The Greatest Danger
Facing the Church
By Douglas
Groothuis
As I reflect on the greatest danger facing the Church today, I believe
that more than anything else the Church is imperiled by its own failure to
teach, to believe, and to live out the great truths of the Christian faith
in a way that pleases God. This is true not only of theologically liberal
congregations -- which essentially abandoned the Bible long ago -- but also of too many
evangelical churches and institutions. When “truth stumbles in the public
square” (Isaiah 59:14, NSRV), when the Church succumbs to the
larger culture’s trivializing of life’s greatest questions, then the Gospel
and all the truths of the Bible go
unheeded. People lose their way and call good evil and evil good (Isaiah 5:20). As Jeremiah lamented, “Truth
has perished; it has vanished from their lips” (Jeremiah 7:28).
The cultural indicators are clear. Religious
involvement is high, but spiritual discernment is low. Knowledge of God is
scarce. Occultism and gratuitous violence fascinate millions and are common
fare on television, in popular music, movies, video games, and even children’s
books. Immorality is evident and taken for granted at every level. Forest
rangers ignite massive forest fires. Huge corporations ignore ethics for the
sake of selfish profit. Serial killers terrorize us. Teenagers go on homicidal
sprees in our schools--and commit suicide in record numbers. Although America
is threatened by deadly terrorism, it refuses to get deadly serious about God,
the soul, and matters of eternity. Many just want life to return to normal when
“normal” -- designer religion, materialism, crass sensuality, and relentless
entertainment--is precisely what God wants us to repent of (1 John 2:15-17). Even after September
11, 2001, and even among supposed Christians, moral and religious relativism
stills runs rampant. (Teenagers have been the hardest hit.)
Our pluralistic society has deceived many Christians
into believing that all religions lead to God, Scripture to the contrary (Exodus
20:1-3; Acts 4:12; 1 Timothy
2:5-6). Many
Christians
take up yoga, ignorant of the fact that it is a Hindu spiritual practice.
Biblical illiteracy is staggering--even when more Bibles and study tools are available than
ever before.
Given the erosion of biblical truth, the Church
is in peril of losing its saltiness and snuffing its light (Matthew 5:14-16). But who else can
explain, defend, proclaim, and apply the Gospel
of Christ if not Christ’s own followers? Who else can offer an objectively true,
reasonable, ethical, and truly liberating worldview to our religiously confused
and ethically corrupted culture? Who else but Jesus Christ, the Lord of the
universe (Colossians 1:15-20), can
call people to repentance, forgive their sins through His sacrifice on the
Cross, justify them before God, and empower them for true spirituality,
faithful obedience, and world-changing service?
We must recover the truth of the Gospel. And we must obey it--come what
may. The Gospel is only good news
when the bad news of sin against a holy God is rightly taught. As C.S. Lewis
wrote in Mere Christianity: “It is
after you have realized that there is a Moral Law and a Power behind that law,
and that you have broken the law and put yourself wrong with that Power -- it
is after this and not a moment sooner, that Christianity begins to talk.” If
the Church speaks with a muted voice concerning sin, it cannot speak in the
name of Christ, the only Savior from sin (John
3:16; 14:6). Christians cannot accept relativism--in ethics or in religion (Exodus 20:1-17).
Salvation
comes only through the grace of a loving and just God revealed in Scripture and through the perfect life,
atoning death, and death-defeating resurrection of His Divine Son. This Gift is
received by faith alone in Jesus alone (Ephesians
2:8; Titus 3:5). There is no other Gospel (Galatians 1:6-9). And this Gospel
summons followers of Jesus to be disciples (not spiritual consumers), to
submit to His lordship over all of life (Matthew
28:18), and to be transformed through the renewing of their minds and the
offering of their bodies as a living sacrifice in God’s service (Romans 12:1-2).
The greatest danger facing the Church today
is the loss of the truth and power of the Gospel.
There is no greater loss.
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Douglas Groothuis
is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Denver Seminary, where he heads the
Philosophy of Religion Masters program. He is the author of ten books, most
recently On Jesus and On Pascal. He can be contacted at: Douglas.Groothuis@denverseminary.edu.