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- Short Circuit = Lack of Power
-
- . I remember watching a talk show on a Christian television network some
- years ago. A prominent Christian evangelist was interviewing the pastor of a
- very large church in San Diego. The discussion turned to the problem of why
- our society is not more affected by the Christian witness within it. The
- pastor mentioned that the results of a religious poll had shown that there are
- 45 million professing "born again" evangelicals in the United States, as well
- as approximately the same number of Catholics who profess a personal
- relationship with God. These figures confirmed in the pastor's mind that the
- spiritual problem in the United States, the relative lack of impact of
- Christian principles on our society, is not so much with our unbelieving
- secular society as with Christians. I found myself nodding my head in
- agreement. Although human sinfulness in society is often responsible for the
- willful rejection of Christian truth, I think that all too often there has
- been no clear truth, no power, no life to reject.
-
- . Many reasons surely lie behind the problem, but I think that at least one
- of the major ones is what I have termed "short-circuited conversion." Many
- "born again" Christians have had a genuine conversion experience. Through
- some memorable experience or process, possibly in a formal church setting or
- maybe in a more private, informal context, they have met the living Christ.
- They have given themselves to him and consciously made him Lord of their
- lives. They have become faithful members of a "Bible-believing, Bible-
- preaching" church. They tithe regularly, live honestly, and are sincere in
- their devotion to Christ. They are "sanctified," separate from the world and
- its "sinful" ways ("I don't drink, smoke or chew, and I don't run with those
- who do!"). So far, so good -- but is it far enough?
-
- . In many cases it is at least far enough to have made an impression on our
- friends, relatives and immediate acquaintances. They have noticed that we
- don't "sin" anymore, we've "got religion," and there is a quality to our lives
- that wasn't there before. That's all well, and it's good -- but is it good
- enough?
-
- . I don't believe that it is. If it were, surely society in general would
- be more fully affected. The original Christian disciples turned their world
- upside-down for Christ, and they numbered MUCH less than 90 million. But
- besides secular society's not coming closer to practicing the principles of
- righteousness, peace, justice and love on a large enough scale, neither are
- many supposedly mature Christians living as fully within the life, the power
- and the love of God as is possible in this world. I'm not speaking of
- perfection, simply of what the New Testament assumes as normal Christian
- living for the mature believer.
-
- . As I said, I believe that part of the problem lies with a conversion
- process that has become short-circuited. Jesus said in John 3:3 that unless
- we are born again we cannot see the Kingdom of God. And so we have been born
- again. For many years, my favorite biblical description of the new birth
- experience has been II Corinthians 5:17: "If any man is in Christ, he has
- become a new creature: old things are passed away: just look -- everything has
- become new!"
-
- When I began the Christian life, this verse was an apt
- description of what had happened to me. My old way of living and looking at
- life was gone; I saw everything with new eyes. But after quite a few years of
- Christian living I began to realize that in many areas of my life and of my
- perspective toward the world the radical truth of God's word had not been
- allowed an effective access and influence on my actions. Most of my human
- relationships were shallow and unproductive of truly life-changing effects; I
- had little conscious concern for the poor and the starving masses of the world
- as I enjoyed my middle class life-style; I gave little real thought to the
- problems of war, of social and political injustice, or of my relationship and
- responsibility to the society and the nation wherein I dwelt.
-
- . I think that I was not remotely aware of how much the society in which I
- was raised had influenced the development of my world view. And when I became
- a Christian only those aspects of my perspective that conflicted with the
- concepts of Christianity then current among the Christians that influenced me
- most underwent conversion.
-
- The Christians with whom I fellowshiped had been
- raised and influenced by the same society and could only teach the version of
- Christianity to me that they themselves had learned, a version that failed to
- notice many of society's deepest problems, a version that failed to strike at
- some of our world-view's most important conflicts with the ethic of Christ.
-
- As I have grown in Christ, my concepts of Christianity and Christian
- discipleship have also broadened, as well as my awareness that much of my
- world-view is still a carry-over from society's influences, not to mention my
- own sinful and selfish nature. One's initial salvation experience may bring
- one into a right personal relationship with God and redeem the soul from
- eternal judgment, but it is just the beginning -- I had been "saved", I had
- seen the error of some of my personal habits (sins), but a broader questioning
- of the values and beliefs of the society in which I lived did not occur for me
- for some time. But change in concepts are not change in actions, and I am
- seeking God's grace to bring about continued conversion in my life to his way
- for me.
-
- . My conversion has been short-circuited at many points, and I'm
- attempting to diagnose and repair the problems. But I believe that my problem
- is common among Christians: shallow concepts of Christian conversion and
- discipleship; lack of awareness of how much our society's values and views we
- have soaked up throughout our lives. And I wonder how much those values and
- views color our understanding of God's Word and will? I believe it's been
- enough to seriously hinder or halt important areas of change that God desires
- to work in many of our lives. And because radical change has not been allowed
- to effectively work in these areas, the world has not been greatly affected by
- Christ's power. How can it be affected by that which it cannot see?
-
- . It's difficult in such short space to put into more concrete form many of
- the ways in which I feel that the world's influence is short-circuiting
- (especially in such a materialistic, egocentric society such as ours) the
- conversion of Christians more fully to the complete new life-style that
- conforms to the scriptural pattern. But I can hope that by asking the
- question, "Has our conversion worked deeply and broadly enough?" I may
- influence some others to look closely at their lives in the light of scripture
- and to see some of the ways that their old world-view is short-circuiting
- their own conversion process, as well as some of the ways in which society
- continues to influence them wrongly.
-
- . The influences of the world around us can be strong and subtle, but as
- J.B. Phillips so aptly paraphrases Romans 12:2, "Don't let the world around
- you squeeze you into its mold, but let God re-mold your minds from within..."
- May we become more vulnerable to the work of God's Spirit in our minds and
- hearts as He works to reveal Christ's life and power in us. May the power
- that "turned the world upside-down" in the first few centuries have the
- freedom to do the same in and through our lives!
-
- Charles Shelton
- Computers for Christ - Chicago
-