In this post, we will conclude our series on truth and unity by discussing
modern Christianity. Most of Christianity today revolves around how the
teachings make people feel. For example, if someone doesn’t like the type of
music that is used in the worship service, they can rally some friends together
and try to change it or drift to another church where they like the music more.
If the atmosphere in a church is displeasing to someone, it’s easy to just go
find a church that gives off that “feel-good” vibe instead of hanging around
and working to improve things where they are.
You know what I mean. This stuff is so common today.
I daresay that people rarely leave a church, switch denominations, etc. because they are in earnest pursuit of the unadulterated truth. Most people seem to decide where to worship on Sundays and how to live their lives based on how it makes them feel with no thought of “absolute truth” or “serving.”
One time, after visiting a small congregation full of older people, a
guy I know told me that “yeah, the people are nice and they’re teaching truth,
but I just don’t…feel good…when I’m in there. I don’t…feel…like…uplifted ya
know?” I understand, believe me, but since when was worshipping God about you? I’ve been a Christian for years,
and it’s definitely never been about me. Sometimes, being a Christian means that we have to do things we don’t
want to do. Other times we have to choose not to do things that we do want to
do. That’s just the way it is. That’s part of it.
That’s life. Sometimes things don’t go your way.
That’s life. Sometimes things don’t go your way.
The man who told me that he didn’t “feel good” when he was at church
doesn’t attend services while he’s at college. He looked at a few different
places and he gave up. He goes on Easter and on Christmas, and that’s it.
“How could he? I would never do that.”
Some of us might have already done exactly that. When we place our
own wants before Christ, we have changed the ultimate example of absolute
selflessness into a social event. It’s no longer about worshipping God “as it is written,” it’s about
filling an addiction to a feeling. When the good feeling is strong, we’ll
be at church and we’ll be living right with God outside of church too. When it’s
gone – we’ll stop.
When Christianity was born, it was groundbreaking. God came
to Earth to deliver His word? Wow. The belief in a monotheistic God that would
come to Earth and die without a fight in order to save people’s souls, well,
that was definitely new. Gentiles and Jews could both be saved? That was
unheard of. You can see what I’m saying – at any given point in time,
Christianity calls its followers to step outside of the culture that they live
in and rally together under a shared set of beliefs and practices to live differently than they used to.
Even though modern culture has taken many of the things condemned as
sin in the Bible and removed most of the physical consequences (birth control,
for example, makes pre-marital relations much easier to get away with), we are
called to rise above that. That’s how its radical for us. Christianity calls us
to not live the modern “American”
lifestyle.
America says “if it feels good, do it at any cost. If it’s illegal, we’ll legalize it. No such thing as consequences, as long as you’re happy.”
Christianity says “if it’s spiritually based and scripturally correct, do it at any cost. It doesn’t matter what the laws say or don’t say, you do what God says and you'll be happy.”
America says “if it feels good, do it at any cost. If it’s illegal, we’ll legalize it. No such thing as consequences, as long as you’re happy.”
Christianity says “if it’s spiritually based and scripturally correct, do it at any cost. It doesn’t matter what the laws say or don’t say, you do what God says and you'll be happy.”
There’s a huge difference, and it’s time for us to realize that.
Christianity is radical, whether we like it or not. That means that we’re
called to be radically different from the world around us. Let’s stop chasing
that next “feel-good” feeling and buckle down to worship God, in everything we
do, in spirit and in truth. Only once we choose, as a Christian nation, to rise
above the carpe-diem culture that holds us down and live lifestyles based in divinely-inspired
truth will we ever be able to find unity. Only then can we change the world.
Thanks for reading! This concludes the series on truth and unity. I’ve
really enjoyed creating it and I have appreciated your support and suggestions. We’ll pick up a new
topic next weekend.
- Ethan
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