The Creators of the World

person holding world globe facing mountain

“My own mind is my own church.”
Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason, 1794

The Scientific Revolution of the 1500’s and 1600’s gave birth to the “Age of Enlightenment” in the mid 1600’s to the late 1700’s. During the Enlightenment the masses began using the scientific method, the way of reason and rationality, as tools of cultural formation. The United States was born because of enlightenment thinking. The Declaration of Independence and US Constitution emerged from the minds of people who wholly believed in reason over magic and superstition. Some of the founders even held rationality and logic as superior to religious faith.

The Enlightenment age led to the Romantic Era (Mid/Late 1800’s to Early 1900’s) which gave way to the Modern Era (1900’s to Mid/Late 1900’s) and then post-Modernism (Late 1900’s to Now). Each era contains remnants of the ones that came before. Over time, major ideas of the former eras die-off while some are kept. We find that today’s thinking has become an “ala carte” venture with smatterings of past thought intermixed with current cultural experience.

The above quote by Thomas Paine is a great example. As people in the new millennium dive deeper into their lived experiences for meaning and identity, we see Paine’s point playing out. We see people worshipping at a “church” of their own mind. They fall in love with, or perhaps despise, their own thoughts, seeking to express, and be affirmed for what flows from their mental altars. At the same time, reason and logic are tossed aside as they arrive at “authentic selves” which often do not match up with facts and reason. Paine’s rejection of God is present in today’s minds while magic and superstition remain; all wrapped in a tight cloak of rationalization over rationalism. They might quote “science” while using none of the scientific method. They might mention evolution while ignoring the engines of Darwin’s theory. For a rational person, it looks like madness. But it’s the grim result of lives spent untethered from concrete meaning which has led to our own 21st Century self-determination. Our fellow human beings truly believe they are creating their own worlds.

We know that culture has largely left enlightenment thinking when our publicly elected officials begin not only affirming these created identities but promoting them as moral, legislating in their favor and enforcing the subsequent laws against detractors. The Enlightenment promised eyes opened and awakened minds to the rational truths surrounding all people. Now that the Enlightenment tenets of reason and logic are dying in American culture, we watch as the blind lead the blind from their corrupted minds to ruinous ends for all who follow them.

What’s a Christian to do?

Christianity has survived every emergence of philosophy and debate since Christ ascended. Belief in the Lord God advanced century to century before the birth of Jesus as the Israelites faced kings, kingdoms, war, exile, and devastation. This is due to what each generation of human beings has come to believe as the foundation of real salvation under God. The endurance of the Christian view of the world begins in one place. There is one God. This God is Lord. This God is Savior. What spans human history, age to age, is the knowledge of and belief in the God of the Bible. Following the fault line of faith in the one true God through the years, we find believers in each generation not just a part of philosophy, art, music, science, medicine, and education, but as pioneers in all disciplines.

The culture will sway proclaiming brave new boundaries broken and “new selves” revealed to the rest of the world. We must remember the human struggle is age old and has not changed. It’s always been the opposite of a staring contest between God and people. He’s desperate to catch our gaze, while we repeatedly look away. God has revealed Himself in each generation of recorded history to the creatures He’s made. But these creatures have decided they’d rather be Him than serve and worship Him. We’d rather be the creators of worlds than subject to the one who’s created the world.

The statements of liberation and independence we hear in culture are nothing new, therefore as human thinking allegedly progresses, we find ourselves still limited, still stuck in what we are. We try to define ourselves by what we do or how we are, yet we find that we are nothing more than we’ve always been, God’s wayward children that He’s calling home. And God, He’s still God, He’s still in control and He’s reaching for all in every era through Jesus Christ.

The Powerful Heart Of Christian Leaders Who Remain Silent

peace word carved in wood

Ever heard something like this?

“Christian preachers need to wake up! The Church is being persecuted in America.”

“Our Christian leaders are failing us! Where are the voices for justice?”

“The Church needs to stand up and fight. Where are the pastors?”

I’ve read and heard many things like these in the last two years from podcasts, social media, and the news. Christian leaders who’ve remained largely silent in this current cultural moment are being accused by other Christians of denying Christ and their calling. I disagree. Here’s what real Christian leaders, tenured shepherds of people, truly know.

In the insanity and pain of recent years, the mayhem and aftermath of a polarized election and widespread radicalization based on worldview, American Christians, with faith totally shaken, have begun to lose their resolve in the true Gospel of Christ.

Why? Because they live mainly on the internet.

Sorry if that feels too harsh. But I wonder if that verbal stab feels familiar? This type of raw commentary is the online standard. I too have been guilty of it. I’ve since decided that I love rhetoric, but only if it’s rhetorical. What’s being said about Church leaders by the Church and members of the media isn’t rhetoric, it’s an accusation of foolishness. (Note: Matthew 5:22)

Christian leaders are asking, “What’s the American Church really worried about?”

This is our current American Christian moment. We get pinched and think we’ve been punched, we get shoved and think we’ve been in a fight.

Consider this. In the three centuries following Christ’s ascension, the exponentially expanding Church experienced the vilest persecution she’s ever seen. For preaching or teaching Christ and living out Jesus’ commandments, a Christian could be burned at the stake, buried alive, sewn into the abdomen of a dead donkey (Seriously, look it up), and don’t forget, crucified in the public square. The Romans were merciless and had no conscience against those who denied Caesar.

Now is not the time for Christian civil disobedience in America. I can say that because we aren’t being persecuted specifically for the Gospel. I can still say anything I want to whomever I want, and I might only have social consequences for saying it. I have not been hindered one bit in preaching the Gospel or living out the commandments of Christ in this world.

Yes, Christians have descended in American culture. Yet, no revolution is now needed, save one. We stand firm in the radical mission Christ began of preaching the Gospel, making disciples, baptizing believers, and teaching them to obey Him. For this world, that will always be radical and rebellious enough. (Matthew 28:19-20)

Look at Acts chapter 5. As the persecution of the Church gained steam in 1st Century Jerusalem, the Apostles were arrested by the Jewish leaders and warned not to spread the message of Jesus Christ. Peter and the Apostles responded, “We must obey God rather than men.” (Acts 5:29) For that response the Jewish leaders wanted to kill them, yet the Church kept chugging along. Two chapters later, after they’ve stayed the course of Gospel ministry, we see bloodshed in the murder of Stephen (Acts 7). After that, mass persecution broke out. What did the Church do? Did they fight? Nope. Did they organize, arm themselves and begin a civil war? Nope. Did they stand in the public square, citing articles of Jewish or Roman law and demand rights? Nope. Many Christians left, the Apostles stayed and preached the Gospel. And the Church flourished!

You may be thinking… But the Church in America has been told at times not to gather. Isn’t that persecution? No it isn’t. Persecution isn’t being told to not meet. Words are not persecutory. It’s being arrested, tried, jailed, tortured and/or executed for meeting. In America, we still have a choice to meet and in large part no local, state or federal law enforcement, no judges, are going to stand in the way.

Christian leaders are remaining silent on cultural issues for the spread of the Gospel itself.

The Gospel of Christ is for everyone. Say it aloud… EVERYONE! The calls for equity or the calls for liberty being made by Christians seem only to stem from a cultural worldview and not the Biblical understanding of the word, “all”. For example, here are two poles of this discussion. Extreme conservatives, if they pay attention to religion at all, have commandeered Jesus, wrapped Him in the flag and deemed that Christ views all societal problems the way they do. Extreme liberals, if they call themselves Christian, have reduced Jesus to the all-around good guy, adorned Him progressive tropes and determined Him to be the affirmer and accepter of all humanistic perspectives. Neither of these poles are close to Biblical. Mainly because they eliminate the concept of “all”.

True Christianity, the true Christ, does not reside in or emerge from individual worldviews. Christ isn’t Lord because people believe He is. He’s Lord whether individuals believe in Him or not. Reading the Bible first, then listening to podcasters, bloggers, social media and the news second (or better not at all) will lead us to an understanding and burden of the Gospel being for “all”. Red and Blue, Right and Left, Republican and Democrat, gay and straight, trans and cis, brown and white, socialist and capitalist, the Gospel is for ALL.

Every Christian leader has friends they pray for daily. Maybe they’ve met with these folks weekly for a coffee over a course of years. They’ve listened, they’ve commiserated, they’ve cried with these friends all the while speaking of and modeling Jesus Christ for them. They’ve done this in hope. It’s hope that these friends may come to know the Christ we know, the Lord and Savior, our King of Kings. All the while, they live down the dull actions and statements of Christians whose faith exists inside a culturally determined worldview.

These leaders would rather die than close the door on those friends because they differ in opinion politically, socially, or culturally. They’d rather risk being called weak, woke or unjust because the eternal destiny of their friend matters deeply to them. When we espouse the current cultural dissensions, fight for things Christ cared nothing about or behave in ways He never would, it ends conversations that could lead to the eternal salvation of lives. As we step back and consider the Biblical revelation of the Gospel, we understand that all souls matter deeply to God no matter who they voted for.

Yes, pressure on Christians is greater this year than last year.

Yes, we are moving toward the appropriate end of days the Bible describes.

And yes, we must speak in defense of those with little to no standing in the culture.

But do not lose the Biblical concept of “all”.

Hear the counsel of the writer of Hebrews.

“Consider (Jesus) who endured from sinners such hostility against himself, so that you may not grow weary or fainthearted. In your struggle against sin you have not yet resisted to the point of shedding your blood.” Hebrews 12:3-4 (ESV)

When we say that American Christians are being persecuted, I think of our brothers and sisters in Egypt, Coptic Christians who live every day in the possibility of their houses being burned to the ground or their children killed for practicing Christianity. When we come to believe that unkind things said about Christians is persecution, I frankly get embarrassed. When did we stop being able to hold our own in the public conversation?

We cannot say the current American culture is persecutory to Christians. Real persecution is unmistakable when we see it or hear of it. I’ve learned we need to be careful what we say because the eternal lives of our friends and neighbors can rest on the in-roads we maintain to speak Christ into their lives. Christian leaders who live for the spread of the Gospel to all people know the difference and therefore speak or remain silent.

Christians! Beware the Victory Lap

photo of two babies sitting on toy cars

I am pro-life. I believe that abortion is in no way a satisfactory answer to unplanned pregnancy.

Yesterday the US Supreme Court effectively overturned Roe v. Wade in the decision Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health.

The decision was met with celebration and alarm as social media, news outlets and live feeds brimmed with responses from single words and sentences to paragraph long rants and sharply constructed memes.

Many Christians decided to create or share posts in “victory” over Roe v. Wade. I saw Christian people declare that we’d won. Some crowed that our opposition (i.e. those who’d support abortion rights, the legislators and governors, our next door neighbors) had fallen and that the cause of Christ had triumphed.

Here’s the problem. Abortion is still legal in the US. Only now, it’s the state legislatures that will determine it’s legality, not the Federal Government. Don’t believe me? Look here.

Today women are still making appointments to have their pregnancies terminated. The question in the US is not if abortion is legal or illegal. The question is “how legal” abortion is.

Living in Illinois, we see the Midwestern capital for abortion. It’s estimated that we will see an increase of 20-30,000 abortions in the next year alone from women in the surrounding states who’ll seek services here. That would take the number of abortions per year in Illinois closer to 100,000. (1)

The Illinois Reproductive Health Act (775 ILCS 55) ensured that even if Roe v. Wade fell, Illinois would be among the US leaders in guaranteed abortion rights (details here). In 2017, Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner eliminated the trigger law which would go into effect when Roe v. Wade failed. So when current Illinois Governor JB Pritzker said yesterday that an “extremist court” bent on causing an increase in back alley abortions risked lives due to the Dobbs decision, he’s basically signaling to the rest of the Midwest that Illinois is doubling down and increasing it’s commitment to abortion rights.

So no, abortion has not been made illegal. In the five states that surround Illinois, only two have eliminated abortion for any reason except the life of the mother. And those in Arkansas and Missouri who are seeking an abortion for any other reason will find one not only in Illinois, but in Kansas, Wisconsin, Indiana, Kentucky and Iowa. (2)

Christians and pro-life advocates, please abstain from taking a victory lap. The job is not done by a long shot.

We need to shut off the valve in order to stop the flow. Roe v. Wade is done. But the effort must now change into making abortion unthinkable, to eradicate the perceived need in the hearts of men and women for abortion. It’s a reality that many people believe that abortion of a child is the only answer to unplanned pregnancy. We must work to change that perception.

If we are Pro-Life, are we Pro-Foster care? Pro-Fatherhood? Pro-Truth Based Education? Are we willing to offer help to prospective parents with substance abuse problems or financial problems? Are we willing to raise the babies born to people who cannot raise them alone? What are we prepared to do to make abortion an inessential last resort?

The bigger question to the Church is do we believe the Gospel of Jesus Christ? If so, we know that complex issues can neither be abolished nor advanced with the stroke of a judicial pen because human problems are based in sin and not on social or legal dogma. We cannot legislate (or de-legislate) morality.

Instead of declaring victory, let’s continue to declare the same state of emergency that Christ declared until He returns.(3) People are dying each day without knowing the God who made them through faith in Jesus Christ. While the demise of Roe v. Wade is a battle won. It’s only one battle in the much larger war being waged for the souls of each human being, born or unborn.