Gloom or Glee – Christianity in Decline

I know your works; you are neither cold nor hot. I wish that you were either cold or hot. So, because you are lukewarm and neither cold nor hot, I am about to spit you out of my mouth. Revelation 3:15-16

Christianity quickly diminishing in US, on pace to become minority religion in decades— (Fox News)

America’s Christian majority is on track to end— (NPR headline)

One after another major publications and news stories picked up the gloomy predictions based on the release of a recent Pew Research Center study. The report reflects the downward trend of people identifying as Christians. 50 years ago, 90% of the population considered themselves Christians, compared to 64% in 2020.

If recent trends in switching (changing one’s religious affiliation) hold, we projected that Christians could make up between 35% and 46% of the U.S. population in 2070.”  The study continued by saying “of course, it is possible that events outside the study’s model-such as war, economic depression, climate crisis, changing immigration patterns or religious innovations- could reverse current religious switching trends, leading to a revival of Christianity in the United States. But there are no current switching patterns in the U.S. that can be factored into the mathematical models to project such a result.”  –Stephanie Kramer, a senior researcher who led the study.

Mark Twain in response to a newspaper report about his death, responded, “the report of my death was an exaggeration.” The same could be said of the end of Christianity. Throughout history, religious leaders beat and imprisoned those who spoke the name of Jesus, the mob threw stones, the emperor released the lions, the elite of society scoffed and the intellectuals scorned, but Jesus said “you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” (Acts 1:8)

G.K. Chesterton’s reflections decades ago can help keep this report in perspective:

Chesterton wrote, “at least five times…the Faith has to all appearance gone to the dogs. In each of these five cases it was the dog that died…. Christianity has died many times and risen again; for it had a God who knew the way out of the grave. But the first extraordinary fact which marks this history is this: that Europe has been turned upside down over and over again; and that at the end of each of these revolutions the same religion has again been found on top. The Faith is always converting the age, not as an old religion but as a new religion”. (Chesterton, The Everlasting Man)

God’s response to Elijah can help keep this report in perspective:

When Elijah thought he was “the only prophet of the LORD who is left” to fight, God reminded him after several mind-blowing natural events that “I still have left in Israel 7,000 followers who have not bowed their knees to Baal or kissed the images of him.” (I Kings 19:18)

History can help keep this report in perspective:

If Christians in America find themselves as a minority in a few decades, it will not be the first time.  America may have had its roots in Christian principles but in 1776 only 17% of this new nation were church members. As one writer said you would find more Americans in a tavern on Saturday night than in church on Sunday morning. From this minority position, God used a couple of major spiritual awakenings and countless local revivals to awaken American Christians. In this growing awakening, God used the church as the catalyst for cultural and societal reforms. Philip Yancey writes in Vanishing Grace that “Christians present an attractive counterculture until they become the dominant culture. Then they divert from their mission, join the power structure, and in the process turn society against them. Rejected, they retreat into a minority subculture, only to start the cycle all over again.”

Our response can help keep this report in perspective:

Maybe the Christianity of the last few decades has become more like a warm fuzzy blanket instead of the fire that swept through the frontier towns and villages of yesteryears. It was a fire that changed society, sent out missionaries to the nations, healed broken families, redeemed desperate people, and shook the world.  “With no social advantage to belief, churches attract people who are serious about their faith—which plants the seed for future growth.” (Yancey) If in the last 100 years Christianity grew from 600 million to over 2 billion worldwide, imagine what could be if the church rekindled their first love?

Jesus’ response on the mountain can help keep this report in perspective:

Jesus was leaving his mission in the hands of a few faithful disciples and He knew the road ahead would be difficult for them. He knew it would be difficult for those who followed through the generations. Jesus knew that governments would change, cultural norms would continue to shift and people would waiver in their faith. Yet Jesus left us this final word, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” –Matthew 28:18-20

Daniel Silliman writing for Christianity Today observed, “Revival could happen, there’s just nothing in the current data that indicates it will.” That statement is probably true except God has never been big on statistics or data. When data had Noah drowning, God closed the door on the ark. When data had Moses trapped by an enemy army, God parted the river. When data had Jesus dead, God moved the stone.  When data had the church in decline, God created a thirst for Him alone.  It will be in that thirst that God will use to revive His church.

As a deer longs for flowing streams, so my soul longs for you, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When shall I come and behold the face of God?” Psalm 42:1-2

Lord, create in us a thirst that only you can quench. Let us boldly live our lives for you even when the world laughs at us.  Fall fresh on us again that we may be the generation of the next Great Awakening.

God is great!

Following the Right Directions

It was by faith that Abraham obeyed when God called him to leave home and go to another land that God would give him as his inheritance. He went without knowing where he was going. Hebrews 11:8 NLT

Traffic jams and big cities just go together! Living in Atlanta I have learned never to leave home without plotting my course with the GPS. I may know how to get where I am going but Google gets me around the inevitable traffic deadlock and gives me the occasional shortcut. If you drive in any big city you come to depend upon a GPS – until you don’t! Drivers in Denver might be a little hesitant after Google Maps left 100 or so stuck in the mud in 2019. When Google Maps gave drivers a shorter way to the Denver International Airport to avoid a major accident, drivers took the route. However, Google identified a road that wasn’t a road and left drivers hopelessly stuck in the mud for several hours. One lady interviewed said, “My thought was, ‘Well there are all these cars in front of me so it must be OK. So, I just continued.” As the road quickly turned into a slick, muddy mess she further said, “That’s when I thought, ‘Oh this was a bad decision.” There was no turning back once they were in the mud.

We all can identify with following directions over unfamiliar territory. I had a similar situation when we lived in Kenya, but with a different outcome. Our family was going to attend a worship service in one of the Maasai villages outside of Nairobi. I did know the road out to the church would be difficult, if not dangerous. However, unlike the GPS miscalculation, I was following a person who had made the trip to the church hundreds of times. He knew every turn, pothole, and ditch going out to the village. The difference is amazing when you are following someone who knows the way and you can trust him to get you to your destination.

The same scenario could be said of a lot of people spiritually. It is often a struggle to decide the right way to go, when in fact, if you keep your eyes on Jesus, the way forward is less important than the destination. Proverbs 20:24 wisely tells you that “The LORD directs our steps, so why try to understand everything along the way?”  I don’t know about you but I realize that if I take my eyes off Jesus, what looks like the smoothest, most direct path of life ends up being a treacherous road.

Staying focused on Jesus allows you to weather the storms of life. You may think the best way forward looks great but you quickly realize it is the most dangerous way when you are following in the wrong direction. The Denver drivers faithfully followed the voice on the GPS only to find themselves stuck in the mud. Listening to the right voice is essential.

Who is the third who walks always beside you?

When I count, there are only you and I together

But when I look ahead up the white road

There is always another one walking beside you.” –T. S. Eliot

So I say, let the Holy Spirit guide your lives. Then you won’t be doing what your sinful nature craves. The sinful nature wants to do evil, which is just the opposite of what the Spirit wants. And the Spirit gives us desires that are the opposite of what the sinful nature desires. These two forces are constantly fighting each other, so you are not free to carry out your good intentions.” Galatians 5:16-17 NLT

George Washington Carver understood the necessity of listening to the right voices. Had he listened to the voices within his cultural context he would not have heard that he could make an impact on the world as a scientist, advocate for justice, and a voice for the poor. He quit listening to the voices that would label him as “the orphaned child of a despised race” but would come to know the Creator whose voice He would follow throughout his life.

All my life, I have risen regularly at four in the morning to go into the woods and talk with God. That’s where He reveals His secrets to me. When everybody else is asleep, I hear God best and learn my plan.” It was his faith in Jesus that Carver viewed “as the key to defeating racism and improving the plight of the poor.”

Oswald Chambers wrote “A river is victoriously persistent, it overcomes all barriers. For a while it goes steadily on its course, then it comes to an obstacle and for a while it is balked, but it soon makes a pathway around the obstacle. Or a river will drop out of sight for miles, and presently emerge again broader and grander than ever. You can see God using some lives, but into your life an obstacle has come and you do not seem to be of any use. Keep paying attention to the Source, and God will either take you around the obstacle or remove it. The river of the Spirit of God overcomes all obstacles. Never get your eyes on the obstacle or on the difficult. The obstacle is a matter of indifference to the river which will flow steadily through you if you remember to keep right at the Source. Never allow anything to come between yourself and Jesus Christ, no emotion, or experience; nothing must keep you from the one great sovereign Source.”

The traffic anchor for KMGH Denver said of the GPS wrong turn, “You are driving. Google Maps is not driving. Google Maps is not perfect. You need to know where you are going and, if it does not look like that’s where you should be going, turn around and try again.”

Good advice for drivers, but also a great spiritual analogy. The world has much to say about which road to take but turn around because it will take you where you don’t want to go. The way Jesus leads will bring you home safely.

Your hope is not in the cultural context of the day but Jesus. Your road may be filled with obstacles but in Jesus, you have a Shepherd who guards his flock, a Friend who understands your needs, and a Savior who gives life.

Lord, we trust you to guide us through this week knowing your ways are right. Since You know what is ahead, let us listen with attentiveness and responsiveness. Amen

God is great!

 

Solemn Remembrance

Why do the nations rebel? Why are the countries devising plots that will fail? The kings of the earth form a united front; the rulers collaborate against the LORD and his anointed king. They say, “Let’s tear off the shackles they’ve put on us. Let’s free ourselves from their ropes.” The one enthroned in heaven laughs in disgust…Psalm 2:1-4a

“It started like any other day,” Lightsey recalled. “I handled a couple of EMS runs and some other pretty minor stuff.”

At 8:47 a.m., a call crackled over the radio:

Battalion 1 to Manhattan. We just had a …a plane crashed into an upper floor of the World Trade Center. Transmit a second alarm and start relocating companies into the area.” –Daily News article

September 11, 2001, is now 21 years removed. On that fateful day, almost 3,000 people were killed during the attacks at the Twin Towers, Pentagon, and aboard United Airlines Flight 93. 9/11 was a day that the United States found itself under attack. “Time is passing. Yet, for the United States of America, there will be no forgetting September 11th. We will remember every rescuer who died in honor. We will remember every family that lives in grief. We will remember the fire and ash, the last phone calls, the funerals of the children.’ –President George W. Bush

It was a day that would unite a nation, open the hearts of people and drive us to prayer. Author David Levithan writes, “what separates us from the animals, what separates us from the chaos, is our ability to mourn people we’ve never met.”

Genelle Guzman-McMillan, a 9/11 Survivor writes that “On September 11, I always take the day off. I want to be in a peaceful quiet place praying. It is a day I both mourn and celebrate.” Senator Lamar Alexander said “September 11 is one of our worst days but it brought out the best in us. It unified us as a country and showed our charitable instincts and reminded us of what we stood for and stand for.”

Fast forward 21 years and according to a recent Quinnipiac University poll, “Americans 67- 29 percent think the nation’s democracy is in danger of collapse.”  Tim Malloy, Quinnipiac polling analyst added that “In a rare moment of agreement, Americans coalesce around an ominous concern. Democracy, the bedrock of the nation, is in peril.”

Americans may not think of themselves as an “empire,” but much of the world does. The average age of empires, according to a specialist on the subject, the late Sir John Bagot Glubb, is 250 years. After that, empires always die, often slowly but overwhelmingly from overreaching in the search for power. The America of 1776 will reach its 250th year in 2026.” –Georgie Anne Geyer

John Adams, the 2nd President of the United States offered a timeless perspective on a nation’s lifespan. Writing to the Massachusetts Militia on October 11, 1798, “We have no Government armed with Power capable of contending with human Passions unbridled by morality and Religion. Avarice, Ambition and Revenge or Gallantry, would break the strongest Cords of our Constitution as a Whale goes through a Net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious People. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”

Philip Yancy writes, “According to a Gallup poll, 73 percent of Americans say moral values are worsening while only 14 percent judge them improving…My secular friends look at these facts and conclude we must work harder to educate children and put new social systems in place. I look at the same facts and doubt politicians’ ability to solve our problems. We need more than new systems; we need a transformation, the kind of personal and societal renewal in which the church could play a crucial role.”

This past week the world lost a remarkable leader who demonstrated a life of integrity and faithful service. Queen Elizabeth served her country and her God with hopefulness, determination, and consistency. In 2000 during her annual Christmas broadcast, she said, “For me the teachings of Christ and my own personal accountability before God provide a framework in which I try to lead my life. “

British Pastor Pete Greig shared in a message following her death, “Almost twenty-two years after that speech, more than seventy since Elizabeth became Queen, we witness contemporary leaders failing and falling all around us at an unprecedented rate. Notions of duty, of promise-keeping, and of accountability to God can seem antiquated and even naive. But at such a time, Queen Elizabeth’s lifelong example of consistency in private faith and integrity in public service is both startling and inspiring.”

Scripture gives insight into a nation and its people that turn from God. We read in Psalm 9 “The nations fell into the pit they had made; their feet were caught in the net they had hidden. The Lord revealed himself; he accomplished justice. The wicked were ensnared by their own actions. The wicked are turned back and sent to Sheol; this is the destiny of all the nations that ignore God, for the needy are not permanently ignored, the hopes of the oppressed are not forever dashed.  Rise up, LORD! Don’t let men be defiant. May the nations be judged in your presence. Terrify them, LORD. Let the nations know they are mere mortals” (9:15-20 NET)

As the news media runs reports and commentaries about 9/11 and the life of Queen Elizabeth, use it as a solemn time to reflect and pray. There is no question that we have witnessed monumental changes over the last couple of decades. Values have changed, political divisiveness has increased, churches are more empty and Christianity has been devalued. Yet should we be hopeless? Never! For God has never relinquished His role, changed His course, or failed to keep His promises.

Is there hope for our nation? Since Scripture gives us insight into what happens to a country that turns from God, you can be confident that God has given us countermeasures to restore a nation. God is not big on formula approaches to life or problems, but He comes close in 2 Chronicles 7:14 in His guidance to Solomon. This is a “formula” that I think could be applicable to us today. “If my people who are called by my name humble themselves, pray, seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”

Followers of Jesus, God’s formula will not be easy, especially the humble part. However, as we humble ourselves, pray, seek God above all else and turn from our evil ways, it will be so worth it for the next generations who make America their home.

LORD, we remember that dreadful day of September 11 and the ensuing tragedy. Yet instead of turning to you over these years, many have walked away from you. Today we ask that you would create desperation in us for healing until we finally cry out for forgiveness and seek only You.  Amen

God is great!

 

Dignity of Work – Celebrating Labor Day

You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands; you shall be blessed, and it shall be well with you. Psalm 128:2 ESV

Happy Labor Day! This great three-day holiday is often known as the end-of-summer or the best deals on furniture and mattress sales events. Cookouts, parades, and parties mark Labor Day throughout the United States. However, over the last couple of decades, Labor Day has also become the time when the world turns into a pumpkin. If you can eat it, drink it or smell it, there is probably a pumpkin version. Starbucks announced that the Pumpkin Spice Latte is out. “What can be said about the Pumpkin Spice Latte that hasn’t already been written before? The segment-creating drink that not only launched an army of imitators and allowed pumpkin spice to infiltrate every facet of our lives, but also turned August into a seasonal product battleground, is returning for its 19th year in 2022.”  (1440 Daily Digest) Since I’m not a great fan of the PSL, I will take my calories in a Dunkin’ pumpkin donut!

Officially, Labor Day is a national holiday signed into law by President Grover Cleveland on June 28, 1894. According to History.com, “Labor Day pays tribute to the contributions and achievements of American workers and is traditionally observed on the first Monday in September. It was created by the labor movement in the late 19th century…In the late 1800s, at the height of the Industrial Revolution in the United States, the average American worked 12-hour days and seven-day weeks in order to eke out a basic living. Despite restrictions in some states, children as young as 5 or 6 toiled in mills, factories, and mines across the country.”

We have undoubtedly seen considerable shifts in the workplace since the first Labor Day celebration. These include tremendous changes in the laws, attitudes, types of work, and even the workforce. However, there is one pivotal component that has not changed and that is the value and dignity of labor. Martin Luther King, Jr said that “all labor that uplifts humanity has dignity.”  Generations before Dr. King wrote his words, the writer of Proverbs said, “You have seen a person skilled in his work—he will take his position before kings; he will not take his position before obscure people. “(22:29)

What you do in your house is worth as much as if you did it up in heaven for our Lord God. We should accustom ourselves to think of our position and work as sacred and well-pleasing to God, not on account of the position and work, but on account of the word and faith from which the obedience and the work flow.”—Martin Luther

God valued the dignity and honor of work. His assignment to us from the beginning was to partner with Him in caring for His creation. “God blessed them and said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply! Fill the earth and subdue it! Rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air and every creature that moves on the ground.” Then God said, “I now give you every seed-bearing plant on the face of the entire earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it.  They will be yours for food.” (Gen 1:28-29 NET). Tim Keller writes that “The material creation was made by God to be developed, cultivated, and cared for in an endless number of ways through human labor. But even the simplest of these ways is important. Without them all, human life cannot flourish.”

Throughout Scripture, we learn about worship, prayer, obedience, being a good neighbor, sharing the Good News, and lots of other important things for life, but there is also a major focus on work. There is a sense of pride, dignity, and accomplishment that comes from doing a job well. As one Proverb tells us “One who is slack in work is close kin to a vandal.” (18:9)

Work can and does bring inner joy as well as provide for the needs of our families. We are told in Ecclesiastes, “There is nothing better for mortals than to eat and drink, and find enjoyment in their toil. This also, I saw, is from the hand of God, for apart from him who can eat or who can have enjoyment?” (2:24-25)

Genesis gives us a beautiful insight into God’s work of creation.  God spoke the sun, moon, and earth into creation with a word. God divided the sea and land with a word. God set in motion the delicate balance of life with a word.  “And God said” and with His word set creation into motion. However, when He came to mankind instead of a word, he said, “let us make humankind in our image.” Make, it was as if God reached down into the earth, got his hands dirty as he picked up the dirt, and shaped his beloved children to give them life. Similar to a potter who painstakingly works over the spinning wheel shaping and reshaping his art, so it was with God. Could it be at the end of the day when “God saw everything that he had made,” he looked at the dirt under his fingernails and then lovingly said, “indeed, it was very good”?

As you enjoy the Labor Day activities with family and friends, also take some time to reflect upon the gift of work. Whatever you do daily, thank God for the opportunities you find to bless others, provide for your family, and to make a difference in this world.

Adam tended the garden with his hands and yet with the same hands, mourned his disobedience.

Noah got splinters in his hands as he built an ark to save his family but then used his hands to build an altar to worship God.

David used his hands to fight Goliath in battle yet used the same hands to lovingly compose the Psalms.

Paul used his hands to carefully stitch the tent material as he shared the hope of Christ with the lost and with the same hands passionately wrote letters on how to live life for Jesus.

Jesus the carpenter used his hands to build doors until the time came for him to open the doors of salvation as nails were driven into his hands.

Labor Day is not considered a religious holiday but maybe it should be.  Remember that Jesus got his hands dirty for you and me! “Whatever you are doing, work at it with enthusiasm, as to the Lord and not for people.” Colossians 3:23.

Thank you for sharing the Love of Christ through the labor of your hands to make our world a better place.

God is great!