It’s July 4th and we could all use an encouraging word. O’pine no more. The New Man Report, delivers with this excellent article that puts Christianity and the Church in it’s “Global” context. Predictions abound that true followers of Christ are a dying breed. This is true, but that is an assessment of the “good ‘ole US of A” as we enter deeper into the throes of God’s “judicial equity” associated with covenant breaking and lawlessness that comes upon any Nation that forgets God.
Be encouraged! The following article demonstrates that it is not only a fallacious premise but sheer arrogance to view the condition of what is going on here as the basis for what the Exalted Christ is doing, or isn’t doing, in all the Nations of the earth.
Read the following New Man eMagazine editor’s blog and you will join the Psalmist in declaring, “Let the Nations Rejoice!”
[rgh]
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Is Christianity Dying?
Ah, the arrogance of the west. When we spot a trend in our culture, we tend to think the whole world will follow suit. Nowhere is this ethnocentricity more evident than when it comes to the topic of religion.
In his book The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity, Philip Jenkins highlights the tendency of western commentators to make grave intonations about the plight of Christendom. He cites a popular article from The New York Times.
“Visit a church at random next Sunday and you will probably encounter a few dozen people sprinkled thinly over a sanctuary that was built to accommodate hundreds or even thousands. The empty pews and white-haired congregants lend credence to those who argue that traditional religious worship is dying out.”
Many voices echo this refrain. Popular writer John Shelby Spong, who wrote the best-seller Why Christianity must Change or Die, travels widely delivering his grandiose ultimatum to the faithful. Spong declares that unless Christians abandon such beliefs as Jesus’ resurrection or the idea of a personal God, Christianity “will soon take its place alongside other ancient religions in the museum.”
Scholar Arthur Peacock agrees, insisting that the church drop what he calls “incomprehensible and unbelievable” teachings of supernaturalism in order to be credible to the world.
Jenkins writes that these statements reveal several misperceptions. Contrary to the gloomy forecasts, statistics show that the percentage of Christians, even in the U.S., is holding steady or even rising slightly. Critics tend to focus on declining numbers in high church traditions while ignoring the massive nondenominational congregations springing up across the country. They also overlook something else: the majority of earth’s population. Jenkins writes:
“Viewed from Cambridge or Amsterdam, such pleas make excellent sense, but in the context of global Christianity, this kind of liberalism looks distinctly dated. It would not be easy to convince a congregation in Seoul or Nairobi that Christianity is dying, when their main concern is building a worship facility big enough for the 10,000 or 20,000 members they have gained over the past few years. And these new converts are mostly teenagers and young adults, very few with white hair. Nor can these churches be easily told that, in order to reach a mass audience, they must bring their message more into accord with western secular orthodoxies.”
A brief survey of second and third world countries (or as some say the “majority world”) reveals an explosion of Christian vitality not seen since the earliest days of the faith. Just look at the statistics.
· In 1900 less than 10 percent of Africans were Christians. Today the number has surged to over 47 percent.
· In 1949 China had only 4 million Christians. Today the number stands at about 82 million. That’s over a 20x increase, even factoring in the country’s total population growth. Former Beijing bureau chief for Time magazine David Aikman projects that within a few decades 1 in 3 Chinese could be Christian.
· Christian faith is also on the rise in South America. Many South American countries report a catholic majority and a charismatic form of Protestantism is growing most quickly, sweeping whole cities with revival.
· The spread of the faith in Korea has been just as astounding. Forget Saddleback. Seoul is now home to the world’s largest church. And Korean Christians are not content with mere domestic growth. Christianity Today reports that now “Korea sends more missionaries than any country but the U.S. And it won’t be long before it is number one.”
Even with this veritable florescence of Christianity, right now somewhere in America a professor is sketching out the soon-ending “Christian Era” before a class of credulous freshmen. On some radio show there’s an “expert” opining about the decline of Christendom.
And meanwhile thousands are hearing the gospel for the first time and responding in faith.
Of course we Christians aren’t surprised. We remember that someone else made a prediction long ago. Standing before his disciples with fire in his eyes Jesus promised to build his church. The gates of hell couldn’t stop it, he told them. Nothing could. Nearly 2,000 years later 2 billion people the world over claim to follow the Carpenter from Nazareth. I guess He wasn’t kidding.
1 Comments:
TLN said…
![]() |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
© Copyright 2006 Strang Communications, All Rights Reserved













