Scripture speaks in the letter to the Ephesians of a time
when immaturity will be the mark of a nation:
“… infants tossed back and forth
by the waves and blown here and there by every wind of teaching and by the
cunning and craftiness of men.” (Eph 4:14 NIV) The vast majority of the Christian church in
this country today sits firmly in this category. It allows for every ‘bright idea’ and ‘feel
good’ idea to be adopted, virtually without question. In the shallowness of its biblical knowledge
the subversive teaching of situational ethics often rules as a god in our church
meetings and conferences – if it feels good and is loving, do it. It seems the underlying necessity to attract
attendance at church or Christian conference today is to entertain, not to
teach. People come, not hungry but
bored with there superficial faith and require yet more sugar coated niceties
to bring them back for a repeat visit.
As A.W. Tozer wrote: “Popular
evangelicalism has been selling out to the worldly spirit and worldly methods
to a point where Hollywood now has more
influence than Jerusalem
ever had….the chaste dignity and
sparkling purity of true Christianity has been displaced by a cheap
hillbillyism wholly unworthy of our Lord Jesus Christ.” [Christian Life magazine August 1954] The sad thing is that in the 59 years
that have passed since those comments were made the church has listened less
and learnt so little! Its head may be
full of knowledge but its heart echoes ever more empty of any meaningful
relationship with God.
Secular society has rightly pointed the finger at us and
shouted, “The emperor has no clothes!”
The shallow insipid witness of the church with its conflicting ‘good
ideas’ and moral alternatives has caused society to understandably choose to
separate from the church’s largely valueless offering. The church, convenient as it is as a
contributor to good charitable works, is none-the-less understandably seen by
the world as having nothing of great value to follow. Why follow the church’s teaching when its
moral behaviour largely reflects the same statistics as a god-less world. Society, now also anchorless and rudderless,
continually revises its own morals and ethics downwards in a desperate attempt
to find some agreed point at which social cohesion would become
noticeable. But it is a downward search
which leaves this drifting boat of British society to be dashed on the rocks of
moral and spiritual bankruptcy.
This week on the radio a primary head teacher was commenting
on our children’s growing inability to physically communicate given the
electronic alternatives. To this I would
add the growing problem of being unable to think for ourselves. We have become a headline seeking, easy-read
culture that does not wish to listen to argument and debate. Reasoned logical discussion seems too much
for many people to cope with, especially among our younger non-literary rising
generations. Even in terms of news,
although bombarded with 24 hour news channels, we simply wish to be titillated
and entertained, but not informed. “Tell
us what to think, tell us what to do” seems to be the underlying cry of vast
swathes of modern couch potato society.
It is in this largely non-thinking moral vacuum of ‘instant tell’
‘non-conversational society’ that the marriage bill finds it can easily sail.
The debate has been vigorous but largely shallow, the
reasoning confused and the issues cross-pollinated to the point where the discussion
of treating people with equal value (I agree) has become blurred with the different
issue of the institution of marriage.
Staggeringly most politicians seem mentally and morally blind to this
confusion. In the bible, in the book of
Isaiah God speaks in judgment and says: “I
will make boys their officials; mere children will govern them.” (Isaiah
3:4 NIV) Commenting on this verse one
writer says: “when competent and capable
men are removed from position of authority in government it is to be expected
that incompetent and capricious rulers will take their place.” (Commentary by E. J. Young on the book of Isaiah)
One only has to view the petty party politics, the childish point-scoring and
the blindness to moral values reflected in the debates in the House of Commons
by many (not all) to realise how profoundly true those words of Young have
become.
Equality has little to do with sameness. Indeed godly heterosexual marriage is about
the union of two very different types a people; a man and a women. You could not expect to find two more
different people, physiologically, behaviourially, or emotionally. Yet it works splendidly when equality is
brought to the partnership. Even the
government recognises equality does not mean sameness; that same sex marriage
will not be recognised in law as a the same as heterosexual marriage. For example, in same sex-marriage adultery will
not be grounds for divorce. Bizarrely
promiscuity will not be a moral crime in same sex marriages! Why then claim that in order to give equal
rights to same sex couples they need to be allowed to marry when clearly
equality is missing from the outset?
Already the government has made distinction before the Act even becomes
law. Should we then, for the sake of
equality, expect the State to remove the crime of adultery from heterosexual marriage
also?
God’s judgment
The Roman Empire of old
foundered on the rocks of wanton hedonism as its moral fibre was increasingly
left in tatters. Over the past few
decades we have been subject to God’s warnings as increasingly large waves of
financial crisis have washed ever higher over us. Did we learn?
Far from it! Instead we patched up our boats and in the pursuit of
evermore comfort paddled out into the sea of capitalistic selfishness and greed. Ignoring God’s warnings for our moral and
spiritual behaviour we now face the mother of all tsunamis as God’s wrath comes
crashing down on an unrepentant society that now dares tamper with his moral
structure for partnership, a partnership that was always intended to echo and
mirror the relationship between Christ and his church.
This
year? Next year? I know not when, but
this government’s pursuit of moral decadence for the expediency of winning a
few votes has, I believe, called forth a trumpet shout from heaven that will
shake this nation to its knees. The
pictorial images of the book of Revelation show how mankind’s disobedience of
God is relentless (Rev 9:20,21; 16:8,9; Rev 16:21) The warnings have gone unheeded, we shake our
fist at God, curse him and shout, “Business as usual”. The outcome however is
certain. If you are willing to look
through the picture language of Revelation chapter 18 the clear hand of God’s
retribution on a world that thought it could play God can be seen. God is not mocked! I finish as I started, I fear for the
future of this nation.
No comments:
Post a Comment