“Perhaps the best thing that can come out of the gay marriage decision is for the church to make a final break between our faith and our nation.”
America
RECOMMENDED: Left Behind in America by Russell Moore
Russell Moore recently wrote an insightful piece at The Gospel Coalition titled, “Left Behind in America: Following Christ After Culture Wars.”
Here’s a sample,
The problem was that, from the beginning, Christian values were always more popular than the Christian gospel in American culture. That’s why one could speak with great acclaim, in almost any era of the nation’s history, of “God and country,” but then create cultural distance as soon as one mentioned “Christ and him crucified.” God was always welcome in American culture as the deity charged with blessing America. But the God who must be approached through the mediation of the blood of Christ was much more difficult to set to patriotic music or to “amen” in a prayer at the Rotary Club.
Now that Christians in America are being confronted with the fact that America isn’t a “Christian nation,” they are more and more awakening to the reality that America never was a “Christian nation” in any Christian sense of the word “Christian.”
In my experience (and my experience may not be reflective of reality more generally) I’ve found that this theme is readily apparent to many Christians in my generation (millennials) but is much more difficulty grasped or accepted by Christians of older generations who lived more of their lives in an environment in which this “Christian America” idea was pervasive.
However much this idea of a “Christian America” with its corresponding form of “Christianity” (i.e., the civil religion of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and enlightenment thought that gave birth to the “American experiment”) may have helped to keep America in moral check to some degree (and in some less than satisfying sense), I’m afraid it did the opposite to the nature of Christianity and people’s perception of the Gospel–it skewed them.
“The Church in America today is slowly awakening from the distortion of about 350 years of dominance and prosperity” – John Piper
Roundtable Discussion – Ferguson, Race, & Privilege (Darrin Patrick)
These are helpful. We need more of these types of discussions.
RECOMMENDED: A Decision in Ferguson: How Should Evangelicals Respond? by Ed Stetzer
Read this article by Ed Stetzer: A Decision in Ferguson: How Should Evangelicals Respond?
Here are some of my thoughts (originally shared via Twitter) that I’d like to share with you.
Whether or not injustice occurred in this specific incident, #Ferguson‘s response is telling of a more systemic race problem in our country.
— Kirk E. Miller (@KirkMiller_) November 25, 2014
We have a race problem. To conclude otherwise is to ignore and discredit the experience of large sector of our population. #Ferguson
— Kirk E. Miller (@KirkMiller_) November 25, 2014
White evangelicals, be slow to criticize the “what” of the #Ferguson response and quick to ask the “why?” #Sensitivity
— Kirk E. Miller (@KirkMiller_) November 25, 2014
Js 1:19 – “Be quick to hear, slow to speak.” Ecc 3:7 – There is “a time to keep silence, and a time to speak.”
— Kirk E. Miller (@KirkMiller_) November 25, 2014