A new Lifeway Study

For those who never attend church, the study revealed this group is least likely to pursue purpose and meaning in life or to think about the afterlife:– 19 percent strongly disagree that there is more to life than the physical world and society;– 33 percent strongly disagree that there is an ultimate purpose and plan for every person’s life;– 63 percent strongly disagree that they think often about what I must do to experience peace in the afterlife;– 50 percent never wonder how they can find more meaning and purpose in their life;– 68 percent never wonder if they were to die today, do they know that they would go to heaven.

via Ed Stetzer – New Research Just Released: How Americans Perceive and Pursue Spiritual Realities.

I came across this article on Ed Stetzer’s blog via the EFCA Facebook page.  On one hand it provides some, “Well, of course,” kind of information.  On the other hand, it provides some that might cause us to rethink evangelism.

For example, according to the study (you can download a .pdf or .ppt here) 49% of those with a college degree never wonder about going to heaven when they die.  That seems unsurprising for two reasons.  First, a certain percentage of those Americans are converted Christians, so they shouldn’t wonder.  Second, American education is so thoroughly humanist and anti-supernatural, you’re not going to find many Universities that seriously engage with such an issue.  Back in the ’90s Purdue required us to take a course called Great Questions or something like that.  It was billed as a look at how different groups had struggled with the great questions of life throughout history.  While creation, judgment, heaven & hell were discussed, it wasn’t serious.  It was more from a, ‘Look at what those unenlightened people used to think.’

The study does, however, provide some food for thought in terms of evangelism.  Fully 68% of the unchurched respondents never wonder if they will go to heaven when they die!  So, two-thirds of our mission field aren’t even concerned with the afterlife. At the same time, the article mentions Ed Stetzer’s Lost and Found.  In that book, he reported that 89% of unchurched young adults would be willing to listen to some explain their view of Christianity.

That would seem to indicate folks are willing to listen, but we can’t assume they believe in a heaven. Also, we can’t assume they believe they aren’t going there.  Perhaps 68% believe in Heaven and assume they are going.  As we share the gospel, then, we should make sure to communicate the reality of heaven and judgment.  If they don’t believe in Heaven, or don’t know about judgment, it shouldn’t surprise us that they don’t accept the gospel.

Thoughts?

Christmas as Christian or Cultural Event

Part of the explanation is simple: Christmas in the United States has become a cultural event about food, family and gifts.

via – The Washington Post.

via – The Washington Post.

One of many articles written about the 10% of churches that cancelled Sunday Worship on Christmas.  But, I think this quote really gets to the heart of the matte:  culture.  Which raises the question:  when should we (Christians) capitulate to culture and when should we stand firm?

How Charity Can Be Toxic, Just in Time for Christmas | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction

The point is, let’s examine the outcome of care. When I talk about the progression of one-way giving, first you elicit appreciation. You do it twice, you elicit anticipation. What’s more, you do it three times and it becomes expectation that he’s going to do it again. Four times and it’s an entitlement. By the fifth time it’s dependency. They’ve done it every year and we count on it. If anybody has been doing this kind of work, they begin to see that pattern.

via How Charity Can Be Toxic, Just in Time for Christmas | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction.

via How Charity Can Be Toxic, Just in Time for Christmas | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction.

A timely conversation about the real costs of certain types of benevolence.  As the Church, we are called to use our plenty to meet the needs of others.  Doing so, without the unintended consequences mentioned about, does require a certain amount of wisdom.

Anyway, read the whole thing and feel free to add your 2 cents.

Merry War on Christmas! – Mark Steyn – National Review Online

The crisis afflicting the West is not primarily one of unsustainable debt and spending. These are mere symptoms of a deeper identity crisis.

via Merry War on Christmas! – Mark Steyn – National Review Online.

Steyn is spot on that we face a much larger problem in America than who gets elected, what laws they pass and what judges rule on those laws.  The foundations of our culture are being undermined by those very folks who, in previous eras, would have been guarding the gates.

I wonder if the Church doesn’t have some blame in all of this.  Steyn points out the ‘faintheartedness’ of the American Church in confronting those forces that would destroy celebrations like Christmas.  True, we are often faint of heart.  Yet, the Church has poured countless sums into political action committees, candidates and other such endeavors.  We’ve sought to overturn Supreme Court decisions, repeal laws, enact new laws and get ‘our’ guys to a place where they control the levers.

But that isn’t the Church’s mission.  Western Civilization is, in large part, the result of more than 1,000 years of making disciples.  The cultures of the West developed because we proclaimed the Gospel to hostile people.

Thus, our current cultural devolution is not a call to greater political action.  It is a call for the Church to reinvest in our core mission:  making disciples of Jesus Christ.