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The New Multi-faith Religion: Faithful Christians better be ready to become unpopular
World Magazine ^ | December 15, 2001 online edition | Gene Edward Veith

Posted on 12/06/2001 6:48:45 PM PST by sola gracia

The new multi-faith religion

Faithful Christians better be ready to become unpopular

By Gene Edward Veith

The 1,500 worshippers fill the former warehouse, now turned into a sanctuary. Before the service, the congregation sings praise songs and old-time Gospel hymns, led by a 160-member choir.

The service is informal and lively. People hug each other. The minister prances on the stage, preaching at full-throttle, dynamic and mesmerizing. In the pews are celebrities, people with testimonies, many having been helped by the 31 ministries this full-service church operates—prison outreach, 12-step programs, support groups for troubled people, help for the needy.

Agape International Spiritual Center in suburban Los Angeles has some 7,000 members. It is a growing church, very much like the hundreds of megachurches throughout the country. But intermixed with the Christian praise songs are the "Oms" of Eastern meditation. In the obligatory bookstore, the Bible shares space with books by gurus, self-proclaimed goddesses, and mystical pop-psychologists.

Agape calls itself a "church," but it makes no pretension of being Christian at all. Rather, as its pastor, Michael Beckwith, explains, it is "'new thought' combined with ancient wisdom."

"We don't believe you are born into sin," he explained to Cathy Lynn Grossman of USA Today. "We are born into blessings. While some seek salvation, we call it 'self-elevation.'" Agape calls itself "trans-denominational," but it is really trans-religion. "Muslims, Jews, Christians, Buddhists, young, old, rich, poor—we cut across all lines," said Rev. Beckwith, "to reach what is true."

The New Age movement has discovered the church growth movement. Or perhaps religious entrepreneurs are realizing that Christ, as He said, is the ultimate stumbling block, an obstacle to growth in this new cultural climate.

One of the greatest ironies in the cultural aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks is that, at the very time Americans, and specifically Christians, are targets of an Islamic jihad, all of a sudden Muslims are getting so much good press.

Documentaries and news stories on the beneficence of Islam fill the media, and schools are inviting Muslims to tell about their religion. Imams from the local mosques are prize performers at the raft of interfaith services being held to honor those killed and "to bring our country together" in this time of crisis.

The enemy, we are told, is not Islam but intolerance. It is that narrow-minded, restrictive view of religion that is to blame for the terrorist attacks and the Taliban oppression. People who think "theirs is the only true religion" are the real enemy, a charge, of course, that sticks not just to the Taliban but to orthodox Christians.

This is the way a number of commentators are framing the issue. Columnist Thomas Friedman says that "World War II and the Cold War were fought to defeat secular totalitarianism." This new world war, he says, is against "religious totalitarianism."

He defines religious totalitarianism as "the view that one faith must reign supreme and can be affirmed and held passionately only if all others are negated." Conservative Christians and Jews hold to this view, he says, as well as Muslims.

"Can Islam, Christianity, and Judaism know that God speaks Arabic on Fridays, Hebrew on Saturdays and Latin on Sundays, and that he welcomes different human beings approaching him through their own history, out of their language and cultural heritage?"

The war, says Mr. Friedman, must be fought not just on the battlefield but in houses of worship. It is urgent that the different religions "reinterpret their traditions to embrace modernity and pluralism and to create space for secularism and alternative faiths." Or what? one wonders. Laser-guided precision bombs on churches that teach that Jesus is the only way for salvation?

In his new book, The Spiritual Society: What Lurks Beyond Postmodernism, Frederic Baue predicts the rise of a new syncretic religion, based on the premise that all of the world's religions must be combined into one. Written well before Sept. 11, the book seems eerily prophetic.

To say that all religions are true means that no religion is true. The only way to bring them under one umbrella is to deny their distinctive teachings and to construct a totally new religion. To not allow different beliefs, to deny the validity of any kind of distinctiveness, and to insist that everyone conform to one over-arching ideology—that is totalitarianism.

If the culture is indeed drifting toward a new syncretic religion, Christians may see "churches" like Agape grow bigger and bigger, as their own numbers decline. Christians will find themselves demonized as "intolerant," perhaps our culture's worst term of abuse. Christians have endured martyrdom, but can they endure unpopularity?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: calvin; christians
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Faithful Christians better be ready to become unpopular

Hmmmm, didn't Christ say something about that?

1 posted on 12/06/2001 6:48:45 PM PST by sola gracia
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To: JenB; Thinkin' Gal; Jerry_M; BibChr; enemy of the people; nightdriver; Precisian; George W. Bush...
Bump
2 posted on 12/06/2001 6:49:59 PM PST by sola gracia
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To: sola gracia
Church of the anti-Christ.
4 posted on 12/06/2001 6:55:28 PM PST by Brett66
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: Jerry_M; sola gracia
The enemy, we are told, is not Islam but intolerance. It is that narrow-minded, restrictive view of religion that is to blame for the terrorist attacks and the Taliban oppression. People who think "theirs is the only true religion" are the real enemy, a charge, of course, that sticks not just to the Taliban but to orthodox Christians.

One Talibornagain to another..this article makes me sick!

6 posted on 12/06/2001 7:01:20 PM PST by RnMomof7
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To: sola gracia
John 15:18 - If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first.
7 posted on 12/06/2001 7:03:48 PM PST by InvisibleChurch
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To: sola gracia
Actually true Christianity is very tolerant of other religions it just insists on the fact that Jesus is the only way to the father. To reject Jesus Christ as the Son of God is to despise the blood that he shed for the purpose of reconciling his people to him. People are free to disbelieve that if they choose. There is no compulsion involved. Those who would compell a certain form of belief are certainly not Christians but unfortunately they will peddle their views as tolerance when in fact they are the epitome of intolerance. I agree that true peace loving and tolerant Christians will be the target of those who have no tolerance for Jesus and his people who are purchased by his blood.

America's Other Jesus

8 posted on 12/06/2001 7:04:31 PM PST by Raymond Hendrix
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To: sola gracia
How do you guys think these ideas figures into Scientology and all the self-involved "drive-thru deliverance" outfits like Landmark and Lifespring?
10 posted on 12/06/2001 7:17:22 PM PST by americalost
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To: RnMomof7
I honestly think the days of our easy living, where a scowl is the usual limit of the so-called persecution, will soon be over. Whether it will be in your lifetime, I don't know, but I would be suprised if it DIDNT happen in mine.
11 posted on 12/06/2001 7:17:38 PM PST by jude24
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To: sola gracia
I wouldn't think someone secure in their own faith would care what others believe.
12 posted on 12/06/2001 7:22:27 PM PST by Doctor Doom
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To: sola gracia
"People who think 'theirs is the only true religion' are the real enemy....."

We hear this argument more and more in these last days. I don't want to appear that I'm side-stepping the issue, but we Christians are fortunate in that we don't have a "religion." We have Christ. He came for us and bought us with his own blood.

If the early Christians in the Roman empire had simply capitulated and added Christ to the pantheon of pagan gods that were in extant in those days, they would have had no trouble and we probably wouldn't have had a word of scripture preserved for us today. The knowlege that God himself became a man and walked among us then went to the cross, died, and rose again from the dead for our justification makes Christianity unique among all other "religions."

13 posted on 12/06/2001 7:25:31 PM PST by nightdriver
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To: Doctor Doom; sola gracia
I wouldn't think someone secure in their own faith would care what others believe.

If that were so, then why did you feel the need to comment? ;-b

15 posted on 12/06/2001 7:32:54 PM PST by FormerLib
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To: sola gracia
We don't believe you are born into sin," he explained to Cathy Lynn Grossman of USA Today. "We are born into blessings. While some seek salvation, we call it 'self-elevation."

So exactly what do you study for text? It's surely no Bible I've ever heard of. Self elevation? Sounds more like humanism to me. Faithful Christians are going to get quite a bit more unpopular when, not if, this truly catches on nation wide. And these people are going to be in for a rude awakening standing before God Almighty

16 posted on 12/06/2001 7:35:38 PM PST by billbears
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To: FormerLib
A seemingly fair point. :) But seriously - why care?
17 posted on 12/06/2001 7:38:33 PM PST by Doctor Doom
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To: sharp_shooter55
O'Reilly is a memeber of this cult, you should have heard his interview with Jerry Falwell.

I heard it..nice man but lost without Jesus.......

18 posted on 12/06/2001 7:40:10 PM PST by RnMomof7
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To: jude24
I do believe you are correct..the beginning of the separation of the wheat and chaff is beginning....I may not see it all but I am seeing this.....

With my eyes open jude..

19 posted on 12/06/2001 7:41:59 PM PST by RnMomof7
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To: FormerLib
Even Latin lovers like me know that God speaks a little Greek on Sundays. Kyrie, eleison.
20 posted on 12/06/2001 7:45:53 PM PST by Romulus
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