I have been reading Reappearing Church by Mark Sayers, pastor and cultural commentator. I suppose only time will tell how accurate and prophetic they are, but as one who lives in a westernised culture much of his analysis rings true to my observations and experience. The vast information available on the internet and availability of customising our information streams to our personal preferences is a massive shift from years past. The abundance of spiritual menu choices (or pseudo-spiritual content) coupled with an Uber Eats approach means we only need to feed on what interests us--not what we may need to hear. The awesome thing is God's Word and goodness towards us remains unchanged and deeply personal. He has the dynamic ability to speak above the noise in His still, small voice. Mark Sayers wrote this in Reappearing Church on the prevalence of consumerism in culture and how it can affect our approach to following Jesus and ministry:
Many of us may balk at forms of cultural Christianity that mix nationalism or ethnic identity and faith, yet we miss how we have been shaped by our own dominant culture, the culture of consumerism. Consumer culture is placeless, yet pervasive. It is the water in which we swim. Consumer Christianity is a form of cultural Christianity that compromises the cross with self rather than flag, mixing the worship of God with the worship of options, personal autonomy, low commitment, and opinion over responsibility.
Consumer culture tells us we can do it all, yet we become paralysed by endless options. FOMO, the fear of missing out, according to Author Patrick McGinnis, is now accompanied by FOBO, the fear of better options: 'I noticed that my classmates and I were always optimising. We hedged, lived in a world of maybes and were paralysed at the prospect of actually committing to something, out of fear that we might be choosing something that wasn't the absolutely perfect option.' McGinnis reports that the fear of better options leads ultimately to the fear of doing anything. Unlimited options and the search for lifestyle perfection leaves us paralysed...
Consumer culture creates in us a mentality of toxic entitlement--the sense that we can have it all, but without struggle or cost. This mentality of entitlement eventually will infect our faith...The Christian caught in consumer Christianity shifts blame for their lack of growth to God, their leaders, the church, their friends, spouse, or family, insulating themselves against renewal. We fool ourselves that someone else will solve the problem of our lack of discipleship.
The good news is that we are reaching the limits of a consumer culture without limits. The possibility of living out of the passive posture of consumerism is passing as its negative effects are felt. churches and faith built on consumerism don't last beyond a generation. (Sayers, Mark. Reappearing Church: the Hope for Renewal in the Rise of Our Post-Christian Culture. Moody Publishers, 2019.)Even when we are paralysed by the abundance of options in our consumer culture, remember how men demonstrated their faith by bringing their paralysed friend to Jesus who healed Him. No culture, society, scheme of Satan, or folly of man provides an obstacle God has not overcome. Self-righteous Saul was breathing out threats and murder against Christ when he was floored by an unexpected, uninvited Saviour Jesus Christ who revealed Himself to Him. Every believer once dead in trespasses and sin has been raised to new life by the power of Jesus Christ by grace through faith. Warren Wiersbe wisely said, "Nothing paralyzes our lives like the attitude that things can never change. We need to remind ourselves that God can change things. Outlook determines outcome. If we see only the problems, we will be defeated; but if we see the possibilities in the problems, we can have victory." God provides more than possibilities but great and precious promises! In a Christian culture which attempts to isolate itself from God, it is comforting to know the battle is the LORD's who works miraculous wonders.
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