I voted "OTHER"
IMO, these are the greatest issues facing the church....
1. Lack of focus. I think the early church (first 3 centuries) had a laser focus on the Great Commission (You GO.... to all..... baptizing..... teaching) and on the Great Commandment (Love!). I don't think most Christians today wake up each morning with that as their #1 priority. I serve on the Church Council of our parish (I'm the property guy) and I seem to get a lot more time than our Evangelism person (as we don't have a love person, lol). Our agenda spends little time on getting the Gospel to the lost, and even less time on loving.
2. Institutionalism. Christians have created institutions - parishes and denominations. I think this is good but I also think that institutions take on a life all their own and tend to ever-increasingly ZAP Christians of their time, energy and focus. Institutions are, above all, self-perserving and self-promoting. I see that in my own parish: while we SAY it's all about the Great Commission and Great Commandment, there's a LOT of "Our parish needs to grow.... our parish needs more members.... our parish needs more money.... our parish needs more attention.... our parish needs to be here 50 years from now." I talk a lot about keeping our buildings looking good, in good repair, and maintained so that they'll be here 50 years from now. I talk a lot about how our facilities look to the community. I love my denomination (the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod) but as I read our denominational magazine, I see a lot of underlining institution protection and promotion. It's just what institutions do. They are like an organism: obsessed with surviving and thriving. SOME of this is probably unavoidable (institutions HAVE institutional issues) but we need to work hard to keep FRONT AND CENTER the Christ, the Cross, the Great Commandment, the Great Commission..... the point is NOT our institutions but the Kingdom of God, the point is NOT pointing people to our parish but to our Savior.
3. Relativism. Yes, we live in a world increasingly like the Roman world .... it is a POST Christian world, a POST Church age. The world no longer assumes the divine or sin or an afterlife, and it's no longer "in" to be a Christian. But I don't see that as a major problem (Christianity became the #1 religion in the world in EXACTLY that milieu! Persecution has improved and helped Christianity, not harmed it). I see the increasing effects of the Enlightenment..... There is no truth, truth doesn't matter, there is no absolute anything, there is no right or wrong.... this threatens Christianity by making it irrelevant. The best Christianity can seen to offer in this milieu is feel-good-ism, and I think much of modern Christianity has actually ACCEPTED that rather than fought against it. Much of modern Christianity has forsaken truth, doctrine, morality.... and substituted "we'll help you feel better." Even a kind of non-professional "pop" psychology as more and more Christianity seems to be about the steps to make a happier marriage or obedient teens or better finances. Increasingly, the church as bought into this relativism (hook, line and sinker) so that it really has nothing to do with sin and grace, heaven and hell, the Cross and the Savior..... it has to do with the church pretending to be psychologists and helping people FEEL gooder and happier. Too much of Christianity has bought into the problem rather than being a light in the darkness.
MY half cent.
Soli Deo Gloria
- Josiah
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