Many of the ills plaguing the modern American church can be traced to the revivalism and decisionism of the 19th century.
Here are a few of the problems:
First, an essentially Pelagian view of conversion gave rise to a virulent pragmatism.
If you believe (as did Chuck Finney, father of modern revivalism) that man's will was not in bondage to sin, and could therefore be persuaded into conversion by mere human efforts—then you quickly conclude that the right words, the right music, and the right methods can convert.
The light shows, rock concert, flashy camera work, hip preachers in sneakers, Easter giveaways, cheesy sermon series based on TV shows—all of it is just bald pragmatism.
It's marketing, and marketing is about moving someone's will to make a decision you want them to make.
And if you are going to reduce conversion to marketing, then what will you do next? Well, you'll become obsessed with youth culture.
“The Juvenilization of American Christianity” by Thomas Bergler is helpful here. Many of our modern errors stem from youth culture marketing.
He describes this "juvenilization" of the church as “…the process by which the religious beliefs, practices, and developmental characteristics of adolescents become accepted as appropriate for Christians of all ages.”
Doesn't that describe so much of the modern church?
Everything from Mars Hill and Acts 29 to Hillsong and Bethel is basically summed up in that description and formula.
And the problem is that it emphasizes exactly the wrong thing: The immaturity of youth over the maturity of seasoned fathers.
Another result of the fetishization of youth culture is an obsession with activism.
Youth culture is all about rejecting the “errors” of the previous generations, discovering new ways of doing things, breaking out of the rigid boxes of our forefathers' traditions.
This goes along with the despising of what the revivalistic culture saw as the "dead ritualism" and "formalism" of their spiritual forefathers.
And so over the last two centuries, the American church rejected much of their glorious inheritance as "dead tradition."
But the revivalistic culture, in its zeal to combat this "dead tradition," actually succeeded in stripping away all of the transcendence, glory, beauty, and stability of the church.
They replaced "dead tradition" with ephemeral vapidity.
They disenchanted the world.
In their youth-culture-driven obsession with rejecting what they saw as rigid formalism—they ended up throwing out forms all together, turning the church into a hyper-individualistic exercise in freestyle spirituality.
But the loss of forms means a loss of being conformed.
Being conformed—to a catechism, tradition, inheritance—is hard work.
But it's also glorious.
We ought to want to be conformed to the great inheritance of the faith delivered to us through the generations—but instead we jettisoned tradition as a weight that held us back. Folly!
So what happens when you reject forms as too hard?
Well, everything is made easy—served to you, or made up on the spot according to our whims.
"Singing the Psalms in 4 parts is too hard. A first-time visitor couldn't do it."
But hang on!
Most glorious things are actually difficult, not easy.
When we reject the hard, plodding work of learning and growing and being conformed to the mold of faith and life handed down to us over the centuries, we become bored, vapid, individualistic—and depressed.
In stripping away transcendence and difficulty in the emotionalism of youth-culture-obsessed revivalism, we become perpetual moody teenagers, cursed by getting what we asked for.
We need fathers.
We need mothers.
We need forms—even rigid ones.
Welcome to a thread about why modern appliances suck, the companies that make them hate you, and how they actively work to make having large families more expensive and difficult.
Let's start with my least favorite dryer ever made, produced by @LGUS:
What is the purpose of a dryer? Probably a good place to start.
Dryers—and let me know if I lose you on this one—exist to dry things. Clothes, mainly. But also towels, bedding... You know, stuff you'd wash in a washing machine.
So you'd think that a company attempting to add technological improvements and innovations to a dryer would be trying to make it dry clothes better.
Extended thoughts on women, polemics, public teaching, women's ministry, the culture war, and sundry other uncontroversial issues.
Yes, this will be long, and I will break my own rule by making you click the "Show More" button at several points. Look! There it is below, mocking… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
1. Women not only can be, but must be students of Scripture. They must be catechized and discipled to be clear and disciplined thinkers, able to refute error and hold fast to the truth once delivered for all the saints. This is obviously true and only fools would say otherwise.… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Now to the subject at hand. Let's start with women's ministry.
The modern way of doing women's ministry is typically to set up female teachers leading regular women's Bible studies, or some permutation therof. To be blunt, I think this almost inevitably establishes a… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
A thread on ocean mysteries, a new show about the weirdest stuff you've ever heard, and that time I almost got lost at sea off the coast of Italy.
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It was a glorious summer in the late 90s, before iPhones, Instagram, and helicopter parenting.
My family was about to move from England to Utah, so we took a lengthy trip around Europe in our trusty minivan before we left.
This trip is one of my greatest childhood memories.
I remember the green hills and cool rain of Scotland, the towering cathedrals of France, and being bored at the Louvre—uncultured seven-year-old that I was.
But Italy was where I almost got myself killed.
It all started with a handful of Lire, the local currency at the time.
Today's episode of @brighthearthpod—on defending the home—is one of our most practical yet. I believe there is at least one action item in there for every household.
Here are five big ideas from the episode via our expert guest, Joshua Adams:
1. You don't want the first time a security issue happens to be the first time you think about it and respond.
Securing what is worth defending—your wife, kids, livelihood—isn't something to do reactively.
Get ahead.
Plan well.
Strategize.
Practice.
2. A household is more than the simple concept of house and family.
It is a complex thing—with economic, spiritual, physical, medical, recreational, intergenerational, and many other components.
Think about your household holistically when thinking about defending it.