Judgement as God’s Mercy Unto Repentance

Judgement as God’s Mercy Unto Repentance

A sentiment I came across on Twitter is common among some Christians:

God destroyed Sodom for the same sins the world now celebrates. Judgment is coming.

My reply:

Actually, brother, judgment is already here. We see it in the fallout of the sexual “revolution.” This is critically important. The judgment isn’t Sodom like because of Jesus. Rather, it’s consequences, a trail of miserable and wasted lives, suffering and death. It’s 50,000(!) suicides a year, and triple that number try(!). It’s broken families, fetal genocide, and one could go on and on and on.

Too often Christians think of judgment as an end game, but it’s not. God’s judgment is mercy to lead people to repentance. Secularism is dead, and people are seeing the misery that’s come in its wake.

The most direct affirmation of God’s judgment as consequences is found in Romans 1:

21 For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened. 22 Claiming to be wise, they became fools, 23 and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.

24 Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, 25 because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen.

God doesn’t normally reign down sulfur and fire, but allows people to get the sinful desire of their hearts. It’s clear God’s judgment is all around us.

God’s Mercy in Judgment
I’ve been very slowly reading my way through Isaiah with John Calvin, and the juxtaposition of judgment and mercy is striking. I’ve read Isaiah numerous times over the decades, and it can be a terrifying read given judgment against Israel and the nations is a consistent theme, but interspersed between declarations of judgment are bright rays of hope like these. Isaiah 7:

 14 Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.

Isaiah 9

For to us a child is born,
to us a son is given;
and the government shall be upon his shoulder,
and his name shall be called
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.

Isaiah 11:

There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse,
and a branch from his roots shall bear fruit.
And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him,
the Spirit of wisdom and understanding,
the Spirit of counsel and might,
the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord.

They shall not hurt or destroy
in all my holy mountain;
for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord
as the waters cover the sea.

Isaiah 25:

On this mountain the Lord of hosts will make for all peoples
a feast of rich food, a feast of well-aged wine,
of rich food full of marrow, of aged wine well refined.
And he will swallow up on this mountain
the covering that is cast over all peoples,
the veil that is spread over all nations.
    He will swallow up death forever;
and the Lord God will wipe away tears from all faces,
and the reproach of his people he will take away from all the earth,
for the Lord has spoken.

As we read through redemptive history in the Bible, God never seems to declare judgment without also telling us that is not the end of the story. Judgment for the God of Scripture is never an end in and of itself, as if smoke is coming up from the rubble and then we’ll just move on. If all you look at is Sodom in Isolation you might think that, but that’s not the full story. In fact, God shows his mercy in rescuing Lot, his wife, and two daughters, but his wife looked back at the train wreck and partook of the judgment.

On this side of eternity, Judgment always has a purpose coming from God’s justice that is informed by his mercy. We’re still in the middle of the history of redemption, so of course it is. This is not wishful thinking, but profoundly biblical; we see it declared throughout Scripture. More importantly, it is also because of God’s covenant promises, the most important of which begins redemptive history even before history began or the world was created, the covenant of redemption in the council of the Triune God in eternity. Then it is revealed to man after he rebelled and fell into sin; God would not allow his creation to fail, not allow Satan to win. Right there in the Garden we see God’s judgment against Adam and Eve, then we read this (Gen 3):

21 The Lord God made garments of skin for Adam and his wife and clothed them. 22 And the Lord God said, “The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever.” 23 So the Lord God banished him from the Garden of Eden to work the ground from which he had been taken. 24 After he drove the man out, he placed on the east side of the Garden of Eden cherubim and a flaming sword flashing back and forth to guard the way to the tree of life.

The first sacrifice, death for life, mercy in judgment. Even our deaths are God’s mercy because we obviously can’t handle living with the knowledge of good and evil, let alone living with it forever. When we are resurrected on a redeemed and renewed heavens and earth, that knowledge will not be problematic.

The Profound Mercy in Noah’s Flood
The next example is Cain and Able, but that’s on a small scale. Another is Noah and the flood, more horrific because of the scale, encompassing the entire earth and human race. It seems the knowledge of good and devil results in mostly evil:

The Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And the Lord regretted that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the Lord said, “I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the land, man and animals and creeping things and birds of the heavens, for I am sorry that I have made them.” But Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord.

When we think about the flood we can’t imagine how awful it would be for however many people were on earth at the time drowning to death. In this inconceivable judgment God had mercy only on Noah and his family. Our thoughts about Noah and the flood either go to animals or rainbows, but something was recently brought to my attention in the story we mostly overlook. It highlights God’s abundant mercy in his terrible judgment.

The first thing Noah does when he comes out of the ark after the flood waters subside is to make a sacrifice:

20 Then Noah built an altar to the Lord and took some of every clean animal and some of every clean bird and offered burnt offerings on the altar. 21 And when the Lord smelled the pleasing aroma, the Lord said in his heart, “I will never again curse the ground because of man, for the intention of man’s heart is evil from his youth. Neither will I ever again strike down every living creature as I have done. 22 While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.”

This is the first recorded example of a burnt offering in the Bible. We can read the specific instructions God gives to the Israelites for this kind of offering in Leviticus 1, and we’ll notice the intricate details the Lord gives so it is done exactly the way He wants. Being an atonement for sin, the offering was the most important of the offerings given by the Lord because it was sacrificial to the giver:

Three kinds of animals were offered as burnt offerings — bulls (vv. 1–5), sheep and goats (v. 10), or turtledoves and pigeons (v. 14). Only the rich could afford bulls, the “middle class” offered sheep or goats, as that was the most they could give, and the poor sacrificed turtledoves and pigeons. In all cases, the offering was a real sacrifice. Meat was a rare luxury back then, so it was costly to burn an entire animal on the altar without giving any part of it to anyone but the Lord. This is exactly what happened with the burnt offering (vv. 9b, 13b, 17b).

It was also most important because it was foundational to the other offerings. Without the forgiveness of sins by the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness, as the writer to the Hebrews tells us. Each of the offerings is a beautiful process of sinners being reconciled to God, all finding their ultimate fulfillment in Christ. It starts with the ultimate sacrifice, the giving of everything, which is a picture of Christ’s ultimate sacrifice on the cross where he paid it all (Is. 53):

5 But he was pierced for our transgressions;
he was crushed for our iniquities;
upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace,
and with his wounds we are healed.

When Noah came out of the ark and made his sacrifice, this is what it was pointing to, a type of what was to come. God had judged sin in the most horrific way imaginable. That wasn’t the end of the story, but only the end of the beginning. Somehow Noah had learned throughout his life from those who came before that the Lord’s wrath must be appeased. In biblical terms that is called propitiation, which is “a sin offering, by which the wrath of the deity shall be appeased.” We read of this about Christ in I John:

In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him. 10 In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.

When we think of Noah’s flood, it reminds us that God’s wrath against sin has already been paid.

There But for the Grace of God . . . .
Almost everybody over the age of probably 30 could finish that thought, which by the mid-20th century was a common proverbial saying. Biblically, it hardly needs justification, but Paul can give us one in I Corinthians 15:

For I am the least of the apostles, unworthy to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God. 10 But by the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace toward me was not in vain.

The saying possibly goes back to a 16th century Protestant in Catholic Bloody Mary’s England:

The story that is widely circulated is that the phrase was first spoken by the English evangelical preacher and martyr, John Bradford (circa 1510–1555). He is said to have uttered the variant of the expression – “There but for the grace of God, goes John Bradford”, when seeing criminals being led to the scaffold. He didn’t enjoy that grace for long, however. He was burned at the stake in 1555.

When I read declarations of God’s judgment against sinners like the Twitter comment example above, I often wonder if that person has any conception of the truth of this statement, that but for God’s grace he’d be right there in Sodom just like those other sinners. Do such people, I wonder, realize that the meaning of grace is unmerited favor? That mercy is not getting what we in fact deserve? We should weep for people under God’s judgment, living with the consequences of their sin, their rebellion not only creating their own suffering, but leading to the suffering of so many others. Regarding the sexual confusion of our age, there is no such thing as a personal sex life, homosexual or not. Sex has massive societal consequences, and if not confined in marriage to one man and one women, those consequences will be exactly what we’re living with now, and its consequent suffering and misery.

The saying, “There but for the grace of God go I,” reminds me of my obligation to love others. I’m not totally sure what that means, but I believe it has something to do with sacrifice given Jesus loved us while we were yet his enemies (Rom. 5:10). The description of love Paul gives us in I Corinthians 13 is a hint of what loving our enemies might look like:

Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails.

Wow. That’s a tall order, but guess what? We have no choice but to love others. And we are able to love others by that same grace. John tells us, “We love because he first loved us” (I John 4:19). When he was asked what the greatest commandment was (Matt. 22):

37 Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ 38 This is the first and greatest commandment. 39 And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ 40 All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”

In saying the second is like the first, Jesus is saying that in loving our neighbor as ourselves, we are loving God. We can’t separate the two commands. If we are to obey the first, part of the way we obey it is by obeying the second. How do we do that? Especially when encountering those who are apparently so unlovable? When we’re struggling with unlovable people, or are tempted to call down Sodom on some sinners, instead of weep for them, it’s a good idea to meditate upon Jesus’ words in Luke 6:

32 “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners love those who love them. 33 And if you do good to those who are good to you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners do that. 34 And if you lend to those from whom you expect repayment, what credit is that to you? Even sinners lend to sinners, expecting to be repaid in full. 35 But love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back. Then your reward will be great, and you will be children of the Most High, because he is kind to the ungrateful and wicked. 36 Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful.

The most important thing I’ve learned to help me to do what at times seems too hard to do is to realize the depth of my own sin. The greater I understand my sin to be, the greater I understand the love of God to me in spite of my sin, and I am compelled to love others whether I want to or not.

Jesus told us when the Holy Spirit comes, which he did at Pentecost, he “will convict the world concerning sin and righteousness and judgment.” Instead of praying judgment down on people, we ought to pray for the Holy Spirit to convict them of their sin and guilt before God, and their need for a Savior, that God would show them mercy in his judgment unto repentance.

 

 

 

Mere Christianity: Moses and the Bronze Snake in the Desert

Mere Christianity: Moses and the Bronze Snake in the Desert

This story we find in Numbers 21 is one the strangest in the Bible, and one the skeptics love. It’s absurd and clearly made up because looking at a bronze snake on a pole can’t heal anybody, obviously. You know, science and all that. But God isn’t limited to what science says can be done because, well, He created it, and everything else. While God healing His people miraculously is what this story is about, we learn from Jesus it’s about something much more profound, something so theologically significant it defined his mission on earth. Before we get to the significance and what it has to do with mere Christianity, let’s look at the story itself.

The Israelites have been wandering in the desert since they escaped from Egypt, and they are having a tough go of it. Deserts are inhospitable places and numerous times they’d just had enough. This was one of those times.

4 They traveled from Mount Hor along the route to the Red Sea, to go around Edom. But the people grew impatient on the way; 5 they spoke against God and against Moses, and said, “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? There is no bread! There is no water! And we detest this miserable food!”

6 Then the Lord sent venomous snakes among them; they bit the people and many Israelites died. 7 The people came to Moses and said, “We sinned when we spoke against the Lord and against you. Pray that the Lord will take the snakes away from us.” So Moses prayed for the people.

8 The Lord said to Moses, “Make a snake and put it up on a pole; anyone who is bitten can look at it and live.” 9 So Moses made a bronze snake and put it up on a pole. Then when anyone was bitten by a snake and looked at the bronze snake, they lived.

We might think it a bit harsh for God to kill His people just because they’re complaining. After all, the circumstances are arguably horrible, and they don’t appear to be getting any better. God can be so unreasonable sometimes, we often think. The most common question in human history attests to our frustration; Why? And this question is always an implicit accusation against God. I’m getting a raw deal! Don’t you care! I don’t deserve this! A better question is why do we feel this way, and think we’re justified in our anger and frustration against God? Sin. The perfectly harmonious relationship between God and man was ruptured at the fall, and as a result we see him as against us instead of for us. Satan’s accusatory question to Eve captures it perfectly: Did God really say . . . ? We can fill in the blanks; no, he wants you to be miserable and keep you from all the good stuff in life, keep you from being happy and fulfilled. People reject God not because belief in him isn’t credible or plausible, but because they hate him, they’re disgusted and want nothing to do with that big meanie.

All of this, including the desert wonderings in our lives, everything, comes down to a question of trust, or confident expectation in something or someone. The Christian life boils down to another question: Do we trust God or not? The only other option is to trust our lyin’ eyes. Unfortunately, what our eyes see is often horribly unpleasant, and trusting God through the unpleasantness is extremely difficult. This was the Israelites’ dilemma. It’s similar to another dilemma the disciples experienced in the gospels.

As Jesus was traveling from town to town spreading the good news of the Kingdom of God around the Sea of Galilee, he wanted to go to the other side of the lake. So they commandeered a boat and headed out. While they were on their way a fierce storm arose and the disciples were terrified. In Luke, they exclaim, reasonably, “Master, Master, we’re going to drown!” While in Mark there is kind of a funny twist: “Teacher, don’t you care if we drown?” We can understand their terror in the dark in the middle of a large lake amidst a raging storm, but Jesus is as calm as cucumber, sleeping away as the storm rages. How could he do that? Well, we need to go back to what he told them prior to heading out on the boat:

22 One day Jesus said to his disciples, “Let us go over to the other side of the lake.”

Notice what Jesus did not say: “Let’s go into the middle of the lake and drown.” I love this story because the contrast between trust and sight is so stark, so blatantly in our faces we’d have to be blind not to see it. Jesus epitomizes Isaiah 26:3, “You will keep in perfect peace him whose mind is steadfast because he trusts in you,” while the disciples epitomize the total lack of trust and what comes with it, fear, and in their case sheer terror. Without the Son of God and the Creator of the universe in the boat, terror would be justified, but not with Jesus who said they were going to the other side.

We can see how this story on the lake relates to the Israelites in the desert. What did God say to them through Moses? That they were going to go out into the desert to die of thirst and starvation? Nope! They were going to the promised land, and the Lord Himself would guide them all the way there. For example, from Exodus 13:

11 “After the Lord brings you into the land of the Canaanites and gives it to you, as he promised on oath to you and your ancestors, 12 you are to give over to the Lord the first offspring of every womb.

This promise went back a very long way, but time after time the Israelites chose to focus on their circumstances instead of trusting in God and Moses His mediator. If they had trusted Him, they would not have spent 40 years in the wilderness, dying before they could enter the land the Lord Promised. Trust is what brings us to Jesus and our salvation from sin and death, where and with whom we will spend eternity.

Jesus, Snakes, and the Nature of Belief
We’re familiar with John 3 and the story of the influential Pharisee named Nicodemus coming to Jesus at night to find out from his own lips the nature of his mission. Jesus tells him if anyone is to see the kingdom of God they must be born again, and Nicodemus is confused, not at all understanding the spiritual meaning of this new birth. Jesus tells him it’s of the Spirit, and then rebukes him because he’s not getting it. Jesus then affirms his Messianic mission as the Son of Man, and explains it this way:

14 Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the wilderness, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, 15 that everyone who believes may have eternal life in him.

Whatever happened in the desert has a direct correlation to Jesus being “lifted up,” which we know was on a Roman cross, crucified like a common criminal. Then John tells us why:

16 For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 17 For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. 18 Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because they have not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son.

The word “believe” is used five times in this passage, so it is clear our salvation from sin is somehow intimately tied up with belief. But what does belief mean? And why is it connected to the snake in the wilderness? Knowing these two things will help us better understand salvation itself, especially in the context of the Israelites’ desperate fear of death and the will to live, and why Jesus told us that is analogous to him being “lifted up”.

Our post-Enlightenment tendency because of rationalism (i.e., reason is the primary source of knowledge) is to see belief as intellectual assent, primarily a rational process. We understand certain propositions, grasp an idea or comprehend it, therefore we “believe” it. That is only one part of the belief, and not the most profound part. By contrast, belief in the Bible is not primarily cerebral. The word in Greek, pis-tyoo’-pisteuó, also translated as faith, is a synonym for trust, or having confidence in someone or something. It is a fuller expression of the human person than just our rational faculties because it requires throwing ourselves upon something or someone without full understanding. Belief requires trust. Get on an airplane and you’ll understand faith, and its necessity. You have no idea how any of it works, or why, or if you’ll get to your destination, but nonetheless you get on. Few planes drop out of the sky, so your faith is well grounded, or as I define it, trust based on adequate evidence.

Modern belief assumes we understand and know all about things when we clearly can’t, flying only one obvious example. Our entire lives are lived by faith. This dependence, this lack of truly knowing, of knowing exhaustively without doubt, is why the analogy of the snake to Jesus being lifted up on the cross is so powerful.

This will make more sense if I explain what I think verse 17 means as we consider salvation from sin and Mere Christianity. Many Christians ignore this verse and believe that’s exactly why Jesus came, to judge and condemn the world and those in it. For them, if someone doesn’t believe the “right” things, i.e., agree with them, off to hell they go! And they almost seem delighted to condemn these people to hell, announcing their judgment as if they were Christ himself and qualified to make judgments on the nature of other people’s souls. I’ve seen this throughout my Christian life, north of 46 years, and it has nothing to do with the content of one’s theology. Sinful human nature is by definition self-centered, in Latin we are all Incurvatus in se, or curved in ourselves. What we think, what we feel, what we believe, our perspective, our views, our opinions are all important. Those who have this disease in an advanced state find it incomprehensible that anyone could possibly see reality in any other way than they see it. We’re all this way to some degree, and we must work on developing humility and trying to see things through other people’s eyes.

Jesus, Snakes, and Salvation
Think about the Israelites circumstances, really try to get in their shoes. They were miserable because they were totally focused on their circumstances and not God’s promise. So as sinners are wont to do, they start complaining, and out of nowhere venomous snakes start showing up in their camp biting them and many are dying. They go to Moses, repent, and beg for him to pray to the Lord for them to get rid of the snakes. Moses prays, and instead of the Lord just doing magic and getting rid of the snakes, He tells Moses to make a snake and put it on a pole. How odd is that? I can imagine Moses thinking, come again? How in the world is putting up the image of a snake on a pole going to address the issue of people dying of snake bites? The absurdity of it makes it all the more historically believable. Who would make up such a thing? What does this require of Moses? Faith. Trust in God’s word and power, using the plane metaphor, flying blind. The Lord tells him, “anyone who is bitten can look at it and live.” OK, God, whatever you say.

We notice belief, faith, trust, is not passive. God is requiring the Israelites to do something for their healing. They had a choice when they were bitten. They could either look down at the injury in terror and fear, or trust Moses that looking at a bronze snake on a pole would heal them, and look up. In the biblical sense they believed Moses when they decided to look up and not down. Did they have any idea how this worked, or why they would be healed? Or really even if they would be healed? No. Out of sheer terror they desperately wanted to live, and despite the pain they looked up. Our tendency is to always look down at the pain, but that’s why Jesus telling Nicodemus the nature of salvation from sin is analogous to the snake in the desert is so important. We have a choice, we can either look down and wallow in our pain, or look up. Do we understand everything that’s happening when we do? No, and if we think we do we’re in danger of our faith being in our understanding and not in Christ. I’m not saying the content of our belief isn’t important, even critical, but Jesus put the analogy in his word for a reason.

I believe that reason is that when we are confronted with our sin we have to realize like the Israelites we can’t save or heal ourselves. Is it required that we know how this works, or why, in order to be saved? No, we just have to look up and trust Jesus. A great example of this is my 91 year-old nominally Catholic mother. I call her most every night, and I often get to “lecture” her about the faith. She doesn’t get much of it, but she doesn’t have to. One evening she asked me, “What if I’m not good enough?” That was profound and moved me. Should I have laid out the Four Spiritual Laws? Go through the Roman’s Road with her? Tell her about the fall and the nature of sin (we’ve talked about that plenty), and the condemnation of the law? Maybe in due course, but Jesus and the snake in the desert came immediately to mind, and I shared that with her. I said, you just have to trust in Jesus? None of us is good enough. She probably knows as much about salvation as the Israelites looking up at the snake, but she still can trust Jesus and be saved.

Which is a good segway to the next verse. John tells us why the analogy is so important. Simply, it is because God so loved the world, and us in it. Do we trust in his love for us? Do we have to know why he would love us? No, we just have to look up and see what he did for us, that he died in our place. It requires belief, faith, trust, and as we learn from the story of the snakes, it is not passive; it’s a choice. What if my soteriology is a bit off? If we trust Jesus to save us from our sin, it doesn’t matter. I’m convinced there will be no theology test when we get to heaven, or I might be in trouble. Mind you, I believe my understanding of it is correct, is biblical, but I’m not trusting that, I’m trusting Jesus! At my daughter’s wedding in February 2019, I talked with a number of her Catholic friends. Did I critique their Catholic theology with them? No, I just told them to seek Jesus and read their Bibles.

Jesus, Snakes, and Mere Christianity
Which brings me to mere Christianity, and you can probably already see where I’m going with this. It’s strange, but I often find myself defending Catholics on Twitter, me a Protestant, postmillennial Calvinist. Because our Reformational faith is founded upon Sola Scriptura, our tendency as Protestants is to focus on the rational, propositional content of the faith. We are required to understand A so we can get to Z. The tendency then is for us to think that anyone who doesn’t understand A-M exactly like us is never going to get to Z. I reject that exactly because of the snakes in the desert, and specifically the snake on the pole. Every Sunday morning when I when I spend time in God’s word and prayer, I thank God that 2 billion or more people all over the world are calling on the name of Jesus. Most don’t agree with me exactly on A-M, but they have the most important thing, looking up to Jesus, trusting in him.

For a lot of people in my little Reformed world, the concept of a mere Christianity isn’t popular. Those of a Reformational faith are some of the most intellectually inclined, and some of the most dogmatic. I used to be that way. It annoyed me that people did not believe certain things the way I believed them. I was clearly right and they were clearly wrong, so what’s their problem? One of the reasons I love being active on Twitter is because I come across so many people who can’t fathom how anyone could possibly disagree with them or see things differently than they do. I have fun with them and slyly mock them for their pretensions of absolute knowledge. One of the reasons I’m a fan of mere Christianity is because of our finitude. The older I get the more finite I realize I am, and the more I know the more I realize I don’t know. It’s hard to be dogmatic when I realize of all the knowledge in the universe, I know about a thimble full, if that. But for what I do believe, I do believe it dogmatically, and can defend it modestly well.

Mere Christianity is, of course, the title of one of the most famous Christian books of all time. It was a series of talks Lewis gave on the BBC translated to book form. He says in the introduction it “was to explain and defend the belief that that has been common to nearly all Christians at all times.” For me, if someone affirms the Nicene Creede, we’re on the same team. If they want to and are open to discussing theological distinctions, I’m all in, but I’m not compelled to convert them to mine. Often, I’ll assume my theological perspectives and see if that opens the door to discussions. At our moment in redemptive history, fighting a rampant secular tyranny with other Christians of different theological stripes as allies is the priority, not what I consider theological purity. There will be plenty of time for that in forever.

 

Yes, Christian Western Civilization is Superior to Every Other Civilization

Yes, Christian Western Civilization is Superior to Every Other Civilization

This assertion was unquestioned in the West for 1,500 years, not until one Karl Marx declared Christianity the enemy of his inevitable coming communist revolution. In their little Communist Manifesto, published in 1848, Marx and his benefactor, Friedrich Engels, outlined the four enemies of the revolution that must be abolished:

  1. Private property
  2. The family
  3. The nation-state
  4. Religion, i.e., Christianity

We’ll briefly explore philosophically why these four were on the top of Marx’s enemies list, but the entire secular leftist, progressive, liberal mission requires enmity toward these four pillars of Christian Western civilization. Once overt Marxism in the form of class-based communism failed in the 20th century, cultural Marxism was repackaged in the 1960s by the “New Left,” which transmogrified into woke in the 21st century. Whatever the package, these four pillars are their implacable enemies, and why if we’re to re-Christianize America and the West, it will include an equally implacable commitment to reestablish these four pillars. True societal and personal flourishing requires all four.

The Problem of Evil and Marx
To better understand the lay of the land, we must start at the ground floor of human perception about reality, or how we think about God and man. A person’s theology determines his anthropology. In other words, what we think about God determines our understanding of man, and this applies to atheists like Marx as much as Christians and other theists. Because life is exceedingly difficult and suffering universal, every religion and philosophy has a theodicy, from Greek theos, “god” and dikē, “justice”, meaning it addresses the problem of evil and why it exists. Even without God evil must be accounted for in some way, so in that sense must be justified. Thus the perennial question echoing in every human heart throughout history: why? Nobody is satisfied with, just because.

So having to explain the horrors of life somehow, Marx took his cue from the anthropology of Rousseau who asserted his belief in the innate goodness of man in the first words of his book, The Social Contract: “Man is born free, but everywhere he is in chains.” Out of Rousseau’s writings the idea of the noble savage, an ancient concept, gained traction in the Romantic movement of the 18th and 19th centuries, and as a materialist with no concept of original sin, Marx believed man was basically good. It was society in the form of capitalism that corrupted man and made him the perpetual victim of his oppressors.

This perspective on human nature completely eviscerates personal responsibility and human agency, making victimization the driver of human existence. The key fact of Marxist existence is oppression, and all relationships are built on the dynamic of oppressors and oppressed. No wonder those programmed into this worldview (primarily via education and culture) are so miserable. That is the point; only miserable people are ripe for revolution. Thus the anger and vitriol in the left’s never ending protests against everything. In Marxian terms it’s called revolutionary consciousness, and the revolution never ends, which is why eternal vigilance is required if liberty, prosperity, and justice are to prevail and spread. We need to be as patient, persistent, diligent, and determined as the Marxists have been for the last 175 years.

The Four Pillars of Superior Christian Western Civilization
Given the pillars are the enemies of the Marxists, what Americans used to call God-less communism, first we’ll need to explore why the first three are biblical Christian concepts. Then, we’ll need to see why they are required for us to be able to do what God commanded Adam and Even in the garden, and by extension us, to build civilization. We find this command, our mission, in Genesis 1:28:

And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”

Throughout Christian history this has been called the cultural or dominion mandate, and it didn’t stop when Adam and Eve rebelled and the earth fell into sin. In fact, this is what life is all about. In New Testament terms, Jesus gave us the same mission when he taught us to pray, “Thy kingdom come, they will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” Given the nature of modern Evangelical Christianity, we tend to see that prayer as moralism, meaning the more God’s kingdom comes the more moral we are, or the more we love and serve others, and it is of course those things, but it is more. This means everything on earth is to be influenced and defined by heavenly values, heavenly truth, wisdom, and righteousness, everything, our schools, our businesses, our homes, our money, our possessions, our buildings, our governments, our music, our art, our stories, every single thing.

This command is given to man made in God’s own image, as verse 27 says, male and female he created them. This is hugely significant for Christians in a secular age in which feminism and egalitarianism have disastrously infected not only Western society, but the church as well. That God differentiates his image into our two, and yes, only two natures, communicates how essential the two distinct natures of man are to true human flourishing. It starts with the most obvious interpretations of “be fruitful and multiply,” having babies. We’re told throughout Scripture that children are a blessing of God, but far too many Christians want to limit the blessings in their lives. We need to be reminded this is a command and not an option. In addition, it also means a life of bearing fruit, a life of multiplication, including in our occupations and relationships. If it is the Lord our God who gives us the ability to produce wealth as a confirmation of His covenant with us (Deut. 8:18), then wealth is an unqualified good, more is better than less. In other words, contrary to much teaching of Christian history, poverty is not a virtue, and in fact to be avoided if at all possible.

Then we add the words subdue and dominion or our mission to fruitfulness and multiplication. God has given man, male and female, the position, the authority as his vice regents to take the chaos in the world and turn it into blessing. Built into the creational order, male and female, man and woman, have different roles and abilities to bring blessing and true human flourishing. The Marxists in the form of feminism and egalitarianism want to destroy that by leveling everything. Down that path, as we’ve seen all too clearly and all too sadly, leads to destruction. Unfortunately, because of the fall creating blessing and flourishing was made harder, now full of painful toil, thorns and thistles, but the commands are no less pressing, applicable, and true.

Thankfully, we’re part of a cosmic story in the entire outworking of redemptive history, which gives us confidence and optimism as we are building the four pillars in the face of the death cult of Marxism, whatever package it comes in. The reason for our confidence and optimism is not based on us, but on Christ, the second Adam. What did Paul say about him specifically in this regard? It’s significant that Paul gives us the theology of the second Adam, Christ fulfilling what the first Adam could not, in I Corinthians 15, the epic chapter on the reality of the resurrection, first Christ’s, then ours. Right in the middle of the chapter he gives us a clue to what being the second Adam means:

25 For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. 26 The last enemy to be destroyed is death. 27 For he “has put everything under his feet.”

The enemies are anything that is contrary to righteousness and justice and love and order, goodness, beauty, and truth, as I said above, every single thing. The cultural and dominion mandate isn’t only what we might consider “spiritual,” but material as well, this earth and everything in it, and Christ will now successfully accomplish it. How? Through us! His church, his people, his body. How else would he do it, by magic? That’s the point of the metaphor of the church being his body, his arms and legs and feet and hands. He can’t put “all this enemies under his feet” without us! But it is by his power and authority as the ascended Lord and King of all creation that this will be done. This is why the Marxists have no chance because all they bring to the table, made abundantly clear in the age of Trump, is lies upon lies built on even more lies, like turtles, all the way down.

Let’s take a look at these four pillars from a biblical perspective and why it is imperative we defend them as Christians.

Private Property – The idea of human beings owning property is foundational to a well-ordered society with maximal liberty. Those who are not allowed to own property, as in communism, are no better off than slaves who can’t own property but are in fact the property of others. There is no direct affirmation of “private property” in the Bible, but it is everywhere assumed. The word property is common, used 50 to 60 times in the Old Testament (depending on the translation). The Hebrew word means possession. What a person possesses they own; it is their property. This is codified in the Ten Commandments in what is called “the second table of the law,” or six through ten. Most directly it is in the command that we shall not steal, which assume others’ property or possessions belong to them. The Lord makes the point even more powerfully in the tenth commandment against coveting, meaning we are not even to desire anything anyone else calls their own.

Contrary to the entire biblical witness, Marx is unequivocal in his antipathy to private property:

In this sense, the theory of the Communists may be summed up in the single sentence: Abolition of private property.

He does qualify this abolition with “in this sense” referring to the Edenic paradise prior to “the fall,” and before man the noble savage was corrupted:

Do you mean the property of the petty artisan and of the small peasant, a form of property that preceded the bourgeois form? There is no need to abolish that; the development of industry has to a great extent already destroyed it, and is still destroying it daily. Or do you mean modern bourgeois private property? But does wage-labor create any property for the laborer? Not a bit. It creates capital, i.e., that kind of property which exploits wage-labor, and which cannot increase except upon condition of begetting a new supply of wage-labor for fresh exploitation.15

In other words, to Marx real private property which is truly (spiritually, ontologically) owned by the person in “modern society” and “capitalist commodity production” can’t exist. So anything called private property in such a society, the only one that exists, must be “abolished” because it leads to “fresh exploitation.” In fact, contrary to Marx, private property is a critical means of fighting exploitation and tyranny.

The Family – As Christians, we don’t need to establish the biblical basis for the family, but we do need to argue that the family, once commonly referred to as the nuclear family, father, mother, children, is the natural order of things. Every society in world history developed with the family as the fundamental building block of its civilization. Even those cultures that practiced polygamy required the man’s commitment to his spouses and children. Through families a culture’s moral values and framework are passed on from generation to generation, and as such must be destroyed by communists. A society comprised primarily of families will never be ripe for revolution or develop the necessary revolutionary consciousness in the population. Thus, Marx is also unequivocal about this: 

Abolition of the family! Even the most radical flare up at this infamous proposal of the communists. On what foundation is the present family, the bourgeois family, based? On capital, on private gain. In its completely developed form this family exists only among the bourgeoisie.

Like with most of Marx’s assertions, he begs the question, assuming any family in “modern society” and “capitalist commodity production” is not in fact a “family.” Therefore, such “families” must be abolished. As with everything else in the Marxist philosophy, this is supposed to happen naturally as dialectical materialism works itself out in history: “The bourgeois family will vanish as a matter of course when its compliment vanishes, and both will vanish with the vanishing of capital.” As we witnessed in the 20th century, nothing vanishes “as a matter of course,” which is why communist regimes are always tyrannical, totalitarian, and bloody.

Marx also addresses education because that can’t be allowed to perpetuate the bourgeois family. Therefore, education must be rescued “from the influence of the ruling class,” and “home education” replaced by “social education.” This didn’t work at all in Marx’s economic model of communism, but has worked brilliantly in the cultural version. Christians must affirm and fight for the family at every point, preferably with many children.

The Nation State – It was the gospel, the good news, given to us in Christ, and expanded to the Gentiles by the Apostle Paul that made Christianity the only universal religion on earth. However, since Christianity isn’t Utopian, the idea of a borderless world never took hold among Christians. It is, however, a requirement for communists. There must be no hierarchy or authority because all such things, including the nation state, will vanish in the inexorable development of history.

As with his critics’ take on private property and the family, Marx addresses those who bring up this criticism, “The Communists are further reproached with desiring to abolish countries and nationality.” His reply? “The workingmen have no country.” So, just like property and family, which by Marxist definition can’t exist in a bourgeois society, neither can “countries and nationality.” This is yet another reason why Christianity was and is the implacable foe of Marxism because it stands in their way. This includes the modern nation-state which developed in Christian Western civilization in many ways because of its Jewish and Christian roots. The idea of nations or peoples is ubiquitous in the Bible, so it stands as a fundamental bulwark to the universalist pretensions of the Marxists as well as the modern globalists who are their offspring.

Religion, i.e., Christianity – Here we come to the crux of the matter. Marx knew it was either Christianity or communism; both can’t exist in the same world. He never saw the need to argue for or in any way try to prove his atheism. Like many Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment thinkers, it was too obvious to bother. Everything in Marx’s philosophy flowed from his anti-Christian animus. Even though the cultural Marxists believed Marx was in error about economics being the driver of revolution, they embraced this central aspect of Marx’s worldview, that hostility to Christianity would make perpetual revolution possible.

Religion, by which Marx always means Christianity, gets the same treatment as every other “traditional idea.” It is dismissed as historically conditioned oppression. His most famous take on religion, or infamous depending on one’s perspective, is not in the Manifesto, but in his “Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right”:

Religious suffering is, at one and the same time, the expression of real suffering and a protest against real suffering. Religion is the sight of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people.

The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is the demand for their real happiness. To call on them to give up their illusions about their condition is to call on them to give up a condition that requires illusions. . . .

The criticism of religion disillusions man, so that he will think, act, and fashion his reality like a man who has discarded his illusions and regained his senses, so that he will move around himself as his own true Sun. Religion is only the illusory Sun which revolves around man as long as he does not revolve around himself.

His criticism of religion is tinged with a contrived concern for people who supposedly suffer from oppression and look to an illusion to dull the pain. These people may think they are happy, but that too is an illusion keeping them from real happiness. You have to hand it to the guy. Here is a miserable man selling happiness to people who by definition will always be miserable (it’s a requirement) until the revolution brings everything to the dialectical end of history. And people bought it! And still do. The Satanic core at the heart of Marxism is blatant: man must be his own God, he must “revolve around himself.” As Satan said to Eve, you will be like God, knowing good and evil, and like Eve, Marxism has brought only misery, death, and destruction.

Some might argue that the civilizational sweepstakes isn’t just between Christianity and Marxism, and they would be right. However, in the history of the world the evidence from every civilization is that the influence of Christianity is necessary for a society to truly flourish. Tom Holland makes this case persuasively in his book Dominion, a must read for anyone who thinks the blessings of the modern world are in any way a secular Enlightenment inspired phenomenon. In fact, both the Enlightenment and secularism are a product of the Christian West. Hindu, Asian, and African cultures only prospered to the degree they were influenced by Christianity, including free enterprise, private property, and any kind of liberal, democratic governance. American Indians were a noble people, but the American continent was a brutal place before Christians began to colonize it. This is not even to mention the rule of law and political liberty and freedom of conscience brought to America from the British Isles, and eventually to the entire world. Or does anybody who has a choice want to live in the Islamic world unless they are committed Muslims?

The superiority of Christian Western civilization is made all the more apparent by one of the great challenges of the 21st century, illegal immigration. It is primarily to America and the once Christian nations of Europe where the world’s poor flee for the hope of a better life. I’m not sure there is a better testimony to the superiority of Christian Western civilization than that, even in its current secular iteration. The task before us, now, is to make America, and the West, Christian again, even as we seek to disciple the nations.

 

The Growth of Pietism and Secularism’s Inevitable Dominance

The Growth of Pietism and Secularism’s Inevitable Dominance

Pietism and secularism lead to the same thing: a secular society devoid of Christian influence. As I’ve argued here previously, Pietism and secularism are two sides of the same coin; one requires the other, and each contributes to the other. This is an odd notion for many because Pietists are extremely religious and secularists are not. In fact, there is a species of human in the modern world called Christian secularist. This Pietistic-secular dynamic is critically important for us to understand because if we’re to bring heaven to earth in obedience to Jesus, we need to understand the lay of the land, and the challenges a secular society presents to us. Because secularism is the air we breathe, like the water fish swim in, few give any thought about why it exists or where it came from. To most people, including Christians, it’s just the way things are, and the way things are supposed to be, but it’s a relatively new phenomenon in the history of the world.

Secularism is primarily a perspective on society, and how it is arranged. It developed out of the Enlightenment in the seventeenth century as a reaction to the protracted wars of religion in Europe, and the idea that a Christian state led to those wars. Religion and politics when combined created misery and strife, so secularism’s proponents had the benign intention of creating civil peace by getting religion, meaning the church, out of the governing business. And we agree, representatives of the institutional church, be they elders, deacons, priests, bishops, pastors, etc., should not as official representatives of the church dictate government policy. But in due course secularism became like a societal Pac Man gobbling up anything smacking of religious belief, insisting it belongs only in someone’s personal life, not in the public square. This slowly developed in the 20th century, and eventually Pac Man gobbled up the last vestiges of a Christian America in the 1960s.

By this point you may already see where Pietists and secularists hold hands. For the Pietist, Christianity is primarily a personal faith without direct societal implications. Whatever cultural impact the Christian faith has on a society is not planned or sought, but a spillover from Christians faithfully living out obedience to God in their lives. There is a continuum of such beliefs on the pietistic Christian side, but as American Christianity became increasingly pietistic, it became increasingly personalized and culturally irrelevant.

We’ll talk about the myth of neutrality below, the bridge that brings the Pietist and the secularist together, but as became apparent over time, Christianity as a societal and cultural force never had a chance. As the 20TH century progressed, and culturally Christianity waned, secularism became more aggressive and we discovered it was a jealous God; it would have no other Gods before it. This was likely inevitable given the historical forces we see play out in the 18th and 19th centuries, but the changing nature of Americanized Christianity made secularism’s triumphant march all the easier. 

How Pietism Took Over American Christianity
The first Great Awakening, while looked on positively by most Christians in our day, had within it the seeds of the two story Christianity I wrote about previously. The terms Old Lights and New Lights were initially used during that time, and we can guess which were for this awakening and which weren’t. New Lights generally referred to Congregationalists and Baptists in New England who embraced the revivals spreading throughout the colonies, while the traditional branches of their denominations, or the Old Lights, did not, seeing them as a threat to their authority, and their emotional appeals as a recipe for social chaos. Jonathan Edwards described his congregants’ vivid experiences with grace as causing a “new light” in their perspective on sin and atonement, and thus the terms were born. Old Light ministers such as Bostonian Charles Chauncy (1592-1672), a Congregational clergyman and second president of Harvard College, decried the awakening as delusionary enthusiasm. Even without delusional before it, enthusiasm was not a compliment in the 17th century. It connoted not merely overly emotional, but implied a claim to have received divine communications or private revelations. That was positively dangerous.

In God’s providence, we largely have George Whitfield to thank for the Great Awakening. Whitfield’s first of his seven tours of the colonies was in 1738. America was a thoroughly Christian culture steeped in Protestant Christianity and biblical knowledge, and because of Pietism’s growing influence in America the emotional appeal of an itinerate preacher like Whitfield found fertile soil for the gospel message. As the saying goes, timing is everything, and Whitfield became America’s first celebrity. He preached upwards of a thousand sermons a year, at times to as many as 25 or 30 thousand people. He also set the foundation of a particularly American church reflected in a dogmatic yet broad ecumenical mentality, with iconoclastic and populist impulses, thanks in large part to Pietism. These would also set the tenor of what would become the American Revolution. The twentieth century focus on Christians being “born again” started in this time. New Lights even began challenging established church pastors as nominal Christians because they hadn’t experienced the “new birth.” They exhorted the true believers to leave the lukewarm established congregations and join new, “pure” churches. The establishment of the day didn’t like that one bit.

We can see in the New Light ministers a rejection of the rationalism of the Enlightenment with their appeal to the emotions of the crowds or congregants, often resulting in immediate conversions. Old Light sermons tended toward the intellectual and sober religious practice, and preached the dangers of “enthusiasm.” From this point American Christianity began the embrace of the anti-intellectual, anti-doctrinal approach to Christianity of German Pietism which would come to dominate Evangelicalism in the 20th century. By the 19th century and the Second Great Awakening, the newness of the emotional appeal was no longer an issue, but became common in revivalist preaching. Nineteenth century revivalism largely replaced Scripture with experience and emotion, divine sovereignty with human free will, a high church ecclesiology and sacramental focus with the parachurch, liturgy with revivalistic techniques, psalms and hymns with more of what we call today praise music, and a properly ordered hierarchy with egalitarianism. This Great Awakening was also driven by the influence of Methodist revivalist preachers, thanks to John Wesley’s indefatigable efforts in Britian and sending ministers to the Colonies.

At the same time developing in Dublin, Ireland, in the 1820s and 30s, were the Plymouth Brethren, and something that almost a hundred years later would come to be called dispensationalism. These men came out of the larger Brethren movement, the most famous and massively influential would prove to be John Nelson Darby. It was this small group that developed the eschatology of what was then known as “the new premillennialism.” As it developed and spread through fundamentalism in the 20th century, dispensationalism become the dominant understanding of “end times,” exploding in cultural awareness with the popularity of Hal Lindsey’s The Late Great Planet Earth in the 1970s, which by the end of the century had sold an estimated 35 million copies. It inspired another “end times” cultural phenomenon in the 90’s, The Left Behind series written by written by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins, which was turned into a hit movie film series of five movies in the early 2000s staring Kirk Cameron.

It is helpful to study the development of American Christianity through the nineteenth century into the twentieth and how it prepares the way for dispensationalism to completely dominate the Evangelical mind in the latter part of the century. Secularism was developing at the same time playing off the dominant fundamentalism of the early part of the century to set the table for secularism’s domination. It was a kind of dysfunctional symbiotic relationship. Fundamentalism put up a good fight but because of its Pietistic assumptions and theology, it didn’t have a chance.

Fundamentalism’s Losing Battle with Secularism
The nineteenth century set up everything that came after in the twentieth. While revivalism and a growing dispensationalism was sweeping the country in the 1800s, at the same time in Germany biblical higher criticism was itself sweeping Christendom. German intellectuals completely embraced Enlightenment rationalism, including its anti-supernatural bias. This meant the Bible was merely a book written by men and could not be God’s revelation to man. The Bible’s critics, however, did not want to abandon Christianity just yet, so Christianity was thereby transformed into moralism, little more than the golden rule, and the world was given liberal Christianity. The “Father of modern liberal theology” was a Christian from Prussia, Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834), himself no doubt influenced by German Lutheran Pietism.

The great Princeton Theologian J. Gresham Machen (1881-1937) was kicked out of the Presbyterian Church and founded Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia in 1929. He spent much of his professional life battling liberal Christianity in the Presbyterian Church and Princeton Seminary. A bastion of Christian theological orthodoxy in the 19th century, Princton produced scholars who were titans of American Protestantism, including Charles Hodge, his son A.A. Hodge, and B.B. Warfield. By 1929 liberalism had won. In his 1923 book Christianity & Liberalism, Machen argues that “The liberal preacher is really rejecting the whole basis of Christianity, which is a religion founded not on aspirations but on facts.” I would add historical facts, which if they did not happen, there is no Christianity. The liberals would not see it that way; the facts didn’t much matter to them. Machen concludes that liberal Christianity is a different religion all together, and the rejection of supernaturalism is at the heart of that difference.

Liberal Christianity in the early 20th century, unfortunately, had all the cultural and intellectual momentum, not least because of German higher criticism. However, it ran into a movement which grew out of revivalism and the Second Great Awakening, fundamentalism, which would not bow the knee to this scholarship taking the intellectual world by storm. It is difficult for most Christians today to grasp just how powerful an attack German high criticism, and its liberal offshoot, was on Christianity. It had developed over a century which produced secular superstars like Marx, Darwin, Nietzsche, and Freud, and going into the 20th had developed a seemingly unstoppable momentum in the form of liberal Christianity. From a cultural perspective, it appeared conservative Christianity’s days might be numbered, but fundamentalism stood in the way.

Out of these two opposing forces came the fundamentalist-modernist controversies. While I’ve critiqued the awakenings and their tendency to an overly emotional Christianity, the fundamentalists, the inheritors of the revivalist tradition, were solidly conservative and refused to give up on the historical, supernatural foundations of Christianity. Fundamentalism today carries pejorative connotations and few Christians embrace the term, but when coined in 1920s it simply meant conservatives who stood up against the liberals. It originated with a book called The Fundamentals, a project conceived by a Southern California oil millionaire and edited by Bible teachers and evangelists, and published in twelve paperback volumes from 1910 to 1915. This served to coalesce those unwilling to lay down on the tracks in front of the intellectual and cultural freight train of modernism—not that fundamentalists had a chance, culturally speaking. Around this time conservative Christianity began its rather quick decline into cultural irrelevance and caricature.

Conservative revivalist Christianity in some ways allowed liberals to pass themselves off as orthodox Christians. In Fundamentalism and American Culture, George Marsden points out the similarity between these two diametrically opposed views of Christianity:

The evangelical tradition had long been strong on the condemnation of the appetites of the flesh—with alcohol and sex seen as the chief temptations. In the pulpit, liberals could not easily be distinguished from conservatives on such practical points, and practical morality was often for American Protestants what mattered most.

Both stood on moralism, and liberal preachers were good at sounding orthodox when in fact they were not. Eventually, however, an anti-supernatural Christianity that appeared unstoppable in the 1920s withered and what proved unstoppable was the supernatural religion of the Bible and conservative Christianity. Unfortunately, on the cultural front the latter was not only stoppable, but proved no match for the freight train of secularism.

The freight train as a metaphor for secularism is apropos. Starting with Renes Descartes and rationalism in the 17th century birthing the Enlightenment, the forces of societal secularism in the West were likely never to be stopped no matter how intellectually robust the Christianity was standing in its way. Unfortunately, a personalized, pietized Christianity made it all the easier, fundamentalism especially so. Nineteenth century conservative Protestant Christianity is exemplified by evangelist D.L. Moody (1837-1899). All things, including doctrine, took a backseat to winning souls. By the early 20th century, according to Marsden, for Christians “evangelism overshadowed everything else,” including battling for the integrity of the Bible against higher criticism. That would be left to the Reformed intellectual types at Princeton like Warfield and Machen, but they were a tiny part of the conservative Protestant world. Machen, however, would prove prophetic, not only in his assessment of Christianity and liberalism, but Christianity and Pietism in the current form of fundamentalism.

According to Marsden, Machen lived his entire professional career in an atmosphere “in which the leading intellectuals, and even many theologians, ridiculed traditionalist Christianity.” Machen believed the hostility to the gospel was “due to the intellectual atmosphere in which men are living,” and the evangelism of the conservatives and the social work of the liberals must be “founded on a solid intellectual base.” For him, the key to the battle to win men to Christ was in the universities. He believed the cultural crisis was rooted in an intellectual crisis, and “an attempt to bypass culture and the intellect, the arts and the sciences, would simply make the situation worse.” The Pietism dominating Christianity at the time ensured that would be the case. Culturally, the final nail in the coffin would be the “Scopes Monkey Trial,” in 1925. The cultural irrelevance and caricature of conservative Christianity as full of backward unsophisticated rubes started here, thanks to the journalist with the acerbic wit who covered the trial, H.L. Mencken. It wasn’t evolution on trial, but the caricature in the popular imagination of fundamentalism. Some fundamentalists certainly tried to fight back, but intellectually and culturally they were no match, so much of conservative Christianity became culturally invisible; fundamentalists separated themselves to maintain their purity in the midst of a hostile culture.

Pietism and the Secular Myth of Neutrality
As with any movement among peoples and cultures there are a variety of complex factors that cannot be neatly packaged as a cause. The same is true with these two isms, and we can see how they grew symbiotically together as a poisonous weed in Christian Western culture. But as much as I denounce secularism, it wouldn’t be nearly the obstacle it is if most Christians weren’t pietists, effectively Christian secularists.

In addition to this faulty, dichotomized version of Christianity, another reason most Christians believe in secularism is because of a misunderstanding of Christianity and the state. Many Christians see the phrase “Christian nation” as an oxymoron, a contradiction in terms. I’ll give examples from two well respected scholars, Larry Arnn, President of Hillsdale College, and Carl Trueman, an author and professor at Grove City College. Arnn had a discussion on his podcast with an Episcopal Bishop on the topic, ironically, of Bold Christianity in a Secular World. When he said, “A Christian nation is an oxymoron,” I started yelling at my little MP3 player I was listening to. “No, Larry, it’s not!” Why would he say such a thing? I’ll get to that with my second example. I saw the following on Twitter from a forward Trueman wrote to James Bannerman’s book, Church of Christ:

If the church’s power is spiritual, then the notion that the civil magistrate should be used to coerce belief is shown to involve a terrible confusion of categories. To put it bluntly, the sword cannot be used to impose Christianity. . . . Churches are Christian; it is hard to see how a nation my qualify as such.

Carl, who said anything about those in government compelling others to believe anything? Larry Arnn basically said the exact same thing. In logic this is called a straw man fallacy. By exaggerating, misrepresenting, or just completely fabricating someone’s argument, it’s much easier to present one’s own position as being reasonable. Of all those who are convinced the Bible and the Great Commission calls for nations to become Christian, not one believes this includes forcing people to believe anything. So, because they believe this is what being a Christian nation is, and it most certainly is not, they believe a nation should be secular. This, however, assumes a secular nation can be morally or religiously neutral, which is a metaphysical impossibility.

The idea that God’s rule (theocracy) based on Christ in a society is inherently tyrannical exists for a reason. It came primarily from a certain slice of Christendom in the Middle Ages where tyrannical force was indeed used to coerce belief in certain things. We know this as the Inquisition, a judicial procedure and later an institution that was established in the 12th century by the Catholic Church to identify heresy. Before we Protestants get on our high horses, our forebearers thought they too could compel belief. This is a complicated situation of the Middle Ages that historical ignorance and bias only makes worse. Religion and state were not separated, and to think people at the time should have thought otherwise is, as C.S. Lewis put it, chronological snobbery. Protestant Christian princes, and everyone else, thought heresy would create societal instability, and it must be stopped.

Because Christian and non-Christian secularists alike believe the rule of Christianity and God’s law in the state is inherently tyrannical, their answer is the rule of secularism, a neutral public square where justice and not religion rule. Such a thing, however, has never existed because it cannot exist. A nation’s culture and laws are a reflection of its worldview, its faith commitments. Its culture and laws are the externalization of its religion. Doug Wilson calls this “inescapable theonomy” because “all societies are theocratic.” Vishal Mangalwadi states an unalterable fact of existence:

Every civilization is tied together by a final source of authority that gives meaning and ultimate intellectual, moral, and social justification to its culture.

Embedded in this view of secularism is an assumption, the myth of neutrality, a metaphorically naked public square. Neutrality assumes religion is fundamentally a private, personal thing that only messes up the tranquility of society if it is brought into how a society is governed. It’s easy to see how Pietism feeds into this.

While the early Pietists were certainly not secularists, they had something in common with modern Pietists. Both believed personal piety would spill over and affect the morals of society, therefore, the more Christians in a society the more Christian it is. There is obviously truth to this, but societies must be governed according to some “final source of authority,” and if Christians aren’t governing and insisting that it is the Bible and God’s law ultimately in King Jesus, that authority will be the state. In the year of our Lord 2025 that has become obvious, and unless Christians reject Pietism for a more engaged Christianity, secular statist tyranny will never be far away.

 

This is Us, Alzheimer’s and the Programming of Modern Medicine

This is Us, Alzheimer’s and the Programming of Modern Medicine

My wife and I recently watched a TV series called This is Us, and one of the main characters came down with Alzheimer’s. Given I’ve had a health epiphany because of Covid, I now see portrayals of disease like this differently than I used to. This Is Us was a series that aired on NBC from 2016-2022. I caught the pilot on Netflix, and it brought tears to my eyes several times, as did most episodes, and we were hooked. Even though it’s typically 21st century secular and left, the story lines do a great job capturing the glory and wreckage of fallen people living in fallen bodies in a fallen world, but without God. It’s wonderful and pathetic on so many levels, not least what it reveals about how indoctrinated most people are by modern medicine.

As a baby boomer I was born smack dab in the middle of the age of “experts,” and nowhere were experts more revered and trusted than in medicine. We turned over our health to doctors and the medical profession because certainly they would not steer us the wrong way. In This is Us doctors are never questioned, nor is what caused the disease. For the most part, modern medicine treats disease as a mystery because doctors are primarily trained to treat symptoms with medication or surgery.

My health journey is an ongoing affair, with the learning curve seemingly always going up. Given the complexity of the human body that doesn’t surprise me. I’ll share more of what I’ve learned below, but last year God graciously gave me a bad case of Dermatitis so I could see in full relief the MO of modern medicine. Early in 2024 I started developing dandruff. Soon there was itching on my scalp, and then red itchy spots on my arms and legs which in due course spread to different parts of my body. How fun! Given I’m still clawing my way up the learning curve, I decided I should go to a Dermatologist, a modern medical professional. She said I had some kind of yeast infection, a fungal issue, and proscribed medication for my scalp and a steroid, anti-inflammatory, for my skin. Then she gave me a piece of paper that said the following, and I kid you not:

Dermatitis is an inflammatory response of the body with no known cause.

As I’m reading this in her office maintaining self-control was difficult, but inside I’m thinking, what? Are you kidding me? No known cause? Seriously? I’d learned enough by this point to know everything has a cause, but modern medicine isn’t interested in causes. Lest you think my experience is unique, it isn’t. Casey Means is a doctor who at 31 after five years of surgical residency quit because my experience is all too common. In her book, Good Energy, she relates this stunning fact:

Despite surgically treating inflamed tissues of the head and neck day in and day out, not once—ever—was I taught what causes the inflammation in the human body or about its connection to the inflammatory chronic diseases so many Americans are facing today. Not once was I prompted to ask, Huh, why all the inflammation?

A tragic example of this in practice was a family member of ours in her 70s who went into the hospital in September 2023 with pancreatitis. Any word with “itis” on the end means inflammation. Did the doctors try to discover what caused the inflammation? No. Instead, they treated the symptoms with twelve plus surgeries, and she died horribly spending the final months of her life in a hospital. As we’ll see, these doctors could not see this any other way because that is how they were trained, and how the whole system sees disease. They tried to do the best they could, thought they were helping her, and ended up killing her.

Dermatitis caused me to finally start seriously looking for a wholistic, integrative medical professional. I did my research and eventually decided on a nutritionist because this had to be something diet and lifestyle related, and it was. After a couple tests, she said the problem was gut related, as is so much disease. I had extremely bad fungal overgrowth, which was the main problem, and bacterial overgrowth as well. This caused something called leaky gut which eventually leads to inflammation. This had obviously been developing for a long time, and it finally caught up with me. She put me on a protocol of herbs and probiotics, and tweaked my diet which had gotten pretty good over the last several years as it was. It instantly started getting better, and completely went away. No known cause indeed!

So now when I see a typical portrayal of something like Alzheimer’s on a TV show it ticks me off. For most people, and modern medicine in general, disease is a crap shoot, a matter of luck, or not, of throwing the dice and hoping you don’t get snake eyes. Are there exceptions to the rule, where someone may do absolutely everything right and some disease strikes them? Of course, but that is not the rule. God gave us a creation that can sustain the creatures He created, and that means we live in a cause and effect universe. With certain inputs we can reasonably expect certain results. He’s given us that reasonable confidence as a gift, but we never presume upon his grace. He may have plans for us much bigger than we can imagine. The Westminster Shorter Catechism # 66 says it in its succinct best:

Quest. 66. What is the reason annexed to the fifth commandment?

The reason annexed to the fifth commandment, is a promise of long life and prosperity (as far as it shall serve for God’s glory and their own good) to all such as keep this commandment.

If our good and God’s glory includes our suffering, so be it. We will trust him as best we can. Otherwise we trust the gracious gifts of his creation to do what He intended them to do.

Modern Medicine, How We Got Here: Pasteur, Béchamp and Germ Theory
To understand where we are we have to go back to the nineteenth century and the foundation of modern medicine, germ theory, and the work of two men, Louis Pasteur (1822-1895), who everybody has heard of, and Antoine Béchamp (1816-1908), who few people have. Their titanic battle over germ theory is a microcosm of the same battle in the twenty first century over health and modern medicine. Once germ theory became the only accepted theory of disease, the template for modern medicine set.

If you do an internet search for, “Pasteur, Béchamp, and Germ Theory,” one of the top results you’ll get is a Wikipedia article entitled, “Germ theory denialism.” That’s almost funny. The word denialism will always tell you the accepted cultural elite position on a topic; and it shall not be questioned! During the Covid era it was used a lot. I believe it originated with those questioning the Holocaust, so Holocaust denialism became a thing, and after that anyone questioning the accepted narrative, whatever it might be, was labeled a denier. This, of course, is meant to shut off any debate on an issue. Thankfully because of the Gutenberg Press of the 21st century, the Internet, that is increasingly impossible. Everyone is indoctrinated to believe in germ theory as the unquestioned explanation for disease, and it is extremely difficult to see it any other way.

For 60 years I had been indoctrinated like everyone else to believe disease as something primarily coming from outside of us, that some little invisible thing invades us causes disease. That disease already lived inside me was hard to wrap my mind around, and more difficult to grasp was that I was the one who determined whether that happened or not. Would the little invisible thing invading me have an inviting space to do its dirty work, or not. That was up to me, not the little invisible thing.

Contrary to Germ Theory, Béchamp developed something called terrain theory. In the former germs are what we need to worry about, finding ways to kill them off with some kind of medicine once they get inside us. Terrain theory, by contrast, argues if the body is well and balanced then germs being a natural part of life and the environment will be dealt with by the body without causing disease. In other words, a germ can cause sickness in one person and not another based on the “terrain,” meaning the inner workings of the body’s immune system. A compromised “terrain” means the body’s inner environment makes it susceptible to viruses and parasites, etc. Therefore, it is far more important to work on the terrain of the body than worry about the latest germ or virus.

Pasteur’s victory for germ theory meant modern medicine’s focus on, well, medicine, was a foregone conclusion. There is a reason we call it medicine given we ingest or consume something as a treatment or cure. You’ll see as we talk about medical education, terrain is well down on the list of the modern medical professional’s priorities, as in pretty much invisible.

The Flexner Report and Modern Medical Education
Few people in or out of the medical profession have ever heard of Abraham Flexner and his report, the importance of which cannot be overestimated. The Flexner Report, published in 1910, transformed the nature and process of medical education in America. In 1908 the Carnegie Foundation authorized a study of medical schools in the country, which were visited and assessed based on how medical education was then currently practiced. Flexner then developed criteria on how doctors would be educated and trained and thus made acceptable to the American Medical Association. Both the AMA, which was founded in 1847, and Flexner accepted germ theory without question. By then cultural elites in the West could see the practice of healthcare in no other way. This can be seen in many places in the report, but one quote will be sufficient to understand the fundamental assumptions of modern medicine. Speaking of pathology and bacteriology, he says the goal is “to master the abnormal,” and in the that context says,

Now the agents and forces which invade the body to its disadvantage play their game, too, according to law.

Something outside of the body invades it and causes “the abnormal,” so the entire medical system became focused not on the patient’s health and enabling the body’s immune system to successfully handle the invaders, but on medicine used to defeat it. On the very next page, however, Flexner seems to contradict himself. He writes, the doctor “through measures essentially educational to enforce, the conditions that present disease and make positively for physical and moral well-being.” This and only one other minor reference to a more holistic approach is about it because by that time the assumptions of germ theory were dominant in the medical profession. Science was seen as all powerful, while God’s creation, the human body and the immune system, were victims of forces beyond their control. Man would save the day and defeat disease though his ingenuity.

Henry S. Prichett, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, said the report was basically agnostic regarding which kind of healthcare the medical professional practiced, as he claims in the introduction:

In making this study the schools of all medical sects have been included. It is clear that so long as a man is to practice medicine, the public is equally concerned in his right preparation for the profession, whatever he calls himself—allopath, homeopath, eclectic, osteopath, or whatnot. It is equally clear that he should be grounded in the fundamental science upon which medicine rests, whether he practices under one name or under another.

In practice, however, once the “scientific standards” were set by the “experts,” anyone straying from them would be considered a quack not to be entrusted with the license of an educated medical practitioner. To that end, Flexner succeeded in aligning medical schools along the university model as the standard for all medical schools. This orientation had its origins in German medical education as American educators and physicians became enamored with university medical schools in Europe. Thus schools ignored what they considered “outdated and unscientific methods,” so doctors received minimal nutritional education and defaulted to treatments primarily with pharmaceuticals. Flexner writes:

The only authoritative competent to pass on such values are trained experts. The entire matter would be in their hands if the state boards should in every state delegate the function of evaluating entrance credentials to competently organized institution of learning.

Such institutions accepted the pharmaceutical paradigm which was the inevitable result of germ theory and the rise of science. The “trained experts” believed it was primarily medicine that healed disease. The profit motive, as well, cannot be ruled out given the financial backers of the report were two of the richest men in the world, Carnagie and John D. Rockefeller. While not downplaying their philanthropic motives, they also likely believed they could bring the production model to the medical profession.

The rise of Big Pharma was built into this new university model of medical education. After the report, funding was only given to schools following its recommendations. Without the money, alternative schools of medicine couldn’t compete and disappeared. The challenge with nutritional or holistic healthcare is that there’s no money in it. You can’t patent something readily available from nature like you can something from a lab, which is why I was almost 61 years old before I first heard the saying, “food is medicine.” In addition to the challenge of the profit motive, insurance companies believe they have no incentive to cover anything other than medicine, and they often won’t work with holistic doctors. Keeping people healthy so they don’t need medicine or medical care in the first place is a terrible business model!

Of course, Flexner and those who supported him had the best of intentions, as do those in the modern medical profession, but they were terribly naïve about the monster they were creating. When I read this sentence I had to laugh, sadly, especially in light of the Covid debacle:

Scientific medicine, therefore, has its eyes open; it takes its risks consciously; it does not cure defects of knowledge by partisan heat; it is free of dogmatism and open-armed to demonstration from whatever quarter.

This was written in 1910 when science was the unquestioned, benevolent, and all powerful god of the age who would never disappoint but only bring untold blessings to all the peoples of the earth. Unfortunately, Flexner and the entire Western cultural elite missed the little fact that science is practiced, and its results applied and implemented, by sinful human beings. Thus it can never be free of “partisan heat” or “free of dogmatism,” and as we saw with Covid, it most definitely is not “open-armed to demonstration from whatever quarter.” In fact as currently practiced, modern medicine is the exact opposite of all these. If, for example, you question the efficacy of vaccines, you are automatically discounted as a “denier.”  Let’s see what this mentality has turned into as medicine is practiced today.

Disease Care and Silo Medicine
Looking at modern medicine, keep in mind this quotation from muckraking journalist Upton Sinclair (1878-1968), the author of the well-known book about the Chicago meat packing plants, The Jungle (1906):

It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.

Human nature is predictable, and money makes human beings as predictable as the sunrise. Reality, however, is a stubborn thing, and in due course reality always wins. Another word for reality is truth, and truth eventually exposes lies because of he who is The Truth. Jesus told his disciples (John 14:6) he is “the way and the truth and the life,” so truth isn’t merely the nature of things but a person who defines existence because he created it all. This is why no matter how messed up things are, no matter how stubborn human nature and human beings can be, we can have confidence our good and God’s glory will always win out in the end. The Covid neutron bomb of truth, as I’ve come to call it, makes this abundantly clear. We saw the modern medical industrial complex in all its malevolent ugliness on full display during that debacle, and it revealed to millions of people all over the world its ruinous business model. And yes, it most definitely is a business.

The fundamental problem with modern medicine is that, according to Casey Means, “every institution that impacts health—from medical schools to insurance companies to hospitals to pharma companies—makes money on ‘managing’ disease, not curing patients.” The evidence to prove this point? “Patients aren’t getting better.” What Casey calls silo medicine is built into the entire medical paradigm. If someone chooses not to be a general practitioner, your basic family doctor, they will become a specialist in a narrow subset of medicine, and doctors are encouraged throughout their education to “stay in their lane.” Doctors thus are not taught to see the body as a system but as isolated parts. If there is a problem with a part, they treat that part. Just like my Dermatologist, doctors primarily treat symptoms within their silo.

Inflammation caused by the body’s immune system appears to be the cause of most disease, yet as Casey points out, the cause of inflammation is never addressed by medical professionals. That is shocking, but as I was told, my Dermatitis “was an immune response of the body with no known cause.” If God had not graciously opened my eyes I would have spent the rest of my life managing my disease as another victim of modern silo medicine. Yes, the medical profession can do incredible things, as when dealing with acute issues like injury or infection, but the entire system is broken and millions of Americans suffer for it. I trust in due course more doctors will wake up and transform the profession so it treats the body and health wholistically. In the meantime, God has provided us everything we need to manage our own health, with knowledge readily available so we no longer have to play the dice game of modern medicine.