Morpheus
New member
I probably should not start this since my time is probably too limited to respond properly, but here goes.
Up until the early 1980s Christian evangelism was done through personally teaching about Christ and through big events like revivals and others like the Billy Graham Crusades. Back then the process went something like this:
In the mid 80s Americans stopped wanting to listen to the message of Christ, so evangelists changed their strategy, not just coincidentally guided by the advent of more political-based groups like the Moral Majority. Since people were more concerned about how to fit in, evangelists developed community based evangelism. The small groups movement meant that people would invite neighbors to visit the groups, making them feel included. The pattern changed to look like:
Then somewhere around the turn of the century people became more interested in issues, so evangelism again changed to reach out with cause-based evangelism. People would be invited to join some cause first and the pattern now looks more like:
It may seem innocuous until you first notice that Christ gradually moves down the list. He has gone from being the end, where community and issues are only means motivated by that end, to now the issues are the end and Christ is only a means to meet that end. The issues are viewed as of ultimate importance, and if some act tied to that issue somewhere conflicts with Christ's teaching, the issue wins and Christ's teaching is shoved aside. This is no longer Christianity, but an aberrant distortion of Christianity posing as true faith.
We have allowed a hijacking of Christianity by people with political motives. They claim a faith; they quote scripture; they pull up convenient passages, all to advance their political ends, and suck in the milk-drinkers by their deceptions.
This is similar to what Islamists, originating from Egypt and spreading out from there, did beginning earlier in the 20th Century. I am by no means an apologist for Islam, but I do recognize that there is no Islamic consensus, with multiple sects, and multiple divisions in each sect. I also recognize the difference between the several mainstream denominations and the aggressive, political-based aberration of Islamism.
I am not so concerned with the intricacies of Islam and it's aberrations; I only am using them as an example to warn Christians of our similar growing problem. If we do not get back to preaching Christ first, the message, our commission, will get lost in a blur of fanaticism. Just how many generations are we willing to lose to lies.
Suggested (dry) reading = "God In The Dock" by C. S. Lewis
Up until the early 1980s Christian evangelism was done through personally teaching about Christ and through big events like revivals and others like the Billy Graham Crusades. Back then the process went something like this:
1) Learn about and accept Christ, then
2) The indwelling of the Spirit led us to reach out to the community, then
3) The Christian community would deal with the issues of the day.
In the mid 80s Americans stopped wanting to listen to the message of Christ, so evangelists changed their strategy, not just coincidentally guided by the advent of more political-based groups like the Moral Majority. Since people were more concerned about how to fit in, evangelists developed community based evangelism. The small groups movement meant that people would invite neighbors to visit the groups, making them feel included. The pattern changed to look like:
1) Community, join to fit in, then
2) Learn about and accept Christ, then
3) The Christian community would deal with the issues of the day.
Then somewhere around the turn of the century people became more interested in issues, so evangelism again changed to reach out with cause-based evangelism. People would be invited to join some cause first and the pattern now looks more like:
1) Draw people to a cause, then
2) Involve them in a community of people devoted to dealing with that cause, then
3) Tell them about Christ and how Christ cares about that cause, and get them to accept him.
It may seem innocuous until you first notice that Christ gradually moves down the list. He has gone from being the end, where community and issues are only means motivated by that end, to now the issues are the end and Christ is only a means to meet that end. The issues are viewed as of ultimate importance, and if some act tied to that issue somewhere conflicts with Christ's teaching, the issue wins and Christ's teaching is shoved aside. This is no longer Christianity, but an aberrant distortion of Christianity posing as true faith.
We have allowed a hijacking of Christianity by people with political motives. They claim a faith; they quote scripture; they pull up convenient passages, all to advance their political ends, and suck in the milk-drinkers by their deceptions.
This is similar to what Islamists, originating from Egypt and spreading out from there, did beginning earlier in the 20th Century. I am by no means an apologist for Islam, but I do recognize that there is no Islamic consensus, with multiple sects, and multiple divisions in each sect. I also recognize the difference between the several mainstream denominations and the aggressive, political-based aberration of Islamism.
I am not so concerned with the intricacies of Islam and it's aberrations; I only am using them as an example to warn Christians of our similar growing problem. If we do not get back to preaching Christ first, the message, our commission, will get lost in a blur of fanaticism. Just how many generations are we willing to lose to lies.
Suggested (dry) reading = "God In The Dock" by C. S. Lewis