Tag Archives: culture

The ties that blind

tiesI like neckties. I think they look good. In most cases, I don’t find them to be that uncomfortable.

And I think every missionary should leave them at home.

We’ve exported an obsession with this piece of clothing to countries far and wide. In some of those countries, no one wears a tie except for preachers. They aren’t a part of the culture in those places. In others, people who otherwise wouldn’t even own a tie are forced to put one on every Sunday.

In many countries, Christians believe that a preacher has to use a tie or he isn’t worthy of respect. Preacher schools around the world have required their students to wrap this colored cloth around their necks as a sign of their seriousness and spirituality.

In Argentina, it was easy to spot the evangelicals on Sunday: the women all wore long skirts (completely out of style) and the men used ties (often with short-sleeved shirts… ugh). You didn’t even need to see the Bibles under their arms to know, without a doubt, that these people were part of some religious group, a group that had been imported from the United States. They stood out, not because of Christian behavior, but because they tried to dress like people from another place and time.

Do Christians have to dress like Americans from the 1960s to be faithful? Are we supposed to create barriers between us and outsiders by the way we dress? Obviously I think not. What do you think?

Should we be preparing to be bilingual?

Picture 2Yesterday I wrote about a successful bilingual church in Stockdale, Texas. As I look at the changing demographics in the United States, I can’t help but think that more and more churches are going to need to go that way. Many people agree to that in theory, but few congregations are doing anything to prepare for that.

Especially in the Southwest, Anglos are going to be in the minority soon. Maybe not this year nor next , but soon enough. So what will churches of Christ do? Content ourselves with primarily serving a minority population? Force Hispanics to adapt to our current way of doing things? Or is there something I’m not thinking of?

What, if anything, do you think our congregations should do to prepare for this cultural and linguistic shift in our communities?

Going with the flow of culture

b-29_bombing1In my last post, I made the following assertion:

Because of this, we accept the need to do unChristian things to “preserve our way of life” and “protect our freedoms.” Christians will often justify such by saying that it’s for the good of the church that we promote democracy, that we fight to preserve this country.

Let me offer an example of what I’m talking about.

In 1931, during the Spanish Civil War, the town of Guernica was bombed by German and Italian aircraft. The bombing, for the first time in history, targeted an entire town, attacking civilian and military targets indiscriminately. The world cried out in outrage. As historians say, a line had been crossed. Up until then, aerial attacks had limited themselves to military targets.

In September 1939, World War II began as the Germans bombed Wielun, Poland, then proceeded to bomb cities throughout Poland. Franklin Roosevelt, leader of the then-neutral United States, called on the countries involved in the conflict to promise to limit bombing to military targets. France and England agreed “upon the understanding that these same rules of warfare will be scrupulously observed by all of their opponents.” Germany agreed to the restriction, but promptly broke the agreement. When Germany bombed English cities, Great Britain began to respond in kind.

George Bell, Bishop of Canterbury and member of the House of Lords, was strongly anti-Nazi, but was also a vocal opponent of what was called “area bombing.” According to Wikipedia (hey, this is a blog, not a scholarly report), as early as 1939 Bell said:

the church should not be allowed to become simply a spiritual help to the state, but instead should be an advocate of peaceful international relations and make a stand against expulsion, enslavement and the destruction of morality. It should not be allowed to abandon these principles, ever ready to criticise retaliatory attacks or the bombing of civil populations.

In 1941, Bell wrote letters to London newspapers, urging the government to change their tactics. Then in 1944, in a speech to the House of Lords, Bell eloquently reasoned:

If that becomes prevalent, it means this, that the ruthlessness in which it exults, and for which it clamours, must bring us into competition with our enemy at his worst. It must mean that, somehow or other, we become indifferent to those values of humane civilization for which, as a people, we have believed we are contending in this war. That sort of competition is one, we should all agree, in which success would be far more dishonourable than defeat. It is a competition in which we can win only by the sacrifice of what has been best and noblest in the traditions of our race.

He also asked, “How can the War Cabinet fail to see that this progressive devastation of cities is threatening the roots of civilization?”

Bell’s stand reflected the views of most of the Western world in 1931. By 1941, most had accepted such bombings as a necessary evil. During the years since, bombing of civilians has been accepted as one of the “fortunes of war.” Morality gave way to pragmatism. The end justified the means; protecting our worldly kingdom took precedence over the values of the Kingdom of heaven. It’s one thing when citizens of the world reason in that way; their priority is the preservation of their kingdom. But what about the citizens of heaven? Dare we say “the end justifies the means,” especially when that end is not a spiritual one? Can we say “But they did it first?” Does that justify “whatever it takes”? Or will we, like George Bell, take a stand and speak out? Even Christians like he that believe in “Just War” have a responsibility to speak out against “expulsion, enslavement and the destruction of morality.” We can’t follow our culture’s changing norms. We have to cling ferociously to the values of our Kingdom. We are ambassadors. We’re here to represent the interests of our Kingdom. We can’t afford to be warped by the world.

Living in Meshech and Kedar

protestA few weeks ago I shared some thoughts from the songs of ascent, that group of psalms from Psalm 120-134. Psalm 120 expresses the anguish of one who lives away from God’s people, away Jerusalem, living among a deceitful, violence-loving people in places like Meshech and Kedar. I said then that we live in just such a place. The problem for many of us that live in the United States is that we want to view our land as Israel, the biblical Israel, a place of people who are under the covenant, even if they aren’t living up to that. It’s hard for us to accept our role as strangers and aliens, as ambassadors of God’s kingdom.
One way in which that manifests itself is our attempts to change the behavior of those around us. We seek to make our nation more godly by making those around us live more moral lives. We fail to recognize that what people need, what our society needs, is the lordship of Jesus. If they don’t have Jesus as their Lord, it doesn’t matter how much we improve their morality, we haven’t really helped them.
Years ago I worked one summer in a Peugeot bicycle warehouse in Compton, California (yes, I know… it’s everyone’s dream job). Among the group of guys I worked with, there was only one who professed to be a Christian. His idea of witnessing to the others was to go around telling them to stop cussing. (Meanwhile, he was the laziest worker there) He didn’t achieve even that small goal because his attempt to control the behavior of the others only met with irritation. Joseph Aldrich said something like “Don’t expect regenerated behavior from non-regenerated people.” I would have put it more simply, but the point is well made. If someone hasn’t been born again, we can’t expect them to live a new life.
We have to accept the fact that our society needs change from inside out. This is not a Christian nation in need of moral correction. This is a nation away from God in need of a Savior. We can get artificial prayers reinserted in schools, but that won’t make our kids more godly. We can get copies of the 10 Commandments plastered on every building across the country, but that won’t give people the motivation to live them out. We could make it a law that everyone had to go to church on Sunday, but until people accept the lordship of Christ, everything else they do is in vain.
If we want to change our nation, we need to bring them to the Lord. He’ll take care of changing them.

Governments: The natural outgrowth of cities

When men banded together in cities, they found it necessary to have an increasingly formal social structure. Before there were nations, there were city states, with each city having its own king. Some strongmen, like Nimrod in Genesis 10, came to rule over several such cities, but the original organization in the ancient world was the city. Later nations like Egypt were formed, groups of cities and their outlying areas that joined together for mutual protection and cultural advancement. Abraham and his family lived apart from such kings (Lot being the exception, choosing to live in Sodom). They had dealings with kings like the Pharaoh, Abimelech, etc., but God’s people were organized by families and clans. It wasn’t until they were led to Egypt for their 400 years of slavery that God’s people came under the authority of a human king.
In a discussion on another blog, someone commented that God invented government. I disagreed then and still do. I think that human government grew up out of man’s rebelliousness, his desire to rely on men instead of God. God would eventually permit his people to have a king, but that wasn’t his desire nor his plan. God has used human governments for his ends, but his plan for mankind was other. God wanted to be king and will be king; he sent his Son to usher his kingdom into this world. The rebellious sinful kingdoms of this world will eventually be absorbed into this kingdom, as announced in Revelation: “The seventh angel sounded his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven, which said: “The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will reign for ever and ever.”” (Revelation 11:15) Satan has been at work in the nations, deceiving them (Rev. 12:9; 20:3, 8, 10). But God’s kingdom has erupted in this world and is displacing those nations and their deceiver.