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Archive for the ‘Current Events’ Category

BOOK REVIEW of “THE TWILIGHT of ATHEISM” by ALISTER McGRATH

31 Oct

At times you can witness a pianist play a “dissonant note” at the very beginning of the music piece he or she has chosen to play.  This can be stylistic or, in some cases a psychological “device” used to break the tension before starting the actual song.  So, to introduce this book review, I am going to use a “dissonant literary introduction” by actually talking about a different book which I read a few years ago.  The book I am referring to is titled “We Were Soldiers Once, And Young” written by Retired Army Colonel Harold G Moore and Joseph L Galloway.  This book is based on a true story about an early and strategic battle of the Vietnam War that became a “policy baseline” for the future planning of the war.  As for America, the entire social ethos soon became engulfed with the war.  One can still hear the haunting lyrics “Tin Soldiers and Nixon coming, four dead in Ohio” (taken from the song titled “Ohio” by Neil Young).  Then there was “I think it’s time we stop, children, what’s that sound, Everybody look what’s goin down” (lyrics taken from the song titled “For What It’s Worth” by Buffalo Springfield).  And then, we can always contemplate what was the “Gulf of Tonkin Resolution” really about.  The rest is history.  Let’s get back to the book.  After I started reading “We Were Soldiers Once, And Young” I couldn’t put it down.  With each page I actually felt as if I was there, experiencing the same breathtaking peril, desperation and uncertaintity as the soldiers on the battlefield.  After reading “We Were Soldiers Once, And Young” I felt as if I finally understood what really happened in Vietnam.

When one reads the book entitled “The Twilight of Atheism” by Alister McGrath a person gets the sense that they have happened upon a long lost explanation that has been missing from the historical record – a bridge that connects the present with the past.  McGrath masterfully weaves between the inter-relatedness of politics, psychology and Christianity, over the last couple of centuries in Europe and the United States.  McGrath’s book pulsates with a tone and congruence that makes history “come alive” in the mind of the reader as you get a sense that you are finally understanding what happened to the collective soul of America.

There are several key points made in the book and I will briefly discuss a few.  First, on pages 76-77 we see a European society in which there had been a long-standing historical belief in God that had existed through the ages and this belief was now being challenged by atheism.  This challenge to the church was essentially a socio-religious “flip-flopping” of collective, social thought, in that, Christians were now being challenged to “prove that God exits.”  It might be pointed out here, that atheists gave no thought to, and showed no appreciation for the “narrative method” of recording history that was used for scripture.  In other words, it is the “story” and the context within history in which the story was handed down that makes it legitimate.  To say otherwise, is simply to “erase” the story of mankind.  And, if you erase the historical record, then you have to put something else in its place.  Re-writing history was the business of atheists, the same as we see today.

To the atheist who asks for evidence that God exits, we have it.  The complexity of nature itself is proof enough.  With each technological advancement in our ability to “look inside” nature, we see that it becomes more and more complex with crescendoing intricacy.  The Apostle Paul makes reference to this in the Book of Acts when he talks about the seasons and climate that causes the fields to give produce.  On the other hand, if the atheist is going to insist that God doesn’t exist, then how is the atheist going to prove it?  Christians are often sarcastically referred to as “book burners.”  The reality is, if the atheists had their way and burned all the Bibles in the world, it wouldn’t affect the reality of God one bit.   If the atheists ever succeeded in shutting off all Christian radio and TV and put padlocks on the doors of all the churches in the world, it still wouldn’t change the reality of God.

Another point McGrath makes is found on page 164 and it is directed at the church.  McGrath describes how the leaders of the church witnessed the social change taking place during the counter-culture revolution of the 1960’s and tried to emulate the same in the church by attempting to “make God relevant.”  It was as if the leaders of the church were “belatedly jumping on the bandwagon of social change” and in so doing, they bought into a temporal social phenomenon and actually weakened the influence of the church in the process.  It was a strategic blunder on the part of the church leaders as they gave in to the pressure of believing that the influence of the church was limited to, and driven by, social trends of the day rather than by the power of the Holy Spirit.  To some degree, we are witnessing the same thing today, however; the resistance we are beginning to witness coming against the church today is quite a bit more virulent than what we saw in the 1960’s.  If the present persecution against Christianity continues on the progressive curve we are witnessing, a Christian will not be able to maintain his or her faith without the power of the Holy Spirit.   We are beginning to see a systematic marginalization and exclusion of evangelical and spirit-filled Christians from the mainstream of society.

On page 230 of the book, McGrath makes an astute observation as he points out the reality that a paradox has been put forth in that “the greatest intolerance and violence” of the 20th Century was, in fact, practiced and conducted by those who were at the same time, claiming that religion caused intolerance and violence.  To put it in street vernacular it was like “The Christians are all intolerant and have been reported to be violent at times, therefore; let’s kill all the Christians because they are intolerant and violent.”  Truly, a paradox.

But today, it seems that we are witnessing something far more ominous on the horizon.  It seems that there is a strata within society that has settled into a mindset that says it is OK to persecute, marginalize and even kill those who don’t agree with them, so long as you persecute, marginalize and kill the others in a systematic and “sanitized” way that keeps it all at a safe and deniable distance.   There is a form of ecumenical world religion that is becoming very pervasive and extremely exclusive toward any who dare to challenge it, especially conservative minded, spirit-filled Christians.  The world is telling the church “It is OK to claim to be a Christian, and to believe in God, Jesus and Christianity, so long as you don’t practice it.”  It’s kind of like what we have seen develop over the last few years toward the Christmas season which is “Please celebrate Christmas, buy lots of gifts, spend lots of money, but, just don’t really be Christian and what ever you do, don’t say anything about Jesus coming into the world to save sinners.”  In other words, please celebrate Christmas because you are Christians, but just don’t practice your Christianity.

In the process of the above, we are seeing a slow but sure drift of our society toward a world system of government and religion.  Let us all be clear on one point.  I will use a quote that is attributed to Nietzsche in which he is recorded to have said, “When one gives up the Christian faith, one pulls the right to Christian morality out from under one’s feet.”  This is a true statement, in that, if you are going to say that God doesn’t exist, then, at the same time you are saying that the morality and behavioral standards attributed to God do not exist either.  So, then, you are left with either a free for all, and a king of the hill approach to man’s existence in which the most powerful, brutal, evil men will gain control, or, at best, the most you could hope for is that mankind can get organized enough to develop some sort of behavioral code and hope that you and your kind somehow find favor with those who are making the decisions.

If you found this particular book review interesting, then you might also enjoy reading “Rage Against God” by Peter Hitchens.

 

THE STRENGTH OF AN IRON HORSE

18 Mar

f-16_aircraft_in_flightIt sits on the tarmac near the hanger with the cockpit open awaiting the pilot.  The F-16 fighter jet is known the world over as a premier fighting machine.  It is as agile in flight as its sleek design would lead one to imagine.  The bubble shaped canopy that covers the cockpit is a very distinctive feature of this jet which makes it easy for the pilot to keep a 360 degree awareness of his surroundings at all times.  The performance factor of its engine and the pound per thrust ratio make it a superb aircraft.

The F-16 is only one of several fighting aircraft in the U.S. arsenal.  And then, there are those under development.  These aircraft are some of the best in the world.  They are highly sophisticated in their electronic warfare capability.  They can track multiple targets simultaneously and they can carry hefty payloads of very lethal and very accurate armament.

What the F-16 is to armies today, is very similar to what the horse was to armies way back then.  Back before the era of jet fighters, tanks, armored personal carriers and missiles, there was the horse.  The horse, in times past, has been a symbol of military strength.  In medieval times, a horse was outfitted with layers of thick covering draped over its sides and face, for the purpose of shielding the horse from arrows and swords of opposing armies. A soldier riding such a horse, had a tremendous advantage over an opposing soldier who was merely on foot.

For the purpose of this article, I am going to call the F-16 jet fighter an “Iron Horse.”  I could use a tank, which might seem more appropriate but, for this article, I am choosing the jet fighter. We, as a nation, have put our trust in the Iron Horse.  We, as a people, have put our trust in what we can build with our hands.  We, as a people, have put our trust in our ability to develop and fabricate highly technical and ultra-sophisticated electronic warfare devices. In the process of the time span covering the era of such high-tech warfare, we, as a nation, have marginalized our trust in God, and have instead begun to do what the Bible refers to as putting trust in the strength of a horse.  We read in Psalm 33:16-18 “No king is saved by the multitude of an army; A mighty man is not delivered by great strength. A horse is a vain hope for safety; Neither shall it deliver any by its great strength. Behold the eye of the Lord is on those who fear Him, On those who hope in His mercy.”

Here is the problem.  For every F-16 sitting on runway, you need a pilot to fly it. Not only do you need a pilot, but you also need maintenance personal, parts and fuel.  Then, once airborne, the pilot will need the support of air traffic control, ground tracking info and eventual landing and refueling location.  All of this requires a tremendous and expensive and elaborate support system.  Lots of money.  When looking at the money issue, we have even built one model of jet fighter (F-22 Raptor) that proved to be too costly to fly and maintain. Even now, the plane chosen (F-35 Joint Force Fighter) as the alternative, is proving to be very costly and by the time all the top military officials get their add-on features incorporated into the project, it will most likely end up being as expensive as the F-22. A serious threshold to be sure, but the money issue isn’t where I’m going with this.  There is something more serious.

What I see for our country that is the more serious issue, more than money, is the absence of a belief in God and the absence of vision for the future as a Christian society. This may sound old fashioned but, when one contemplates the transition that has begun, the future of our society looks anything but promising. We, as a nation, are going headlong into a post-Christian era.  Some, upon reading this may say “yes, this is a good thing.”  The arrogant, atheist intellectual may think he will one day live in a world free of all religion, but such an individual is naïve.  Mankind has been religious from the beginning, and will be in the end.  Imagining a world in which there is no religion, is the product of the mind of a person who has insulated himself from the rest of the world.

The United States of America is drifting away from God.  The United States of America is transitioning from a Christian nation to a post-Christian nation.  If history proves correct, such a transition will not go smoothly.  We, as a people, have put our trust in the Iron Horse that we made with our hands.  We thought if we could build such technologically innovative and superior war machines that they, of and by themselves, would keep us safe and secure as a nation.  What we have failed to realize is that it is in God, and in Him alone where our security is to be found.  Once we abandon the foundation of faith and trust in God, then all is lost. Once we start putting our faith and trust in our own man made devices, all is lost.  It is the Lord who delivers a nation, not man.  It is the Lord who provides peace, safety, security and comfort, not man. If our future is left in the hands of mere men, then only misery awaits.

As important as it was to design and build the F-16, it was equally important to ensure that you had pilots to fly them.  As a nation, we needed to ensure that we were training up pilots we could trust and pilots who had the same vision and hope for the future.  We, as a nation, have failed in this area. It is the unity of vision and values in our society that is slipping away.  In other words, the dilemma rapidly overtaking us is “so what, if we are able to build the best jet fighters in the world.  If we don’t have loyal pilots to fly them, what good are they.” And, this is where I see our society heading at a rapid pace. It is coming down to the issue of trust.  Who do you trust to put on the Iron Horse?  If you cannot find soldiers you can trust and you cannot face an enemy with a unified force, you will lose the battle.  This is the dilemma we are facing as a nation.

We have chosen to put our faith and trust and in ourselves and the work of our hands rather than putting our faith and trust in God. So what, if we can build the sophisticated Iron Horse.  If our nation is rotten and corrupt on the inside, if our society has turned its back on God, if our people have gone headlong into a lifestyle of sin, then no degree of sophistication or lethality of our military Iron Horse can save us.  We are doomed. God will leave us to our own devices and we will fragment and begin fighting each other.  The Bible tells us in Proverbs 28:19 “Where there is no vision (prophetic revelation), the people perish (cast off restraint).  We, as nation have lost our vision.

So, there on the runway sits the new Iron Horse.  Who will fly it?  What will be the loyalty of the pilot who sits in the cockpit?

 

Humbled To Witness

20 Jan

CrossThe pride of man is much like a computer virus. Have you ever had a computer virus? I once had one on my computer that was called a Trojan virus. If you are ever thinking about downloading a free song online from one of those sites that offer such service and a warning pops up that says “This file may be corrupted. Do you still want to download?” please click on the button which says “No.”

You see, in my case, my song was already at ninety-nine percent download. And I just had to click “Yes.” Within seconds of doing so, the image of an ugly beastly-looking creature took over my computer screen, flashing in bold letters the words “TROJAN VIRUS! TROJAN VIRUS!” No matter what I did, I could not get the beast off of my screen. Whenever I clicked the “x” to close the window, another would just pop up to replace it. This happened again and again and again. Finally, I had to unplug the computer and take it in to a specialist to have the virus removed.

Similarly, the popping-up of pride in a man’s heart is something we all must deal with as Christians. Nobody is exempt. Sometimes it feels like we keep clicking the “x,” but it keeps on coming up again. So, we humble ourselves before the Lord, calling on the name of Jesus. Through and by the graceful working of the Holy Spirit, God then begins to set things straight in our hearts. Praise God for his sin-virus specialist!

In Titus 3:2-6 we read a reminder that the Apostle Paul writes to his son Titus concerning the attitude a believer should have toward an unbeliever in light of all the “viruses” which Jesus has healed us of by the stripes he bore for us on the cross. I encourage you to examine it carefully. It reads:

“Remind the people…to be ready to do whatever is good, to slander no one, to be peaceable and considerate, and to show true humility toward all men. At one time we too were foolish, disobedient, deceived and enslaved by all kinds of passions and pleasures. We lived in malice and envy, being hated and hating one another. But when the kindness and love of God our Savior appeared, he saved us, not because of righteous things we had done, but because of his mercy”

We can see from this Scripture that the Apostle Paul is wanting Titus to remind the people who have come out of a very deep place of darkness, to remember who they were before the love of God was revealed to them. He felt it vital to recall that they were only brought from slavery and into freedom when God unveiled the curtain to them to show them the “new and living way” spoken of in Hebrews 10:20. It is in this light that the people are reminded to, again, “slander no one, to be peaceable and considerate and to show true humility toward all men.”

What Paul is referring to here is an attitude of heart that only comes from the crushing of human pride at the cross of Christ. This “true humility” can only be in us because we truly believe the truth of God’s grace and it has affected us in the inner man. This broken spirit, created by the Spirit of Grace, must remain in us if we are to be used to draw those to the Father who are “foolish, disobedient, deceived and enslaved by all kinds of passions and pleasures.” This humility cannot be reproduced and it cannot be imitated in order to reach the lost. God will not be mocked and, most of the time, neither will unbelievers. This is why God, speaking through Paul, calls the humility which we are to show forth “true humility.” I say to you, if the humility in us has been re-manufactured, then it has been replaced by something sinister.  Therefore, I ask rhetorically, is it time to take the computer in? Is it possible, as II Peter 5-9 discusses, that we are not gathering harvest because we have forgotten that we were cleansed of our past sins?

Now, if we possess an authentically grateful heart to God, there will be no limiting of the praise that flows from the fountains of our hearts. The Holy Spirit will dwell in our hearts by faith and through Him we will sing that freedom song in us which declares “Praise the Lord, all you nations; extol him, all you peoples. For great is his love toward us, and the faithfulness of the Lord endures forever. Praise the Lord (Psalm 117).” This is the Spirit-formed declaration we need in order to obey our dear Lord Jesus’ command found in Matthew 28:18-20 which states:

“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples

of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,

and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always,

to the very end of the age.”

In this humble faith, which produces praise, we are then lifted up by the hand of the Almighty himself. For He has promised us in James 4:6 that “God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble.” This is the grace in which enables us to operate in the entirely unlimited authority of our great Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ and, by it, we have the full capability to go and make disciples of all nations!

However, I want to remind you that we do have an enemy, named the devil. And even though, according to Colossians 2:13-15, Jesus has disarmed the devil by taking the Law of Moses and “nailing it to the cross,” this devil is still a very good deceiver and is constantly wanting us to turn away the grace offered us at Calvary. It is the blood sacrifice of Jesus Christ that has forever defeated him, and he knows this. Therefore, Satan must get our eyes as far away from that reality as possible to have success in stopping us– not only for our sake, but for the sake of the people we might bring to God by our authentic faith in Jesus. He does not want you, the nations, or anybody to glorify God through Him!

So, what is Satan’s weapon or what fiery dart does he use to accomplish such a thing? He plays on human pride– that evil desire that produces judgment, as seen by the fruit of the Pharisees. As the Apostle Paul said in Romans 10:3 about them “Since they did not know the righteousness that comes from God and sought to establish their own, they did not submit to God’s righteousness.” The Gospels declare in Luke 18:9 that these Pharisees were “confident in their own righteousness, and looked down on everybody else.” It is pride that causes men to turn from grace, to desire self-glory and to look down on others. This is the same desire the devil had in the beginning when he said “I will ascend…” The Pharisees ascended in their hearts above the rest of the people. This is one the reasons why Jesus called the devil the father of the Pharisees.

What I am saying to you is that the most vile people we come across as believers can and must be reached. We must see people through the eyes of the Holy Spirit and always remember that “it is by grace we have been saved, through faith– and this is not of yourselves, it is the gift of God–not by works, so that no one can boast (Ephesians 2:8).” We ourselves must remain at the cross to preach the cross rightly.

Therefore, in light of this we ought to easily show forth true humility towards even the most perverse of men and keep our mouths shut concerning slander toward them. This will be a huge surprise to such a person because, even in the world, sinners constantly slander other sinners for the sins they have committed. If you doubt me, you should go get a job in an office building sometime!

In getting to the heart of the matter, the words of Jesus recorded in Mark 12:31 need to get burnt into our souls, especially concerning those in danger of suffering in hell for eternity. Jesus said “Love your neighbor as yourself.” It is in this kindness that we must go, living the holy life offered to us in Jesus Christ. We also must open our mouths to testify, without fear, of the reason why this is possible.  Simply put, since we do not want to go to hell, we should not allow a neighbor to go there either– not without a fight. We must love their souls as we love our own.

Let me close with some practical advice in terms of personal evangelism, in light of God’s mercy toward us. Remember, this is not a formula, but merely advice for someone getting started:

  1. Be Patient To use a fishing analogy, sometimes we must give someone a chance to take a hold of the “hook” and not be so quick to reel the line in. We must fish, with patience, like the person’s soul depends on it, remembering that it actually does. A fish will sometimes nibble, much like a person who is becoming interested in the truth. The Holy Spirit will tug with urgency on your heart when it is time to bring them in. It is Jesus who makes you a fisher of men.
  2. Pray in the Spirit, asking the Lord for the wisdom in reaching these souls (James 1:5). We need wisdom to win souls as Proverbs 11:30 states: “He who wins souls is wise.” Let us pray without ceasing for fields placed before us, remembering we were in that field once. Also pray for other Christians working in fields around the world. God is listening and will respond to us.
  3. Use the Word of God You do not have to have it all “figured out,” so relax and allow the Holy Spirit to work through you. We do not use Him, but he does use us. So, if you are in conversation with a person and it feels as though God may be “in it,” pray to God (in your mind) for guidance. Often, a Scripture will come into your heart that you know. This is the Holy Spirit handing you the tailor-fit Word you need for that situation. Just open your mouth and say “You know, the Bible says…..”  You may be surprised at everything coming out of your mouth and at the ensuing results. While the goal is to have such a person turn to Christ right at that moment, we must learn to take only what the Holy Spirit gives us. Take it boldly and in the anointing He provides. If nothing else you will have planted a seed and that seed, God’s Word, will not fail, but will accomplish that which it was sent to do (Isaiah 55:10). Praise the Lord!

Submitted By Jeremiah Cullett

January 20, 2010