Thought

 
I was talking with fellow book nerd BD tonight about a new book I got for ordination – Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview by J.P. Moreland and William Lane Craig. After the discussion I was inspired to dig into it a bit and ran into the following quote (very long) which lays the foundation for the rest of the book. These days I am often caught between a desire to teach deeply or to try to be culturally relevant – as though the two were mutually exclusive. Of course I am beginning to realize they are not mutually exclusive but rather very dependant upon each other. Unfortunately we often take two things that are meant to be held in tension with each other (or balance) and create a dichotomy of them – forcing them apart and forcing a choice of one over the other. Check out the following quote which I think is reasonably brave and too often describes myself:
 
"Our churches are overly populated with people whose minds, as Christians, are going to waste. As Malik observed, they may be spiritually regenerate, but their minds have not been converted; they still think like nonbelievers. Despite their Christian commitment, they remain largely empty selves. What is an empty self? An empty self is a person who is passive, sensate, busy and hurreied, incapable of developing an interior life. Such a person is inordinately individualistic, infantile, and narcissistic.
 
Imagine now a church filled with such people. What will be the theological understanding, the evangelistic courage, the cultural penetration of such a church? If the interior life does not really matter all that much, why should one spend the time trying to develop an intellectual, spiritually mature life? If someone is basically passive, he will not just make the effort to read, preferring instead to be entertained. If a person is sensate in orientation, then music, magazines filled with pictures, and visual media in general will be more important than mere words on a page or abstract thoughts. If one is hurried and distracted, one will have little patience for theoretical knowledge and too short an attention span to stay with an idea while it is being carefully developed. And if someone is overly individualistic, infantile and narcissistic, what will that person read, if he reads at all? Books about Christian celebrities, Christian romance novels imitating the worst that the world has to offer, Christian self-help books filled with slogans, simplistic moralizing, lots of stories and pictures, and inadequate diagnoses of the problems facing the reader. What will not be read are the books that equip people to develop a well-reasoned theological understanding of the Christian faith and to assume their role in the broader work of the kingdom of God. Such a church will become impotent to stand against the powerful forces of secularism that threatens to wash away Christian ideas in a flood of thoughtless pluralism and misguided scientism. Such a church will be tempted to measure her success largely in terms of numbers – numbers achieved by cultural accomodation to empty selves. In this way, the church will become her own grave digger; for her means of short-term "success" will turn out in the long run to be the very thing that buries her."
 
I can’t help but hear a certain intellectual arrogance in the text which may be one of the things that keeps people from embracing such a perspective in the first place.

One thought on “Thought

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