Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Why are Christians losing America?
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Wednesday, April 28, 2004 | David Kupelian

Posted on 04/28/2004 12:01:04 AM PDT by JohnHuang2

Why are Christians losing America?


Posted: August 9, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com

"I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth."
– Revelation 3:15-16 KJV

Most Americans call themselves Christians.

Twice they chose as their supreme leader Bill Clinton – a sexual predator and pathological liar who regarded the "religious right" as enemies and radical homosexuals as friends, and who by any meaningful and historical measure was a traitor.

After that, millions of Christians came within a hair's breadth of electing Clinton's partner in crime, Al Gore – another pathological liar, a radical environmentalist who reveres "Gaia" but believes the internal-combustion engine should be outlawed (according to his book, "Earth in the Balance").

Christians have stood on the sidelines during the breathtaking transformation of their once-great Judeo-Christian culture into today's neo-pagan, Sodom-and-Gomorrah-style freak show.

Christians have lost the 30-year war to protect the unborn.

Christians have lost the war for America's schools – which have been scrubbed antiseptically clean of the Christian principles and traditions that once guided those institutions, and are now filled instead with every conceivable form of propaganda and perversion.

Christians have lost their former influence in politics, in the press, in entertainment, in literature – in virtually every major area of life.

And now, Christians are losing the war for their very own institutions – their churches. The clergy sex scandal is the tip of the iceberg. Both the Catholic Church and most of the major Protestant denominations are literally being ripped apart – from within – by double agents who pretend to be "faithful" but actually loathe Christianity's historical precepts and values.

It's a harsh indictment – but hey, the truth hurts.

In his recent book, "Abandonment Theology," author John W. Chalfant describes the precipitous decline of Judeo-Christian influence in law, culture and public policy in America, noting the 1947 Supreme Court decision that invented the modern "separation of church and state" and later decisions that outlawed Bible reading and prayer in the nation's public schools. He writes:

Once God was shown the door, America went into chaos. Scholastic Aptitude Test scores plummeted. Violent crime rocketed upward. The abortion mills did an unprecedented business as they devised ever-more-sadistic ways to kill children before and even during birth. Bill Clinton, elected president of the United States in 1992, aggressively advocated homosexuality, which God calls "abomination." The Abandonment Clergy and their millions of undiscerning followers stood mute while America's sudden loss of greatness became obvious even to the world.

What's this about an "Abandonment Clergy"? Chalfont explains:

Abandonment Theology is a term devised by the author to describe a faith which deceptively pawns itself off as Christianity by operating in the name of Christ, but which produces fruits destructive to America's God-given freedoms. It comprises what is left today of the militant, power-filled, full-dimensional Christian faith of America's Founders after decades of erosion, watering down and trivializing of God's action mandates by America's Abandonment Clergy. It is a "feel good" theology that patronizes Jesus Christ and thereby gains legitimacy, while at the same time produces disobedience to the commands of God and desertion of Christian duty.

Chalfont describes how the "Abandonment Clergy" and their followers have responded to increasingly audacious attacks on Christian America during the past half-century:

Incredibly, this was the ultimate hour for the Abandonment Clergy to see the light of truth. They faced blatant godlessness at every turn. They could have abandoned their own ways and made a comeback to the faith of the Founding Fathers. But what did they do?

They observed the horrible, deteriorating conditions in America, determined that she was headed into rubble just like pagan Rome and that we must be living in the prophesied "last days" and "end times." Therefore, with the end and the "rapture of the church" so apparently near, why fight?

"After all," these clergymen said, "We're in this world, not of it, so to heck with it," and "Compared to eternity we're here only for an instant." They told us that all that really counts is that we "lead as many people as possible to salvation and let our corrupted country continue on its death course."

Faulty Christian teaching, says Chalfant, is the only way to explain why so many well-meaning Christians are paralyzed into inaction:

The Abandonment Clergy and their followers have been teaching, preaching and saturating the media and their church members with the doctrine of surrender and political non-involvement. They are not teaching us to surrender to Christ through obedience to the commandments of God. Rather, they tell us that America is finished, that the collapse of our heritage and our freedoms has been predetermined within a definable near-future time frame and is therefore beyond our control.

Chalfont takes direct aim at those obsessed with their own imminent "rapture":

The legitimate study of eschatology (the future in prophecy) has been converted into a doctrine of futility and surrender by the clergy who, in defiance of Christ's injunction (see Mark 13:32,33), insist upon assigning near-future dates to the "last days," the "rapture of the church" and the "second coming" of Christ. … At the very least the clergy should understand that their "last days" teachings are nothing more than personal speculations. Christ taught that futility of attitude denies the faith and leads to enslavement. He promised great rewards for those who endure to the end in His cause of freedom.

Chalfont is right. But the problem with contemporary Christianity goes way beyond mere political non-involvement. Do we dare take an honest look?

One reason for the multitude of attacks on Christianity is that evil always attacks good – because it is good – because good shines a bright and painful light on the works of darkness. Jesus Himself warned His followers to expect to be persecuted, just as He was persecuted. This is the reason, and a profound one, that Christians offer to explain why they, their values and their institutions are always under attack.

However, there is another, and far more decisive, reason for the spectacular decline of Christianity in our modern era: Christianity today is very different from what it once was.

America is full of people who have accepted the idea that Jesus Christ died for their sins, and that this belief guarantees them a place in Heaven.

Some are very sincere. They are truly mortified at their former sins, genuinely contrite before God and those they have offended, and they grieve over their continuing compulsions. They have awakened from their former life of gross sin, and now want nothing more than to do the will of their Creator – whatever that may be, wherever it may lead them, whatever they may suffer. They take seriously the commandments and principles given by their Savior, and make their life revolve around emulating Him, to the best of their ability. They are, quite literally, followers of Christ – that is, Christians.

On the other hand, there are countless "Christians" who believe they have a ticket to Heaven, and nothing else really matters very much to them. Their attitude can only be described as brazen. They live lives of shallowness and selfishness, of petty emotions and jealousies, of distraction and escape, of ego and pride, and sometimes of gross corruption and treachery – remember, Clinton is a churchgoing "Christian." This version of Christianity, more prevalent than you can imagine, literally justifies and excuses dirty rotten scoundrels. Its adherents, while living it up under the smug delusion that they're "saved," drive other people crazy (and away from real Christianity) with their hypocrisy.

And then there are, of course, millions of "lukewarm" Christians in between these two groups. They go to church and sing songs and sometimes read the Bible, and maybe "try to be a good Christian" – but they're basically clueless. Their marriage is on the rocks and their children are wearing tongue studs. They believe in society's atheistic "experts" and they're addicted to Internet porn.

Some Christians are actually worse off after being "saved" than before. At least before they were "saved," they had a natural respect for, or fear of, ultimate justice – an inborn sense that somehow we all reap what we sow. After being "saved," that's gone for the insincere "Christian." For him or her, belief in Jesus amounts to a "get-out-of-Hell-free" card, a sort of spiritual "diplomatic immunity." It's like the profligate teenage son of an important Arab diplomat who knows he won't be prosecuted under U.S. law while living here, so he drives recklessly, molests women and generally lives it up with impunity. And because the natural and necessary fear of consequences has been unwisely removed from his life, he falls that much more easily to the temptations of his lower nature.

For millions of people, Christianity has become a bumper-sticker religion. Simply by saying, one time, a single phrase – "I accept Jesus Christ as my savior and repent of my sins" – you are guaranteed salvation and eternal life in heaven, no matter how insincere or selfish or shallow your motives for doing so.

Is this the kind of salvation Jesus referred to when He said, "But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved." (Matthew 24:13 KJV) Endure to the end? What's with that? I thought this salvation thing was all settled by that altar call back in '89.

Is this what He meant when He said, "If ye keep My commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as I have kept My Father's commandments, and abide in His love." (John 15:10) Many Christians don't bother to pay any attention at all to God's commandments. Hey, what the heck difference does it make? I'm already saved!

Is this what Paul referred to when he said, "I die daily"? (1 Cor. 15:31) The apostle's poignant and intensely meaningful reference to the duty of man to give up the life of pride in all its forms, to die to the "carnal mind" – considered central to Christians of past eras – is all but absent from most of today's churches.

Christianity – the deepest, most meaningful and awe-inspiring religion ever, the magnificent driving force behind Western Civilization, and the transcendent hope of mankind's future – has been dumbed down by these types into a comic-book religion. Turn on your radio and listen to some of the pitches: "Do you want to go to Hell – forever? Well, think about this: What if it really is true that Jesus is the Son of God, and that He is the only way to eternal life in Heaven? Do you want to miss out on eternal life? Then why not say yes to Jesus right now, just to make sure? You'll like it – it's a natural high."

Such altar calls are little more than an insurance pitch. "Hey, buy a little extra insurance, then you can go on with your selfish life and be guaranteed a place in Heaven no matter what."

Just repeat the salvation "formula" – like an Eastern mantra – and you're saved. Period.

For this type of Christian, there's no need to do good works, because they're saved by grace, not works. No need to obey God's commands, because they're already saved, so why bother? They don't need to try to help make it a better world, because they're gonna be "raptured" soon and the rest of the suckers who are left behind can sort out the mess.

Is it any wonder the West is dying?

What's missing in all of this, of course, is a love of truth.

"This people draweth nigh unto Me with their mouth, and honoureth Me with their lips; but their heart is far from Me," said Jesus. (Matthew 15:8 KJV)

Truth predates the incarnation of Christ, it predates the Bible. It's the substance of our bond with God. If you have a love of truth, you're just not ever really satisfied with anything else, and you want to know the truth about everything – especially about yourself. If you're wrong about something, you want to know it. If you've been living a lie, you're willing to see it – no matter what the cost.

If you don't have a little bit of this quality, you don't have squat – even if you call yourself a Christian.

To a truth-seeking soul, the story of Christ – not as told by a plastic minister, but as told by someone, anyone, who's real – has an internal reverberation of truth in the listener's soul. It has the quality of a wonderful old story you heard long ago, in your childhood, but had forgotten.

At the core of this life-changing religion is the individual believer's love and appreciation and acceptance and embrace of Christ's sacrifice – the ultimate demonstration of God's love for His wayward children.

But the problem with the way Christianity is "taught" today is that it doesn't require a love of truth. It doesn't require honest introspection, or courage, or self-denial, or patience. The only ingredient it needs is a guilty person who's sick of feeling guilty, who wants relief, wants to feel better about himself and doesn't want to go to Hell. But even the most insincere person wants to feel better about himself, wants relief from guilt, and fears death and what may lie beyond.

So, it's this compartmentalization and trivialization of Christianity – into a mantra of belief – but separated from works, from obedience to God's laws, and even more fundamentally, separated from basic honesty, integrity, love of truth and true repentance, that has ushered in a generation of shallow and ineffectual Christians.

Did you ever wonder why American founders like Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin completely rejected institutional Christianity – what some call "Churchianity"? Maybe even back then too many of the churches were just too pale a reflection of Christ's true message for them to stomach.

The Christian Church in America needs a revival. But it doesn't necessarily need ever-bigger tents with tens of thousands of people swaying back and forth, singing songs, giving speeches and getting pumped up – and then going home and watching television.

America's real revival will happen when those same people go home, go to their room, close the door, take a deep breath – and take a good, long, hard look at themselves in the mirror. And then, quietly and humbly and fervently, they ask the living God for help, for insight, for direction – for salvation.




TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: christianity; christians; culturewar; losingamerica
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-87 next last
To: rogueleader
Legalizing abortion was the biggest decision, some think.
41 posted on 04/28/2004 9:38:53 AM PDT by RightWhale (Destroy the dark; restore the light)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
I agree with this article. Wish it could help stir some of these religious folks.
42 posted on 04/28/2004 9:38:57 AM PDT by Delphinium
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Taliesan
What you write may be true but all I can say is that luckily for us the "black robed brigade" from the Revolutionary War days felt much different about the church's and their role in the political matters of the day. It's pretty obvious that one of the major driving forces in organizing the citizenry to stand up and fight the British were the pastors and various church leaders who were instrumental in organizing and motivating the colonists. I guess their interpretation of the New Testament was somewhat different than what we're witnessing today.
43 posted on 04/28/2004 9:41:21 AM PDT by american spirit
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 38 | View Replies]

To: qam1
When Rome was Pagan it was at it's high point being the world leader for 1000 years but after Constantine converted the Empire and the more Christian it got the worse off it became.

Superficial history.

Rome was always pagan. It decayed from within from success and prosperity (not because of homosexuality and games, BTW).

Constantine did not "convert the empire". Only individuals can convert; Constantine opened up the power structure to individuals who claimed to be Christians, and wanted to impose so-called Christian profession and morals on other people by the sword. The populace was never "converted"; they chose to live rather then die. The church was tragically corrupted by touching the sword in outright apostacy from the Lord's style.

Rome fell from ease and affluence, just like America is rotting from ease and affluence. The church fell from lust for power (which is just a step toward ease and affluence). When the church threw in with Constantine, it simply meant they both went down together, both clutching the same idol.

The dark ages were simply the holocaust of war and the breakdown of institutions followed by a dominance of peoples (Goths, etc.) who had no classical heritage.

It took a thousand years for the West to recover classicism (read: Aristotle) from the rubble, and it took the same 1000 years for the church to recover her own classics (read: Jesus).

It all was not the tale of God in history; God abandoned history when history crucified Him. It was simply a human tale of greed, power, politics, learning.

Similarly, America was not blessed by God with freedom because of the presence of Christians on North American soil. This is an extra-canonical story which has come to hold the status of unwritten scripture in the minds of some American Christians. The same protestant evangelicals who would shudder at the thought of the pope adding one jot to the authoritative corpus have no problem holding as a sacred story of origins the myth that for some reason, here, God decided to bless the pious with the political freedom He had shown so little interest in giving other Christians in other lands and times.

America is not a tale of God in history. He abandoned history when history crucified Him.

Christianity had little to do with the decline of Rome. Christianity planted the seed in the Western mind of non-coercion of belief -- that seed got into the meme store of the West and grew out as the separation of church and state, which was elaborated by the minds and blood of believers and atheists alike, and blossomed into America when believers and atheists alike simply decided to kill their overlords rather than live under their thumbs.

But, other than the planting of the seed, Christianity has not produced special blessings on America from God.

You cannot read history and ascribe long term cultural success to anything other than Aristotle's mind made politically free by Jesus' style: you cannot read the New Testament and think that God has any great interest in political freedom, American or otherwise.

44 posted on 04/28/2004 9:49:51 AM PDT by Taliesan (fiction police)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
Why are Christians losing America?

Because there are too many of them who think that the way to promote Christianty is via legislation rather than evangelization, who think that boycotting non-Christian enterprises to get their own way counts as some sort of positive Christian virtue. While these folks are fools, they're not "fools for Christ."
45 posted on 04/28/2004 9:53:37 AM PDT by aruanan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: american spirit
I think you are right. The early colonists, as well as many ON BOTH SIDES of the Civil War, were christians. In the case of the Civil War, pastors on both sides used their pulpits to drive the war effort; in the North, they cried "free the slaves, God wills it" and in the South, they cried "free your homeland, God wills it".

The reason both sides could enlist christians to kill each other is simply that the New Testament supports neither argument, equally.

Neither Jesus nor Paul had any interest in the concept of dying or killing for a country.

In fact, Jesus explicity rejected that option: "IF MY KINGDOM WERE OF THIS WORLD MY SERVANTS WOULD FIGHT."

46 posted on 04/28/2004 9:59:48 AM PDT by Taliesan (fiction police)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 43 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
Christians have lost the 30-year war to protect the unborn.

Since when did the Pro-Life movement become the Pro-Defeatist movement? Has there ever been a group more dominated by manic-depressives?

The writer completely ignores the facts that we are passing increasing restrictions on abortions, that public opinion is moving in the direction of life, that abortions are decreasing, that the youngest generations are far more pro-life, and that all this points to the overturning of Roe v. Wade is a near certainty based on demographics, the only question is how soon.

47 posted on 04/28/2004 10:05:36 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Diddle E. Squat
worthy of a tagline
48 posted on 04/28/2004 10:08:10 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat (When did Pro-Life become Pro-Defeatist? How have the manic-depressives been allowed to take over?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
"History fails to record a single precedent in which nations subject to moral decay have not passed into political and economic decline. There has been either a spiritual awakening to overcome the moral lapse, or a progressive deterioration leading to ultimate national disaster." -- General Douglas MacArthur
49 posted on 04/28/2004 10:11:24 AM PDT by spodefly (A 7mm intellect in a .284 caliber world, or something.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
Because they don't vote.
50 posted on 04/28/2004 10:12:34 AM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
Great post. Thanks.
51 posted on 04/28/2004 10:19:45 AM PDT by Tribune7 (Vote Toomey April 27)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
Thank you for an excellent post......I'll be chewing on this one for a while.
52 posted on 04/28/2004 10:21:32 AM PDT by freedox
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
America's real revival will happen when those same people go home, go to their room, close the door, take a deep breath – and take a good, long, hard look at themselves in the mirror. And then, quietly and humbly and fervently, they ask the living God for help, for insight, for direction – for salvation.

Amen!

2 Chronicles 7:14 - if my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.

53 posted on 04/28/2004 10:37:04 AM PDT by mombonn
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: rogueleader
Stop immigration and we will create a situation where we can solve many other problems, including the excess of immorality.

Thanks for the laugh. I suppose all the gays and screeching feminists came from Mexico and the liberals from France?

54 posted on 04/28/2004 10:44:57 AM PDT by Dataman
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: BibChr
Aside from the gratuitous (and inaccurate) slap at people who take prophecy seriously, a good think-piece.

I don't think it was gratuitous. Those who sit on their duffs because they think they are going to be raptured out of trouble don't really take prophecy or the words of Jesus seriously, do they? Using any teaching such as a pre trib rapture or eternal security as an excuse for laziness is an abuse of the teaching.

55 posted on 04/28/2004 10:48:58 AM PDT by Dataman
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: Dataman
<< Using any teaching such as a pre trib rapture or eternal security as an excuse for laziness is an abuse of the teaching. >>

So who does? What's the biggest organized group of women countering NOW? That would be Concerned Women for America. Who founded and heads it up? That would be Beverly la Haye. La Haye... La Haye... that name sounds familiar.

Oh yes, she's the wife of Tim la Haye, BIG-time pre-tribber, co-author of the Left Behind series.

Before the literary critics descend, here's the point: being pre-trib obviously didn't retard their sense of social engagement as Christians.

Examples could easily be multiplied. I would be another, far lesser example.

There are lazy, foolish professed Christians of all shades of doctrine. But no direct line necessarily connects taking prophecy seriously and being disengaged.

Dan
56 posted on 04/28/2004 11:05:11 AM PDT by BibChr ("...behold, they have rejected the word of the LORD, so what wisdom is in them?" [Jer. 8:9])
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies]

To: BibChr
So who does?

Dear bro, few know as well as you how belief affects behavior.

I've run across quite a few so far. The worst example was from the Dutch Reformed parents of good friends who went to the mission field. The parents, along with the pastor pleaded with them not to go because it was futile in light of robotic predestination.

Another example was a group of youthful churchgoers who were entering into a "questionable activity." When asked how they could be seen like that in public, the response was, "We're under grace, not under law."

57 posted on 04/28/2004 1:42:04 PM PDT by Dataman
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 56 | View Replies]

To: Diddle E. Squat
Christians have lost the 30-year war to protect the unborn.

Since when did the Pro-Life movement become the Pro-Defeatist movement? Has there ever been a group more dominated by manic-depressives?

The writer completely ignores the facts that we are passing increasing restrictions on abortions, that public opinion is moving in the direction of life, that abortions are decreasing, that the youngest generations are far more pro-life, and that all this points to the overturning of Roe v. Wade is a near certainty based on demographics, the only question is how soon

Well technically the author is correct, Christianity did lose it's battle in the pro-life/pro-choice "war". In an ultimate irony what is actually turning more people over to the pro-life side is not religion (because the most pro-life generation is the least religious) but science (most notably ultrasounds).

Plus I never understood the connection between pro-life and Christianity, In the Bible the unborn (as well as children and pregnant women) were often killed by or in the name of God.

58 posted on 04/28/2004 5:17:07 PM PDT by qam1 (Tommy Thompson is a Fat-tubby, Fascist)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: Taliesan
culture wars are not won through political action but by winning the hearts and minds of the people.

Very true. However, once their hearts are converted, someone has to educate their minds as to *what* God expects of them in the political realm. Regarding which --

Jesus had NO interest in influencing politics ... Jesus had NO interest in reforming society by any method other than a personal devotion to His person and His utterances.

True in a certain sense, but, (a) civilization requires laws and goverment, (b) somebody, somewhere, has got to be the government, (c) government officials can be saved, just as everyone else, and (d) such salvation, if genuine, will cause the said government officals to make more righteous decisions.... hence, a certain amount of social reform WILL take place. "Seek ye first the Kingdom of God", yes, but, in the getting of it, righteous governemnt is a nice earthly side effect.

It was His scandalous LACK OF INTEREST in politics and wider culture (plus other things) that got Him in trouble.

Au contraire -- part of the false charges against him involved alleged illegal plotting against the government.

I can't imagine how anybody could read the New Testament and find ANYTHING OTHER than a clear, willful, systematic, proud "political non-involvement" on the part of Jesus and His followers.

They had no rights or political access to the system; most of them were not even Roman citizens (except for the Apostle Paul). It simply wasn't possible for them to influence the political system, except indirectly by evangelizing those who WERE government officials.

However, it does not logically follow that Christians in a democratic republic should shirk their duties re:, at least, studying the issues a bit and voting, and in some cases obeying a call to activism or seeking elective office. It's clear that God cares about government -- the Bible has a lot to say about how government should be conducted, and we ignore those admonitions on election day at our peril. Furthermore several heroes of the faith were government officals of one sort or another -- Joseph and Daniel come to mind.

59 posted on 05/03/2004 1:35:40 PM PDT by Rytwyng (we're here, we're Huguenots, get used to us)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 38 | View Replies]

To: JohnHuang2
Bump for later read.

Looks like *good* stuff.

60 posted on 05/03/2004 1:59:08 PM PDT by k2blader (Some folks should worry less about how conservatives vote and more about how to advance conservatism)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-87 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson