Monday, February 4, 2013

Half-Time, Beyonce and Judgmentalism

Before the all-to-common accusation "you're being judgmental!" is hurled in my direction, let me make an unequivocal statement...I am no one's final judge.  The Bible is very clear that there is one judge and I am not it.  Now, while you exhale your great sigh of relief, allow me to share a truth that might interrupt your ease.  While I am not the judge, there is a judge who always makes the right judgement.  Along with this fact, the one who is judge has given us a criteria for His judgment called The Word of God or the Bible, if you will.  Certainly, the Bible is much more than a judgment book, but it certainly gives us the basis for our judgment by God.

As the living Word of God, the Bible tells us how God determines His judgment of us.  Matthew 7:21 says, "Not everyone who says to Me, ‘LordLord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven."  Clearly, Jesus will judge that some who professed Him did not actually know Him.  How is this determined?  By whether or not the "professor" actually pursued living according to God's will...beginning with surrendering to Christ as Lord (salvation).  No one is birthed into God's kingdom by trying to accomplish God's will on his own...but those who have truly come into a relationship with Him will be seeking continually to do His will.  Again in 1 John, the Word of God gives us further criteria on how God will judge.  In chapter 2, verses 3-4, we are told, "Now by this we know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He who says, 'I know Him,' and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him."  According to God's criteria, a true believer is one who keeps His commandments.  This does not mean that we are prefect, but genuinely striving to walk in obedience to what God's has told us.  What does this have to do with the half-time show during the Superbowl?  

Various opinions of the half-time show featuring Beyonce littered the pages of Facebook.  Some were critical of her performance as being near to a striptease show while others praised her as giving great entertainment to watch.  While some expressed their dismay and disgust, others accused those of being judgmental.  So how do we proceed?  Who is right and who is wrong and how do we make this determination?  As we learned earlier, the Bible must be our criteria.  It is our measuring rod.  My opinion matters little, God's opinion matters immensely...so what does He say through His Word?  "For this is the will of God, your sanctification: that you should abstain from sexual immorality; that each of you should know how to possess his own vessel in sanctification and honor, not in passion of lust, like the Gentiles who do not know God; that no one should take advantage of and defraud his brother in this matter, because the Lord is the avenger of all such, as we also forewarned you and testified. For God did not call us to uncleanness, but in holiness. Therefore he who rejects this does not reject man, but God, who has also given us His Holy Spirit."  (1 Thessalonians 4:3-8)  We are not to defraud our brother...meaning to take advantage for our own sensual gain.  Any person with a modicum of honesty would have to admit that there was a "whole lot" of defrauding going on in the half-time show...men and boys being exposed to sights that were immoral and alluring to the flesh.  Young girls seeing an example we can only hope they do not model.  And...the key to it all, Beyonce claims to be a Christian.  She says about her sensual dancing, "I honestly believe he (God) wants people to celebrate their bodies so long as you don't compromise your Christianity in the process."  God doesn't want us to celebrate our bodies, He wants us to sanctify our bodies and possess them with honor.  As one who professes to know Christ, the pattern shown causes reason for pause and concern.  Passing judgment, you say?  1 Corinthians 5:11 tells us not to share a meal with a professing believe who is sexually immoral.  This requires us to make a judgment according to the dictates of God's Word.  We don't know if the person is a true believer or not, but we are to make a judgment concerning our association and involvement based upon God's criteria...and based upon His standard, the half-time show was certainly anything but clean entertainment that edifies.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Celebrity Christianity and the Modern Church

We are definitely in the day of the celebrity.  Take a quick stroll through the TV programming menu and you are likely to find titles such as...Celebrity chef, Dancing with the Stars, Celebrity Fit Club, Celebrity Survivor, Celebrity Apprentice and on it goes.  Entire shows are dedicated to tracking the lives of the celebrity famous so we can get the "scoop." The Oscars, Emmys, People's Choice Awards, Grammys, American Music Awards, Teen Choice Awards all pinpoint the "best" in the business and further solidify celebrity status.  We are told how the famous think and what they believe, their tastes and styles.  We tour their homes and travel with them on vacation via camera and satellite.  Our culture idolizes celebrities.  One fourth to one half of the 100 most influential people of 2012 were celebrities of one stripe or another.  I think you get the point.  We are enamored with the rich and famous and they certainly contribute to the shaping of our modern culture. This "writer" contends that fascination with celebrities is detrimental and has helped create a narcissistic generation.  These idolized individuals live by their own rules, conveniently escape laws required for everyone else, carouse in opulence and wealth and lead "the masses" to believe this is the way it should be for us all.  Their lives are not reality, yet are presented as what should be reality.

As troubling as the idolization of secular celebrities is, equally troubling is a new trend within the modern church.  This trend is the making of celebrities within Christianity.  Some have entitled it "Celebrity Christianity."  A number of "young gun" pastors and ministers have adopted the "if you can't beat them, join them" mentality when it comes to reaching the current generation.  The church sanctuary has been replaced with a media savvy auditorium that would rival the local theater.  "Relevant" sermon series geared to the interests of the people are packaged in catchy titles that have human appeal.  These "communicators" are no longer the proverbial "men of the cloth," but young styled professionals complete with skinny jeans, v-neck pullovers, untucked button-ups, sock less slip-ons or tennis shoes and the most modern of eyewear.  Passionate preaching has been mothballed as confrontational and offensive.  Sermons are given as "talks" in a low-key, conversational tone.  Verse by verse exposition of scripture is passé.  Certain passages are determined to be overly controversial, therefore avoided.  New social ills have been adopted as the "cause" the church must address, while other biblical issues have become strangely silent...such as abortion and homosexuality (new "ills" must be addressed, but not to the exclusion of others).  Amazingly, topics like homosexuality are strongly avoided so as not to make those involved feel "unwelcome."  In their attempt to reach "all men," these "mod" ministers are simply appeasing them with a gospel that gives meaning and happiness to life, but requires no repentance or death to self.  Many of these "Celebrity Christians" have gained rock star appeal among their congregants and the media.  No longer are these men "the voice of one crying in the wilderness" or ones who "convince, rebuke, exhort with all long-suffering and teaching."  They are trend setters who want to make "Every Day a Friday." I contend that "Celebrity Christianity" within the church is reinforcing the narcissism in society, with a religious twist.  Now, lest I be misunderstood, I do not believe God is more "drawn" to a suit coat and tie over a pull-over and slip-ons.  An auditorium with a great sound system is not "less spiritual" than the one that cracks and pops.  What does concern me is the ideology that the church must mimic the world in order to reach it, lest we become irrelevant.  The Word of God is ALWAYS relevant and when preached correctly and thoroughly, will ALWAYS be controversial and confrontational.  Our job is not to make a name for ourselves or our church, but to make the name of Jesus famous.  It's not about being "hip", but being holy.  What we need today is not "Celebrity Christianity", but a revival of Selfless Spirituality.