The ARIS Study: Christianity On The Decline In America

UPDATE: Welcome to all of you stopping by from the Drudge Report and Real Clear Politics. Glad to have you.

The American Religious Identification Survey published its results this week, and if you go to the USA Today graphic and punch in Catholics, Other Christians and Non-Religious, you will get the picture.

(Touchstone Magazine has a good summary piece as well, with excellent summary analysis. Be sure and read it.)

Hispanics are the only thing floating in a sinking American Catholicism. Catholicism in the northeast is in rapid decline. Stunning, really.Continue reading “The ARIS Study: Christianity On The Decline In America”

iMonk at Christian Science Monitor + Podcast Icon

A 1500 word version of “The Coming Evangelical Collapse” is now up at the online version of the Christian Science Monitor and will be in the print edition later this week.

Thanks to the good folks at CSM for this opportunity.

Also, there is now an icon on the sidebar for a direct subscription to the podcast via iTunes. Thanks to Lurker Shane for the help.

Riffs/iMonk 101: Wilkerson Warns/iMonk Rants

UPDATE: John Piper takes a look at Wilkerson’s prophecy and responds rightly.

David Wilkerson (Cross and the Switchblade, Times Square Church) is predicting a world changing disaster, and advises that you dust off those cans of Spam you still have from Y2k. It’s getting serious coverage by the unhinged conservative media.

I wrote about Evangelical anxiety about the end of the world in the “Evangelical Anxieties” series in February of 07. Not only have I not changed my mind, I’m more bothered by this than ever.

If eschatology were a multiple choice question, with answers like this:

a) be Christ centered
b) proclaim the Gospel
c) do missions and evangelism
d) look forward to the new heaven and the new earth
e) be idiots

…guess what a large chunk of Evangelicalism would choose?Continue reading “Riffs/iMonk 101: Wilkerson Warns/iMonk Rants”

New Toys, Same Problem: Evangelicals, Evangelism and the New “Altar Call”

Becoming a disciple of Jesus just got a lot easier, thanks to your cell phone.

I’m on the record about the public invitation or “altar call,” as revivalists like to call here. (Here, here, and here.)

I don’t like it. Why? Read the posts, but for now, let’s look at one reason: You walk the aisle, you can say you’re a Christian. In most revivalistic contexts, it’s strongly implied- or absolutely assumed- that walking forward makes you a Christian.

Aisle walking, altar call invitationalism replaced baptism in the revivalistic tradition as the visible proclamation of personal faith in Christ. It also had the advantage of being non-negotiable in the mind of many “converts.” Before you said a word to anyone, you’d already “walked the aisle.” If you evangelist had done his job, “walking forward” at that meeting was all the assurance you would need for the rest of your life.Continue reading “New Toys, Same Problem: Evangelicals, Evangelism and the New “Altar Call””

W.A. Criswell on “The Bible Kind of Salvation”

If you’re a Southern Baptist determined to fight against those pesky Calvinists and anyone who believes in the sovereignty of God in salvation…..If you want to return the SBC to the good ‘ol days of preachers like Criswell…..go get a Diet Coke and watch/listen to this.

Sit a good distance from your computer keyboard, especially when you’re drinking that Diet Coke.

Riffs: 03:07:09: David Head (and Paul) on the Gospel

It seems to me that evangelicals need to say one thing, do one thing and be one thing. But what?

In lieu of an answer like, “the Gospel,” another option is to try to say many things, do many things and be many things, all from a standard that varies from group to group, even person to person.

It’s a very bad solution. Look out your window and that cacophony you hear is evangelicalism doing whatever it does.

Let’s address this two ways:

Start with David Head’s amazing, wonderful concluding post in his “Recovering From Theological Genocide/Suicide” series at his blog, Ponder Anew. This is a post about that “one thing” I’m talking about: the Gospel; but not just “about” the Gospel. It’s a thorough and liberating one-note composition on “What do we do now?” David has a great gift of prose, but also a fine gift of positive application, something deeply needed in the blogosphere.Continue reading “Riffs: 03:07:09: David Head (and Paul) on the Gospel”

Internet Monk Radio Podcast #129

podcast_logo.gifThis week: Simple Evangelicalism? (Comparing today’s evangelicals to our ancient ancestors) and Are You Looking for What We’ve Lost? (I think you’ll enjoy both these podcast talks.)

Brant Hansen
The Blue Snowball
The Belkin Tune Talk
The Viking Game

Our sponsors are: 60 Ways to Leave Your Mother…Alone. A comic by Michael Buckley.

New Reformation Press. New music and DVDs.

Zaccheus Press– Fine Catholic Books, including Union With God.

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New Music and More at New Reformation Press

New Reformation Press has been a great sponsor for InternetMonk.com, and many of you have stopped in to buy teaching, books and the best t-shirts on the web.

Now New Reformation Press has some new products that I want to make IM readers aware of, and I hope you’ll stop by and take a look at all of them.

Singing the Faith is a DVD resource that does a first class job taking you on a tour of Lutheran and Protestant hymnody.

Anonymous 4 has long been a favorite classical vocal group, and NRP is carrying some of their music. If you’ve never heard them you are in for a treat. A beautiful sound that compares to nothing else.

For those who enjoy a more contemporary sound, Josh Garrels is a brilliant song craftsman, using a variety of styles to create truly unique music. NRP is carrying three of his cds. You can also find him on Youtube.

NRP is also carrying the new Concordia “Pocket sized” version of the Lutheran Confessions.

I hope you support these guys who have worked with me for more than a year and have really been a dream sponsor. Their support makes a big difference for our family, and your support of them makes that possible. Don’t overlook the many excellent Bible study and Reformation theology resources they make available.

Click the icon on the sidebar or visit them at New Reformation Press.

Riffs: 03:05:09: Richard Foster on Solitude; Me on Silence

Next Reformation posted this bit of a 2008 CT interview with Richard Foster. (I mainly mention Foster to light up the radar of the discernabloggers. Boo!)

What is the discipline that you think we need to be exploring more at this point?

Solitude. It is the most foundational of the disciplines of abstinence, the via negativa. The evangelical passion for engagement with the world is good. But as Thomas à Kempis says, the only person who’s safe to travel is the person who’s free to stay at home. And Pascal said that we would solve the world’s problems if we just learned to sit in our room alone. Solitude is essential for right engagement.

I so appreciated in Bonhoeffer’s Life Together the chapter, “The Day Alone,” and the next chapter, “The Day Together.” You can’t be with people in a right way without being alone. And of course, you can’t be alone unless you’ve learned to be with people. Solitude teaches us to live in the presence of God so that we can be with people in a way that helps them and does not manipulate them.

Another thing we learn in solitude is to love the ways of God; we learn the cosmic patience of God. There’s the passage in Isaiah in which God says, “Your ways are not my ways,” and then goes on to describe how God’s ways are like the rain that comes down and waters the earth. Rain comes down and just disappears, and then up comes the life. It’s that type of patience.

In solitude, I learn to unhook myself from the compulsion to climb and push and shove. When I was pastoring that little church, I’d go off for some solitude and worry about what was happening to people and how they’re doing and whether they would get along without me. And of course, the great fear is that they’ll get along quite well without you! But you learn that’s okay. And that God’s in charge of that. You learn that he’s got the whole world in his hands.

Silence and solitude played a large part in my conversion. I wanted to play church basketball as a teenager, and to be on the team you had to do a “vigil,” which was 2 hours alone with a Bible and a lot of questions. It was one of the first times in my life I really sensed the presence of the living God speaking to and seeking after me.

I took a retreat at Merton’s monastery back in the 1980’s, when guests stayed in the old dormitory. The silence was thick. It wrapped around me and even though I was in a big room, I was intimidated. The silence the rest of the time was manageable, but that night silence was alive, big, ubiquitous.

This past year, my sabbatical gave me a lots of solitude and silence, and I wasn’t ready for it. I planned a week at St. Meinrad, and left after three days. The silence was driving me crazy. I traded it for the silence of the Brescia College library. More manageable for me.

In sabbatical orientation we talked about silence. They said don’t be afraid to sleep. Lots. That was good silence. I tend to forget that, and like too many adults, I get too little sleep. I should be asleep now.

My community is almost never silent, and when we are, we aren’t listening for God as much as we are listening for the next bit of trouble to break out. To really be silent, you have to stop listening. Go beneath the water and let the world above go on without you.

You aren’t silent to be pointed out as someone being silent. No, you are silent to pray. To hear. To hear the nothing that is the world in the presence of God, who is a crashing, blasting, exploding silence.

We’re a distracted world, piping in the noise any way we can. We now have devices that enable endless talking. We are in one another’s presence, but we can’t talk because we can’t be quiet. We have to talk into devices and listen to devices. Even at a seminar or prayer or a silent retreat.

Tell people they can’t have their talking gadgets and watch their faces.

This is one reason I’ve started playing chess again. It’s a game that values silence. It’s little noises are imperceptible to most people. Sighs. Clinking chessmen. Near silence, with movement only permitted in a complete respect for the game.

This is what prayer should be like. A canvas of silence, and on it we paint sparely, with few words and sounds. Our presence in His presence is noisy. His silence is absolute resolution to all our cacophony.

We gave up the tv. There won’t be silence, but there will be more silence of a kind. Less noise. More room to breath, sleep, read, pray, listen to the quiet.

Silence is no sacrament, no theological thing, no Protestant-Catholic thing. It is simply a good thing. A gift of immediacy; an invitation to the gifts that are as close as a heartbeat.

Lewis has Screwtape say that heaven is music, but hell is noise. Music has its pregnant, wondrous silences. Noise has nothing, but disturbs everything.

Silence is, in these times, incredibly cheap. Purchase some. Spend it wisely. Do something wonderful with it. Learn to be comfortable in it, rather than to run from it. Look into the silence, and see who is there, and how long he has been waiting.

Riffs:03:05:09: Baptists- The New Methodists? (According to Dr. Chuck Kelley)

Dr. Chuck Kelley at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary spoke this week on the problems with Southern Baptist Evangelism and our churches in general. It’s a heartfelt, quite moving and well-thought out talk; a mixture of our revivalistic side and the scholarly, historical side. You can and should listen here. The message starts after the music (maybe ten minutes) but the music’s great.

(My comments should be understood as the positive engagement of one Southern Baptist, and nothing more.)

I appreciate Dr. Kelley’s passionate engagement with the issues that are troubling Southern Baptists right now. He represents a constructive voice and I would encourage other Southern Baptists to listen to him.

I agree with some of what Dr. Kelley is saying in this message.

1) I agree that the SBC is in decline. By his own numbers 89% of our churches are not growing. Most of those churches are facing a generational horizon and many are not going to see 2025.

2) The task of growth by conversion evangelism and new church planting is paramount. It must be a priority at every level of Southern Baptist life.Continue reading “Riffs:03:05:09: Baptists- The New Methodists? (According to Dr. Chuck Kelley)”