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“I like your Christ, I do not like your
Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.”---Mahatma
Gandhi
We filmed a video on the University of California
Santa Cruz campus to show at our worship service. We asked each
person we interviewed these same two questions:
- What comes to your
mind when you hear the name “Jesus”?
- What comes to your
mind when you hear the word “Christian”?
The answers to these
questions brought me both joy and optimism, but also extreme
sadness. Why? Because at the first question we saw students’ faces
light up in smiles. “Jesus was beautiful.” “I want to be like
Jesus”. “Jesus was a liberator of women.” “I’m all about Jesus.” “I
want to be a follower of Jesus.” “Jesus was enlightened and had
higher truth.” What encouraging answers! Here we were on a very
post-Christian campus and we were finding students eager to talk
about Jesus. I realized they probably weren’t familiar with the
whole of Jesus’ teachings, but they held an incredibly high
perception of Christ as a positive figure in history.
Yet, when the very
same students were asked the second question their expressions
changed dramatically. Eyes looked downward, smiles turned to frowns
and even painful expressions. “Christians have taken the
teachings of Jesus and really messed them up.” “I would want to be a
Christian, but I have never met one.” “Christians are dogmatic and
close-minded.” “Christians are supposed to be loving, but I never
met any that are.” “Christians should be taken outside and shot.”
We video-interviewed
16 people on the campus, and their answers to the second question
were both frightening and extremely heartbreaking. The most
discouraging fact of all was that only one person even claimed to
actually know a Christian personally. Their conclusions were based
on general observations and hearsay. What they knew of Jesus, they
liked--but what they knew of Christians, they definitely didn’t.
“When Pammy and I
returned to school in the fall my junior year, terrible news
unfolded: our English teacher had become a born-again Christian.”
[1]
- Anne
Lamott from the book Traveling Mercies
We would probably not be attracted to Christianity
today –
if we weren’t Christians
I can’t blame those
students at all for their opinions of Christians. Only one of the
sixteen even knew one. If no one is living out their faith to them,
how will they know any different about Christians or who the true
Jesus is?
“How, then, can they call on the One they have
not yet believed in? And how can they believe in the One of whom
they have never heard?” – Romans 10:14
We are currently
living in a wonderful time period when younger generations are wide
open to Jesus--but it is Christians who are often the stumbling
block to them. Let’s take a look at some of the factors that are
influencing people to think so negatively about Christians, and
Christianity in general.
An overall sense
of mistrust and caution towards Christians
A college student at a local university
told me she was sitting at a bus stop on campus when another young
woman sitting beside her asked what she was reading. When she was
told that it was a book about Christianity, she recoiled with a
grimace. “Oh, Christians,” she said, “they are wicked people”.
From a non-Christian perspective in
post-Christian times, ironically Christians are often considered the
“wicked” ones, and perhaps understandably so. We had the Christian
televangelist scandals of the 1980’s, a commonly known part of
Christian history even to those too young to have experienced them
firsthand. And what is the common perception of Christians in the
media? News reports show extremists protesting a whole spectrum of
social and ethical issues, carrying signs and slogans such as “God
hates fags.” Prime time TV presents Christian characters such as Ned
Flanders and his family on the cartoon show The Simpsons. Almost
every time Christians are portrayed on television or in the movies
they appear somewhat unintelligent, mindless, even cult-like,
usually engaging in angry crusades to wipe out the evils of society
and convert people to their point of view. Added to all this is the
public arrest of a pastor or priest for some sexual crime. So if we
are honest with ourselves we can understand why emerging generations
are generally distrustful of Christians.
“I became disillusioned by a lot of
things that happened to me by Christian people.” – Scott Stapp, lead
singer of Creed
Emerging generations are born into an
untrustworthy world
Christians are not the only people
emerging generations have difficulty trusting. Just picture growing
up in today’s culture where many come from families torn apart by
divorce and have experienced the pain of a broken home. Watch any TV
sitcom and you may be surprised to see how much of the humor is
based on lies between friends and family. And of course many believe
that politicians aren’t to be trusted. Is it any wonder that we
sense mistrust and caution from those we are hoping to reach?
Because emerging generations live in
this confusing and often disappointing world, a much more relational
approach to ministry and evangelism is needed. We need to rebuild
trust, and point to Jesus as the One who can always be trusted.
“Do not let your hearts be troubled.
Trust in God; trust also in Me.” - John 14:1
The strange world of Christian subculture
I had a rather shocking experience a few
years ago when I tried to buy a book for a non-Christian friend to
help him learn about Christianity in a way that he could understand.
I love Christian bookstores and I frequent them often. This time I
was shopping with my friend in mind and had an incredible
eye-opening experience. I walked into the store and I immediately
noticed the wide arrange of Christian T-shirts on display. Many of
them had cute and clever slogans on them, but as I tried to picture
what my friend would think, I felt uneasy. The wording on the shirts
was supposed to be evangelistic, but I ended up feeling many of them
would actually be offensive or just plain silly to my friend.
I then turned to the CD’s and music
section, which featured a whole array of celebrity musicians, all of
whom would be completely unknown to my friend. The music styles and
the look of the musicians seemed to distinctly mimic certain secular
bands down to the hair, dress and even facial expressions as they
posed. Christian punk music, Christian heavy metal, Christian
country and western, they were all there. Looking around me I saw
numerous other products for sale--Christian sweatbands with
Christian slogans, Christian tea-bags with verses, Christian candy,
even (I am not exaggerating here) Christian golf balls and tees. As
I continued to peruse the aisle I found Christian dolls, Christian
baseball hats, Christian jewelry and (to me) some pretty ugly
Christian art.
Then I looked at the Bible table and
again pictured my friend becoming confused. I spotted Bibles for
leaders, Bibles for women, the “Jesus Bible,” the End Times Bible,
the Athlete’s Bible, the African-American Bible, Bibles endorsed by
various celebrity preachers and literally dozens of Bibles
sub-categorized in niches. I was almost surprised not to see a Bible
for left-handed people or for people with red hair. I know these
Bible are produced to help people, but something about the fact that
we have niche-marketed the Bible to this degree made me feel uneasy.
Especially as I thought of trying to explain to my friend why, even
with all of these Bibles, most Christians today are still biblically
illiterate.
In my flustered state, I actually bumped
into a life-size cardboard promo cut-out of a famous Christian radio
preacher promoting his new book. At this point I was just too
“weirded out” by the whole experience so I left the store without
purchasing anything at all. I sat in my car in silence for what must
have been twenty minutes trying to comprehend what I had just
experienced.
Are you numb to the sub-culture we
have created?
What happened in there? I’d been in that
same store dozens of times and had never before noticed its strange
sub-culture atmosphere. I realized that Christianity itself would
require some explanation, but what rattled me about what I’d seen in
the store was that, had my friend been with me, I would have had to
explain more than just “spiritual” things to him. In fact, the store
didn’t look or feel very spiritual to me at all. That was the
problem. Now, I know that often times beneath the surface there is
great content (usually), or at least positive intent. But picture
this scene through the eyes of someone growing up in a
post-Christian world.

Christapalooza: 20,000 Christians
convene …God doesn’t show
If you disagree with me, consider this
quote from an article written by a non-Christian young adult
reporter for a secular music and entertainment paper. He called the
article “Christapalooza: 20,000 Christians convene …God doesn’t
show”. He had attended a large Christian music festival, the kind
which draws in 20,000 or more people. I have been to this type of
event, even been a speaker at one. They have always seemed like
great fun. From what I sense it is mainly Christians who attend
these events in order to hear their favorite Christian bands. But
listen to this reporter’s non-Christian, post-Christian perspective:
“I have a difficult time locating any
similarities between what Jesus says and does, and what the people –
in particular the organizers, said and did…Jesus is a beacon of
righteousness who leads the way through a dark world to eternal
peace, love and salvation; the Jesus of (the festival) is a
blue-light special, pointing you to a quick fix of righteous bargain
in the shopping mall of endless consumption.
These two versions of Christ, and the
premises they entail, are antithetical. They negate one another,
leading me to an unsettling, unpleasant conclusion…It was in the
end, a very un-Christian affair.”2
Note that he came thinking that a
Christian festival would represent the Jesus he has heard about. The
Jesus who was a very spiritual being. The Jesus of the Bible who
wandered homelessly across the land, living among the poor. The
Jesus who was known for taking times of solitude and quiet as His
normal way of life. The Jesus who overturned the tables of the
money-changers in the Temple.
But what this young reporter saw was
entertainment-- screaming teens adoring their favorite bands, loud
music, and tons of money being poured out by Christian consumers
eager to buy Jesus products and other Christian paraphernalia. Now
you and I know that this is simply a fun way to spend a day or two.
We are pretty sure that at least most of the bands and promoters
love Jesus. But to someone who expected a spiritual event, it came
across very foreign to him. Where was the Jesus that he had
expected? Where was the Jesus who was against profit-making in God’s
name, and spent His time with the poor and needy? Where was the
Jesus who devoted quiet time to prayer in the garden or on a
mountain? This reporter concluded that He wasn’t there and in he
even subtitled the article by declaring “God didn’t show up.”
The Bible teaches us that we should “Be
careful, however, that the exercise of freedom does not become a
stumbling block to the weak.” (1 Corinthians 8:9). Perhaps we need
to apply this scriptural principle to the sub-culture we have
created. In many ways, our sub-culture may cause non-Christians to
stumble. In fact, it may more than likely repel them, as it does
look (from the outside) to be a far cry from what we see the life of
Jesus was all about. As we design ministry for the emerging church,
we need to introduce people to Jesus, not to the Christian
“sub-culture” of consumerism we have subtly created. We need to make
sure we are not trying to see them “born again” into our Christian
sub-culture and change into one of us, but be transformed by the
Spirit into a disciple of Jesus. We need to teach them difference,
or they may not be interested and I personally wouldn’t blame them.
A more personal look
Let’s take this to a more personal
level. What would someone who has grown up in a post-Christian world
see when they entered your church building? What does your décor or
paintings or posters are on the walls communicate? What types of
things do you sell in your bookstore? What words do you use in your
ministry statements or descriptions that may seem nice to you, but
horribly tacky to anyone outside of the Christian sub-culture? You
may need to reexamine the messages you may be sending through the
eyes of those you hope to reach.
I recently saw the logo and mission
statement of a college and youth ministry at a church. It was a big
shield and a sharp sword, which had words under them saying
something about making Christ known to the lost. Now I understand
the biblical metaphor of a shield and sword and I’m sure the church
had great intent and a good heart. But what does this logo say to a
post-Christian college-age student for whom this ministry was
intended? What educated young adult wouldn’t immediately associate
these symbols with the evil of Crusades of the Middle Ages and all
the forceful bloodshed that took place in the name of Jesus? We need
to be very careful in how we come across to those growing up in a
post-Christian world. Don’t underestimate this, if you are serious
about being a missionary in their world.
The new theology teachers and spiritual prophets
In the past, generally pastors and
religious leaders of America defined spiritual terms for the average
person. But today, this is no longer true. A new group of prophets,
philosophers, and theologians are teaching the emerging culture
about spirituality and even Christian theology. I have been told
that post-Christian generations have no interest in theology, but to
the contrary they are being taught theology all the time. They are
even willing to pay for it.
Theology 101: at a theater near you
Movie
theaters all across America (and the world) project a constant
release of movies dealing with spiritual themes, sometimes
humorously, sometimes seriously, sometimes subtly. The fact is that
emerging generations are being taught theology all the time. The
doctrine of angelology is being taught in movies such as “City of
Angels,” where an angel can fall in love and become human. Satan is
defined in the “Devil’s Advocate” as a lawyer, or as a beautiful
woman portrayed by Elizabeth Hurley in “Bedazzled.” We learn that an
angel in heaven can have sex with Satan and produce a child called
“Little Nicky” portrayed by Adam Sandler.
The doctrine of the afterlife is taught
in “The Sixth Sense” where departed souls still wander around modern
day neighborhoods, and in “What Dreams May Come” where we learn that
we can make our way out of hell, and into a very pluralistic type of
heaven. Eschatology (the study of end times) is taught in movies
such as “End of Days” with Arnold Schwartzenegger, and “Lost Souls”
where we hear about the meaning of 666 and the anti-Christ.
The doctrine of Christology is taught in
television specials such as Peter Jenning’s “The Search for Jesus.”
Through this particular broadcast, over 16 million viewers learned
that most of what the Bible says about Jesus was made up by the
early church, and that the supernatural resurrection and other
miracles didn’t literally happen.
In popular music spirituality is seen
quite often. Marilyn Manson’s strong lyrics are derived from
Christian themes but twisted to opposite meanings. The band Godsmack
are very public about their belief in Wicca. Bands today use
religious symbols and imagery quite frequently. There are some
subtle and truthful spiritual themes of Christianity in bands like
Creed and P.O.D., but overwhelmingly people are flooded by lyrics
which give very contradictory messages.
We must understand that new definitions
are being assigned to spiritual and theological terms by the new
cultural prophets and philosophers of music, movies, and media. This
effects what and how we teach.
We may think that there is no harm to
this. After all, in past years we have had movies such as “It’s a
Wonderful Life” which featured an angel that wasn’t quite biblical.
But unlike generations past, which had a Judeo-Christian
worldview, emerging generations have no such biblical grounding.
For those of us in ministry, this means we need to redefine for our
listeners many theological terms and premises which are being
incorrectly taught by popular culture.
Celebrity prophets and philosophers
shape emerging generations worldview
"We are under siege from religious
zealots and nuts...mostly Christians, so-called Christians. I'm
talking about those hell-bent, holy rollers that sit around and try
to control the country, the ones that are against abortion….Those
nuts. Those wackos.”3 -
Howard Stern, national radio and TV show host
Today celebrities serve as our culture’s
prophets and religious philosophers. What a famous actor does or
believes carries much weight to those who look to them for fashion
trends, hairstyle and even religious influence. Celebrity lives and
practices are scrutinized; movies are viewed and reviewed, the
lyrics of songs are heard over and over again. We cannot
underestimate how these voices subtly shape the opinions and minds
of emerging generations—or how hungry our celebrity-driven culture
is to listen to them.
To add to the confusion, we have famous
celebrities who claim they are Christian, who may talk about God or
Jesus, yet promote a lifestyle that is contrary to Scripture. This
“Christian” example, for many younger people, is the only one they
know.
"We'll never tell [our fans]
to do drugs, burn people's houses down, kill people, or worship
Satan. I'm really into Jesus Christ, God, all that. I really am a
big believer. I'm a Christian. I just happen to have a foul mouth,
and I try to make kids laugh. But that's just me. I'm as God made
me."4
—Tom DeLonge, Blink-182 guitarist-singer whose top-ten selling
albums have the ‘explicit lyrics’ stickers on them, had one album
cover and video featuring a porn star, and latest album has the
sexual joking title called “Take off your Pants and Jacket”.
An
extreme openness to “spiritual” things
“First, I
want to thank God!”
“Without
Jesus, none of this would have been possible!”
God is now
thanked from end zones and awards podiums so often that his name has
almost become commonplace. While the credits rolled on a recent MTV
Music Awards broadcast, a skit ran in the background featuring a
white-haired deity figure directing a recording session in a sound
studio. The producers jokingly surmised that God must be there with
the musicians as they recorded music, since they so often felt
compelled to thank Him. Spiritual hunger and awareness is on the
rise, and the desire to express one’s spirituality is now becoming
much more commonplace among emerging generations. It is really
thrilling to see so much spiritual interest surfacing. We have gone
far past any “God is dead” mantras, and are now in a culture where
God is very much in thoughts of today’s generations.
[Sidebar: “Tell me all your thoughts on God.
Cause I would really want to meet Her…So tell me am I very far – am
I very far now?”
- Dishwalla, from the song ‘Counting Blue Cars’]
The good news is that emerging generations are
very open spiritually
There is good news and bad news. The good news is
how fashionable it is these days to talk about God. Praying
is even in. Britney Spears proudly told the press that her then
boyfriend and N’Sync singer Justin Timberlake had given her a copy
of the book Conversations with God. Deepak Chopra was
featured in Rolling Stone magazine promoting his latest book How
to Know God. Visit any non-Christian bookstore and you’ll find
plenty of books about God, Jesus, and developing a spiritual life.
We did a survey of 400 students on a very pagan local college campus
where there is hardly any Christian presence and over 75% said they
believe in “God.” Even Newsweek had a front cover article
acknowledging that our brains are “Wired for God”. God is in,
spirituality is hip. The Internet offers a huge number of web sites
designated to spiritual discussion and information. These are
exciting times!
Now for the bad news. As often as “God” and
“Jesus” are thanked from the limelight, the message being taught by
the prophets of our day is not a biblical one. Often, just prior to
crediting God, these same artists have performed a song that demeans
women, or promotes violence or glorifies sexual promiscuity. It is
common to hear Christian terminology used by celebrities without any
grounding in either Scripture or the person of Christ. There is
confusing messages being sent to emerging generations who are
learning these theological terms and having “God” and “Jesus”
defined and described very differently then the Bible does.
Spiritual but not religious
We also see that while there is a genuine
openness to spirituality, the attraction is usually to a mix of
religious faiths with a piecing together of various spiritual
beliefs. When the exiled Tibetan Buddhist leader, the Dalai Lama,
came to my area in California, he drew a packed audience in the tens
of thousands, a including a significant number of young people.
One evening I was visiting our local UC college
campus when I heard drums coming from the woods nearby. I wandered
down the path to find a drum circle of various conga drums and other
percussive instruments. I was greeted with great friendliness and
invited to sit with them. I had been a drummer in a band for many
years, so I appreciated the variety of rhythms they were producing.
As I chatted with them, I learned that they considered the drum
circle a very spiritual event, and were aware of its significance as
such. They seemed wide open to discuss the topic and were very
knowledgeable about the various beats and their origins in African
tribal drumming. Their beliefs were a far cry from the doctrines of
Christianity, but the fact remained they were seeking a spiritual
experience.
The hole only God can fill - A final note of
hope
[Graphical quote: "There's a God-shaped vacuum in
every man that only God can fill." - Blaise Pascal , French
mathematician 1623-1662]
Ancient, Medieval, Modern or Postmodern, emerged
or emerging, when it comes down to it, in an imperfect world, at our
core we still have the same basic human needs. We all want to be
accepted. We all want to know that we are loved. We all long for
purpose. We also long for spiritual fulfillment and meaning. We long
to know our Creator, and are born with a hole in our hearts that
only He can fill. These things will never change this side of
heaven. This means Jesus will be the only answer for people to fill
this eternal longing created in us, whether ravers, gothics,
Wiccans, twenty year olds or ninety year olds, Madonna or Marilyn
Manson, Elton John or Eminem. When the early church was birthed,
there were sorcerers, gods, goddesses and many other spiritual cults
and religions. We are not facing anything new that the Holy Spirit
of God moving in the emerging church cannot overcome.
[Graphical verse: “He has also set eternity in the hearts of men…” -
Ecclesiastes 3:11]
I believe we are living in times of incredible
promise and hope for the church where we find those in this emerging
culture remarkably open to discussing spiritual things. My prayer is
that those of us in leadership will have the courage to stay true to
the Scriptures, while radically rethinking the way we do ministry.
May we seize this moment in history and become missionaries again,
being sensitive to post-Christian culture, living lives of intense
Spirit-dependence and rethink what the emerging church will be like
for new generations.
* I hope this first part of this book explains
some of the reasons and underlying reasons of for what you will now
read in the second section in terms of methodology. This first part
was key, as I have said, without it, the second section is only
surface fixes.
Emerging Thoughts
1) If you were to go out to your local university
and ask the questions “What comes to your mind when you hear the
name Jesus?” and then “What comes to your mind when you hear the
name Christian?” what do you think you would hear? Why in your local
community would they say that? You may want to actually conduct
these interviews and then show the video to your church for its
teaching impact .
2) What are some other ways the culture is
teaching people in your church or community about theology, or who
God is?
3) Did you understand the writer’s observations
who attended the “Christapalooza” event? Did you ever view something
like this through those eyes? Any comments or further thoughts?
4) From the eyes of a post-Christian, how would
they view your church? Your logos, your mission statements, the
wording in your bulletins etc.? Is there anything that you can
change that will carry the same meaning, but done in an appropriate
way? |