The Failure of Winsomeness

rod-dreher“The United States has avoided Europe’s fate for a long time, but the churches here have finally lost the ability to coast on cultural momentum. The churches that don’t retrench around building their internal strength and coherence around orthodoxy – and that requires far more than catechesis, but it requires at least that: teaching our story to our children –  and evangelizing from that position of strength, aren’t going to survive. The overculture is just too strong. The forces of atomization and desacralization are very hard to resist.

This is a reality that many Christians, Christians of all kinds, do not want to face. …

… if we believe that being winsome and likable and all that is going to earn us any points with the overculture, we are making a dangerous mistake. Assimilation is not going to be allowed absent giving up what makes Christians distinctive from the rest of the culture.”

– at The American Conservative, Rod Dreher urges Christians to prepare for the long night ahead.

Is Christianity dying?

Russell Moore“Bible Belt near-Christianity is teetering. I say let it fall.

For much of the twentieth century, especially in the South and parts of the Midwest, one had to at least claim to be a Christian to be ‘normal.’ During the Cold War, that meant distinguishing oneself from atheistic Communism. At other times, it has meant seeing churchgoing as a way to be seen as a good parent, a good neighbor, and a regular person.

It took courage to be an atheist, because explicit unbelief meant social marginalization. Rising rates of secularization, along with individualism, means that those days are over—and good riddance to them.…”

– Russell Moore, president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention responds to a recent study on church attendance in the USA. (h/t Justin Taylor.)

ACL News March 2001Related: Back in 2000, Peter Jensen (then Principal of Moore College) spoke at the ACL Synod Dinner and made these observations about Sydney –

“The 1950s saw large church and Sunday School attendances. The churches seemed to be flourishing. But an acute observer would have been very worried even then. The Christianity of the people was not evangelical. It was a sort of ‘common Christianity’, a ‘lowest common denominator’ Christianity. It had a strong moral emphasis; Christianity was about behaviour not belief; parents sent their children to Sunday School in the hope that they would grow up decent citizens rather than committed Christians. To be born once was enough; to be born again was excessive. The ranks of church-goers were swollen with the unsaved. The real religion was materialism.”

– Read it all in the ACL News of March 2001 – PDF file. (Text-only version here.)

Schools, Scripture and Book Banning in NSW

3-books-2“There has been quite some concern in Christian circles in my home State of NSW over the last few days, over bureaucratic action to ‘ban’ some books from being used in Special Religious Education classes.

While events are still unfolding (the relevant Department has so far made no general public comment on the matter, which seems to be promised for the coming week), it seems worthwhile to set some of this dispute in legal context…”

– Neil Foster shares some much-needed background to SRE in schools at Law & Religion Australia.

Will the American Church be a new Smyrna?

Rick Phillips“As Christians brace for official oppression in America, Jesus’ words to Smyrna offer a great hope. Primarily, Jesus declares his sovereignty over such tribulation.”

– Rick Phillips at Second Presbyterian Church in Greenville, South Carolina, writes this reflection at Reformation21.

Learn biblical Hebrew?

Why learn Hebrew?Why learn Biblical Hebrew?

“The job of a pastor-teacher is to be gripped and transformed by God’s word, and so to speak God’s word faithfully and appropriately into the various life situations of those under your care. If you are serious about devoting your life to the ministry of God’s word, you can’t afford to be shallow in your engagement with it.” – Lionel Windsor at Moore College. (And see his interview with Michelle Philp.)

and George Athas, also on the Faculty at Moore College:

“I’m often asked by people going to theological college or seminary, “Why should I study Hebrew?’ Less often, they ask, “Why should I study Greek?”

They’re good questions. Vital questions. To answer, I want you to imagine this scenario…” Read it all here.

 

How to destroy freedom one wedding cake at a time

wedding cake“Those Christian bigots are at it again. And this time it’s those Gun-Lovin’, Bible Thumpin’, Cousin’ Marryin’ conservative rednecks over in Indiana.

On March 26th, Mike Pence (the Governor of Indiana) signed into law the state’s  Religious Freedom Restoration Act (or RFRA as it’s known). Many people got quite upset by this new law, and immediately both mainstream media and social media went beserk…”

– At Thinking of God, Akos Balogh provides some background to help understand what’s been happening in the US.

The Empty Tomb and the Risen Christ — The Centrality of the Resurrection to the Christian Faith

Albert Mohler“The pattern of the Christian year is an exercise of the Church’s annual remembrance and proclamation of the Gospel. The annual celebrations of Christmas and Resurrection Day help the Church to ponder again the truths of Christ’s incarnation and resurrection from the dead.

Christians understand that every Lord’s Day is Resurrection Day, but this Sunday is the festival which draws all Christians face to face with the empty tomb and the truth of the resurrected Lord…”

– Albert Mohler reminds us that “Christianity stands or falls with the empty grave”.

Why the Creeds are good

from the Book of Common Prayer 1552“To too many the creeds are a dusty vestige of a happily distant past. They were written centuries ago, born out of abstract battles whose players we can’t even name. Isn’t it just better to love each other and not get caught up in all those silly questions?…”

– In an age where creeds play little part in many church gatherings, R.C. Sproul Jr says that creeds are good guards of the faith. (h/t Gary Ware.)

When to make a stand

Detail from Luther at the Diet of Worms, by Anton von Werner, 1877“Three great ‘stands’ in the history of the church:

Being prepared to make a stand has characterised genuine Christian leadership throughout the last two thousand years. But why? And when? And how?”

– Moore College Principal Dr Mark Thompson gave this talk at a seminar during the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans Conference in Melbourne last week.

Very helpful. Download it here as a PDF file.

(Picture: Detail from ‘Luther at the Diet of Worms’, by Anton von Werner, 1877.)

‘The Presbyterian Church (USA)’s long and boring shuffle out of Christendom’

pcusa-interreligious-gathering“The drift from biblical orthodoxy to spiritualized leftism has profound real-world consequences. The church isn’t just shuffling out of Christianity, it’s shuffling out of existence. The church has lost 37 percent of its members since 1992, and the trend is accelerating.”

National Review. Photo: PCUSA.

Related: How to tell the difference between The PCA and PCUSA – Joe Carter.

How can we pray for terrorists?

Canon Phil Ashey, American Anglican CouncilCanon Phil Ashey of the American Anglican Council writes to encourage Christians to pray for those involved in terrorism.

‘Submission’ to my husband allows us both to flourish in our marriage

SMH Comment“Recent articles in this newspaper about evangelical churches’ “oppressive” doctrine of male headship reveal a complete failure to understand the Christian psyche…

Some see inconsistency between the Bible’s teaching of “Christian freedom” on the one hand, and female submission on the other.

However, it is precisely the Bible’s teaching on freedom which so transforms a person’s thinking once they become a Christian that they are ready to submit to others.”

– Sarah Colyer writes this helpful opinion-piece in The Sydney Morning Herald.

For Christians who missed the memo: the Bible abhors all domestic abuse

Canon Sandy GrantI’m thankful for the many in our community from Australian of the Year Rosie Batty, to the Sydney Morning Herald’s ‘shine a light’ campaign who are speaking out on domestic violence. Even if it makes me and my own tribe – more theologically conservative Christians – uncomfortable.

I’m grateful since one of the best-known facts of Jesus Christ’s life is his compassion to women, especially those in need. Jesus protected women.…”

– Sandy Grant writes an opinion-piece for The Sydney Morning Herald.

Phillip Jensen on Anglican Evangelicalism

Phillip JensenIn the latest Preaching Matters video from St. Helen’s Bishopsgate, Phillip Jensen speaks about what it is to be an Evangelical Anglican.

In doing so, he explores the difference between ‘followers of Calvin’ and ‘followers of Calvinism’. (Mike Ovey responds here.)

Bearing the cross: a letter to the Islamic State

Dr Mark Durie“The Islamic State sent me a letter this week. This letter was in the form of a short film produced by the Islamic State’s Al-Hayat Media centre.

This was not addressed to me personally, but to all Christians everywhere…”

– Mark Durie reflects on the meaning of the message sent by ISIS in their murder of Coptic Christians.

Related: What ISIS really wants (The Atlantic)

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