How did we get here?
Look around, and it’s not hard to find culprits. You can point to the progressive tilt of Hollywood as a contributing force. So, too, the radicalization of the news media. The left’s over-reaction to Donald Trump’s rhetoric has contributed. So, too has the censorship of conservative conversation in Facebook and other social media. Add to that the emphasis, in many of our colleges, of left-wing philosophies and the abandonment of the commitment to teach college students
how to think, not what to think. Add to it the sense of entitlement on the part of younger generations, who it seems, are abandoning independent thought for follow-the-herd positions.
The list can go on and on. For purposes of this article, however, I want to point out two major contributors to the dark-ward slide in the culture:
1. The impotence of the institutional church system.
I realize that it is a radical thought to the vast majority of cultural Christians. No one wants to question or criticize your local pastor.
But someone must think clearly about this and ask some important questions.
Regardless of your feeling about your local pastor, or friends you made at the local church, the unvarnished truth is that the institutional church – as a nation-wide institution -- has proven itself to be impotent to slow down the cultural slide. In the last 20 years, the system of church building, pastors, denominations, worship services, etc. which we all know as “church” has spent over $530 Billion on itself, and not increased the percentage of
Christians in this country.
In fact, it has facilitated the decline in the percentage of Christians. It has failed in its stated mission of spreading the gospel and multiplying the number of disciples. If it were at all effective, we would have a higher percentage of Christians in the country not a smaller number.
Look at this from an objective, common-sense perspective. If there were a business enterprise that burned through $530 Billion dollars over the last 20 years and actually lost market share, what would we do with it? We would immediately put it out of its misery and look for an alternative. We’d recognize that there is something deeply flawed in the model and that a new logo or younger branch manager would not be the solution.
Yet, few people consider the institutional church model. Instead, we focus on a new worship leader, or a better ‘youth minister’ or a clever church name. Instead of looking at the heart of the problem – the institutional model itself -- we feel better arguing about the most superficial, marginal issues. We want more modern music, a better AV system in the auditorium, a younger and more hip youth pastor. All of these are inconsequential and
superficial. It’s like changing the color of the curtains in a home whose foundation is cracking.
If the institutional model could have impacted the culture and increased the percentage of Christians, it would have. It’s spent $530 Billion dollars and presided over the decline in Christian culture. It is impotent to impact the culture and increase the Kingdom. (For a more in-depth look at this issue, consider the book, Is the Institutional Church Really the Church?)
But this article is not about the institutional church system, but rather about one of the products of it – Christian businesspeople who are content to sit on the sidelines.
2. The indifference of the Christian business community.
Granted, there are some Christian businesses who are not afraid to verbalize their core values. Hobby Lobby, for example, filed the lawsuit that challenged the Obama administration’s mandate that employers had to provide contraceptives to the employees. Chick-fil-E is unabashedly Christian, and the world knows it.
Despite these few exceptions, most Christian businesspeople have chosen to remain on the sidelines, removed from active participation in the culture wars. They maintain these positions:
1. Business and faith don’t mix.
2. I go to church on Sunday, and do business on Mondays, and there is no connection between them.
3. My Christianity is defined by how active I am in the church, not by my behavior in the marketplace.
The vast majority of Christian businesspeople have not risen to the challenge, opting instead to adhere to a comfortable form of Christianity which asserts that Christianity is about ‘church,’ and business is something totally different. These Christian businesspeople are pious about ‘church’ while viewing their businesses as ‘secular.’ Unfortunately, all these positions function to provide a ‘pass’ from responsible engagement in the culture wars.
Their consciences are pacified as they cling to one of the positions described above.
This separation of Christianity from the marketplace is one of the greatest lies in the history of Christianity. In addition to being anti-Biblical, it has caused millions of people, across generations, and locations, to live their lives outside of the loving touch of God’s providence expressed through contact with a genuinely Christian business.
By maintaining that position, millions of individuals who may have been touched by the light of a Christian company were not. By keeping the light of a Christian business hidden under a basket, we have effectively relegated a huge army in the culture wars to the sidelines.
The genesis of this idea has been, of course, the Institutional church, which has for generations, and still today, holds that there is something special and holy about their buildings, their people and their institutions. The institutional church says, “Since our work is special, yours is ordinary. Since our work is set aside, yours is non-descript. Since our work is ‘sacred’, yours is ‘secular.’
This is, of course, garbage. It is a man-made doctrine designed to keep the power and money in the religious establishment.
God says that all our work is ministry, if we do it for the Lord:
Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for men, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving. Colossians 4: 23
The Movement
But God is orchestrating a movement to change that way of thinking. The Business as Mission (BAM) movement is now decades old, has influenced thousands of businesspeople, and is now morphing into Business is Ministry, (BIM), which recognizes that business has a primary role to play in the expansion of the kingdom.
Dozens of books have been written, national and international conferences held, and local business groups formed. Dozens of websites support the movement, and bloggers and podcasters articulate the specifics. (See the newsletter BuildingBiblicalBusinesses.)
The movement to recognize business as ministry is well-entrenched and growing rapidly. With just a few minutes of time invested into a Google search, an interested person can identify dozens of resources devoted to helping business grow and increasing their spiritual impact. (See The Biblical Business Resource Center, for example.)
The conversations are public and assessable, the resources numerous. The movement is growing.
A Couple Questions
Here are a few questions to ask yourself:
1. How much longer do you think your business and your families will remain unscathed by the culture wars?
2. If you have been content to sit on the sidelines of the culture wars and keep your business separate from your Christianity, isn’t it time that you considered an alternate approach?
Some Options
If you think that you may want to explore the possibilities, here are a few suggestions:
1. Pray
Begin to ask God to take you on this journey and to move you, one step at a time, to a position of a greater relationship with Him, and a more impactful business.
2. Expose yourself to ideas within the movement
3. Find a local group of Christian businesspeople
Begin to rub shoulders with others of the same mind as you. Almost every city and location have some.
4. Gain a more objective analysis
Look at where your business is relative to other businesses on the spectrum of “biblical businesses.” Download the free “Biblical Business Self-Assessment” and use it to guide your development.
It’s Time! You can no longer afford the luxury of sitting on the sidelines. The culture wars will impact your family and your business. It’s time to step up and join the battle.
Footnote:
1. “According to a new analysis of the recently released 2018 “General Social Survey” data by Ryan Burge, a Baptist pastor and political scientist at Eastern Illinois University, 23.1% of Americans now identify as “nones,” followed by Catholics (23%) and evangelicals (22.5%). “As ‘Nones’ rise in numbers, Catholic Church faces Evangelization Challenge.” National Catholic Register, blog, posted by Peter Jesserer Smith on May 20, 2019.