Brett Lawrence wrote an article in the Leadership Journal in the
fall of 2002 describing the spirituality of Gen-Next in their twenties who are far from God.
He addresses three questions Christians need to answer when dealing with this
generation. The questions reveal the hearts and fears of this generation.
Question 3: What Good is
Christianity?
This is a question
of utility and relevance. Does Christianity have value to me? The concept is
described in the article, "Does your belief change lives? Does your
religion work? Does it help me, whether I'm in your group or not? Or are you
just another self-serving group?" (Lawrence
5).
Answer 3:
Christians are to demonstrate value in the context of the worldview which Gen
Next live in. There is value in laying our life, finances, abilities, and
aspirations to give a Gen Next person something. The article summarizes,
"There is a fundamental call to Christians to be involved in generous
compassion to the poor and the broken and the underprivileged. There's more in
the Bible about justice and compassion than evangelism" (Lawrence 6).
My response:
Listen to the arrogance of the perspective! Somebody is owed something. We have
forgotten the Sovereignty of God. We can be instantaneously ground to dust,
killed for our faith, or simply destroyed by our Creator for His glorification!
What rights and privileges do we have, in the context for which we were
actually created?
God recognizes
only two types of people: the saved who believe in Christ Jesus and those who
do not. There is no distinction between
man, woman, Jew, Gentile, freedman, slave, wealthy, poor, broken, or underprivileged.
At the final judgment, Jesus separates those who have demonstrated the fruits
of salvation. Those who are allowed in have participated in the works that God
gave them after being saved by grace
(Eph. 2:1-10). Those who enter see the kingdom of heaven not as some privilege
or right, but as an incalculable valuable gift of pure unmerited mercy.
Aggregately,
Christianity strives for peaceful order and benevolent goodwill. Often it has
been subjugated by the worst of examples among followers. The demonstrated
principles, doctrine, and dogma of Christianity are beneficial for any society
willing to embrace the blessings of God.
This article
shocked my thought process in a much-needed way and that was the point of the
article. We need to think differently if we are to evangelize those whose
context is different. Some see a generation of people that do not know what to
believe, who to trust, and incapable of deciding what is truth. Every
generation has been that way and it is likely that it will continue to be that
way until Christ returns. As the holy context of the Bible remains unchanged
and the world continues to devolve its context away from the plan of God, our
ability to grasp and bridge the connection of the world context and the cross
will become ever-increasingly difficult.
For more information on Vibrant Church Renewal and free resource visit our page here.
Lawrence,
Brett. "Starbucks spirituality: postmoderns have three questions for
Christians that you'd better be ready for." Leadership 23.4 (Fall
2002): p81. From Religion and Philosophy Collection. (2002). 3 December
2013.
Contributed by Dr. Lyle Pointer