:: In.a.Mirror.Dimly ::

Ed

An imperfect and sometimes sarcastic perspective on following Jesus by Ed Cyzewski.

The Gospel as a National Security Issue

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Over the past weekend I had a chance to hear a variety of Christians speak about writing and our call to be ambassadors for Christ. For the most part I was encouraged by the sincerity, kindness, and insight shared among these believers.

However, at certain key points I heard speakers, some who spoke to large crowds, sharing a kind of counterfeit version of the Gospel that almost left me in tears. I’d like to address this matter, but I want to avoid words like “danger” or “threat” that just inject venom and anger into these discussions. I’d rather just say that I heard some sincere followers of Jesus clouding and possibly distorting the Gospel and particularly our motivations for sharing it.

I’ll spend the majority of my time focusing on my understanding of the biblical witness concerning what the Gospel does and why we should share it. I’ll end with a few words of caution about ways Christians have distorted these ideas.

What Does the Gospel Do?

The Gospel reconciles us with God. I think we can all agree on that. As we join others who share the same Spirit and relationship with God, we form the people known as the church. We have all been saved and sustained in the same way.

The Gospel makes us citizens of God’s Kingdom, which is the other worldly and this worldly place where his will is done. When we pray, “Your will be done, your Kingdom come,” we are asking God’s Kingdom to expand on earth as his will is done.

Why Should We Share It?

We share the Gospel because Jesus asked us to do so, because it is the way others can be saved, and because God intensely loves his creation and longs that all would come to know him. We don’t share the Gospel to preserve our churches, to ease our egos, or to give a soul fire insurance. We want others to know the joy and freedom that comes from knowing Jesus today, sharing in his sufferings, and moving toward eternal life with him.

What’s at Stake

In getting back to our problem of a distorted Gospel. I heard several speakers challenge the Christians present to preach the Gospel in order to preserve America’s Christian character and to prevent God’s judgment from falling upon us. One speaker made it clear that Democrats were to blame. Such teachings cloud the real reasons why we should share the Gospel and what it accomplishes.

I used to think that America was a Christian nation, so when I speak of Christians who operate from this assumption, I can identify as a former insider. The trouble is that the Kingdom of God cannot be affiliated with the agenda of any one nation since the Gospel is Good News for “all people” and “all nations” are blessed through Abraham.

In addition, classifying America as Christian at its founding raises serious historical questions since many founders were deists, slave owners, and generally greedy and corrupt. While some may have resembled evangelicals today, crediting good fortune to Providence—a common practice among the founders—did not make someone a Christian.

Christian sociologist Bradley Wright has also found that there is a much higher proportion of Christians in America today than during the Revolution. We could point at some places where Christianity impacted the founding of America, but calling America a Christian or godly nation from the start is a mistake that only white Americans could make. Our African American friends have much to teach us in this regard. America’s history is not a fall from grace spurred on by Democratic politicians. It’s more realistically a mix of high and low points.

Having said that, we should not ignore the possibility of God’s judgment. The Old Testament shows that time and time again God will judge a nation that neglects the poor, allows corruption, attacks its enemies without mercy, and concentrates wealth among the few to the detriment of the many. These are real, bi-partisan problems to consider in America.

Nevertheless, we should seek righteousness and preach the Gospel not as a means to preserve America or to keep America as a Christian nation. That turns the Gospel into a self-serving, political tool that unintentionally brands unbelievers and sometimes Democrats into religious terrorists who are calling down God’s judgment on America and only the true patriots will hold off destruction through their preaching.

In a sense, this kind of thinking turns the objects of God’s desire, those who do not know him, into enemies who are ruining our country and our place as the keepers of our country. Christians are servants who are called to follow Jesus and Jesus alone. Even allegiance to one’s country cannot be allowed to cloud the goals and motivations behind our calling.

I won’t say that such teachers are ruining Christianity or America, but they are distorting their Christian practice with political agendas and suspect history. As I stated in Coffeehouse Theology, an unexamined context can influence our theology and fool us into thinking that we are free from its influence.

Sadly, there are still some evangelicals who are failing to consider how American culture and particularly conservative politics are skewing their understanding of the Gospel and our mission as believers. They can be Christians who happen to be American patriots. That’s a different conversation. Our problems come when they create a Christian patriotism that uses the Gospel as a means of preserving America.

America is not the light on a hill. The light is Jesus shining through his people—a people that is not limited to those found in America.

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Category: theology

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10 Responses

  1. Dude, you ought to get riled up more often! That is the single best post of yours I have ever read. I think you are spot-on regarding the dangers of distorting the gospel via nationalism–even well-meaning nationalism. Please tell me you were able to deliver this message at the conference, even if it was only a break-out session. In my opinion your thoughts are theologically sound and extremely well said. How about a series on the difference between the kingdoms of this world and the Kingdom of God?

  2. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by edcyzewski and Ray Hollenbach, Evangelical. Evangelical said: The Gospel as a National Security Issue | :: in.a.mirror.dimly :: http://bit.ly/aQpWDX #Jesus #christ #god [...]

  3. I think this particular heresy is a result of a poor understanding of the nature of the fall and the scope of the resurrection. It betrays a gnostic assumption of goodness that makes ones enemies the dirty garbage of a disposable world. It amazes me that this gnosticism results in fighting over a world that they proclaim is not their home. It is very sad indeed.

  4. ed says:

    Ray, sounds like a plan. I’ll get to work on that later this week. Thanks for your kind words.

    Paul, great insights. The thought of fighting over a world that is not our home is jarring!

  5. Fantastic post, Ed. It was something new for me when I first moved to the States (I lived there for 8 years) and went to the first “4th of July Church Service!” Whoa!

    The truth is that America is not the hope of the world (those of us that aren’t American don’t labour under that notion too much. ;-) ) But I see theologians like yourself that are calling bullshit on this kind of thinking and it gives me hope.

  6. [...] other day I dug into the ways that Christians misuse the Gospel for political and national goals. It was a tough post to write because I don’t want to be the [...]

  7. ed says:

    Sarah,
    Thanks. I’m glad to hear my bullshit detectors are functioning properly. Christians in America need to dialogue with Christians from other countries in order to figure out some of this stuff. We REALLY need to learn from our missionaries as well.

    I hope someone at your American church bought you a Patriot’s Bible to replace your socialist Canadian Bible… ;)

  8. Patriot’s Bible!? I just looked that up and showed it to my poor husband who nearly had a coronary.

  9. ed says:

    I suppose you didn’t really need to know about that, huh? That kind of stuff should stay far away from Canada, like scrapple and the Tea Party movement…

  10. Ben Sternke says:

    Way late to the party, Ed, but just wanted to say “fantastic post.” I like this feisty prophetic side of you!

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