| Editorial
Is
Christmas Relevant?
By Mark Shepard
As
Christmas comes, reactions abound. Since the fourth century AD, when
Roman Emperor Constantine embraced Christianity, church service attendance
in Western Civilization is greatest at Christmas and Easter.
Prior to Constantine, Christianity
was illegal and thus did not attract people who were not deeply committed.
Ironically during this period of intense persecution the number of Christians
grew at a phenomenal rate, with an organic underground-style network of
small home-based churches (much like China has been experiencing since
the rule of Mao Zedong). That amazing growth, before Constantine,
laid the foundation for Christianity’s widespread acceptance leading to
a more organized Christianity.
Yet in many ways organizing
Christianity stifled the life-transforming power that grew the earlier
organic Church. And in more recent decades the spike in attendance
at services for Christmas and Easter has decreased, while critical reactions
toward or around these two special Christian days has increased in both
number and intensity.
The name CHRISTmas forces
most people to consider at some level: Who was Christ and why should his
living two-thousand years ago make any difference to us today in our hectic
modern life where we are bombarded with ideas trying to answer life’s most
basic questions?
Many find this season warm
and joyous. Yet others respond from indifference to an outright repulsive
reaction to Jesus Christ’s claim to be God, the creator, sustainer and
restorer of humanity and the world.
Some reject Biblical moral
boundaries, while other rejections are connected to horrific acts done
in the name of Christianity, or at least by self-identified Christians.
While it is important to acknowledge such acts as horrific, it is just
as important to ascertain if such acts are condoned or condemned by Biblical
teaching, lest we throw baby Jesus out with the filthy and corrupt bath
water.
As Americans, does the Christmas
story have anything to do with: our freedom to think and express ideas;
our freedom of religion; the equality of people; or even ideas like the
size and reach of government?
Clearly the individual rights
and freedoms that have long-defined America are not because of where America
sits on the globe, but rather they fall directly from a worldview that
sees humanity as unique and special and worthy of protection. And
Christianity, which teaches that people are created in the image of God
and that God came in human form and gave his life to provide a means for
every person to have a restored and harmonious relationship with their
Creator, puts a value on human life that is arguably much higher than that
of any other set of ideas.
Cultures, which have embraced
the Biblical value of humanity, have delivered the greatest level of individual
liberty. While not all American founders embraced orthodox Christianity,
they did embrace the Biblically-based view of human nature and that every
person is created equal "with certain unalienable Rights, that among these
are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness."
The American experience,
just like our own life experience, has had its struggles putting these
profound ideas into practice. Yet had these ideas not sprung from
a real foundation the American experiment in liberty would have been a
futile effort, like every other culture that does not value humanity.
In recent decades some in
America have been pushing America away from its foundation, with the result
being increased chaos. Chaos has been answered by increasing the
size and reach of government, leading to a decrease in personal liberty
and making our personal and national future much less secure. We
would be wise to look at the results of godless national experiments before
we take the leap.
If atheism or any other set
of ideas is true then by all means let us live life accordingly, but let
us not take that jump without first investigating the idea which arguably
has most radically and positively changed the lives of people and civilizations:
Biblical Christianity.
Granted Biblical Christianity,
unlike most other sets of ideas, does not align well with human logic,
where might makes right, or utopia is achieved through personal effort.
Does that not suggest that Biblical Christianity is not a human creation,
but more likely revelation from our Creator? Even apart from
the continual historical and archeological validations of Biblical history,
Biblical teaching on human nature, the human condition, and the path to
restoration, ring incredibly true with human experience.
Humanity is creative and
desires to express that creativity. True faith cannot be forced upon someone.
Vast power (control of resources) invites corruption, whether in business,
politics, government, or religion. Left unbounded by inner moral guides
or external militant guides, people and cultures self-destruct. Incredible
transformation and healing does result when people bond with their Creator.
Indeed these human experiences align with the Biblical presentation of
humanity.
Ideas do have consequences.
Ideas that ring true with life experience yield better results for us individually
and for cultures. This Christmas, consider investigating genuine Biblical
Christianity directly from its source document and resting your future
in ideas that ring true and truly transform.
Mark Shepard is from Bennington
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