Monday, October 1, 2012

The Product of an Over ‘Politcalized’ Church


Recently, I have been asked a lot of political questions.    I have been encouraged to be more political in my messages - to preach against or for issues, to encourage people towards information that would help them to get more involved politically, to stand up for their rights, to recognize the doom that could come to their American dream and to speak openly against political parties.  Let me explain why this is not on my Sunday morning agenda.  

In the 1950 & 1960’s a dramatic change took place in many of the southern black churches in America.   At one time, they were an ethnic group whose churches most capably laid out an example of what true Christianity and the true gospel entailed, but in the face of great mistreatment and injustice, they were derailed.  How did it happen?  It came in the face of deep and hateful persecution and injustice.   While slavery had ended, a landscape of racism still clearly marked the culture, sadly even the religious culture.  The Black community was not treated humanely or given any sense of the dignity that a person created in God’s image should receive.    This injustice clearly deserved action, but the action that was taken erroneously moved from the community halls to the church buildings.

What happened next was unfortunate.   Sunday in some black churches slowly digressed from being a time for equipping people to live in this world - with all its unfairness, all its trials and all its persecution - in a way that would allow the light of Jesus to shine out of darkness.   No longer was the day centered on the worship of a sovereign God “Who’s got the whole world in his Hands” and Who could be trusted to cause the rise and fall of kingdoms as best met his loving and divine purposes.  The proclaimed purpose of believers shifted from rescuing lost and unrepentant sinners from eternal bondage and punishment for sin, to “let’s free ourselves from social injustice.”  Clearly, many of those unrepentant and unsaved sinners that needed saved could be found filling the racist religious gatherings down the road who were fueling the injustice. As a regretful response, compassion was replaced with self-preservation. 

The change sent the church down a slippery slope.  Rather than being infused with love for their enemies, churches began to breed the bitterness that their enemies were pouring out on them.  Rather than lifting up Jesus’ right to reign in hearts, parishioners were told to focus on their rights.  Sunday became a time to strategize, to motivate and to move people against the injustices of this world.  It became a time when liberation from injustice - right now, today, on this planet became the objective.  When this took place, the mission of the church was undermined and generations were infected with a mindset that thwarted their spiritual growth and disregarded the mind and heart of God.

Here is the problem. While Christians should be concerned about social injustice, while they should be good citizens and vote and while they should be proactive in their communities, this should not be what obsesses them. Most importantly this should not be the focus of their Sunday worship.   

The focus of our corporate gathering is to worship the God Who is constant and Who transcends this world.  As we gather, we are to recognize that this God might have injustice on tap for us as He did for His Son, in order to help more vividly shine His love through us against the backdrop of our own persecution.    The body of Christ, formed from those of every nation, ethnicity, tribe and tongue, all have one thing in common, we have a heavenly citizenship and a heavenly mission.   The changing of society is not God’s primary goal here and now. In fact, this world is promised to be dark, unfair and unruly.  Fairness and or ease for ourselves is not to be our focus at all, and certainly not in church body gatherings.   Instead, our focus as we gather is to be equipping one another to shine the light of the gospel and share the truth of the gospel into the darkest and most hateful corners of our communities.    It is to encourage each other to the mind of Jesus as we relate to a world that increasingly hates us, not to breed bitterness against that world, the government or its enemies. 

If we lose focus on what God has in mind for us, what will happen?   The gospel by which we are saved - and for which we are to be ambassadors - will be lost.   What we talk about will be us, our freedom in this life, our dreams and goals for the here and now.  In its wake the gospel of Jesus will be lost and the fruit of the spirit will disappear.   Don’t be fooled!  The product of an overly politicalized church is not nearly as divine as one might initially think.    Let’s be the best citizens we can be.   Let’s pray much for our nation.   Let’s follow our political conscience as framed by biblical principles.   BUT, let’s not lose sight of the goal as given to us by Jesus.  Let’s make spiritual disciples our primary goal not political ones. If we lose focus, the game will be lost.   

 

 

3 comments:

  1. Thanks Andy for your thoughts. I agree that involving politics as a focus during the gathering of the saints should be rarely visited, if at all. It only relates in such a setting as we ask ourselves: what is it God would have us to do? That looks different to each of us in our respective lives. We have God's word to follow in that regard, which I might add does hold the answers to all our life ?'s.

    Remember though, as we live in the world, that God loves justice, mercy, truth, righteousness. These are all things that He is. And in an environment such as ours we have been blessed to see much more of these things than most of the world. And where truth and justice reign, so does the environment to serve one another, and to understand the gospel because it can be freely presented.
    The power of God and His message are not subject to any environment or culture. He will build his church, but we are not promised we will not have to fight the enemy. On the contrary it is our duty to put on the full armor of God and be the light, the city on a hill, the glaring lights in a field on Wednesday night.

    It is not Andy or PJ's job or commission to tell us who to vote for, or what people we need to make do the right thing. They are their own Americans, who will answer to God like the rest of us. So be the american God has called you to be. Fight injustice, tell truth, trust in God and not Kings, do what you say your going to do, love and serve others, most certainly pray, but don't assume to tell others what it is they must do unless it is to turn to Christ. The heart of a man must trust in Christ, until then, behavioral change is largely irrelevant. Know what God ask of YOU, and I ask PLEASE pray for truth and revival in our wonderful nation.

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  2. Right on Pastor Andy. Great insights!
    Let us encourage one another to love and good works (Heb 10:24) so we will accomplish His work among the nations (John 4:34).
    ron

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  3. Markus,
    I just heard an illustration from Rob Green that applies to your thought, "The heart of a man must trust in Christ, until then, behavioral change is largely irrelevant." He said our goal is not to seek change that moves a person from one side of hell to the other but change that brings life and lifts people out of condemnation to transformation." That was not the exact quote, but the main jist. God bless all of you this day.

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