Posted by
Sarah Flashing on Thursday, April 09, 2009 8:00:00 PM
Newsweek’s proclamation of
The End of Christian America
leaves a sense of despair in the minds of many Christ-followers this
Holy Week. We have heard President Obama state recently that America is
neither a Christian or Muslim country, and now we read in the
2009 American Religious Identification Survey
(ARIS) that the percentage of individuals claiming no religious
affiliation has almost doubled. But there is more. The northeast
quadrant of the United States is identified by the survey as a new
“stronghold for the religiously unidentified.” This is not entirely
unexpected as we have seen the ongoing decline of religious influence
in academic institutions located in this region, institutions that were
originally established to some extent to advance God’s Kingdom. And the
concentration of liberal politicians in this region of the country has
been noticeable for many years.
Observing that the momentum of
the current political climate is resulting in a greater secularization
of the American mind, I suspect that the numbers presented in this ARIS
report will likely increase in the next five years. As Christian
doctors continue to have their right of conscience threatened, as
institutions like Notre Dame make an impractical distinction between
the office of President and his ideology, and as common, every day
believers hand over their religious freedom of expression for a
mythical notion of neutral language and practice, I think we will see
these numbers increase throughout the country. But this is not the end
of Christianity and God is not dead. America may no longer be easily
identified as a “Christian nation,” but the work of the church has not
ceased.
American Christians do not really know what it means to
be persecuted. Yet on a relative scale, I do believe that the
infractions against conservative religious voices will motivate an
uprising of American Christians willing to challenge the rising tide of
intolerance. The question for Christian conservatives is, are we
willing to work harder AND smarter to impact individual’s lives that
will ultimately have an impact on the overall worldview of our society?
In theory, we are all willing, but are we willing to stake our lives
and reputation on an explicit expression of the Christian worldview?
Perhaps we can even take some responsibility for the problem of
secularization for preferring a godless conservative language and
approach over that which is consistently and unabashedly Christian.
That is not a battle between the conservative vs. the secular, but the
Christian vs the secular.