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Actually, It’s the Religious Left That’s Dying
Townhall ^ | 09/06/2017 | Michael Brown

Posted on 09/06/2017 6:30:46 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

No sooner had the Nashville Statement on biblical sexuality been issued then we began to hear a common refrain from the left. “This is another sign that the religious right is dying! This statement represents the last gasp of the old, antiquated guard! It’s time to say good bye and good riddance! Let’s welcome the new thing the Spirit is doing!”

In reality, it is the religious left that is dying, while those who uphold Scripture are seeing blessing and increase around the globe. Before I back up this statement, here’s what some “progressive” Christian leaders are saying.

Writing for the Huffington Post, seminary professor Greg Lancaster scornfully claims, “Their public audience shrinking, their public presence waning, and their credibility shot to hell, the Christian right needs attention.”

His article is titled, “The Nashville Statement and the Decline of the Religious Right,” and he concludes with this salvo: “In the end we’re stuck with a meaningless document. It adds nothing to the conversation that hasn’t been said. If anything, its fake compassion increases the agony of LGBT Christians. All that’s accomplished by this document is a little press for the religious leaders who signed it, a whiff of air time for the disenfranchised. The Statement underscores the obvious: in the age of Trump, the Christian Right has lost its moral authority. These guys — they’re almost all men – may be have a spiffy website, but nobody’s listening.”

Pastor John Pavlovitz, a frequent critic of conservative evangelicals, recasts the Nashville Statement in his own words. He claims that the framers of the Nashville Statement are really saying, “We've chosen to wage cheap war on innocent and vulnerable people [homosexuals] in order to feel mighty again.” (Quick note to Pastor Pavlovitz: I appreciate your rhetorical flourish, but do you really believe this?)

This is how he rewrites the statement’s Preamble: “Evangelical Christians are at the precipice of extinction—and we know it. We are a profoundly endangered species coming to grips with the urgency of the moment, of our impending disappearance, of the whole thing going sideways here in the Bible Belt—and we’re in a bit of a panic. 

“We are leaking people from our churches, watching multitudes walk away in disgust, and losing market share in the religious landscape, as well as the vice-like stranglehold we’ve had on American politics for the past 241 years—and we are rightly terrified.”

So much for the Pavlovitz paraphrase. Shall we return to reality?

It is certainly true that many evangelicals, me included, are deeply concerned about the moral and spiritual condition of our nation. And it is certainly true that we are heavily burdened for the many young people who have dropped out of church and consider themselves “nones” – having no religious affiliation.

But, as has been demonstrated time and time again, it is the so-called progressive churches that are “leaking” and the liberal denominations that are fading. This is true in America as well as around the world. And since the so-called progressive Christians have pointed to numbers, let’s take a more careful look.

Out of the 100 largest churches in America, how many are conservative? The vast majority, at the least. The same with the fastest growing churches and the fastest growing denominations. Almost all of them hold to conservative biblical values, even if they are “progressive” and chic and cutting-edge in other ways. Almost all of them would affirm the basic tenets of the Nashville Statement, at least in private.

Out of the most rapidly shrinking denominations, how many are liberal? Almost all of them? Which seminaries are bleeding the most, conservative or liberal? Take a guess. And how about major youth gatherings – yes, youth gatherings – for prayer and worship and teaching? Which events draw the biggest crowds? If you said “conservative” you’d be right again.

In recent years, I’ve been invited to speak on the subject of “Can You Be Gay and Christian?” at: 1) the most financially generous church in America, which gives more than one million dollars to world missions every month; 2) the largest megachurch in Europe, with a membership of more than 70,000; and 3) the largest evangelical church in the Philippines, with a sanctuary that seats 10,000 (and a much larger membership than that). 

And this represents a much larger pattern: The most thriving, growing churches in the world hold to conservative sexual ethics.

In contrast, churches like the once influential GracePointe in Franklin, Tennessee have seen a massive decline in numbers after embracing same-sex “marriage,” losing as much as 80 percent of its membership in the last few years.

As for having a national influence, isn’t it interesting that, this same, vilified “religious right” that was deemed almost dead and buried just a few years back is the key spiritual group seeking to provide godly counsel to the president? And didn’t some of these religious “has-beens” help defeat pro-abortion candidate Hillary Clinton? And should I mention that a good number of the signers to the Nashville Statement can hardly be categorized as politically-affiliated members of “the religious right”? (It would take too long to demonstrate this now, but for anyone interested, the names are here.)

Putting things into a larger perspective, Mark Tooley notes that, “Critics of the Nashville Statement should realize that about 95 percent of the world’s approximately 2.5 billion professed Christians are associated with branches of Christianity that share the Nashville Statement’s perspective. Of course not all are compliant with those teachings, and nobody complies completely, everyone relying on grace. But these teachings are the constant shelter under which the universal church rests.”

And, he states, “Dissenting Christian institutions are almost entirely confined to declining Western liberal Protestant denominations. If the Nashville Statement’s critics were correct, these dying churches should be flourishing by their embrace of the spirit of the age. But in almost every culture and time, spiritual seekers are more drawn to religion that challenges, not that accommodates.”

Of course, numbers alone prove nothing, but since progressives keep pointing to numbers, we should respond with truth. And where other signs of spiritual vitality are measured – prayer and study of Scripture and wining the lost and caring for the needy and investing in family – it will be seen that, around the globe, those who hold to the authority of the Word are reproducing in a far healthier way.

I have no problem with leaders wishing that the Nashville Statement made reference to the many sins in our own camp, such as rampant divorce and pornography, or that it confessed our past failings to reach out compassionately to those who identify as LGBT.

But the reality is that, to the extent the religious left departs from the clear testimony of Scripture, to that extent it will lack the blessing of God. And to that extent it will fail to do the very thing it wants to do: namely, reach a hurting and dying world with the message of forgiveness and transformation.

Grace and truth cannot be separated without doing immeasurable harm to one or the other.


TOPICS: Evangelical Christian; Mainline Protestant; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: homosexualagenda; left; lgbt; progressives; religiousleft; transgender

1 posted on 09/06/2017 6:30:46 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

The day that fake “marriage” was pushed on the United States, a United Methodist Church near me shut its doors. It was absolutely ominous.


2 posted on 09/06/2017 6:35:08 PM PDT by fwdude (Democrats have not been this angry since Republicans freed the slaves.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Decline of the Religious Right

and the irreligious left is ascending.

There is no religious left.

3 posted on 09/06/2017 6:56:16 PM PDT by oldbrowser (There is a striking similarity between Islamist, BLM, Antifa, Nazis, anarchists, and the democrats.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Bookmark for tomorrow


4 posted on 09/06/2017 6:57:07 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o ("Three things sustain the existence of the world: justice, truth, and peace." - Mishnah)
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To: oldbrowser

I’ve heard of a religious left, which is supposed to be people who say Jesus would be a socialist, because he focused on taking care of the poor. And they take a Bible verse such as the one which reads “Blessed Are The Peacemakers”, and use that to push for demilitarization.

Not sure how many truly religious people would have such views.


5 posted on 09/06/2017 7:07:18 PM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: SeekAndFind

6 posted on 09/06/2017 7:31:44 PM PDT by Rocky Mountain Wild Turkey ("I have an open mind ... just not so open that my brain falls out onto the floor!!")
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To: SeekAndFind

Again, no numbers for the Catholic Church in America.


7 posted on 09/06/2017 7:59:41 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: SeekAndFind

“LGBT Christians”

The use of that phrase in so many discussions about Christianity drives me straight into crazy.

How about instead of Christian Gays we use the phrase “Christian Murderers” or “Christian Thieves”? How about Christian Pedophiles or Christian Rapists.

If you are in open sin and refuse to repent of that sin, I am not sure you can call yourself a Christian.


8 posted on 09/07/2017 3:26:48 AM PDT by wbarmy (I chose to be a sheepdog once I saw what happens to the sheep.)
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To: Rocky Mountain Wild Turkey

Introibo ad altare Dei...


9 posted on 09/07/2017 5:07:16 AM PDT by IrishBrigade
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To: SeekAndFind

The left has been losing followers for a long time. They were down to the elderly life time members, and they are dying off.


10 posted on 09/07/2017 8:16:40 AM PDT by SaraJohnson ( Whites must sue for racism. It's pay day.)
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To: SeekAndFind

They can claim to be religious gay but there is no provision in the Bible for being queer


11 posted on 09/07/2017 8:32:23 AM PDT by okie 54
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To: IrishBrigade
Domine, non sum dignus,
ut intres sub tectum meum:
sed tantum dic verbo,
et sanabitur anima mea.

/beating breast/

12 posted on 09/07/2017 8:40:28 AM PDT by Rocky Mountain Wild Turkey ("I have an open mind ... just not so open that my brain falls out onto the floor!!")
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To: SeekAndFind

You cannot be religious and be what the left is today... Why do you think Communism requires the church be destroyed? Because the STATE is god and no other god can come before it....

You cannot be an honest religious person and be a leftist... because the left demands the state uber alles. This is completely at odds with any monotheism or even polytheism....

You can pretend to be a good whatever and be a leftist, but in reality you are only lying to yourself. Religious beliefs when honest with them will always put you at odds with leftist dogma.. (modern leftist dogma) because You cannot have the State be God and still claim to follow any religion.


13 posted on 09/07/2017 8:47:53 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: SeekAndFind

There are a huge number of mainline Protestant churches who have few members under 50. Once the baby boomers die off, liberal Protestantism will be all but extinct.


14 posted on 09/07/2017 9:14:04 AM PDT by WatchungEagle
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