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10 Reasons Why Pastors Avoid the Culture War

Orginally published on Thursday, January 03, 2008 at 7:10 AM
by Todd Rhoades

Radio talk show host and pastor Doug Giles has an interesting post over at The American Daily website on why he thinks most pastors avoid the culture war. This is one of those 'thinking' pieces, so you won't agree (at least I didn't) with everything he writes, but it's a good thought starter. What is the pastor's role in culture? And how should a pastor respond to certain political issues? Here's a synopsis of Gile's ten reasons:

Giles writes:  “In some kind of ascending order, it seems to me there are 10 reasons why pastors and priests avoid political and intense cultural issues and thus aid and abet evil:

1. Fear of man. If you purport to be a man of God then your regard for God and His opinion must trump the trepidation of the creature God created from spit and mud. Come on, man of God, don’t fear the crowd . . . we’re ants with cell phones who’ll shoot Botox into our foreheads. We’re weird and fickle weather vanes of what’s en vogue. You’ve got to lead us. Therefore, go to the mountain . . . get a fresh dose of holy terror and move into Moses mode and command us to be and do what is holy, just and good. The grinning, mild, subtle Oprah approach doesn’t seem to be stemming the current flood of filth.

2. Ignorance. Most people are not bold in areas in which they are ignorant . . . always excepting Britney Spears, of course. I know keeping up with all the pressing political issues is maddening, but that’s life, brother, and if you want to be a voice in society and not just an echo, you have got to be in the know.

3. Division. Y’know, I hate the current non-essential divisions in the church as much as the next acerbic Christian columnist. Squabbling over the color of the carpet, who’ll play the organ next Sunday or who is the Beast of Revelation, is stupidity squared. Hey, divisive Christian rebel without a clue—get a life, por favor! Or become a Satanist and go screw up their church.

4. Last Days madness. Many ministers do not get involved in political issues because they believe that “it simply doesn’t matter” since “the end has come,” and Jehovah is about to run the credits on this failed earth flick. These defeatists believe that any change in the jet stream, war, earthquakes, a warming globe, the success of a corrupt politician—or even a new Shakira video—are “proof” that God is getting really, really ticked off and that His only recourse is to have Christ physically return and kick some major butt.

5. Sloth. Classically defined, sloth is lethargy stemming from a sense of hopelessness. Viewing our nation and the world as an irreparable disaster, where our exhortations, prayers, votes and labors will not produce any temporal fruit, leaves one with all the fervor of a normal guy who’s forced to French kiss his sister.  If you’re wondering why your flock is so apathetic, Pastor Eeyore, ask yourself if you have stolen the earthly hope that their valiant efforts can actually prevail in time and not just in eternity.

6. They don’t want to lose their tax exempt status. Many pastors, priests and parishioners have been cowed into inactivity by the threatened loss of their tax exempt status if they say anything remotely political. This can make pastors who don’t, or won’t, get good legal advice about as politically active as Howard Hughes was during the flu season.

7. They bathe in paltry pietism. Pastors avoid politics because such concerns are “unspiritual,” and their focus is on the “spirit world.” Yes, to such imbalanced ministers, political affairs are seen as “temporal and carnal,” and since they trade in the “eternal and spiritual,” such “worldly” issues get nada.

8. They have bought into the Taliban comparison. Pastors have muffled their political/cultural voices because they fear being lumped in with Islam by the politically correct thought police. The correlation made between Christians’ non-violent attempts at policy persuasion and the Taliban’s kill-you-in-your-sleep campaigns is nothing more than pure, uncut crapola.

9. They can’t say “no” to minutiae. Some ministers can’t get involved in studying or speaking out regarding pressing issues simply because of the ten tons of junk they are forced to field within their congregations. Spending time wet nursing 30-year-olds without a life and being bogged down in committee meetings over which shade of pink paint should be used for the women’s ministerial wing of their church, ministers are lucky if they get to study the Bible nowadays—much less anything else.

10. They likey the money. The creepy thing about a lot of ministers is their unwillingness to give political or cultural offense when offense is needed, simply because taking a biblical stand on a political issue might cost them their mega-church, which means their seven homes, their Bentley and their private jet. Oh well, what do you expect? Christ had His Judas, and evangelicalism has its money loving hookers.

He concludes:  If the ministers within the good old US of A would crucify their fear of man, get solidly briefed regarding the chief political issues, not sweat necessary division, not get caught up in last days madness, maintain their hope for tomorrow, understand their liberties under God and our Constitution, not become so heavenly minded that they’re no earthly good, focus on the majors and blow off bowing to cash instead of convictions, then maybe . . . just maybe . . . we will see their righteous influence cause our nation to take the needed sharp turn away from the secularist progressives’ speedily approaching putrid pit.

This is just part of the article… you can read more here...

FOR DISCUSSION:  What is the pastor’s role in culture?  And how should a pastor respond to certain political issues?  And what do you think of Gile’s ten reasons that pastors aren’t more involved in the culture war?


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  There are 3 Comments:

  • Posted by Derek

    Some pastors (myself included) do not engage in cultural wars, because most of wars are simply Christians engaging in the wrong battles. I choose to stay out of cultural wars NOT because I am afraid or my theology is out of whack. I abstain from most of these wars because my job is to introduce Christ into culture, not Christian values into culture.

    We see that we are losing our cultural influence and so we freak, we protest, we write our congressmen and demand that prayer is let back in school or that the ten commandments are allowed to be posted in public arenas. But is that what we are called to do? I thought we were called to make disciples, baptize, build communities of faith and love, serve one another, etc. Instead of trying to reclaim Christian values in culture, shouldn’t we be trying to get Christ in the people in culture?

    Some of the hostility towards Christians in Western culture is a good thing. Christendom (when Christianity is the cultural assumption) is a bad thing. And I guess I see too many cultural-war-embedded pastors fighting for to restore Christendom instead of partnering with God in the process of redemption.

    I was a youth pastor when Roy Moore had his stink about the Ten Commandments in Alabama. During a youth worship service, I asked my students this question: If we posted the ten commandments in every room in your school, would that make a bit of difference in your friends who do not know Christ? The consenus was “no.” I then said, “What if a core group of students in your school loved Jesus with all their hearts and when about helping each other, would that make a difference?” I got back a resounding “YES!”

    The church in its mission to engage culture should be subversive instead of combative. We should work to shape the culture by the subversive art of transformation in the hearts of people instead of these silly cultural wars that give all the big media outlets something to talk (and write) about.

    g&p;Derek

  • Posted by Danny Daniels

    Derek:

    Ditto!

    Thanks for the great comment.

  • Is it true that many pastors are apathetic and fearful? Yes.
    Is the answer to preach which is the best option of the world’s politics? No.
    The fact of the matter is that Republicans and Democrats (and Libertarians and Greens) represent the narrowest possible slice of so-called ‘political’ action possible.
    They give you the choice between evil A and evil B. What if those aren’t the only two options? And what if A and B are complex and convoluted such that God-fearing Christians might honestly disagree about them?

    The Church is called to be political, but it is political by being itself. For what could be more political than loving the poor, foregoing violence, sharing resources, and living in simplicity? What is more political than pledging allegiance to a Kingdom that unites all of the world’s baptized believers, regardless of geography? The Church is a witness to the State not by having James Dobson (or whoever) endorse Mitt, or Mike, or Rudy, but by BEING ITSELF. By doing what our Lord has commanded us to do, and by being who our Lord has commanded us to be, both individually and corporately.

    The way to be political is not to read up on the Constitution. Screw the Constitution! Christians are citizens of a Christian Nation—it’s called the Church. The Body of Christ. And it transcends national borders. So read up on your politics, but do so by re-reading the gospels, not the propaganda of the kingdom of the world.

    Peace,
    -Daniel-

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