2.2 Dunk and Run
2.3 Lasting Conversion
2.4 Joining a Club
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2.5 The Mixed Church
20. If the baptisms and conversions of the church right now are not inductions into a church club, what are these individuals supposed to be joining?
The answer is of course the people of God. They are joining a kingdom. It is the kingdom of God and his Messiah, Jesus the Christ.
This may seem all too obvious, but it's inevitable that there will always be some hay, straw, and wood mixed in the gold and silver (1 Cor. 3:12-13). While the true church is invisible, it always meets in visible form. The word of God is pure, the word of the preacher will inevitably be mixed.
It is a sacred charge for those who lead the church to do their best to permeate it with the "pure milk of the word" (1 Pet. 2:2) and to reduce the inevitable cultural baggage to a minimum.
21. But it does regularly get mixed with all-too-earthly stuff. Sometimes the mixture is fairly harmless. At other times, it can be mixed with the truly vile. It is important for us to know the difference.
I am always struck by a story from 1899 when white people living around Atlanta went to church and then took excursion trains afterward to participate in the lynching of Sam Hose. They tortured and burned him. They took souvenir body parts. Photographs were taken. Hose had killed a white man, quite possibly in self-defense, but sensationalized reporting turned his death into a public spectacle.
You have to wonder what was preached that Sunday morning.
22. In this current climate, a fair amount of politics is being mixed into in the pulpits across America right now. No doubt positions are being taken on all sides of the political spectrum. Some of these sermons are no doubt truer to Scripture than others. It is important for us to be aware of what we're mixing.
In normal times, pastors have tried to stick more to the principles of Scripture and to let the individual Christian apply them in terms of specifics. For example, a pastor might preach on abortion without explicitly saying, "Now go vote for the Republican." There is definite value in keeping such implications more implicit and allusive than explicit. For one, it allows a church to minister across the political spectrum.
But in these polarized times, preaching has often become more specific on both sides. In response, you hear different reactions. Some say, "Don't get political, preacher" -- often because they don't like the angle the preacher is taking.
I have mixed feelings about this response. There is surely a point where a pastor should call out explicitly the ungodliness of its leaders. For example, shouldn't the pastors of Nazi, Germany have said something about what was happening there? Those who did were often arrested. So, we can all surely imagine a point where preachers should call out political evil.
Yet, in more normal times, you surely want to minister to both Republicans and Democrats. Isn't it best most of the time to try to point out good and bad values on both sides? Yet, again, there is also the danger of drawing a false equivalency. Aren't there times when one party is more unbalanced than at others? I can hear "both sides" saying "YES!"
23. So how can we do our best to baptize new converts (or young people returning to the faith of their childhood) into the kingdom rather than into a club or tribe of human making?
First, let's make it clear that it is a heavenly kingdom. Paul tells the Philippians -- some of whom may have been Romans citizens -- that their real citizenship was in heaven (Phil. 3:20). [16] Hebrews 11 also emphasizes that we are seeking a heavenly city and country, not an earthly one (Heb. 11:10, 16). 1 Peter calls believers "aliens" and "exiles" in the earthly country they live in (1 Pet. 1:1; 2:11).
Hebrews 13:14 puts it starkly: "We don't have a city here that will last."
We're thus mixing hay in with the gold when we confuse any earthly country with our heavenly citizenship. No earthly country is pure enough. Even ancient Israel, while intended to be a theocracy run directly by God, failed miserably at the goal. Only for a brief time under Moses and Joshua did it seem to work and even then the people repeatedly failed their God.
24. Part of the dross of American Christian culture is to confuse America with the kingdom of God. It sounds outlandish to say so, but it's true. We have American flags on our pulpits right next to where the word of God is preached. Why would we think that was an appropriate place for the flag of an impure, earthly kingdom? We treat soldiers like saints, and some almost treat fallen soldiers as Christian martyrs.
But you don't automatically go to heaven because you die for your country. You go to heaven because you put your faith in Jesus Christ.
The American church is more likely to celebrate July 4 than Advent or Lent. Our church calendars pay special attention to Memorial Day and Veterans Day. They are less likely aware of periods that have been on the Christian calendar for almost two thousand years.
Most of the time, I have personally found these mixtures somewhat innocuous. Robert Bellah called these dynamics of American Christianity, "civil religion," the elevation of our country to religious status. [17] The key is that the reverence for country not reach the level of the worship of Christ. It's like the veneration of Mary in Catholic circles -- as long as it doesn't cross the line into actual worship, it's iffy but God will probably be merciful.
25. In our current moment, civil religion has blurred into what is often called, "Christian Nationalism." [18] While civil religion might innocently (and unreflectively) think of America as the modern equivalent of ancient Israel, Christian nationalism tries to make it so. Its goal is to force a particular Christian vision on the country and set up a sort of "theocracy" or rule by God as they see it.
I grew up with pastors occasionally quoting 1 Chronicles 7:14 in relation to America. We needed to humble ourselves, repent, and pray for God to heal our land. Like Jeremiah 29:11, no thought was given to the fact that this verse was for ancient Israel rather than contemporary America. Also missing was the realization that America has never technically been a Christian nation, although you could argue that some Judeo-Christian values undergird its Constitution.
There is a lot of mixed faith in here. If the church itself is a mixture of gold and straw, then the attempt to fuse it with a political vision is even less likely to be pure. The mixture of church and state has rarely moved a nation closer to God. It is truly shocking to see what happened when Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire. [19] You had monks murdering people because they didn't have the right view of whether Jesus had one or two natures.
In England, it led to multiple people -- both Catholic and Protestant -- being burned at the stake. Henry VIII made himself head of the church and burned Catholics who questioned him. Then Bloody Mary burned at the stake Protestants who opposed her. Then Queen Elizabeth similarly put to death those who undermined her. Europe fought for thirty years in the 1600s in what basically laid out as a struggle between Lutherans and Catholics for political control.
Puritan New England is often the model for Christian nationalists, but the Puritans came to America because they had failed to take over England. The English ousted them from power after they dethroned the king and tried to rule for a short time. We like to say they came here looking for religious freedom, but what they came here for was a place where they could impose their vision of a Christian rule on everyone within their purview. In the process, they both murdered and exiled those who disagreed with them.
This background explains why the Founding Fathers forbid that America would have an official religion in the First Amendment. "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Christian nationalists would like to remove that from the Constitution.
When worldly authority is confused with heavenly authority, there is always dross. "Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men." [20] This is true no less of the church than a nation. Almost inevitably, the fusion of church and state doesn't turn out to be the true Church at all, just a twisted version of the state pretending to be the Church. An idolatrous kingdom gets substituted for the true one which, again, is ultimately invisible.
[16] Philippi was a Roman colony. If you were a citizen of the city, you were a citizen of Rome. In fact, it was like living in Rome itself, as far as citizenship was concerned. This makes Paul's statement all the more striking.
[17] Robert Bellah, "Civil Religion in America" Daedalus (1967), reprinted in Beyond Belief: Essays on Religion in a Post-Traditional World.
[18] For a more detailed analysis, see Miranda Cruz, Faithful Politics: Ten Approaches to Christian Citizenship and Why It Matters (IVP Academic, 2024).
[19] See Philip Jenkins, Jesus Wars: How Four Patriarchs, Three Queens, and Two Emperors Decided What Christians Would Believe for the Next 1,500 years – Violence, Politics, and the Origins of Church Authority (HarperOne, 2011).
[20] A famous quote from a letter by Lord Acton in 1883.
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1. What is Evangelicalism?
1.1 Revivals of the 1700s and 1800s
1.2 The "New" Evangelicalism
1.3 The Poltical Takeover

