What does it take to attract the young upwardly mobile to
church? Provide them what they want! What do they want? Community - a place to
let their hair down and to even be prayed for, a place where spirituality is
not measured by what you think but by what you experience.
Consequently, the young members no longer arrive at their
home fellowships with their Bibles but with accounts of their weekly
experiences and prayer requests.
Of course, these are helpful for building community, but is
it a Christian community if the Bible is neglected? Let me try to illustrate
the problem. In my first visit to such a home fellowship, I was glad to see one
participant, who was living out an alternative sexuality, openly expressing his
fears of going to hell.
However, no one was willing to explore this fear, let alone
to address it from the Bible. However, the sufferer did receive prayer, as if
that was all that was needed.
In some groups, using the Bible is disparaged and even
disdained. One young man eventually informed my wife and I that he was “turned
off” whenever we would speak. Since we were the only ones who were offering
Biblical counsel, we assumed that the Bible was the cause. Even worse, no one
came to our “rescue,” as if to say that they were in agreement with the
“verdict.”
This is especially sad because these are supposed to be
Bible-centered evangelical churches, which are now offering a feel-good experience
instead of transformative one through the way we think (Romans 12:2).
However, our thinking and believing serve as a foundation
for everything else. If I think that my mailman wants to kill me, this belief
will affect everything else - my thinking, feeling, and behaving. This principle
also pertains to my thinking about God. If I continue to feel guilty about my
sins, even after apologizing and making reparations, I will be inclined to believe
that God still holds my sins against me, unless I am grounded in His Word (1
John 1:9). If so, I will be inclined to hate and reject Him and the faith.
Many churches seem to trust their own solutions in place of
what God has given us through His Word. Consequently, their preaching and
teaching are not Biblically addressing the problems; nor is the pastoral staff
willing to preach a sermon that is politically incorrect and that might offend.
Why not? Perhaps the pastors are afraid of antagonizing and loosing attendees.
However, they are offending those who see the problems
proliferating in the absence of Biblical responses from the pulpit. But this
problem is only secondary. In essence, they are also offending the God of the
Bible.
When I asked one group leader for his strategy to deal with
the problems, he answered, “We just want to love them into the Kingdom.”
However, is this truly love? The Bible offers us a different understanding of
love:
- By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and keep His commandments. For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. And His commandments are not burdensome. (I John 5:2-3)
His commandments require us to correct those who unrepentantly continue to sin:
- And a servant of the Lord must not quarrel but be gentle to all, able to teach, patient, in humility correcting those who are in opposition, if God perhaps will grant them repentance, so that they may know the truth, and that they may come to their senses and escape the snare of the devil, having been taken captive by him to do his will. (II Timothy 2:24-26)
Scripture also warns us that a little sin can have a
corrupting effect upon the entire church: “A little leaven leavens the whole
lump” (Galatians 5:9).
I warned one pastor that sexual sin, which was becoming
rampant within the church, would inevitably spread to others unless he firmly
preached against it. Without solid Biblical warnings, it would leave the young
of the church with the impression that the pastors didn’t regard sexual sin as
a big deal.
It is therefore no wonder that serious Christians are
growing cynical about the church and its leadership. Please join me in prayer
that our Lord would revive His slumbering bride.
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