Who Holds the Future?
January/February 2009 Editorial
by Elwood McQuaid
The conversation was between a militant,
Russian Communist and a reserved, elderly Christian in the days before the
collapse of the Soviet Union. A disciple of
Marx and Lenin, the Communist proficiently argued his case against God and
those who believed in Him. He expertly unloaded on the elderly follower of
Jesus a barrage of Communist dogma and atheistic vitriol. Finally he paused to
ask the old man what he had to say in defense of his beliefs.
The gentleman responded, “I can see that
you are obviously a man of superior intellect and eloquence. Fur-thermore,” he
replied, “I could never begin to compete with your ability to express yourself
about what you believe about religion and politics. But I do have the advantage
over you in one important aspect of life. I am assured of my future, and you
are not.”
The old man expressed the material point
when it comes to our situation following an American election that so clearly
revealed the revolutionary moral and social convulsions that have developed in
our culture over the decades. Belief in both the absolute authority of a divine
Sovereign and the truth of His Word has been dismissed as myth and fable. The
great masses apparently feel that only intellectual dwarfs cling to their
“crutch” of faith and obstinately attempt to communicate their beliefs to
others. Neopaganism is fast becoming a staple in America and the Western
democracies.
Neopaganism travels in the same circles as
”inclusivism,” which contends that every religion and cult possesses qualities
equal or superior to Christianity and the biblical Judaism out of which the
Christian faith came.
The truth, however, is that radical,
liberal religionists have reintroduced the polytheistic worship of many gods,
which our forefathers in the faith rejected. Also, I might add, some elements
in evangelicalism are now moving away from the traditional one-God, one-way
Christian position.
To make neopaganism palatable will require
a concerted effort to emasculate “outsiders,” meaning Bible-believers who
adhere to inerrancy of Scripture and the Great Commission to “go into all the
world and preach the gospel” (Mk. 16:15). We will either have to be silenced or
brought into the mainstream of contemporary religious thinking and practice.
Already some politicians are beating the
drum to resurrect the slyly named Fairness Doctrine designed exclusively to
suppress free speech in the news media. It would use intimidation and/or
legislation to make conservative journalists and broadcasters paya heavy price for bucking the enshrined
secular system.
Charles Colson, eminent evangelical and
founder of Prison Fellowship Ministries, cited a prime example recently when he
spoke of Califor-nia’s Proposition 8 that in November reversed a ruling
allowing same-sex marriage. Californians overwhelmingly rejected gay marriage
in 2000 (Proposition 22), only to have their will overridden by the California
Supreme Court on May 15, 2008.
On Election Day, voters courageously rose
up and reversed the reversal. You can be sure, however, that the matter is far
from closed. Appeals will fill the courts. And the courts may well again
declare that the majority doesn’t make the rules; judges and radical minorities
do, particularly those harassing for change and promoting deviant lifestyles.
It is worth noting that the California Council of Churches joined 250 other
organizations supporting same-sex marriage.
In an October 27, 2008, New York Times
article by Laurie Goodstein, Mr. Colson made this observation: “This vote on
whether we stop the gay-marriage juggernaut in California is
Armageddon. . . . [If] we lose this, we are going to lose
in a lot of other ways, including freedom of religion.”
Colson may be like a prophet. Far too few
leaders today are as willing as he to speak out and warn people about what’s
ahead. We are, like it or not, living in the vortex of a political, moral, and
social revolution. Too many true evangelicals are content to believe “It can’t
happen here.” Oh, it can, and it is.
The time may be near when you or your
pastor will be behind bars for daring to articulate a clearly defined biblical
issue that doesn’t mesh with what neopagans deem correct. It has happened
before.
The obsession with change has become the
shibboleth of our time. We are still waiting for what change means. From this
vantage point, it doesn’t look promising.
But we do have, with absolute certainty,
the same assurance the elderly Christian told the Communist about. Only
believers have a grasp on the future; and that truth will forever be
unintelligible to the masses.
We may not understand everything in this
life. But we know who holds our lives. And that’s something to hold on to.