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Things Going Your Way? A Holy Week Reflection
Many of you know that I used to work for the Church of God Department of Lay Ministries. One of my colleagues, who did most of the graphic design work, was a good friend in addition to being a coworker. Sometimes he’d greet me with the phrase, “Things going your way?”
It’s an easy way to say “how are you” because you just assume that, if things are going your way, they’re good. But the more I think about it the more I realise that there’s something missing here. The assumption that, if things are going your way they’re going the way they should, needs some review. I was raised in an environment where I was told that it really didn’t matter whether things went your way or not; you just dealt with what was thrown at you. Finding out that much of the world doesn’t see it that way–especially Christians–has been a life long struggle.
No where is this more evident than full gospel Christianity, with prosperity teaching following. The idea is very current that, if you’re in God’s will, things will be going your way. If they’re not, something is wrong with you. Many people who experience adversity decide that it isn’t them, and that’s the unrolling theodicy disaster we’re seeing now. The practical application of this is that people–Christians and others–are conditioned to go to pieces when things don’t go their way. We’ve seen this play out in the past year with the COVID pandemic, but it antedates that. This kind of attitude makes life in the U.S. very difficult to endure.
Such an attitude is profoundly unBiblical, and the whole story of the Passion and what follows shows this. From Palm Sunday things go downhill for Our Lord. First Judas sneaks off, first to make the deal with the Jewish leadership and then to make good on that deal. The other disciples are erratic at best; they can’t stay awake when Our Lord needs them the most and bail on him when the going gets tough. He endures gruesome torture and ultimately death by crucifixion, taunted by things like this: “He saved others, but he cannot save himself! He is the ‘King of Israel’! Let him come down from the cross now, and we will believe in him. He has trusted in God; if God wants him, let him deliver him now; for he said ‘I am God’s Son.’” (Matthew 27:42-43 TCNT)
But then things change: he rises from the dead, turns disciples into apostles by commissioning them to take the good news to the world, ascends into heaven, and sends the Holy Spirit to start the church. (The church, sadly, has tried to do the job without the Paraclete, and has the results to show it.)
The lesson of this is simple: just because things aren’t going your way just now doesn’t mean that they aren’t going God’s way. Our first objective in our walk with God is to follow him, not to expect him to follow us. When we do that we can find the happiness he has for us, both here and on the other side.
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Casting the Seven Mountains Into the Sea
David French’s piece on the “Seven Mountain Movement” is in intriguing look into something that I’ve heard discussed over the years but never really spelled out. He describes the basics of the movement as follows:
In its distilled essence, the Seven Mountain concept describes seven key cultural/religious institutions that should be influenced and transformed by Christian believers to create “Godly change” in America. The key to transforming the nation rests with reaching the family, the church, education, media, arts, the economy, and the government with the truth of the Gospel.
Although stuff like this has induced panic into the left over the years, even with Trump the left has overestimated the ability of those who espouse this movement to make it a reality. Looked at from a purely objective standpoint, the whole Evangelical movement to “take America back for God” has floundered along for too long, having its biggest triumph too late in the game for the results to stick.
French himself put his finger on the core problem, but I don’t think he realises its import:
Astute readers will by now have noticed two things…Second, you’ll note how much it emphasizes the importance of placing people in positions of power and control.
The left understands completely the importance of power and control, and has from the start. They’ve played the long game to get where they’re at, even though many, in typically American fashion, have been impatient about results and frequently have overplayed their hand because of their impatience. The left’s biggest problem is that, as I noted at the end of my novel, they don’t have a strong leader to really get their agenda over the top, contenting themselves with collectivistic gumming of their opponents.
Evangelicals have up until now lived in a country where you didn’t have to have power to have a good life. The legal and political system allowed people to live well without having to have some kind of “inside deal” to get along. They didn’t understand, unlike the left, that you have to “play for keeps” to really get where you want to go, and the game is not won by winning elections or getting many people on your side, but the right people, in which case the other two come eventually.
That’s all changed, and now Evangelicals have woken up to the fact that their opponents have been engaged in asymmetric warfare with a superior strategy. So now they now try to target the right people, which is a game changer for Evangelicals, usually engaged in an eternal popularity contest. In the course of this they have set as their objective control of society, because the left has taught them that, to do what you want, you need to have power.
I honestly think that it’s too late in the game for Evangelicals to attempt this. I also think that Evangelicalism isn’t designed for societal domination in the way that, say, the Main Line churches were. The latter, descendants for the most part of Old World (and some New World) state churches, lived in a world where the church and state set the agenda (subject to disputes as to what that agenda was) and everyone went along with it. The Main Line churches dominated the scene in this country, not now the state church but comfortable with bringing people to cultural Christianity. With the decline of Main Line churches, Evangelicals have tried to fill the void. But Evangelical churches are, by definition, about a decision. To be a truly national/societal church isn’t about decisions; it’s about setting the pace in a society. Those who don’t like the pace they’ve set either must revolt (with the consequences of failure) or leave.
At this point, instead of playing around with “influencer” games, Evangelicals have only two choices.
The first is what I call the “Jehu Option,” i.e. a revolt until their opponents are gone. Some would like to think that the riot at the Capitol 6 January 2021 was the beginning of such an option, but given the desultory way the rioters assaulted vs. the inadequate response of the Capitol Police, we’re a long way from that happening. In any case I doubt Evangelicals (or any other dissidents) could pull it together to make it happen. I’ve always felt that the fall of the Republic will come from outside taking advantage of internal weakness and division; the idea that we can replicate the American Revolution against ourselves is a non-starter.
The second is to recognise that we have lost control of the levers of secular power and plan accordingly. In reality Evangelicals have not had their hands anywhere near these levers since at least World War I. The events of the Trump era were an aberration; Evangelicals were forced to go along with someone who was very different from their idea of a good, respectable human being. The fact that some tried to apply adoration to their icon only shows that it’s easier to try to get away from the apostolic churches than it is to actually do it.
I don’t think that the New Testament supports the “Jehu Option” in any form (the Old Testament wasn’t really happy about the outcome of that bloodbath either.) Getting Evangelicals past their defective concept of the relationship of the Old and New Testament–which makes options like that and the American Revolution morally plausible–isn’t going to be an easy task. Getting American Evangelicals past their a)conflation of their faith in God with their love of country and b)their idea that Evangelical Christianity is the “way up” isn’t going to be easy either, although the latter should be obvious in a country where there isn’t much of a way up for most of the population.
What Evangelicals need to do is to is to quit trying to scale/conquer the seven mountains and try to move one:
And Jesus answering saith unto them, Have faith in God. For verily I say unto you, That whosoever shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; and shall not doubt in his heart, but shall believe that those things which he saith shall come to pass; he shall have whatsoever he saith. (Mark 11:22-23 KJV)
To which the great Bossuet commented as follows:
Behold the wonder of wonders: man clothed in the omnipotence of God.
Go, said the Saviour, heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, case out devils: freely have you received, freely give. (Matthew 10:8) Who ever gave such a command?
And he sent them to preach the Kingdom of God, and to heal the sick. (Luke 9:2) Who ever sent his ministers with such commands? Go, He said, into this house and heal those whom you will find there. All were filled with wonder at such commands. And yet, he proceeded even further: All that you ask in my name, you shall receive. (John 14:14) You will be able to do all that I am able to do. You will do all of the greatest things that you have seen me do, and you will do even greater things. In fact, if one was cured on touching the edge of the robe of Jesus Christ while He was wearing it, weren’t even greater miracles being performed by St. Paul, when there were even brought from his body, to the sick, handkerchiefs and aprons, and the diseases departed from them? (Acts 19:12) And not only the linens which had touched the apostles had that power, but their very shadow: when Peter came, his shadow at the least, might overshadow any of them, and they might be delivered from their infirmities. (Acts 5:15)
Here, therefore, is the greatest miracle of Jesus Christ. Not only is He all-powerful, but here He renders man all-powerful and, if possible, more powerful than He Himself is, performing constantly greater miracles, and all through faith and through prayer: and all things whatsoever you shall ask in prayer, believing, you shall receive. (Matthew 21:22) Faith, therefore, and prayer are all-powerful, and they clothe man with the omnipotence of God. If you can believe, said the Saviour, all is possible to him who believes. (Mark 9:22)
The performance of miracles, therefore, is not the difficulty. Rather, the difficulty is to believe. If you can believe. This is the miracle of miracles; to believe absolutely and without hesitation. I believe, Lord, help my unbelief (Mark 9:23), said the man to whom Jesus said: If you can believe.
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Work in Heaven? Rubbish!
I got this shout-out from MEL Magazine’s Miles Klee about my 2012 piece on working in heaven:
I was thankful to turn up one guy, Don C. Warrington, who, though a practicing Christian and once employed by the Church of God, wasn’t having this bull****. “The Scriptures are not very detailed on what our life with God on the other side will be like,” he argued in a 2012 blog post. “They speak of rewards, crowns, ruling and the like, but none of this suggests work. The whole idea of ruling is that someone else gets to do the work while you take the credit.” Moreover, he asserts, we won’t have to develop the infrastructure of heaven when we arrive: “Jesus promised that he would go and prepare the place.”
As I did then, I think the whole concept of working in heaven is profoundly unBiblical. I laid out the case in that post and won’t go through it again. What I want to concentrate on here is how this kind of belief got into Evangelical Christianity in this country. Klee leads off with FBC Dallas’ Robert Jeffress pronouncement on the subject, but as he shows this kind of thinking has been embedded amongst our ministers for a long time. (My original post nine years ago was in response to some pulpit pronouncements.)
I think this is a classic example of Evangelicals “engaging the culture” which ends up becoming “following the culture.” Traditionally (in the South at least) Evangelical Christianity has always had an escapist streak in it, as anyone who’s experienced a “heaven song” medley will attest. Americans, however, have a bad habit of defining themselves and their worth by what they do for a living, be that independent business or working for someone else. Churches have not only picked up and tried to Biblicise that, they’re also playing to a bad dynamic amongst our ministers which makes the congregation essentially employees of the pastor, there to fulfil the pastor’s vision for the church. This last point is weird considering that the money flow in a church is opposite to that of a workplace.
I think my own pushback to all of this, in addition to reading comprehension of the Bible, is assisted by my own status as a combination of old money snobbery and Scots-Irish laziness, the former of which is virtually unknown in Evangelical circles. To begin with, I think it’s bad that Americans invest so much of their concept of self worth in their work. It’s bad from a career standpoint, as I point out in Advice to Graduates: The Two Promises I Made to Myself, and it’s also bad from a workplace operation standpoint. In many workplaces everyone is trying harder to show that they’re up to their inflated publicity rather than doing the task that is in front of them. Changing that would not only make our workplaces more productive; it would get rid of many of the gender bias issues that we seem to obsess so much about.
It’s also shocking that Christians invest so much of their self-concept in their work and that their ministers aid and abet this mistake. Isn’t our first identity in Christ? How can we oppose the critical race theory jockeys and still look to somewhere else other than our creator for our identity and worth? I discuss this on a elevated social plane in my piece A State of Being.
That being said, I am one of these people who believe that we should come to work and do our best, and apply our mind to effectively do the task that is in front of us, up to and including challenging the concept of “we’ve always done it this way.” But when it’s time to “lay our burdens down,” it’s time, and heaven ultimately is that time. Klee laments that one Evangelical says that there will be no orgasms in heaven. The Evangelical is right, but what we will experience in the presence of God will be far more intense and sustained than any orgasm we experience here.
At that point, the work will cease and the celebration will begin and never end. Don’t miss it.
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ACNA: About That Celibacy Thing…
Edgar Noble’s piece Yes to Gay Identity, No to Gay Sex? The Concept Shaking the Foundations of the ACNA is a thought-provoking piece on a subject that, to be honest, I didn’t think would come up this quickly in the ACNA’s life. As I noted in the last post, we have TEC, why do people feel compelled to bring this into the ACNA? I’ll come back to that later.
I look at this as a “meaning of life issue.” What is life all about? What is our real purpose and goal? What are we trying to accomplish along the way? I grew up in a world–upper class and progressive at that–which put forth the idea that life was all about getting laid, high or drunk (in that order,) and that there is something basically wrong with people who didn’t subscribe to that. That’s really the core of the conflict between the “arbiters of taste” in our society and Christians who uphold the traditional sexual ethic.
If you look at the culture wars the last fifty years or so, that’s pretty much the essence of the matter. But it predates that: the ancient world was filled with fertility deities and all of the “wide open” practices that went with that. Christianity (and before that Judaism) came and and opposed that, and the pagan world has hated us for it ever since. The issue at its crudest is simple: is our God the creator of the universe, or does this deity reside between our legs?
Under these circumstances, the whole concept of celibacy is a form of secular blasphemy. If life is defined by our sexual activity, then how is it possible for us to abstain and be human? Part of the core of Christian belief and practice is that all of us have to practice celibacy at some point in our lives. The fact that such periods exist for anyone is deeply offensive to those who make sexual activity the centre of their existence.
The whole course of the current LGBT movement needs to be seen in that context. We have a group of people who are defined by their sexual activity, whose identity is bound up in that activity. How is it possible for people to be celibate and yet claim this identity? That’s a question the ACNA needs to find an answer for and not get lost in the post-modern mushiness that surrounds most of our cultural debates.
Noble mentions that people have been conditioned to view their sexual orientation as immutable. That’s being challenged by the “T” part of LGBT, that not only should our lives be determined by our sexual activity, but that domination extends up to and including changing the tools out. It’s a conflict that has led to the “TERF wars” of which J.K. Rowling is the most famous general.
And now we should consider a question we started with: why fight this battle in the ACNA and not simply move to TEC, which has embraced the LGBT community for many years. One thing the left in this country is obsessed with is existing institutions. They seldom think of starting their own; they work hard to take over ones that are already there. Evidently the ACNA, in spite of its relative youth, is an “existing institution” of sufficient prestige to warrant such demands from the left. Personally I think that the ACNA, like TEC, is a victim of its own privileged demographics. Largely white and well off, it’s a natural target for movements like this.
That being what it may, the ACNA was born in the defence of basic Christian doctrine and life. It either needs to stand for it or fold and admit that all of the money, pain and litigation were simply a waste of time. American Christianity has for too long been a popularity contest. Real Christianity has never been popular, and that simple fact needs to be understood completely.
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Vindicated About Justin Welby
They probably admitted this a long time ago, but this admission on Anglicans Unscripted about Justin Welby’s unsuitability for his position is gratifying:
There are some of us who saw this early on. The problem isn’t as much with Welby–although he certainly has his issues–but his church and the fact that he is appointed by the state. This is the same state which enacted the Equalities Act along with same-sex civil marriage. It was unrealistic to expect such a state to appoint a truly orthodox Archbishop of Canterbury, which is one reason why I’ve felt for a long time that North American Anglicans’ desire for reunion with Canterbury was, to use a good Islamic term, a mirage.
The church is also an extension of the UK’s foreign policy as well, and the same comment applies there too, especially with his relationship with GAFCON. Rowan Williams tried very hard to put the “Humpty Dumpty” Communion back together, but he failed. I think some in the government–and Welby himself–thought that someone with some negotiating skills could do better. But the problem wasn’t the negotiation but the substance, coupled with the fact that the UK’s ability to sway its formal colonials isn’t what it used to be. So Welby has failed at this.
What the neocolonialist Anglican Communion needs more than anything else is a well-executed parting of the ways. Canterbury would probably end up with most of the provinces it has in number but not in membership. It would give birth to a truly non-Western centred part of Christianity, which is the shape of things to come anyway. Whether Welby’s successor will attempt this or continue to demonstrate that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result remains to be seen.
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Some Reflections on “The Ten Weeks” and Our Current Situation
Well, it’s done: my novel The Ten Weeks is now blogged. I trust that those who have followed it have been blessed and entertained. For those who have not kept up, it’s not a problem; this site’s traffic has traditionally come from its long-term content.
The novel was an ordeal for its participants; while blogging it, our country has gone through something of an ordeal of its own. When I posted the novel I made the decision to not interrupt it for current events. Although it was tempting to break that, I’m glad I didn’t. This has been a time when thoughtless–and inconvenient–proclamations were punished. But the confluence of the two was intriguing in some ways, and I’d like to make some comments regarding that.
I said at the start that the novel was started in 2006. That’s before the Obama-Biden years, and now we’re in the Biden-Harris years. Left-wing regimes have a common theme; it’s the variations that make them different. But I’ve also eschewed the label of prophet, and that’s paid off. The problem in the Evangelical/Pentecostal/Charismatic world is that prophecy, like leadership, tends to be self-validating, and that’s not a good thing. I think that recent events should convince some of our prophets that they need to find a new line of work.
Having said that, I think that the U.S. has come to its “Allan Kendall” moment. There are two important differences. The first is that it’s come to this moment without an Allan Kendall. That I think is a big part of why the left freaked out over Donald Trump. They know that they don’t have a Lenin to counter a Kornilov; they don’t have a Mao Tse-Tung to counter a Chiang Kai-Shek; they don’t have a Castro to counter a Batista. They’re more like an Azaña against a Franco, and we all know how that ended. So they freak out when a strong person comes against them. Their best hope is to lean on our tech oligarchy to deplatform their opponents, and although intra-oligarchy fights are not unknown to the left (Nicaragua comes to mind, although that type of struggle occupies the novel as well) it’s not the best way to bring power or justice to the people.
And that leads to the second question: why did it take so long? The Ten Weeks is set in 1970-1, and not a few of us in that era thought that they would roll on to triumph. It would have been easier because they had a populace who was more used to obeying the government rather than endlessly challenging it. I think the critical moment came in the wake of Watergate: the left largely squandered the moment that followed, both through laziness and electing a President who was neither invested in the revolution nor motivated by the desire to right past personal wrongs. The economy went into chaos, the Boomers went into their spectacular volte-face, and the rest, as they say, is history.
So, as always, we are left with Lenin’s question: what is to be done? For the participants of The Ten Weeks who were on the wrong end of the national outcome, the answer was simple: leave. If I were the age of those participants now, I would be making preparations to do the same. In fact, I considered doing just that back in the day. Getting Americans to consider that is hard; most are not prepared for that, either in their style or mind or their skills to make a living. But if the regulatory and legal web about to be weaved turns making a living and worshiping God into an ordeal, things might look very different.
After all, most of our ancestors came here for a better life (in many ways,) why not leave for the same reason?








