Reflections On A Crazy Faith
Crazy Reflections On Faith
Faith Reflections On Crazy

Friday, March 20, 2015

EVANGELICALS HAVE KILLED EVANGELISM


   Some evangelical spokespeople blame liberals, emergents, hipster Christians, agenda-driven atheists, and gays... for the decline in (traditional, conservative) evangelism.  Sorry people, wrong target.  Having spent most of my 60-plus years in the conservative evangelical stream, I’d argue the culprit is us.  Not them.   We did it. 

  In a stunning piece of illogic, these same spokespeople often long for a return to the past.  As though ignoring the way the world has changed in the last 70 years, and recreating the flawed version of Christianity that was modern evangelism, will solve the problem.  That’s what happens though, when you point the finger at everything and everyone but yourself.  You mistakenly think that if you can get everyone to believe what you’ve always believed, the problem will be solved. 

   OK, so evangelicalism (and the evangelical churches that represent it) isn’t dead.  But the practise of evangelism that gave birth to it, that gave the movement identity, and expressed its theology, is.  

Evangelism’s heyday was post WW2, through to about the mid-80’s.  Forty glorious years.  Well, glorious if you were part of that version of Christianity, championed by organisations like the Billy Graham Association, Youth for Christ, Campus Crusade, YWAM, and Open Air Campaigners.  And by church-based “Decades of Evangelism”; by the spread of the charismatic movement into almost every denomination; and by nationwide revivals in places as diverse as central Africa, the Solomon Islands, and South America. 

   But it’s over.  If you doubt it, try organising an outreach event, a mission project, or even a small, local, Gospel-sharing activity.  Finding committed volunteers, resources, and dollars will leave you exhausted and dispirited, certainly in comparison with the abundance experienced in the 70’s.  Most Christians are just over it – suspicious of any request for money; full of doubt about the claims made about past evangelism successes and future possibilities; and just too busy doing life, to give their time. And they are increasingly uncertain about the theology that underpinned most evangelism.  All with good reason in my view.  Here’s just a few of my thoughts on why this has happened: 

  1.  Limited theology    Evangelism was built on the foundation of a narrow interpretation of the Bible that necessarily ignored contradictory passages of scripture.  For instance, the idea that “by grace are we saved, not works...” turns a blind eye (or at least a jaundiced one) to the scriptures that indicate we are saved by works – most notably Jesus’ sermon in Matthew 23.  Evangelical views on the nature of God, the existence of hell, the atoning work of Jesus, and the free gift of salvation by grace, these all served to motivate an army of volunteers willing to do their part to save the world. But while the Christian hoi polloi may be no more biblically literate (probably less so) than in the past, they increasingly know that the Bible contains bigger, wider, and more complex views.  Understandably they are no longer willing to burn-out (physically, emotionally and spiritually) in an evangelical cause that is less-convincing than ever. 

  2.  Confrontation is tiring and life-draining  The concept that believers in Jesus (and specifically, evangelical-style believers) are “saved”, and the rest  “lost”, established a ‘them’ and ‘us’ delineation that most Christians now find draining.  They work alongside people who are full-of-life and creative.  They have family members and friends, who are loving, and deep thinkers. 

Eventually we just got tired of believing that our meagre attempts at doing life are somehow more acceptable to God, than our neighbours.  We suspect that our selective morality, that allows us to ignore Jesus’ command to give away our possession but damns our friends for having sex before marriage, just doesn’t add up.  Consequently we’re no longer willing to tell people to become like us in order to be saved. 

  3.  The over-emphasis on the after life  Evangelism has largely been about securing an eternal destiny.  After all, this life on earth is just a finger snap compared to eternity, right?  Maybe, but actually life here on earth is pretty damn important to us.  In the midst of all the crap that goes on, we want it to work.  And the notion we were sold as kids that the evangelical milieu would have a better handle on life as well as an eternal paradise, has proved to be bullshit. 

The notion that by belonging to a Bible-believing, evangelical church, we would be part of a great caring community, that was full of life and energizing, has proved to be something of a joke.  So much so, that even if we wanted to see our neighbours “saved”, most of us wouldn’t invite them to our church, fearful that they would get discouraged. 

  4.  We  value authenticity over institution  Over the last 40 years we have had more and more questions about faith, and about the practise of evangelism.  Important questions.  Troubling issues.  But these haven’t been welcomed.  Quite the reverse, they’ve been written off as doubt or rebellion.  No surprise that burying them didn’t make them go away.  They were just internalised and we voted with our feet.  And we’re still voting.                          
 

I can think of a number of additional reasons but these will suffice for now.  
   Most who know me are aware I spent nearly 40 years in Youth for Christ – about as evangelical an organisation as you can get.  I’d still be in it, except the International leadership of YFC removed the New Zealand branch from the organisation after we morphed into a collective of people determined to follow Jesus and our hearts.  That’s ok.  Their prerogative. 

   But here’s what’s fascinating – they subsequently tried to re-start YFC in NZ by contacting numerous people who had previously worked in the organisation.  Without success.  After 60 years of an established, supposedly well-respected and effective evangelistic organisation, no-one suitable could be found with the passion to make it work.  I’m not surprised.