Tuesday, July 18, 2017

THE CHURCH GREW POLITICAL





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THE CHURCH GREW POLITICAL

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Church Growth pastors and consultants, like myself, played a role in uniting America's Christian Right behind the Trump Presidency.  In our effort to facilitate the growth of churches, we inadvertently prepared “the body of Christ” to believe the church’s goals were compatible with those of government.  

We evaluated the churches’ growth potential, recommended, and implemented proven strategies that stimulated and maintained increased attendance.  Our growth tactics included replacing any programs, personnel, physical facilities, or promotional activities that resisted growth, with more expansionary alternatives. 

"Church Growth", at the time was a popular nation wide phenomenon.
Our directives were so precise that resultant growth rates followed in direct proportion to the church's ability to adopt our recommendations.  Those who implemented the proposals won significantly more parishioners and the financial rewards that accompany numerical growth.  Those that didn’t, stayed the same or declined.  The principles were all scripturally justifiable, though spiritually neutral, and purely practical.  With only slight modifications, the same tactics  would have work for a shoe-store,  a gas station, or almost any other business endeavor. 
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Therefore, when candidate Trump made similar claims of growth and prosperity the American Evangelical Church failed to see any moral or ethical red flags.  They believed the Trump view of "Make America Great Again" lined up perfectly with their own goal, "Make Your Church Great Again."  The absence of moral or spiritual value held only two exceptions...abortion and homosexuality.

At that time, there had been a statically verifiable shift away from these two moral issues in our country, which admittedly had not reach fulfillment.  But before those or any moral issue can be successfully legislated, they must first achieve dominant national approval.  That requires a cultural heart transformation.  Such a moral shift is the purview of Christians operating in the love and grace of God, not in the power and force of government.
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 Involuntary criminalization always produces revolt and incompliance among those whose hearts and minds are not sensitizes to the “rightness” of a law.  Just and fair laws reflect the values of the governed.  Unjust and unfair laws dictate the values to the government.  

Considering criminalization overlooks the spiritual work that must precede any such legal action.  God tasked the church with that unique redemptive role…a role government cannot fill.  No matter how hard government may try, its role is not redemptive.  The innocent blood of millions of children, lies at the feet of our churches, who insist that church and government combining their separate roles, into one, weakens them both.
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Convinced my vision of the American Church growing numerically was God's will, I rejoiced in my success.  Regrettably, my success blinded me to the fact that the church was becoming more pleased with itself, less empathetic toward the needy outsiders, less dependent of the power of God on our society, and more dependent of political power.  As it lost its love for “the lost,” the church also lost its redemptive role in society, and worst still relinquished its moral authority, to politicians.

So with its social role and moral authority depleted, the church strove to use its numerical advantage to regain social influence through political alliances.  In so doing, it no long balanced the penalizing role of government with its own redemption role, resulting in a cruel and impersonal politically aligned governmental structure. Subsequently, the nation finds itself on the verge of justice without mercy. 
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However, I believe we can look ahead for a future of ecclesiastical miracle, when we realize what we have done.  The church of Christ Jesus rising from the dead.  The American Church kneeling in humiliation, turning in tearful repentance, will once again shoulder her ordained place under God’s redemptive yoke.  God will have nothing to do with our attempts to make people good by political alliances or our church growth programs.  Returning to God and allowing Him to rule each of us personally, the church will awaken anew to her social role and regain her spiritual authority.

Amen

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