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Pop Justice:

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Title: Pop Justice:


1
Pop Justice
  • Is social action the latest church trend?

2
  • Bono has helped the evangelical church in America
    become more sensitive to those in need around the
    world and awakened our marginalized, or in some
    places forgotten, call to see justice. But, is
    the new focus on social justice just another
    pop-Christian trend?
  • http//blog.christianitytoday.com/outofur/archives
    /2006/09/pop_justice_is.html

3
  • What if social justice and compassion projects
    are simply the latest trend?
  • In recent years, many church have become involve
    in social justice issues, or at least talking
    about it.
  • Will it last or will it fade like every other
    trend?

4
Trends in the Church
  • Small groups
  • Seeker sensitive
  • Vineyard worship music
  • Cell churches
  • Baseball diamond for assimilation
  • Holy laughter
  • Radio preaching

5
Routine of Trends
  • Excitement
  • Adoption by early innovators
  • With time, most churches participate
  • Eventually, it passes and we wait for the new
    thing.

6
  • Will all the attention the church at large is now
    rightfully and biblically giving to social
    justice fade with time?
  • It is horribly sad if this rising interest in
    justice is only short-term.
  • Hopefully it wont fade away, but come to be seen
    as central to what it means to be a disciple of
    Jesus.

7
www.johnstott.org/the-impact/?id1f6a337f297229822
6695eb2b1d28d82
8
Evangelism
  • The Lousanne Covenant (1974) defined
    evangelization as the whole church taking the
    whole gospel to the whole world.

9
Use the Whole Bible
  • Holistic theology and practice of mission
    requires a holistic understanding and use of the
    Bible.
  • The Bible shows us Gods priorities and passions.

10
The Bible shows us Gods heart
  • For the last and the least (socially, culturally,
    and economically) as well as the lost
    (spiritually).
  • For those dying of hunger, AIDS, and war, as well
    as those who are dying in their sins.
  • For the landless, homeless, family-less and
    stateless as well as for those who are without
    Christ, without God and without hope in the world.

11
Old Testament Prophets
  • OT prophets confronted Israel and demanded that
    they change their ways, if they were to have any
    hope of fulfilling their mission of being a
    light to the nations and a blessing on earth.
  • The dominant prophetic call was to repentance
    among Gods people, so that God could get on with
    the job of blessing the world.

12
Scandals and Abuses in the World-wide Community
  • Mega leaders wielding vast wealth, power and
    controlunaccountable, unattractive and
    unChristlike.
  • Scandalous biblical ignorancemultitudes of
    ordinary Christians in so-called evangelical
    churches never hear the Bible preached or taught.

13
  • Prosperity gospela 21st century form of
    indulgences, except you pay your money not for
    release from pains after death, but for receipt
    of material blessings here and now.
  • Ungodly alliances with secular powerpolitical,
    economic and militaryidentifying themselves with
    agendas and ideologies that reflect human empire
    not the kingdom of God.

14
Criticism of 16th Century Reformation
  • Was criticized because it lacked missionary
    awareness and energy..
  • They were so obsessed with tackling abuses in the
    church that they neglected world mission.
  • How ironic and tragic will it be if 21st century
    evangelicals are so obsessed with world missions
    that we neglect abuses in the church and remain
    willfully blind to our own idolatries and
    syncretism?

15
  • If reformation without mission was defective,
    then mission without reformation will be deluded,
    self-defeating and even dangerous.

16
Course CorrectionsAjith Fernando
  • At the end of the 19th century, theological
    liberals began emphasizing the humanness of
    Christ while evangelicals reacted by emphasizing
    the atoning work of Christ.
  • Liberals concentrated on good deeds while
    evangelicals focused on saving souls.
  • www.christianvisionproject.com/2007/11/getting_bac
    k_on_course-print.html

17
  • By the middle of the 20th century, evangelicals
    realized their mistake!
  • C. F. H. Henrys work, The Uneasy Conscience of
    Modern Fundamentalism (1947), and the Lausanne
    Covenant of 1974 were landmark documents leading
    the church to see social concern as an element of
    the churchs mission.

18
  • Regardless of political allegiances, Christians
    were encouraged to engage the culture and seek to
    daily demonstrate the Christian ethic.

19
  • The old evangelism versus social action war was
    overor so I believed.
  • Serving in Sri Lanka, I was devoted to raising up
    a post war generation for whom social
    involvement and evangelism were natural
    outgrowths of commitment to Christ.

20
Neglecting Evangelism?
  • I hear evangelicals talking a lot about justice
    and kingdom values but not proclaiming the gospel
    to those of other faiths and winning them for
    Christ.

21
Proclamation or Presence?
  • Evangelicals emphasized proclamation
  • Liberals emphasized presenceliving out our
    Christianity before the people.
  • I believe the presence versus proclamation
    battle has come back to the church.

22
  • Many nations are outlawing conversion through
    coercion.
  • Severe persecution is the result.
  • We face several obstacles that could stop our
    evangelistic momentum and replace it with more
    palatable agendas.

23
Questions to Challenge Our Shortsightedness
  • Do we talk about the coming judgment?
  • If not, the next generation wont believe it.
  • One generation neglects the belief, the next
    generation rejects it.

24
  • Jesus said, What does it profit a man to gain
    the whole world and forfeit his life?
  • The context indicates that the Lord is talking
    about eternal destruction which can only be
    averted by accepting his grace, denying self,
    taking up the cross, and following him.
  • Does his perspective color the way we look at
    people who do not follow Jesus?

25
  • Why did the Holy Spirit ensure that there are
    seven statements of Christs Great Commission in
    the New Testament?
  • Is it not because Jesus believed that before he
    left, it was important to drill into his
    disciples minds the priority of the work of
    saving souls for eternity?

26
Does Evangelism Have Priority Over Social Concern?
  • Reluctant to use the language of priority.
  • Such talk comes out of the Western desire to have
    things nicely lined up in logical progression.
  • I prefer, that our calling is to be obedient to
    God totally. If God is in control of our lives,
    he will lead us so that we will give the proper
    place to the whole will of God for us.

27
Holistic Thinking
  • We are called to be holistic.
  • But part of holistic Christianity is the
    statement of Christ that all earthly gain is
    worthless if a person loses his life to eternal
    destruction.
  • The stark fact of lostness places before us the
    urgency of evangelism.
  • I will encourage people to live the Christian
    life in society, but I will also follow Christs
    example in placing before Christians the fact of
    eternal damnation and the glory of eternal
    salvation.

28
  • I am reluctant to reinsert the priority argument.
    But we need clarity. Some will rightly say that
    because of calling or circumstances in some parts
    of the world, faithful Christians cannot always
    preach. They are called instead to social work,
    and government regulations prohibit combining
    social work with evangelism. Fair enough.

29
  • Some parts of the body of Christ may be called to
    do things other than proclaiming the gospel of
    eternal salvation, though they would verbally
    advocate other aspects of the kingdom agendasuch
    as justice, fair play, and righteous values.
    Indeed, every Christian needs to be committed to
    the whole gospel, seeking to be a personal
    witness through life and word.

30
  • To that end, Christian social-service
    organizations must ensure that their workers are
    not only committed to their social work, but also
    to Christ as the Lord of their lives. So even
    though verbal witness may not be part of their
    job descriptions, they need to be committed to it
    in their person lives.

31
  • Practical realities will dictate that not every
    segment of the church will be involved in all
    forms of proactive evangelism and all forms of
    social engagement.

32
  • Taken together, the whole body of Christ will be
    engaged in the whole mission of the church.
  • As the Lausanne movement puts it, The whole
    church must take the whole gospel to the whole
    world.

33
Brussels Statement Commentary
34
  • A long history of reaching, planting, training,
    and touching people.
  • Touching is what we do.
  • Our actions in compassionate ministries should be
    clearly enunciated as part of an intentional
    theology and strategy.

35
  • Kingdom of God is key term to formulate biblical
    principles of church missions that seeks to obey
    all Christ's commands
  • Signs of the Kingdom are seen clearly in Jesus
    ministry
  • Jesus exemplary ministry and sacrifice on the
    cross is a summons to service for all His
    followers.

36
  • Though the Kingdom of God plants signposts of the
    future in the present
  • There remains an eschatological fulfillment when
    the messianic salvation will be perfectly
    accomplished in the age to come.

37
  • To enter the Kingdom requires a radical
    transformation in ones life through repentance
    and faith in the atoning work of Jesus Christ.
  • The blessings of life in the Kingdom come by
    Gods gift of grace alone.

38
  • The Pentecostal narrative in Acts connects the
    Kingdom of God and mission of Jesus.
  • The empowerment of the Holy Spirit in Acts 2 and
    the eschatological hope in the return of Jesus
    energized the early church.
  • The Spirit empowered disciples to do all that
    Jesus began to do and teach.

39
  • Acts demonstrates the rule of God pushes
    followers to
  • Continue miracles, signs, wonders
  • To continue compassionate responses to human need
  • To break down humanly constructed social barriers
  • Continue to proclaim the Gospel to all nations

40
  • To enter the Kingdom is to come under Gods rule
    and be incorporated into the new order of life
    where love is normative.
  • Moral imperatives such as love, mercy, peace,
    justice, respect of person are not prescriptions
    of law, but what life looks like under Gods rule.

41
  • The local church is called to be Gods visible
    and corporate entity bearing witness to his
    Kingdom in mission and reconciliation between
    people.
  • The ministry of the church is to all people
    because all people have been made in the image of
    God.

42
  • Jesus earthly ministry demonstrated a deep
    concern for every aspect of human existence.
  • To follow Jesus example, the church must do the
    same.

43
  • The church models Jesus lead
  • Ministry to children provides dignity
  • To the marginalized, it provides self-worth and
    justice
  • To the sick, it provides healing

44
  • The hope of the return of the Lord makes demands
    on our life and service in the present.
  • We long for Jesus return, but we are not passive.

45
  • The promise of Christs return compels us to
    continue to proclaim the good news, engage powers
    of darkness and show compassion of Jesus to
    suffering people.
  • This is the gospel preached and demonstrated to
    all nations until the end.
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