Spirituality is commonly conceived as a matter of choosing
the form that feels right for us. All of the spirituality marketers understand
that the consumer wants to remain in charge and have marketed their products
with this in mind, even the Voodoo priestess Alourdes.
Anthropologist Karen Brown, who written about her full-body
dive into Voodoo, helps us to understand the attractiveness of Voodoo and other
New Age spiritualities:
·
No Haitian — certainly not Alourdes [the Voodoo
priestess] — has ever asked me if I “believe” in Voodoo or if I have set aside
the religious commitments and understandings that come from my childhood and
culture. Alourdes’s approach is, instead, pragmatic: “You just got to try. See
if it works for you.” The choice of relinquishing my worldview or adopting
another in its entirety has therefore never been at issue.” (“Mama Lola: A
Voodoo Priestess in Brooklyn!”)
Normally, we want to maintain our autonomy to choose what
gives us what we want. Therefore, for today’s buyer, doctrine is a major
turn-off. It tends to feel like coercion for those who insist on being the “captain
of their own ship.”
Following Jesus is the antithesis. He taught that God and
His Word had to be first in our thinking (Matthew 6:33). Coming to Jesus was a
matter of surrendering all, even our patterns of voting and speaking:
·
So therefore, any one of you who does not
renounce all that he has cannot be my disciple. (Luke 14:33)
This is not an attractive message. Understandably, Jesus
taught that coming to Him had to be miraculous:
·
“This is why I told you that no one can come to
me unless it is granted him by the Father.” (John 6:65)
What Jesus had been teaching was not humanly appealing. Even
though He performed many miracles to validate His teachings, truth alone failed
to be attractive enough for people to lay aside their own interests.
Consequently, the Christian faith has become less
marketable. Even many who remain adjust the Faith to meet their lifestyle and
then wonder why it is not working for them.
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