1996, 35.

[70] Groothuis, The Soul in Cyberspace, 16.

[71] Quoted by Vance Havner, Rest Awhile (New York: Revell, 1941), 11.

[72] C.S. Lewis, God In The Dock (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1994), 130.

[73] Blaise Pascal, Pensees (New York: Penquin, 1966) 27/378, 137.

[74] Francis Schaeffer, The Church At The End Of The Twentieth Century, 54-55.

[75] John Leo, “This column is mostly true,” U.S. News & World Report, December 16, 1996, 17.

[76] Steven Connor, Postmodernist Culture (Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers, 1997) 205.

[77] Edward O. Wilson, “Back From Chaos,” The Atlantic Monthly, March, 1998, 58.

[78] Ravi Zacharias, Deliver Us From Evil, 17.

[79] Quoted by David Doran, “Market-Driven Ministry: Blessing or Curse?” Detroit Baptist Seminary Journal, Fall 1996, 212.

[80] David Chilton, Productive Christians in an Age of Guilt Manipulators (Tyler:  ICE, 1985) 3.

[81] Veith, Postmodern Times, 52.

[82] Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe (Chicago:  Moody)  209.

[83] Douglas McLachlan, Reclaiming Authentic Fundamentalism (Independence, MO: AACS, 1993) 18.

[84] William H. Willimon, “This Culture Is Overrated” Christianity Today, May 19, 1997, 27.

[85] John MacArthur, Reckless Faith (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1994), 45.

[86] Francis Schaeffer, The Great Evangelical Disaster, 64.

[87] Douglas Groothuis, Christianity That Counts (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1994), 81.

[88] William Bennett, “Redeeming Our Time,” Imprimis, Hillsdale College, November 1995, 3.

[89] Vance Havner, Rest Awhile (New York:  Revell, 1941), 46.

[90] A.W. Tozer, The Best Of A.W. Tozer (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1991), 100.

[91] J. Gresham Machen, Christianity and Liberalism (Eerdman’s, 1977), 141.

[92] William Lane Craig, Reasonable Faith, 167.

[93] Quoted by Douglas Groothuis, The Soul In CyberSpace, 27.

[94] Connor, 174-175.

[95] Machen, 71.

[96] John Knox, “On the First Temptation of Christ,” Orations, Mayo Hazeltine, Ed., 1349.

[97] Machen, 68.

 

The Believer and Prayer

The Believer and Prayer

by Rick Shrader

Prayer is the most neglected power on earth.  God has given us two wonderful tools with which to get things done:  work and prayer.  C.S. Lewis called these the dignity of causality which God has given to His creatures.  A.W. Tozer wrote that there are three legitimate ways a desire may be obtained,  “one is to work for it, another is to pray for it and a third is to work and pray for it.  These are clear methods by which God gives His good gifts to His people.”1 There is no doubt which of these two methods is the most powerful and safest.  Yet most believers spend 95% of their energy in work and 5% (if that!) in prayer.

Bible reading is also an unused blessing, but most believers probably spend more time in Bible reading than in prayer.  H.A. Ironside wrote, “Prayerless Bible-reading becomes dry and unprofitable, leaving the student heady and cold-hearted.  But prayerful meditation on the inspired pages will nourish the soul in divine affections.”2 In Bible reading one can sail along, not thinking about the words being read without too much effort.  Though prayer can also be full of distractions and straying thoughts, it still takes more effort to remain in an extended time of prayer than in reading.  Invite some friends over for a “Bible Study” (which is often a spiritual excuse for fellowship) and you might get a houseful.  Invite some friends over for a time of evening prayer and you may be fortunate to have anyone.  The pastor is discouraged to see only 25% attendance at a choir practice, but is elated to see 25% attendance at prayer meeting!

The disciples were correct in their request of the Lord about prayer.  They did not ask Him to teach them how to pray.  They said, “Lord, teach us to pray” (Lk. 11:1).  So Jesus, in answering their request, said, “When you pray, say, Our Father which art in heaven” (Lk. 11:2).  A child does not wait until he goes to school to learn to talk to his father, he merely begins talking, at first on a very rudimentary level, but soon in broader vocabulary.  A father is never so pleased as when he hears those first words.  No long treatise is necessary to translate the love and affection that comes in those first baby syllables.  It would be but a stunted natural growth for a youth not to talk, but it would be an insult and a travesty for a youth to be able to talk and yet not talk to his own father.  Prayer comes from both ability and love.  We are able at any time because we possess the Holy Spirit; we must desire communication with our Father if we are to start.

It is helpful for us to remember a few things about prayer as we begin.  The Scriptures are overwhelmingly encouraging to the believer when it comes to the details of prayer.  The more we learn about the subject, the more we will be encouraged to pray.  In reality, no subject in the Bible is so deep and yet so easily done.  Nothing else calls all of heaven into action and moves every power on earth more easily and efficiently than a believer’s simple prayer.

The Purpose of Prayer

I believe the old saying that hung above my grandfather’s rocking chair, “Prayer Changes Things.”  But it also should be understood that a godly believer will only want what God wants because he knows that only His ways are just and righteous altogether.  The apostle John twice repeated the need to align our prayers with God’s perfect will.  “Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God.  And whatsoever we ask, we receive of him, because we keep his commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in his sight” (1 Jn. 3:20-21).  Also, “And this is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask anything according to his will, he heareth us: and if we know that he hear us, we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him” (1 Jn. 5:14-15).

If we desire for God’s will to be done, even when we can’t see all of the implications of our prayers, we will be satisfied with a different answer or with no answer at all, which, of course, is enough of an answer for us.  Our prayers should be disinterested enough with our own desires that our true joy is to see His will accomplished.  Didn’t James warn us, “ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts: (Jas. 4:3)?

The Persons of Prayer

The prayers of the saints truly engage the thrice-holy Godhead.  God the Father has invited us to come to Him and call Him Father.  Peter quoted the Psalmist when he wrote, “For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers” (1 Pet. 3:12).  Literally, His ears are bent down toward His child to hear his faint cry!  God the Son has opened the way into the holy place in heaven that we might come into the Divine Presence.  “Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them” (Heb. 7:25).  God the Spirit comes with us as our Divine Interpreter.  “Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities: for we know not what we should pray for as we ought: but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered” (Rom. 8:26).

There are two other important persons involved in prayer: ourselves,  “Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need” (Heb. 4:16); and also others, “If any man see his brother sin a sin which is not unto death, he shall ask; and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death” (1 Jn. 5:16).

The Procedure of Prayer

Some may find it difficult to actually start praying.  This may be due to misconceptions about what must happen before or during our prayers.  We will deal with some physical difficulties below, but for now a few Biblical thoughts might make praying easier.  Prayer does not have to be long.  In fact, the Lord warned us not to make long prayers especially with vain repetition (Matt. 6:5-8).  Let your prayers be as long as your desire to pray.  We are to “always” pray but realize that this means to always be ready, willing, and in a constant state of awareness.  Our prayers may actually be short “ejaculatory” prayers such as, “Lord, help me now with this situation.  Amen.”

The Bible often uses the word “mention” when speaking of the apostles’ prayers.  Paul made “mention” of the churches in his prayers (see 1 Thes. 1:2, Rom. 1:9).  This word “mention” means a memorial like a marker such as a tombstone.  Sometimes our prayers are simple mentions of things before God.  On the other hand, remember that Jesus prayed often and sometimes all night.  As we adjust our schedules by priority, our prayers will fit where they should.

The Position of Prayer

Homer Kent wrote, “The bodily posture of bowing the knees is a common one in Scripture, although not the only one (see 1 Ki 8:54; Lk 22:41; Ac 7:60; 9:40; 20:36; 21:5).  It is a posture which reflects the attitude of heart in acknowledging the greatness of God, and is especially appropriate at this point.  The wonder of God’s plan as seen in the church should drive any Christian to his knees.”3 Kneeling, with our eyes closed and our head bowed is to place ourselves in the most vulnerable position a human being can be in.  This is a good reminder for the Christian as he prays.

Kneeling in prayer is perhaps the best position but it is not necessary to pray nor is it the only position we find in the Bible.  Jesus fell on His face to pray in the garden of Gethsemane (Matt. 26:39); the thief on the cross cried out to God hanging on the cross (Lk. 23:42); a group of women prayed while meeting by a river side (Acts 16:13).

The Place of Prayer

Just as the position of prayer often varies, so does the place of prayer.  Our daily routine finds us in many places where we call out to God for help.   We will all pray sitting at the dinner table, perhaps in a restaurant, to thank God for our food (1 Tim. 4:3-5).  We will pray standing in church or at a public gathering, or perhaps with our spouse at the close of day.

Still, the place, as with the position, does have some Biblical direction.  We are to pray both in private and in public.  Jesus instructed us, “But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly” (Matt. 6:6).  Private prayer is absolutely vital to the believer.  Maybe this is an actual closet, or maybe this is just a quiet room by oneself, or a favorite spot where one can be alone.  God delights in the humble heart that needs no audience to pray.

Also, we are to pray in public, that is, with other brethren.  Jesus said that where two or three were gathered in His name, He would be there (Matt. 18:20).  The size of the group makes no difference.  God doesn’t turn up the power relative to the number of people.  Rather, to gather “in my name” is the important thing.  There is no sweeter time of my week than on Wednesday night and Saturday night when I kneel or bow in prayer with fellow saints of God.

The Pitfalls of Prayer

The first pitfall is not to pray at all!  Only a prosaic barbarian never bows his head to his Maker.  But when we do there are warnings all around:  “vain repetition” (Matt. 6:7); “to be seen of men” (Matt. 6:5); our prayers “hindered” by quarreling with our spouse (1 Pet. 3:7); sleeping and falling “into temptation” (Lk. 22:46); “fainting” in our Christian walk because we do not pray (Lk. 18:1); selfishly asking “amiss” (Jas. 4:3).

Pitfalls like these happen more to people who rush into God’s throne room with little thought or reverence for what is about to take place.  The overly cautious soul should not let his backwardness deter him, but rather let it be a good and natural governor to proceed on and learn what holy boldness is all about.

The Possibilities of Prayer

Yes, prayer changes things!  No one can explain exactly how Almighty God can be Sovereign over His whole creation and yet heed the prayers of His children.  But, “The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much” (Jas. 5:16).  “For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers” (1 Pet. 3:12).  “Ask, and it shall be given unto you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you.  For everyone that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened” (Lk. 11:9-10).

We do not have to understand everything about prayer in order to do it.  We are praying to the God of the universe!  If He has asked us to ask, then we should ask!

G. Campbell Morgan gave this English story of church prayer:

One day in a Yorkshire prayer-meeting there came a stranger who did what many men are in the habit of doing—God forgive them—he made a prayer.  When he had been talking twenty minutes, and no living man ought to pray in a prayer-meeting above five, and had been giving the Almighty information of which He had been in possession long before the man was born, at last he said, ‘And now, O Lord God, what more shall we say unto Thee?’  An old man who knew how to pray audibly replied, ‘Call Him Feyther, mon, and ax for summat.’4

And So . . . .

We must put away our fears and inhibitions and find our way back to our knees.  Whether we understand how God saw our prayers before the foundation of the world and took our requests into consideration or not, we dare not be disobedient to the Creator and Father by neglecting to come to Him in confession, praise, and request.  We have never needed it so much as now and He has never been any more willing to hear and answer than He is today.

Notes:
1. A.W. Tozer, The Next Chapter After The Last  (Camp Hill: Christian Pub., 1987) 120.
2. H.A. Ironside, Holiness, The False And The True (New York:  Loizeaux Brothers, nd.) 136.
3. Homer Kent, Ephesians:  The Glory of the Church (Chicago:  Moody Press, 1971) 57.
4. G. Campbell Morgan, The Practice of Prayer (London:  Fleming H. Revell, 1906) 118.
 

 

Reading God’s Word

Reading God’s Word

by Rick Shrader

The Bible is the greatest treasure in the world today.  By it we know of eternal life in Jesus Christ and by it we can make sense of our world both in the past, the present, and the future.  John Newton once wrote, “A child that has read the Bible knows more than all the philosophers of old put together.”1 The Bible is God’s revelation to us put in book form, yet we do not read it.  It is more available today than at any time in history, in myriads of formats, yet we do not avail ourselves of it.  The Bible promises cleansing, guidance, power, and wisdom, yet we do not saturate our hearts and minds with its truths.  The Bible is the most unsought treasure ever to exist!

The Bible is inspired and infallible and is left to us to be read.  Long before electronic formatting and long before the printing press, people sat with Bibles on their laps and ate of the bread of life through Scripture.  Yet the simple reading of the Bible is the very thing that we neglect.  Our schedules are busy and the distractions are many, but somehow we must find time to sit and read God’s Word again.  There are Bible reading schedules to help and more than enough study guides, but in the end we must find ourselves reading the Word every day.

I can go back to a time, several years ago now, when I knew I had to drastically step up the time I spent in God’s Word.  Nothing has had a greater affect on my life and ministry than that one determination.  A yearly reading through the Bible is the minimum for the Christian.  The New Testament must be read more because it is the bedrock of Christian doctrine and practice.  I like the Faith Baptist Bible College reading schedule2 because it breaks up the reading into three areas: Old Testament; Poetical Books; and New Testament.  I use their Old Testament schedules but have a more aggressive schedule for the New Testament.  I like to read a lot in the morning (NT), a shorter time in the middle of the day (PB), and an average time at night (OT).  I’m a morning person whereas my wife is more of a night person.  I like what C.S. Lewis called those misty cob-webby mornings.  The good news is it gives us each time to sit and read!  I also find prayer time can be divided among these three reading times easily and efficiently.

I am offering some do’s and don’ts for personal Bible reading.  Many things could and should be added but if these help get someone started, even at the minimum amount, a good work will have been accomplished and a vista will be opened which cannot be closed.  As Paul Scherer wrote, “There isn’t any book on earth that makes you feel more bankrupt than the Bible makes you feel; and there isn’t any book on earth that smiles so, and covers you over with its hand, and sets you down by the grace of God above the stars, among angels and archangels.”3

The Do’s

Read with a clear mind.  Leave the searching for lesson topics and proof-texts aside and read the Bible simply for what is there.  Ask yourself, “what is the author saying?”  Put yourself in the place of the hearers and let it speak to you as if you were actually there.  Often we already have a passage outlined or underlined and have written our previous thoughts all over the margins.  We tend to let those ideas form our thoughts rather than the plain text itself.  Study Bibles can sometimes cloud the text more than enlighten.  As someone has said, we ought to read study Bibles from the top down, not from the bottom up!  As much as possible, read with a clear mind.

Read for explanation.  The Bible is truth and there is a true explanation for every passage.  However, there may be several valid applications or principles that we can derive from a passage.  The explanation is what the Bible means.  It is the foundation for all else that may come from the text.  This should be our first task in Bible reading and study.  Unless our interpretation is correct, we have no guarantee that our application correctly follows.

We often remind ourselves and others that we have to keep things in context.  In Scripture that means that we take the passage in its grammatical, historical, and even theological context or setting.  By keeping the explanation in context, we will keep our applications within proper boundaries.

Read for cleansing.  “Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way?  By taking heed thereto according to thy word” (Psa. 119:9).  “Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it; that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word” (Eph. 5:25-26).  This isn’t a magical operation that starts washing us as when one pushes a button to start a washing machine.  This washing comes as we read, understand, and own the truth for ourselves.  This comes when the reader longs to be conformed to the truth of the passage.

Thomas à Kempis said in his book, The Imitation of Christ, “Never read the Word in order to appear more learned or more wise.  Be studious for the mortification of thy sins; for this will profit thee more than the knowledge of many difficult questions.”4

Read for wisdom.  God is the fountainhead of wisdom.  “For the LORD giveth wisdom: out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding” (Prov. 2:6).  Seeing that the Scripture is God-breathed, or inspired, wisdom, then, comes directly to us through His Word which He has written.  John MacArthur wrote, “When you are diligent to absorb God’s Word daily by reading, studying, and meditating, godly responses to all the challenges in your life will become second nature.”5 Old thoughts and ways begin to drop off as we begin developing new thought patterns centered in the Scripture.  We begin “Bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ” (2 Cor. 10:5).  Whatever we think or speak that is in agreement with Scripture is wiser than the world and stronger than men.

Read with patience.  We could not plumb the depths of Bible knowledge in a hundred life-times, much less can we understand much in a single reading.  Bible knowledge grows throughout our lives as we continue to pour over its pages.  Isaiah said, “Whom shall he teach knowledge? And whom shall he make to understand?  Them that are weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts.  For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little” (Isa. 28:9-10).

We can certainly understand much that is plain in the Bible.  Matters of faith and purity are there for even the child to understand.  John Wyclif, the great Scottish Reformer said,  “The New Testament is of full authority, and open to the understanding of simple men, as to the points that be most needful to salvation . . . . He that keepeth meekness and charity hath the true understanding and perfection of all Holy Writ.”6

Read for recall.  Familiarity with Scripture brings ease of use.  A child who is good in the Spelling Bee is a child who is a good reader.  We ought to work diligently on memorizing helpful portions of Scripture; “Thy word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against thee” (Psa. 119:11).  But constant reading plants words and phrases in our minds that stick like glue and come out as the need requires.  Jesus said, “Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh” (Matt. 12:34), or as someone said, “what goes down in the well of the heart, comes up in the bucket of the mouth.”

The Don’ts

Don’t read without the Holy Spirit.  It is the Spirit of God that illuminates the Scripture for us.  After all, He is the author of it and desires that we know it.  “But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned” (1 Cor. 2:14).

I would want every man to read the Bible, for by that he may come to conviction of his own sin.  But without the Spirit of God in him he will not stay at it long.  The things of God have little interest to him.  Derek Prime said, “It is as impossible to undersatand the Scriptures without the Spirit’s help as it is to read a sundial without the sun.”7

John described the Holy Spirit as our resident Teacher who lives within us to teach us on a daily basis.  “But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you, and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in him” (1 Jn 2:27).

Don’t read for magic formulas.  Many people only open their Bible if they need a quick answer or rebuttal to an issue.  They may be looking for “proof texts” which seem to have the exact wording needed to say what has already been determined.  Some want a quick formula that will deliver from trouble or perhaps produce benefit in time of need.  The problem in almost all such instances is that those words have been removed so far from their context that one might as well be saying, “abra-cadabra.”

R.A. Torrey once said, “The Bible is not a talisman, nor a fortune-telling book, nor a book of magic;  it is a revelation from an infinitely wise God, made in a reasonable way, to reasonable beings.”8

Don’t read for a blessing.  This may sound strange but we often get the cart before the horse in this matter.  Blessing, as in many good things, comes to us as an addition as we seek the Lord.  As a person never finds a friend by seeking friends but by seeking deep interests, a believer finds blessing in seeking the Lord’s face in His Word.

William Cowper wrote in his song, “Sometimes a light surprises the Christian as he sings; it is the Lord who rises with healing in His wings.”  So blessings come as delightful surprises to the Christian as he diligently  reads God’s Word.

Don’t read for show.  Though it is a good thing to be reading God’s Word, it needs to be for our benefit, not for the supposed benefit of some onlooker.  I would hope that I’m not ashamed to have people know that I read God’s Word, but I desire a closet (and “disinterested” at that) because I need the Word more than they need the reminder.  Witnessing is witnessing, but Bible reading is intense business.  I know that it is good for children to know that father or mother reads the Bible regularly.  But they will know if it is regular enough!  The most difficult time for me to read is when I’m not in my own house with my own private time and place.

Don’t read leftovers.  I mean by that, don’t read in leftover time or with leftover attention.  It is too easy these days to try to read the Bible in front of the television or computer or some other distracting thing.  Does Bible reading just become a side-bar on a screen or a text message in the middle of emails?  Is our only struggle in God’s Word to stay awake for two minutes as we quickly read a few verses before turning out the light and falling asleep?

If we only open the Bible at church or Bible study, we are not reading God’s Word as we should.  Sadly, many churches have removed the Bible from people’s laps even there by an easier, quicker, more convenient way of glancing at the big screen.

And So . . . .

In his hymn, Isaac Watts says,

The heavens declare thy glory, Lord!

In every star thy wisdom shines;

But when our eyes behold thy Word,

We read thy name in clearer lines.

May this be ours:  “Resolved to study the Scriptures so steadily, constantly and frequently, so that I may find, and plainly perceive myself to grow in the knowledge of the same.”9

Notes:
1. John Newton, 365 Days With Newton (Leominster, UK: Day One Publications, 2006) Jan. 5.
2. The schedules can be ordered for a donation from FBBC at www.faith.edu.
3. Paul Scherer, Facts That Undergird Life (New York: Harper’s, 1938) 55.
4. Thomas à Kempis, The Imitation of Christ (Chicago: Moody Press, 1984) 221.
5. John MacArthur, Nothing But The Truth (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1999) 327.
6. Bruce Shelley, Church History In Plain Language (Dallas: Word Publishing, 1995) 229.
7. Derek Prime & Alister Begg, On Being A Pastor (Chicago: Moody Press, 2004) 78.
8. R.A. Torrey, Daily Meditations (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1963) 33.
9. Jonathan Edwards, The Preacher (Grand Rapids: Baker Book, 1958) 73.
 

 

What Child Is This?

What Child Is This?

by Rick Shrader

Following this introduction, beginning on the second page, is a reprint of the December 1995 Aletheia article, “What Child Is This?”  At this time of year we cannot emphasize enough the timeless truths of the Scripture.  We do not limit our preaching of the birth of Christ and the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ to the holiday seasons.  But these times do afford us space to speak as loudly and clearly as possible about these essential doctrines.

In 1992 I made my first trip to Russia with my father-in-law, Peter Slobodian, and my brother-in-law, Sam Slobodian.  In those days, Russia was still like the old Soviet Union.  Soldiers still guarded the streets, airports, and other important places but with little or no authority to do anything other than watch.  The economy was in shambles and the stores were empty as people lined up to wait for food and other necessities.  Prices for Westerners were great because the monetary system of the USSR was totally out of touch with the real world.  Three of us rode on a train for twelve hours in a sleeper car for about a dollar and a half.  We took pastors out to lunch (when there was any place open to eat) for almost pennies.

For seventy years the cold, atheistic system of Communism had gripped that large land (reaching across eleven time zones) and left it in ruins.  We stayed with Christian families who had ministered underground for years and had suffered in many ways for their faith.  Almost every husband or father had been in a prison at one time or another, usually for just passing out Christian literature or for participating in an unlawful assembly.  The usual meal consisted of cheese and crackers and perhaps some salami and hot tea.  One pastor kept live minnows in his bath tub (which he kindly removed before we took showers) because he always went fishing on Mondays for the only meat they would eat that week.

Most striking of all, however, was the change that was taking place over that land in the winter month of December.  We left Chicago in mid-December amid legal battles over nativity scenes on public property, lawsuits over children mentioning God or Jesus in school Christmas assemblies, and general antipathy toward any mention of God or Christ in public advertising.   Yet here we were in the former Soviet Union passing out tracts on the streets and preaching the gospel in the state school assemblies.  There was little restriction at all for public assembly.  You could not have enough literature for all the people who would flock around you on a street corner when they saw that you had Christian literature.  Nor could you carry enough Bibles into the country to be given away.  I heard a missionary just last month who said there is still more religious freedom in Russia and Ukraine today than in the United States of America.

There is no guarantee that our own country will continue its religious heritage.  There is no divine promise that Christians will live in Christian nations or with freedom of expression in the age of grace.  There is a guarantee, however, that the gospel of Christ will be met with opposition because it is truth and this world will always react against the light of the gospel that exposes its sin and calls it to conversion.  God has no grandchildren.  The faith of one generation does not automatically pass to the next.  In a matter of years, the faith of a family or a community or a country may be totally gone.  Culture can live on the spiritual capital of the last generation for a while but it will soon be gone.  The truths of Christ must be preached and believed in each generation.

What Child is this, who, laid to rest, on Mary’s lap is sleeping?

Whom angels greet with anthems sweet, while shepherds watch are keeping?

Why lies He in such mean estate where ox and ass are feeding?

Good Christian, fear–for sinners here the silent Word is pleading.

So bring Him incense, gold and myrrh–come, rich and poor, to own Him;

The King of kings salvation brings–let loving hearts enthrone Him.

~ English melody, fifteenth century

It has always been one of the striking testimonies of Christianity that Jesus Christ came quietly into this world and left the same way.  Though He ascended to heaven while five hundred watched, when His mortal put back on immortality, He simply sat up inside a tomb, quietly put his clothes aside and walked out without audience. At His birth, although angels sang to shepherds on far away hills, when the Babe cried and first breathed earth’s air only cattle turned their headsin witness. The gospel account simply fits with the reality that we know of this world.

With the gospel writers, we are not to take the miraculous conception of Jesus by the Holy Spirit in any other way but matter of fact. They don’t ask us to. We don’t have to give an explanation of the miracle, we only have to believe it or reject it. Is it any less reasonable than the alternatives we are offered?

For example, the Romans believed that Zeus impregnated Semele without contact and that she conceived Dionysus, lord of the earth. The Babylonians believed that Tammuz (see Ezek. 8:14) was conceived in the priestess Semiramis by a sunbeam. In an ancient Sumerian/Accadian story inscribed on a wall, Tukulti II (890-884 B.C.) told how the gods created him in the womb of his mother. It was even claimed that the goddess of procreation superintended the conception of King Sennacherib (705-681 B.C.). At the conception of Buddha, his mother supposedly saw a great white elephant enter her belly. Hinduism has claimed that the divine Vishnu, after reincarnations as a fish, tortoise, boar, and lion, descended into the womb of Devaki and was born as her son Krishna.  There is even a legend that Alexander the Great was virgin born by the power of Zeus through a snake that impregnated his mother, Olympias.1

The biblical account is above all such make-believe. Nothing about Christ’s incarnation violates what we know of this world. It only asks us to accept that the Creator of the world can enter and leave it when He wants and as calmly as He wants. It doesn’t insult us with tortoises or sunbeams in the womb. It is not God who is unreasonable in the Christmas story, it is man with his selfish nature and bent toward unbelief.  “The incredulous are the most credulous. They believe in Vespasian’s miracles only to disbelieve in those of Moses.”2

We might say that God has asked us to accept a balance of reality in the world into which the incarnation fits perfectly well. God has placed us in a middle world between the microscope and the telescope.  We can ascend into the starry heavens until we are overwhelmed by the size and awesomeness of space itself. Or we can descend into the microcosms of the cells and atoms only to find smaller worlds revolving in their own atmospheres. Man was placed between those two extremes at the center of God’s creative process so that we might be in a place to receive God’s revelation with a reasonable faith that fits with reality. The greatest revelation was when God also became a man, coming into the center of His creation, to reveal Who and What is the reason for our existence.

We learn in the Scriptures that God is both transcendent and immanent. God is transcendent in that He is totally separate, apart from and above His creation. But He is not as transcendent as the existentialist and agnostic would have us think. He is willing to reveal Himself and has done so in many ways, coming into the center of His world with voice, letter and in person. God is immanent in that He is close to and everywhere present in His creation. But He is not as immanent as the pantheists and new-age thinkers would have us believe. He does not consist of the material universe and cannot be found in its parts.  Rather, as before, He must come into the world in order for us to know Him. ‘‘God is a person and he made us as persons in his likeness. Because we are persons and he is a personal God, we have the capacity to worship him and to know him and to love him.’’3

And this brings us back to the Christmas story. It is the record of a mighty God overshadowing a virgin Mary, sending angels to sing in concert to shepherds and throwing a star in the sky for wise men to see. But that same God came quietly into our world among the mud of a stable floor and the smells and sounds of common herds. He came as an infant who needed to be nursed and protected from his enemies.  He was the perfect revelation of a transcendent, immanent God.  There was enough light to lighten the willing and enough mystery to keep them in awe.  But there was also enough mystery to hinder the unwilling and yet enough light to rid them of excuse. It was the perfect form for man to receive.

‘What means this glory round our feet,’

The Magi mused, ‘more bright than morn!’

And voices chanted clear and sweet,

‘Today the Prince of Peace is born.’4

Notes:
1. John MacArthur, The MacArthur New Testament Commentary, Vol 1 (Chicago: Moody Press, 1985), 12.
2. Blaise Pascal, Pensees (London: Penguin Classics, 1966), 100.
3. Robert Wenz, Room For God? (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1994), 162.
4. James Russell Lowell’s Christmas Carol .

 

Thanks Be Unto God

Thanks Be Unto God

by Rick Shrader

O give thanks unto the LORD; for he is good: for his mercy endureth forever.

O give thanks unto the God of gods; for his mercy endureth forever.

O give thanks to the Lord of lords: for his mercy endureth forever.

Psalm 136:1-3

There is no greater characteristic of believing people than thanksgiving.  Of all people who enjoy good things in this life, Christian people know of a certainty that all good things come from God.  “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights” (Jas. 1:17). And of all good things that Christians possess, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ is the greatest.  “Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift” (2 Cor. 9:15).

In the language of our New Testament, “thanks” comes from the same root word as “grace” (charis).   In this simple form, where Paul might say “grace be to you” (2 Cor. 1:2), we also have “thanks be unto God” (2:14) coming from the same word.  When we add our English eu (“good”) as a prefix we have the noun (eucharistia) “thanksgiving” and also the verb (euchariste?) “to give thanks.”  To have thanksgiving in our heart (the noun), then, is to be in a state of blessing because of “good grace,” such as “abounding therein with thanksgiving” (Col. 2:7).  To give thanks (the verb) is to express “good grace” toward something such as “giving thanks unto the Father” (Col. 1:12).

We are glad for the national recognition of “Thanksgiving” during the month of November, though it isn’t the primary cause of thanksgiving in the heart of a Christian.  We are even sad to read the rewriting of this American tradition by the eliminating of God’s providence toward the Pilgrim fathers, and the redirecting of thanksgiving from God’s blessing to man’s own devices.  We can read that the Mayflower Compact begins with the words, “In the name of God, amen.”  The history of that group of 102 people is a history of English separatists who sought a place to worship God by the dictates of their conscience and the Word of God.  Those of us who still believe we must worship God in the same manner, are thankful for the opportunity to express our own thanksgiving to God for His provision.

The Scriptures admonish us to be a thankful people.  Paul wrote to the Corinthians, “Who maketh thee to differ from another?  And what hast thou that thou didst not receive?  Now if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it” (1 Cor. 4:7)?  Paul also reminded the unbelieving Areopagites, “God that made the world and all things therein, seeing that he is Lord of heaven and earth, dwelleth not in temples made with hands; neither is worshiped with men’s hands, as though he needed anything, seeing he giveth to all life, and breath, and all things” (Acts 17:24-25).  It is when man thinks of himself as God that he becomes ungrateful as if he himself made the world rather than receiving all good things in the world.  Here are only a few things for which the believer is thankful.

Creation

The Bible begins with the words, “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth” (Gen. 1:1).  In the Psalms, David elaborated, “The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth his handiwork.  Day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night showeth knowledge.  There is no speech nor language, where their voice is not heard” (Psa. 19:1-3).

It is fitting that Thanksgiving day was established in the fall of the year when the leaves are painted and the ground is frosty white.  In each season God clothes the earth with special beauty:  the new life and dazzling colors of youthful spring; the powerful sun and productive season of summer; the lush colors and wisdom of fall; and the hoary white of winter with its life ending freeze.  All will cycle again and again, bringing forth from their treasures things new and old.

Again, David writes:  “Bless the LORD, O my soul.  O LORD my God, thou art very great; thou art clothed with honor and majesty.  Who coverest thyself with light as with a garment: Who stretchest out the heavens like a curtain:  Who layeth the beams of his chambers in the waters: Who maketh the clouds his chariot:  Who walketh upon the wings of the wind:  Who maketh his angels spirits; his ministers a flaming fire:  Who laid the foundations of the earth, that it should not be removed forever” (Psa. 104:1-5).

How can a child of God keep from singing, “This is my Father’s world, and to my list’ning ears, all nature sings and round me rings the music of the spheres.  This is my Father’s world, I rest me in the thought, of rocks and trees, of skies and seas; His hand the wonders wrought.”  Or, “All creatures of our God and King, lift up your voice and with us sing, Al-le-lu-ia, Al-le-lu-ia!  Thou burning sun with golden beam, thou silver moon with softer gleam, O praise Him, O praise Him, Al-le-lu-ia, Al-le-lu-ia, Al-le-lu-ia!”

Food

Giving thanks to God for our food is, perhaps, the most common expression of gratitude to the One Who provides our daily provision.  When the pagans of Galatia supposed Paul and Barnabas were life-providing gods, Paul admonished them quickly to turn to the true God “Which made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and all things that are therein. . . . Nevertheless, he left not himself without witness, in that he did good, and gave us rain from heaven, and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food and gladness” (Acts 14:15, 17).  The Psalmist wrote, “He causeth the grass to grow for the cattle, and herb for the service of man: that he may bring forth food out of the earth” (Psa. 104:15).  As well, “Who giveth food to all flesh: for his mercy endureth forever” (Psa. 136:25).  Isaac Watts put this truth into song, “I sing the goodness of the Lord, that filled the earth with food; He formed the creatures with His Word and then pronounced them good.  Lord, how thy wonders are displayed wher-e’er I turn my eye: if I survey the ground I tread, or gaze upon the sky.”

Paul, in encouraging the Corinthians in the grace of giving explained, “Now he that ministereth seed to the sower both minister bread for your food, and multiply your seed sown, and increase the fruits of your righteousness” (2 Cor. 9:10).  At the same time that God gives us food to eat, He supplies seed that will multiply for the next meal, that is, if we are not so greedy as to eat it all without giving some back!  Paul told Timothy not to tolerate those who abstain from meats because, “God hath created [them] to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth.  For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving: for it is sanctified by the word of God and prayer” (1 Tim. 4:3-5).  And that is why any human being who recognizes God’s provision ought to say “grace” or “thanks.”

In an amazing explanation of the resurrection of the body, Christ likened His own death and resurrection to a seed that must fall into the ground and die before it can be raised (John 12:24).  Paul, expanding on the same thought, wrote, “And that which thou sowest, thou sowest not that body that shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of wheat, or of some other grain: but God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him, and to every seed his own body” (1 Cor. 15:37-38).  Every plant which we eat is the result of this resurrection process.  Something had to die and be resurrected from the ground before we could eat.  We do not eat the pre-resurrection body, but of the plant that grows afterward.  In striking parallel, we have eternal life because we partake of the resurrected life of Christ by faith.  If we are compelled to thank God for our physical food, how much more for our spiritual life!

The Gospel

It is because the gospel comes to us as grace, having nothing worthy of it in ourselves, that Paul saw himself as a debtor to all those who have never heard of its wonderful provision (Rom. 1:14).  Having received what we do not deserve makes us thankful and also obligated.  The gospel came to us freely and it can so come to anyone else.  We can give thanks to God for the gospel of Jesus Christ whether we are the recipients or whether we are the witnesses.

Paul, the first and greatest Christian missionary, had a special relationship to the churches.  He was not only their spiritual father (1 Cor. 4:14-16) but their first missionary (Phil. 4:15).  The mutual feeling between the missionary and the churches was one of thanksgiving for all that God had done.  “Ye also helping together by prayer for us, that for the gift bestowed upon us by the means of many persons thanks may be given by many on our behalf” (2 Cor. 1:11).

Paul’s relationship to the Philippian church was especially filled with gratitude because of the trying circumstances that he and Silas found themselves in at Philippi.  In opening his epistle to the church Paul included a typical missionary praise, “I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, always in every prayer of mine for you all making request with joy, for your fellowship in the gospel from the first day until now” (Phil. 1:3-5).  So also in the closing chapter he wrote, “Now ye Philippians know also, that in the beginning of the gospel, when I departed from Macedonia, no church communicated with me as concerning giving and receiving, but ye only.  For even in Thessalonica ye sent once and again unto my necessity.  Not that I desire a gift: but I desire fruit that may abound to your account . . . . An odor of a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable, well-pleasing to God” (Phil. 4:15-18).

God calls a man to go into His mission field and a church joins him in that effort by prayer and finances.  The results that come of it all cause both parties to rejoice and to offer up thanksgiving to God which are like sweet-smelling sacrifices before His throne.  Neither the missionary nor the church are investing for this life, for then they would be of all men most miserable (1 Cor. 15:19).  But they are investing in righteousness which will last eternally:  “As it is written, He hath dispersed abroad; he hath given to the poor; his righteousness remaineth forever!” (2 Cor. 9:9).

In the English Midlands in the 1700s, a small group of independent pastors met monthly to pray for missions.  Among them were Andrew Fuller, a bright and studious pastor at Kettering, and an enthusiastic young man named William Carey, pastor of a small, struggling church in Moulton.  With a few of their pastor friends they met on October 2, 1792 in the Inn of one of Fuller’s members, the widow Wallis, and formed the Baptist Missionary Society.  It was the first of its kind in that it was a true “faith mission.”  Support for missionaries would only come from the offerings of their local churches.  Each man gave what he could to start the mission and the total amount was 2 shillings, 6 pence, a little over 13 pounds.  Carey was so poor he could not give in the offering, so he proposed that if they would give, he would go as the first missionary.  His famous words were, “I go to India to mine for souls; you hold the ropes.”  Fuller took the charge seriously and became the secretary of the mission for the rest of his life.  Carey went to India and died there, never returning to his home in England.  He is known today as the father of modern missions.  For over 200 years many thanksgivings have been offered up to God for missionary work done by faithful people and churches.

And So . . . .

Whether we sit at our bountiful tables and receive God’s blessing of food, or kneel in our churches and thank Him for blessing and protection of our missionaries, or simply stand in awe of God’s glorious beauty, let us do so with a thankful heart.

We thank thee, then, O Father,

For all things bright and good,

The seed-time and the harvest,

Our life, our health, our food:

Accept the gifts we offer

For all Thy love imparts,

And, what Thou most desirest,

Our humble, thankful hearts.

 

Spirit Filled: an individual responsibi...

Spirit Filled: an individual responsibility

by Rick Shrader

The local church is made up of individual believers.  Each believer comes into the church by testimony of his faith in Christ exhibited by believer’s baptism.  The local church is the earthly expression of the body of Christ and must keep itself pure, by all human means, of unbelief within its members.  Only in this way can the church fully represent and display the holy character of Christ to the world.  So we find in Scripture a common pattern:  “Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls” (Acts 2:41).  First conversion to Christ, then water baptism, and only then membership in the local body of believers.

The church, then, is a unique organization which operates as a free congregation under the Headship of Christ and His Word.  The members are equally children of God and all possess the Holy Spirit.  The church acts as a democracy in that final decisions are voted on by the whole congregation, even the calling of a pastor and the election of the deacons.  We often say that we are all “believer-priests” under the one high priest, the Lord Jesus Christ, since the Scripture plainly says that we are “a holy priesthood” and a “royal priesthood” (1 Pet. 2:5, 9).  This is why Baptists have held to a congregational form of church government.  The two church offices of pastor and deacons are given due respect but even each of them has only one vote in congregational matters.

Since we believe this arrangement is truly biblical, it presents a great responsibility as well as a great danger.  The danger is that the church would become filled with members who are truly saved and baptized but not filled with the Spirit.  Though we believe that all true believers possess the Holy Spirit from conversion, the filling of the Spirit for daily walk becomes a continual command for the believer in this life (Eph. 5:18).  It is entirely possible for a church to have more members who are not Spirit filled than who are!  In this case, the possibility of such a church making biblical and wise decisions is thrown to the wind.  The decisions are made from human wisdom and understanding, but not from the leadership of the Spirit.

The great responsibility, therefore, is for the whole church to strive to be filled with the Spirit and for the leadership of the church to guard this great occupation at all costs.  Ephesians 5:18-21 and Colossians 3:16 tell us that when we are filled with the Spirit, we will be (as a result) teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace, making melody in our hearts to the Lord.  In Hebrews 13:15-16 we find that we may offer spiritual sacrifices to God which are the fruit of our lips, giving thanks to His name.

When Spirit filling is missing, the church will rely on human emotion for its comfort, various methodologies for its fruit, and symbolism for its substance.  This has often been the case in every age of the church because there is no guarantee that people will seek to be filled.  In times like ours, imitations abound because they are easier and are more comfortable to carnal Christians and to the world.  When people want success rather than spirituality, growth in numbers rather than in knowledge, friendships rather than fellowship, human effort alone will accomplish those much easier and will not bring with it that uncomfortable conviction of the Holy Spirit.  But filling is not an automatic phenomenon that comes by turning on a switch.  It comes by yielding ourselves to the Spirit as we live out the New Testament Biblical faith.  Rather than seeking hidden formulas, we will find the way to the filling of the Spirit clear and open to every believer.  It sounds like an old list but that is because it has been true for two thousand years.

Scripture

Paul’s command for us to be filled with the Spirit in Ephesians 5 is paralleled by the command to let the Word of Christ dwell in us richly in Colossians 3.  The Psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs come as a result of this filling, not as means to that end.  All of Scripture is the command of Christ to us and we should not expect to remain in fellowship with Him if we are disobeying His Word.  It is by the Word that the Holy Spirit convicts us of our sin (Heb. 4:12) and then cleanses us from our ways (Psa. 119:9).  Disobedience to the Word causes the Spirit to be quenched (1 Thes. 5:19) and grieved (Eph. 4:30).  How could we expect that the same Spirit would be filling us if He is offended?  Sanctification is the process by which the Holy Spirit makes us holy.  A believer who dislikes that process dislikes the Holy Spirit Himself.  Paul wrote, “For God hath not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness.  He therefore that despiseth, despiseth not man, but God, who hath also given unto us his Holy Spirit” (1 Thes. 4:7-8).

Paul admonished the Corinthians that their carnality was keeping them from the meat of the Word (1 Cor. 3:1-3).  We cannot feed on the Word when sin is dominating our lives and we are remaining babes not adults.  The writer of Hebrews desired to write of deeper things concerning the priesthood of Christ, but the readers could not handle the meat of the Word because their senses were not exercised in the deep things of God (Heb. 5:12-14).  We cannot expect to be filled with the Spirit and only open our Bibles for Sunday school and church or for a coffee shop Bible study.  We need extended time in the Word.  With all of our technological advances, our modern day has robbed us of time in the Word.  Though we have the Word available in more forms than ever before and though we can access it from more avenues than ever before, we still do not take the time.  That same technological age keeps our schedules full and robs us of every hour of the day.  George Gallup said, “Americans revere the Bible — but, by and large, they don’t read it.  And because they don’t read it, they have become a nation of biblical illiterates.”1 Jeff Brown wrote, “The average unbeliever in America 200 years ago knew more of the Bible than the average member of an evangelical church does today.  Daniel Wallace contends, ‘We are a generation away from biblical illiteracy on a scale that mirrors the middle ages.’”2 We must again find the time to read the Bible if we are to be filled with the Spirit.

Prayer

Jonathan Edwards said, “Prayer is as natural an expression of faith as breathing is of life; and to say a man lives a life of faith, and yet lives a prayerless life, is every whit as inconsistent and incredible, as to say that a man lives without breathing.”3 J. Oswald Sanders said of prayer, “It is indeed the Christian’s vital breath and native air.”4 Prayer is the life blood of the Christian life.  “The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much” (Jas. 5:16).  An unrighteous man doesn’t pray and that is largely why he is unrighteous.  Paul tells us  that the Holy Spirit waits beside us when we pray to interpret our prayers before the Father (Rom. 8:27).  We don’t even know what would be best to ask, so the Spirit helps “our infirmities” because He has the same mind as the Father.  A Spirit filled believer is a believer who prays.

A Spirit filled man is not necessarily the one who prays long prayers in public, though he might.  Many times the one who prays long in private prays short in public.  But the only factor that really counts is whether a person prays with the help of the Holy Spirit.  Jesus Christ has opened the door into God’s presence so that we may come boldly before the throne of grace (Heb. 4:16).  The Holy Spirit, then, helps our prayers as they come up before the Father as sweet smelling incense (Rev. 8:3), whose eyes are over the righteous and whose ears are open to our prayers (1 Pet. 3:12).  We must find time to pray if we are to be filled with the Spirit.

Church

R. Kent Hughes recently wrote, “It is my considered belief that those who do not have the local church at the very center of their lives are likely not to make it as Christians through the opening decades of the third millennium.”5 There is an antipathy toward the local church in our day.  People want to malign it, change it, profane it, abuse it, and refuse it; anything, it seems, except use it.  But the local church is God’s program for this age of grace which exists between the first and second comings of Christ.  The church belongs to Christ and He is its Head.  We are commanded not to forsake our assembling together with other believers in our local church, and even more so as we see the day of Christ approaching (Heb. 10:25).

Since the Holy Spirit indwells every believer (1 Cor. 12:13), and the local church is the place where believers gather together, it is obvious that a believer needs to be in that meeting for the benefit of the Spirit’s work in his life.  “For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them” (Matt. 18:20).  When the Lord spoke to the pastors of each of the seven churches of Revelation, those letters were always ended with, “He that hath an ear to hear, let him hear, what the Spirit saith unto the churches” (Rev. 2:7).  The Holy Spirit builds us up spiritually through the life of the body.  A Spirit filled believer, then, is not one who neglects the church.

Family

A believer may be in one of a number of different family situations.  The New Testament has many admonitions to various family members.  Husbands are to love their wives; wives are to obey their husbands; parents are to raise their children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord; children are to obey their parents (Eph 5:25-6:4).  A believer who does not provide for dependent ones in his family is worse than an infidel (1 Tim. 5:8).  When a husband is not the husband he ought to be to his wife, his prayers are hindered before God (1 Pet. 3:7).

Above all, members of a Christian marriage or family are brothers and sisters in Christ.  It is a shame when some treat strangers with more brotherly love than their own family.  Many marital problems are solved when a husband and wife remember that they are first brother and sister in Christ.  A home ought to be the place, above all others, where believers show true Christian character.  Churches cannot expect to see the blessing of God when their members are carnal six days of the week at home and pretend to be Spirit filled at church on Sunday.    Our family relationships are vital to the filling of the Spirit.

Witness

Can a believer effectively share the gospel while not being filled with the Spirit?  Will a truly Spirit filled believer not make attempts to share his or her faith?  One of the important pieces of the Christian armor is the feet which are shod with the preparation of the gospel (Eph. 6:15).  When Peter stood to speak during the days of Pentecost, it says, “Then Peter, filled with the Holy Ghost, said unto them” (Acts 4:8).  Similarly, when Paul preached on Cyprus, it says, “Then Saul, (who also is called Paul), filled with the Holy Ghost, set his eyes on him” (Acts 13:9).  Paul quoted David when he said, “We having the same spirit of faith, according as it is written, I believed, and therefore have I spoken; we also believe, and therefore speak” (2 Cor. 4:13).

It stands to reason that if the Holy Spirit has filled the believer, he will have a God-given desire to share the gospel, the good news, with souls which are lost.  Since the Holy Spirit’s job in this age is to convict the world of sin and judgment (John 16:8-11), a believer who is filled with that same Spirit will be speaking the gospel.  Also, the believer who desires to be filled ought to endeavor to be involved in evangelism.

And So . . . .

As individuals, as families, and as churches, we are commanded by God to be filled with the Spirit.  If we are to salt our world and shine light upon its darkness, it must be through Spirit filled believers through whom God can powerfully work, even with the power that raised Jesus Christ from the dead and now lives and works in us.

 

The Local Church: A Unique Entity

The Local Church: A Unique Entity

by Rick Shrader

I remember hearing an older preacher say that he grew up in church and was bored most of the time.   Frankly, I cannot relate to that because it wasn’t my experience at all.  I certainly did not know much of what went on in the whole church nor did I understand the complexities of church organization but, for my part, I always thought of church as an important responsibility that I had before God.  I would later realize that taking an obligation seriously never allows boredom.

The church, however, is not being taken seriously today.   From many on the inside, the church is being made like the world in an effort to combat the otherwise boring services.  From many on the outside, the church is being pushed into becoming a social/political/medical resource in order to fill in where society has failed.  In either case, the church is not allowed to be what it uniquely is: the body of Christ in the midst of a foreign and hostile world, boldly displaying what it alone can display—peace with God.

The average citizen no doubt thinks that the church exists to serve humanity in whatever way humanity happens to display the greatest need.  It is now being proposed by liberal thinkers that the church should join hands with the government to support government controlled healthcare, a moral imperative, they say, which the government and religion have to all humanity.  At the same time, it is being proposed by conservative thinkers that the church should be building hospitals and healthcare organizations as a kind of “faith-based initiative” to take the load off government taxation.  Tax exemption, then, becomes a political issue in order to maintain the church’s ability to fund these programs through charitable giving.

Both perspectives display a lack of understanding of the fundamental and unique nature of the church (and government) as described in the New Testament.  If the general needs of humanity become the moral imperatives of the church, why only consider healthcare?  Since food is essential for life, perhaps even more so than healthcare, maybe churches are obligated to be in the grocery business, providing economical and sufficient food for all the community or city.  Maybe it is the church which should be in the car business and not the government, since it is imperative that people be mobile and able to get to places of employment and other obligations.  The mistaken notion that the church exists for the social good of the community knows no limit (nor unique perspective) as to its role in the world.  This is also the government’s problem.  It has lost its perspective of why it exists as well.  It sees no limit to its moral obligation to humanity and therefore expands far beyond what it can and should attempt to do.  Oh, there are always those who see the obvious advantage of being in charge of such processes and benefiting by being in influential positions—both in religion and government.  In the end, however, government will fail to govern and religion will fail to convert and humanity will suffer from both.

We see clearly that government should enable, support, and protect free people to engage in the process of making an honest living (1 Tim. 2:2).  Some honest citizens will naturally be in the healthcare business.  But the church is even more narrow (and therefore more important) than that in its New Testament perspective.  It is engaged in preparing men for the next world regardless of their station in this one.  It must maintain a unique assembly for those who believe so they may be able to carry on this important mission of eternal truth available to all humanity (1 Tim. 3:15-16).

Things Positive:

The church is a local entity

Of the 115 times that the Greek word for church appears in the New Testament, well over 100 of those refer to local churches.  Christ is the Head of every believer and therefore of every church comprised of believers (Eph. 5:23).  Local churches are autonomous in their operation, answering to Christ, His Word, and the body of believers making up that church.  We call this the visible church because you can go there and attend if you like.  Most of the New Testament books are epistles written to particular churches or to the pastors of those churches.  The subject matter is local church polity, doctrine, and evangelism.

The church is a volunteer entity

No one is forced to be a member of a local church although all believers ought to be.  The first church in Jerusalem was made up of those who had done three things: “Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls” (Acts 2:41).  One must be saved, then baptized by immersion (which is the mode of every New Testament baptism), and then make a conscious effort to join with the other believers.  This is the pattern throughout the book of Acts and described in every epistle.  The New Testament does not entertain the idea of an unbaptized believer separate from a local assembly.

The church is a gospel entity

The saints of God, dwelling in local churches throughout the world, have a commission from Christ to evangelize the world.  The gospels of Matthew and Mark clearly give this commission in their closing remarks and Luke records a further commission in Acts 1 just before Jesus ascended into heaven.  The ordinances that belong to the local churches are there for those who have received this gospel.  No person can be forced to have faith.  The gospel is inclusive in that it is to be offered to every person, and it is exclusive in that it presents Jesus Christ as the only way to heaven (John 14:6; Acts 4:12).

The church is a closed entity

This means that it is designed and built by Jesus Christ for His believers (Matt. 16:18).  Though lost people are always welcomed and would benefit greatly by attending, the purpose for the church gathered is for the edification of the saints so that they will be able to go out and be witnesses (Eph. 4:11-12).  In times of revival and peacefulness, evangelism has taken place within the church to a great degree and invitations should always be given when the lost are present.  The things that happen there: the singing, the praying, the ordinances, the teaching, the accountability are all for the saints.  We understand that the lost person can hardly understand most of what is going on but we know that is best for them and for us.  The great difference is Spiritual regeneration.  This must be the only thing that changes a person from one on the outside to one on the inside.

The church is a working entity

The service of the saints for one another is a beautiful thing.  Love is always shared within the family of God (John 15:10); sharing of wealth and goods provides for members that are in need (Acts 4:35; 1 John 3:17); taking care of widows and orphans who have no other believers to do it is a responsibility of each local church (Jas. 1:27; 1 Tim. 5:1-16); discipline and accountability to the Scriptures are sacred obligations the saints have for one another (1 Cor. 5:1-13; 2 Cor. 12:21).  All of these things and more were done among the brethren.  This was the blessing of being in the church that far outweighed the antipathy from those outside the church.  In these cases water (baptism) was thicker than blood (relatives) even to the point of laying down one’s life for the brethren.

The church is a free entity

Believers have obligations to the church by covenant.  These cannot be ignored by members without the reminders of accountability.  But the obligations of Christians to humanity lie in love and evangelism.  In all things that pertain to life and godliness, the believer is free to participate as his conscience leads, in nothing, however, violating Biblical teaching.  A believer may feed the hungry or clothe the naked; he may rescue those in danger or help those in need; if he is able he may donate to any moral cause such as hospitals or schools or homes for unwed mothers.  In these things, he is the Lord’s freeman but in things specifically Scriptural he is the Lord’s bond-slave (1 Cor. 7:17-24).

Things Negative:

The church is not a state church

Baptists especially have objected to the state controlling the churches in any way.  Neither have they desired to control the state.  The Catholic Church and most Protestant Churches have at one time or another been the “state church” in a particular country.  Often this was enforced by persecution against all other religious beliefs.  Infant baptism was, from its first use, an identification of the church with the state and placed the child not only in the state as citizen, but also in the church.  Government will not be able to force Baptist (and other independent) churches to do its will.  Even when such a project might be a good thing, local New Testament churches may only give their allegiance to Christ and may refuse to do the thing because it can only give unto Caesar what does not already belong to God.

The church is not a denominational church

Many in the world still think of churches as referring to the denomination.  I am in favor of denominational names because I believe they are good and honest identifiers but any Baptist is opposed to a denomination which would control individual churches and take away their sovereignty.  Baptists have always had ways of organizing local churches into fellowships or associations for the sake of missions and other inter-church projects.  But these are always voluntary and carry no authority over the individual churches.

The church is not an activist church

Though a church may have individual members who legally and morally participate in social or political causes, the New Testament is silent in command and example about the churches “as churches” doing these things.  As terrible as the Roman Empire could be, we have no example of churches or believers protesting or trying to pressure the government in any way.  Even the apostle Paul was beheaded by Nero without a protest.  Ignatius and Polycarp were martyred denying intervention.  Jesus explained that the wheat and the tares would grow together in society and that we would not be able to separate them by force in this present age (Matt. 13:24-30).  When the church begins to fight social and political causes in the world, it soon loses its biblical focus and then loses its moral authority to speak about anything.  This is not to say that believers should not speak out as individual citizens if the country they live in gives them that legal right.  But when the local church ceases to be a spiritual church with a greater spiritual purpose of the gospel and a life of separated holiness, its candlestick is removed from the place of blessing (Rev. 2:5).

And So . . . .

God has ordained a few entities in this world.  The family was first designed by God to consist of husband, wife, and children.  The family is sovereign also.  No power on earth can force people to live another way or even honestly define the family another way.

God has also ordained government.  From the time Noah left the ark, the power of human government was established (Gen. 9:5-6).  It is also sovereign in the sense that it cannot be forced by another country to practice in any way other than for the good of its people.  To do so is to invite God’s displeasure and to remove His blessing.

God has ordained Israel to be His earthly people in the coming kingdom of God.  Though they live under “the times of the gentiles,” they will yet be His chosen people dwelling in the land of Israel with the Seed of David sitting upon His throne.

The church as a whole is the Bride of Christ but She exists today in local communities of believers.  These churches are sacred groups of believers who have accepted Christ as their Savior and have testified of that faith in the burial waters of baptism.  They live in the world but are not of the world.  They are the world’s best citizens but are pilgrims and strangers within it.  They allow tares to grow in the world but not in their churches.  They live for the good but they die for Christ.

 

The Wiles of the Devil

The Wiles of the Devil

by Rick Shrader

Few studies in the Bible have greater impact on our lives than knowing our arch enemy, Satan.  In our little world of empires and dictators, nuclear weapons and terrorists, space travel and internet, we often forget that the Scripture tells us “we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places” (Eph. 6:12).  We can become occupied with the darker beliefs of witchcraft, spiritism, and the occult,  or we can spend our time answering the so-called Christian spiritists who practice contemplative or centering prayer, lectio divina, and ancient-future cults.  We are often so concerned about chasing various winds of doctrine we forget that Satan and his minions are the real forces behind these and other false beliefs and practices.

Satan is a created being as are his demons.  He was created perfect as the anointed cherub who covered God’s throne until sin was found in him (Ezek. 28:14-15).  His rebellion was an all-or-nothing attempt to usurp the very throne of God (Isa. 14:12-15) and in his failed attempt he drew a third of the angels with him to a fallen position (Rev. 12:4) who then were relegated by God to the status of demons.  They are not atheists.  Human beings are the only creatures who are so foolish as to deny their Creator’s existence.  But they are deceivers and seducers, impersonators and controllers, turning the humanistic dreams of humans into seemingly real things such as witches, shamans, channelers, and ghosts.  There are no spirit beings other than angels and demons.  The souls of deceased humans are either in heaven or hell where it is impossible to contact living people (Lk. 16:19-31).  All other phenomena are the deceiving manipulations of Satan and his armies, successfully luring people to a sinner’s hell.  Many are there today having relied on some spiritual or near-death experience, being deceived into believing that life after death was not to be feared.

Their jurisdiction is the whole world; “The whole world lieth in wickedness” i.e. “the wicked one” (1 Jn 5:19).  All who are not children of God have Satan, the father of liars, for their spiritual father (Jn. 8:44; 1 Jn. 3:19) and one day all liars will be sent home to their father (Rev. 21:8).  Hell was prepared for Satan and his demons but will be the eternal abode for countless millions who, though scoffing at the Bible’s description of the fall of Satan and demons, will fall with them into the eternal lake of fire to pay forever for that which no human or demon can ever pay.

The spiritual armor that Paul describes in Ephesians is commensurate to the spiritual warfare in which we are engaged.  Though we do not wrestle against human kind, we do indeed wrestle.  Spiritual warfare is a battle to the end.  Believers are partakers whether they think they signed up to be or not.  Some are on the battle field without the belt of truth and the rest of the armor hangs very loosely; others are without a shield or without a breastplate and their heart is not protected by righteousness; some are barefoot, having no preparation for the gospel, who tip-toe through life never engaging the enemy.   Those without a helmet are never secure in their position, always ducking but never delivering a blow.   Worst of all, many have no sword.  They try fighting with methodologies, with spirit experiences, with emotion, but never with the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God.

The apostle gives four descriptions of the demons which we take as real categories within their ranks.

Principalities

These are rulers with global jurisdictions.  They are the arcas or “princes.”  Even Webster defines our English word “principality” as “the territory or jurisdiction of a prince or the country that gives title to a prince;  an angel of the third lowest rank” (Seventh).  Jesus called Satan “the prince of this world” (Jn. 12:31); Paul calls him “the prince of the power of the air” (Eph. 2:2) and the demons are called “principalities and powers” (Col. 2:15).  When Gabriel was sent with explanation to Daniel, he told of his fight with “the prince of Persia” and also with “the prince of Grecia” and even assured Daniel that “Michael your prince” would stand up for the nation of Israel (Dan. 10:18-21).  There are good principalities and bad but both seem to have authority over global territories.

We must not forget that Satan has a kingdom (Matt. 12:25-26) and once offered this kingdom to Jesus by saying, “All this power will I give thee, and the glory of them: for that is delivered unto me; and to whomsoever I will I give it” (Lk. 4:6-7).  His kingdom is organized better than any business or any country.  It has a doctrine and creed by which the demons operate:  “Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils” (1 Tim. 4:1).  Jesus warned the church of Thyatira not to fall into “the depths of Satan as they speak” (Rev. 2:24).  Paul warned the Colossians not to lose their reward by a “voluntary humility and worshiping of angels, intruding into those things which he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind” (Col. 2:18).

These doctrines have teachers who pretend to be faithful Bible teachers but are in reality “false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves into the apostles of Christ.  And no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light.  Therefore it is no great thing if his ministers be transformed as the ministers of righteousness” (2 Cor. 11:13-15).  Paul was so confident that whoever teaches contrary to Scripture is demonically influenced, that he was willing to “let him be accursed” (Gal. 1:8-9).  People who fall for such teachers by saying, “It was so real.  How could it not be of God,” have fallen for deception 101.  Paul said to the Corinthians, “For ye suffer fools gladly, seeing ye yourselves are wise.  For ye suffer, if a man bring you into bondage, if a man devour you, if a man take of you, if a man exalt himself, if a man smite you on the face” (2 Cor. 11:19-20).  They would say “thank you very much” and go on being deceived.

Powers

The “powers,” exousias, are authorities in the air and earth.  Satan is both the “prince” and also the “power” (our word) of the air” (Eph. 2:2).  These powers that rule in the “high places” may affect more than we know.  We may not be able to say that Satan and demons control all the air waves or sound waves or radio and satellite transmissions around the globe, but they may have more influence on the effects than we know.  Certainly they use this medium to reach millions of people with their messages of unbelief just as millions more are reached with a message of true belief.  Could we not say the messages transmitted in the “air” will take as many people to hell as to heaven?  Or that the medium of the air is a powerful controller of people’s intellect, emotion, and will?

The demonic powers are also authorities in the earth.  Demonic activity is usually related to the places where humans dwell.  “The LORD said unto Satan, Whence comest thou: Then Satan answered the LORD and said, From going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it” (Job 1:7).  Satan, “as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour” (1 Pet. 5:8).  The false prophet who arises with the antichrist in Revelation 13, comes from the earth and deceives the whole world with signs and wonders.  The world is headed toward a new-age type of spirituality in which “mother earth” is worshiped in many facets.  Even today environmentalism has become an inviolate authority; pantheism and panentheism still grow; even quantum physics gives witchcraft and similar demoniacs reason to believe that the earth is always speaking to us because it is always moving and therefore giving off new information.  These all give access to “the powers that be.”

The rulers of the darkness of this world

These are world tyrants who influence dark domains and passions.    Kosmokratoras, are “world potentates” which tempt men into the darkest corners of a sinful world.  Believers have been delivered from “the power of darkness” (Col. 1:13) and are not to be unequally yoked with unbelievers because light has no communion with this kind of darkness (2 Cor. 6:14).

The proof of this is easily seen in the world’s doctrine of “tolerance.”  The rulers of darkness are tolerant of any and all religions and philosophies which have no power to keep souls from hell.  But ask them be tolerant of Christianity, the only way for a soul to come to God, and we see immediate intolerance!  And why should we be surprised or even upset?  This only proves the Bible true.  Satan and his rulers have “blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them” (2 Cor. 4:4).

These rulers seem to specialize in inflaming fleshly passions and all human beings, even believers, who are still in fleshly bodies are susceptible.  James said, “This wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish” (Jas. 3:15).  Romans chapter one describes in detail the downward descent of those who turn from God to these passions and fall into sexual sins, especially homosexuality and worse.  These rulers are delighted with this progression because God may well give them up to these vile affections and then escape from hell becomes impossible (Rom. 1:21-32).

When the bottomless pit is opened in Revelation, demons who were confined, flood the earth and take possession of every person to torment and keep them from dying for five months (Rev. 9:6-7).  For all of that they still will not stop their “worship of devils” nor “repent of their murders, nor of their sorceries, nor of their fornication, nor of their thefts” (20-21).

Spiritual wickedness in high places

These are invisible armies of Satan controlling the highest levels of religion and government.  They are thepneumatika ponhrias, the “spiritual hosts of evil ones.”  They are said to effect the “high places” or literally, the “heavenlies.”  Believers are also seated in these “heavenlies” (Eph. 2:6) and ought to be above their deception.  Demons are “seducing” (“impersonating,” 1 Tim. 4:1) spirits who pose as religious teachers and leaders, as we have seen (e.g. 2 Cor. 11:13-15).  Religious deception often comes through impersonation or imitation.  The signs and wonders movement abounds with alternate revelations and visions supposedly from God.  Contemplative Prayer invites spirits to lead the suppliant into new realms of spiritual experience.  Emotional worship services invite trance-like people to trade their word-based doctrine for experience-oriented beliefs.

These spiritual hosts have long controlled the nations of the world.  We may notice that powerful people with money and influence, throughout history, have manipulated kings and presidents.  They are all puppets in Satan’s kingdom, waiting for a final manifestation of his earthly (howbeit temporary) rule.  When that time comes, the conspiratorialists will finally be right.  But the real power behind that world-wide government will be Satan, not the illuminati.

Satan offered his kingdom to Christ who refused such two-bit fame.  But there is coming one who will accept Satan’s offer whom Satan will indwell to the fullest (Rev. 13:1-8; 16:13-14) and through whom he will control the final form of demonic earthly government.

And So . . . .

And tho’ this world with devils filled,

Should threaten to undo us,

We will not fear, for God hath willed

His truth to triumph through us.

The Prince of darkness grim-

We tremble not for him;

His rage we can endure,

For lo, his doom is sure,

One little word shall fell him.

That word above all earthly powers,

No thanks to them, abideth;

The Spirit and the gifts are ours

Thro’ Him who with us sideth.

Let goods and kindred go,

This mortal life also;

The body they may kill:

God’s truth abideth still,

His kingdom is forever.

Martin Luther

 

Pleasing God

Pleasing God

by Rick Shrader

For this cause we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to desire that ye might be filled with the knowledge of his will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding;  That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of God (Colossians 1:9-10).

Our generation continues to struggle with the concept of pleasing God.  Even though we know that we are justified by faith in the merits of Christ alone, for some reason we balk at the thought of a justified believer pleasing God by good works.  Sometimes an old equivocation of terms is employed to argue against the idea of the believer pleasing God i.e. we speak against works for sanctification by employing verses that speak against works for justification.  We say that the believer can’t please God by his good works because the Bible tells us that we should “Stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage” (Gal. 5:1).

Sometimes an old theological misunderstanding is employed to argue against the believer pleasing God i.e. someone will say, “I was so relieved when I found that I should stop trying to do things myself and simply allow God to do it all through me.”  But is the believer’s progressive holiness to be as passive as his positional salvation?  The relationship between justification and sanctification has always been debated by various denominations (in fact it has created many of those denominations).  Louis Berkhof said it well when he wrote, “While the meritorious cause of both lies in the merits of Christ, there is a difference in the efficient cause.  Speaking economically, God the Father declares the sinner righteous, and God the Holy Spirit sanctifies him.”1 That is, salvation is “Not of works, lest any man should boast.  For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God has ordained that we should walk in them” (Eph. 2:9-10).

Sometimes an old semantic argument is employed against pleasing God.  Does God accept us as we are?  We want to say yes because we understand that God saved us without any merit of our own.  But then we realize that it is because He could not accept us as we were that the righteousness of Christ had to be applied to us.  Even in sanctification God does not leave us where we are but continues to change us into the image of Christ.  Why?  Because He does not accept us as we are.  In all of this, however, we know that we are always “accepted in the Beloved” (Eph. 1:6) because of the work of Christ.  As Paul Hartog wrote in a recent article on Christian Culture, “The good news reaches us where we are but has no intention of simply leaving us there.”2

In all of this, there is still an old obligation the believer has to the very words of Scripture.  The fact is, the Bible often tells the believer that he ought to strive to please God.  Paul encouraged the Thessalonians, “That as ye have received of us how ye ought to walk and to please God, so ye would abound more and more” (1 Thes. 4:1).  In the New Testament, in the light of Christ’s finished work, this concept appears again and again and we can’t avoid it.  We know there is no conflict in this command and in our salvation by grace alone.  The  most common word for pleasing (arestos, please; arest?, to please; arestia, pleasing), is a simple word with no surprise in its English translation.  Neither do less common words (e.g. eudoke?, to seem good) cause problems as the following categories show.

Jesus always pleased God

Jesus Himself said, “I do always those things that please Him” (John 8:29).  Paul wrote, “For even Christ pleased not himself” (Rom. 15:3) meaning that He pleased only God.  In turn, God was pleased with Christ when He said, “This is my beloved Son in Whom I am well pleased” (Matt. 3:17); or, “For it pleased the Father that in him should all fullness dwell” (Col. 1:19).

Jesus was obviously not trying to earn His own salvation, but in a real way was earning ours.  We could even say that this was the only true legalism, that He kept the whole law and did it for our sakes.  Here, in its simplest form, however, to “please” means to do those things that God wants one to do.  Hebrews chapter 10 takes Christ’s obedience to a higher level when we find that God had prepared a body for the Son (“A body hast thou prepared for me,” vs. 5) so that the Son could say with the Psalmist, “Lo, I come to do thy will, O God” (vs. 9).  That body, sinless as it was, was equipped with intellect, emotion, and will which Jesus utilized to the fullest in order to perform the will of God to His pleasing.  Even in the garden, against every cry of His human nature, Jesus still performed the Father’s will with His flesh which became our veil into God’s presence.

The lost cannot please God

“But without faith it is impossible to please him” (Heb. 11:6).  “So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God” (Rom. 8:8).  A man without the Spirit of God does not have the spiritual capability to do things acceptable by God.  He is going about doing good because he hopes to be accepted by those good things before God.  Though a lost man may be doing things God created human beings to do, he still does not please God that way.

We, however, who are already accepted in the Beloved, can do those things that are pleasing to God because our very fallen nature has been radically reoriented to include the Holy Spirit in a new creation.  The lost man’s intellect, emotion, and will are at odds with God and do not seek after God.  The expressions of his fallen nature make up the “world” or “culture.”  “Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature the children of wrath, even as others” (Eph. 2:3).

We are not to please men

“For do I now persuade men, or God?  Or do I seek to please men?  For if I yet please men, I should not be the servant of Christ” (Gal. 1:10).  “But as we were allowed of God to be put in trust with the gospel, even so we speak; not as pleasing men, but God, which trieth our hearts” (1 Thes. 2:4).  We are not even to please ourselves!  “We then that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves.  Let every one of us please his neighbor for his good to edification.  For even Christ pleased not himself” (Rom. 15:1-3a).

The seeming contradiction here between not pleasing men and yet pleasing our neighbor for his good only keeps our good works in proper perspective.  We could seek to please men to the point of idolatry, putting them higher in priority than God.  This cannot be done even with our own loved ones (Luke 14:26).  Yet we can seek to win our neighbor to Christ by doing those things that bring conviction and witness to his conscience.  Those would be good and edifying.

We can do good works that please God

As Jesus was incarnated into a body in order to please God, so we are given this “space” in order to use it for God’s glory.  This must also include our intellect, emotion, and will.  God does not do good works through us without us.  He does not intend for us to be volitionally passive.  Our very decision to move, to think, to do, is the stewardship we have from God.  Yes, it is God working in us, but not God working without us.  Just as an athlete is coached and trained, when he swings at the pitch, he must do it himself and allow all of that training to come out at that moment.  He may hit the ball or he may strike out.  More training and practice will cause him to do better the next time.  He can’t do it without the coach, but the coach will not do it without him.

A single man can please God because he has time to apply himself.  “He that is unmarried careth for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may please the Lord” (1 Cor. 7:32).  A believer can please God in his Christian walk:  “That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing” (Col. 1:10); “That as ye have received of us how ye ought to walk and to please God, so ye would abound more and more” (1 Thes. 4:1).  Children can please God by obeying their parents: “Children, obey your parents in all things: for this is well-pleasing unto the Lord” (Col. 3:20).  Believers can have a successful prayer life by obeying God:  “And whatsoever we ask, we receive of him, because we keep his commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in his sight” (1 John 3:22).  There is no conflict between a believer’s walk of faith and his striving to please God.  “By faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death; and was not found, because God had translated him: for before his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God” (Heb. 11:5).

We can do sinful things that displease God

The Israelites all passed through the Red Sea, “But with many of them God was not well-pleased: for they were overthrown in the wilderness.  Now these things were our examples, to the intent we should not lust after evil things, as they also lusted” (1 Cor. 10:5-6).  Obviously if the Scripture admonishes us to do things that are pleasing to God, it is entirely possible for us not to do those things.  In this way, every command of Scripture is a way to please God or a way to not please Him.  When we were first saved we may have thought we were really struggling to overcome nasty habits, or to stop swearing or stealing or such like.  We couldn’t have known then that the unseen things such as our thoughts and motives would become far greater challenges.  “Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ” (2 Cor. 10:5).  But where there is deeper water to tread, there is more calmness and serenity and a sweeter walk with the Lord.

God does certain things to help us please Him

Why does God bother with chastisement?  If we are always pleasing to Him and our ways are always acceptable, why does He desire to enact change in us?  God does this precisely because we are sons and not strangers, because He loves us and desires to see us grow and become useful to Him.  A parent that loves a son or daughter does not leave him/her without training.  Only selfish parents do that.  Why would God purge the branches on the vine and even more so the productive ones?  Is it not to have them bear even more fruit?  Why would God send trials into believers’ lives if He loves them?  “Thou therefore endure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ. . . . That [you] may please him who hath chosen [you] to be a soldier” (2 Tim. 2:3-4).

What is the difference in our position before these things and after?  How has God changed in His desire toward us before and after the trial?  Isn’t the answer to that the same as our definition for pleasing God?  And isn’t that what the Bible means when it uses that word?

And So . . . .

As a believer I should fully understand that God has saved me and that I am eternally secure in Him.  I do not work to remain saved nor fear for my salvation when I do sin.  Yet the Scripture teaches me, and all of life reminds me, that I am still in the flesh and will be growing in Christ until the day I die; that this world is a broken world and full of good things and bad which I can use for God’s glory or my own; that God wants me to choose the right and shun the wrong and that to do so is to please God who has called me into His service.  If God could not be displeased with sin He would not be God.  Yet in Christ He can accept me for eternal life;  He can be Just and Justifier of all who come to Him by Christ.   And all the while, doing good works and striving for maturity is a satisfying and rewarding walk, “for with such sacrifices God is well-pleased” (Heb. 13:16).

Notes:
1. Louis Berkhof, Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1977) 514.
2. Paul Hartog, “Toward A Christian Approach To Culture,” Faith Pulpit, May/June 2009.
 

 

How Relevant is Relevancy?

How Relevant is Relevancy?

by Rick Shrader

For a generation now the church has been concerned about whether or not the world is listening to our message.  Books and articles continue to bemoan our plight of a decreasing effectiveness in evangelism and church attendance.  This has caused many to make drastic changes to the methodology and polity of the church.  But even with the major overhauls that have taken place, still many are not satisfied with the results.  Our postmodern culture has caused the church to run the spectrum of styles from seeker sensitive to the emergent church.  At the same time, many contemporary church proponents continue to be critical of traditional churches.

One recent article,1 written by a professor of writing and communications at a major university, expressed concern about what messages we are sending to the world by the way we conduct our church services.  After visiting a number of fundamental Baptist churches, he “made an ethnographic analysis of the speech codes that we unconsciously use in our subculture.”  He means that he noticed a number of ways in which the world seems to be turned off by our church services.  His use of “subculture” to describe our churches seems backward to me since I rather see the world as a subculture and the New Testament as a divine culture.  But, of course, my point of view, according to this author, would be part of the (so-called) problem!

First, he says, “Much of the speaking we do in church is unintelligible to outsiders.”  He sees our churches loaded with assumptions about the way people relate to one another.  We talk of “having fellowship” among believers, of “witnessing” to unbelievers, and even of “having devotions” with God.  These kinds of expressions, the author thinks, are “extremely strong forms of negation” toward outsiders.

Second, “Our church buildings have few crosses.”  He explains that our churches have a pulpit with a preacher giving a “top-down” monologue rather than a two-way dialogue.  The Bible is our “dominant symbol.”  The author wishes we could find other ways (having more icons?) of being more “welcoming” to visitors.

Third, the author relates how university professors have difficulty teaching Christian students in secular schools how to compose arguments.  These students seem to think the Bible ends all arguments.  “By refusing to do research [is this really true or just someone’s opinion?] and construct arguments, these students were reinforcing the stereotype of Christians as obscurantist Bible thumpers.”  As a conclusion he says (of student essay contests), “My burden is that a theme of ‘Balancing Biblical Truth and Cultural Relevance’ should be an occasion for us to look beyond the discourses we use in church.  We must rethink the unconscious messages by which our subculture alienates visitors.”

These kinds of thoughts are not new.  The church has been wrestling with relevance for most of the last century.  Before I give some rhetorical questions of my own, I want to say that  we shouldn’t lose ourselves in a minimalist mindset.  Of course we do some things for the sake of visitors.  Common courtesies, general cleanliness, friendly environment, even modern conveniences are things anyone would do when hosting visitors.  The weightier issues here, however, have to do with the operation of the church itself; with whether or not we are changing New Testament Christianity to fit the world’s desires.  If we change what we are convinced we ought to be, are we even being honest with those who come in among us?

Are we worried about a belligerent minority?

Are we attempting to reconstruct the whole house because of one squeaking door?  When studies are made about cultural relevancy, the laboratory mice are always the teenagers, college students, or similar groups with a specific world view.  Some years ago now, I engulfed myself in a study of postmodernism.  It seemed that I saw everyone and everything through the lens of metanarrative, semiotics, or deconstruction.  I finally had to slap myself back into reality and realize that the great majority of people I sit next to in the restaurant or pump gas next to at the gas station not only don’t know or care about these terms, they don’t fit into these categories anyway.  I’m not saying that these things don’t pose a threat to our society, but I am suggesting that the church has overestimated postmodernism’s effect on the majority of people.

We ought to at least agree that Christianity has faced many things in its two thousand year history and it never profited by changing its message or methods to fit the temporary cultural winds.  Jesus first instructed His disciples to enter into a town with the message of the kingdom and if there were those who were “unworthy” of the message and wouldn’t receive it, they were to shake the dust off their feet and move on (Matt. 10:11-15).  I don’t think the Lord was teaching hard-heartedness or cultural obscurantism, but I think He was teaching us to not lose our heads when some in our society won’t hear the message.  At times that belligerent group may be large or small, but it should not affect the gospel presentation.

Should we continue down a proven slippery slope?

Surely we know by now that few things move from liberal to conservative, but rather almost always from conservative to liberal.  The twentieth century alone is sufficient to warn us of individuals and groups who were once fundamental and solid in their Biblical convictions but through a sincere desire to reach more people have gone off into compromising arrangements from which they never returned.

The apostle John warned the church not to bid “God speed” (or “God bless”) to those who have deviated from the message of Christ (2 John 10-11).  To do so is to fellowship or partake in their wrong actions.  We never gain more evangelistic results by compromising the truth of Scripture.  Aren’t we doing that with a lost world when we adopt their methods of worship and bring those into our churches?  Many Baptist groups slid down this slope but few have recovered.  They merely redefined their new position as fundamental.  Our soteriological methods must always be governed by our doxological convictions.

Should churches be sanctuaries or half-way houses?

Is it the purpose of the local church to reform the unregenerate or to strengthen the saints?  Should we make our services debating contests or places of fellowship and admonition?  It is interesting how those questions sound politically incorrect to our ears.  We have been so conditioned by our culture that to think of the church as a sanctuary apart from the world, a place of rest from the battlefield, a realm of safety for our families, makes us feel as if we are somehow cowards or apathetic.

How can we read the book of Acts and the Epistles and miss this?  Read Acts 4:23ff; 5:12-14; 18:6-8; 19:9-10.  It does not follow that because the church creates a sanctuary for the saints that the church will do less in evangelism.  To the contrary, the church must teach, admonish, comfort, worship, and pray if it is going to be effective in evangelism.  We must retreat to our training facilities if we are to perform mightily on the field!  Our practices (to continue the analogy) are not closed to outsiders, but they are closed to the advice and control of outsiders.  The church as the church will produce believers who are ready and able to truly evangelize.

Do heralds bargain with the Master’s message?

I’m sure we would all agree that they do not.  But some evidently feel that changing methodologies does not violate that principle.  Our word for “preacher” comes from the New Testament word for “herald (kerux—2 Tim. 1:11).”  He was a trusted agent of the king who spoke the king’s message to the people.  He had no right to change or barter that message.  His method of proclaiming the message was “preaching” (kerusso—2 Tim. 4:2).  The message itself was the subject of the preaching (the kerygma—2 Tim. 4:17).

If we really believe the Bible is our authority for faith and practice, then we have no right to rearrange our practices because those we are preaching to don’t like it.  That may grieve our hearts and may even cost us relationships but it cannot change our devotion.

Are we to evangelize or win the world?

There is a vast difference between faithfully proclaiming our faith to whomever will listen, and insisting that every listener must accept our faith.  We are commissioned to preach the gospel to every creature (Mk. 16:15-16) but not to win every creature.  We don’t baptize every nation but the converts from every nation (Matt. 28:19-20).  We are to be “witnesses” in all the world but there will be both times of revival and persecution.  Must we insist that our time  be a time of great revival?  Must we say that if we are in one of those difficult times that we are doing something wrong?  God doesn’t ask us to evaluate our evangelism or our faith by how others respond.  That is the Holy Spirit’s business and we should be satisfied with His decisions.

Does our generation really not understand us?

Does the average American citizen have a difficult time following a simple sentence with nouns and verbs?  Does even the punk rocker not know what we are saying when we speak of the gospel of Christ?  I think he understands perfectly and reacts according to his conscience.  We’ve been watching too many TV shows and reading too many vogue magazines and watching too many Hollywood movies.  The generations, cultures, and faiths may have their own homey way of speaking within their circles (where would the world be without such variety?) but to say that one cannot be understood by the others is to be a bit culturally myopic.

The Bible does say that the lost man cannot grasp spiritual things (1 Cor. 2:14) and that unless the Holy Spirit works in his heart he will call it all foolishness.  But this is not the same as saying he cannot understand language.  Besides, if he could not even understand our language, then there would be no purpose to evangelism at all.  The lost man understands all too well the claims of Christ.  We are the ones who are uncomfortable.

Do we really want to be like the world?

Are some trying so hard to be “understood” by the world because they love it more than the church?  One has to wonder what the motivation is for turning the church of Jesus Christ into a cultural retreat for the world.  If the local church assembly is to be designed by sinners, where do the saints find fulfillment for the New Testament commands of Christ?  Where is the reverence?  Where is the specifically Christian fellowship?  Where is the love of the brethren?  Where is the place to do the business of the church decently and in order?

Some say that they make these changes in the church service for the sake of the lost who are there.  But if they see that no lost are there for a particular hour, do they quickly dispense with all that and have a normal service?  No, these changes are made for Christians who like it that way.  It is because they spend the other six days of the week watching American Idol that they cannot bring themselves to love the church on Sunday.  John wrote, “They are of the world: therefore speak they of the world, and the world heareth them.  We are of God: he that knoweth God heareth us; he that is not of God heareth not us.  Hereby know we the spirit of truth, and the spirit of error” (1 John 4:5-6).

And So . . . .

Cultural relevancy is not all it’s cracked up to be.  This isn’t the first generation of believers who have found themselves on the outside of cultural elitism. History and eternity will judge how we hold the banner behind a long line of faithful men and women.  “Let us not be weary in well-doing, for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.”