Posted on 05/28/2008 7:38:55 AM PDT by Terriergal
In an era of broken politics and bad religion, faith is making a serious comeback as a force for social change, says Christian author and speaker Jim Wallis.
Mon, May. 26, 2008 Posted: 08:58:18 AM EST
LONDON In an era of broken politics and bad religion, faith is making a serious comeback as a force for social change, says Christian author and speaker Jim Wallis.
Speaking at the U.K. launch of his new book, Seven Ways to Change the World, in central London Sunday night, Wallis said Christianity is reviving and that it is time for Christians to answer the two great spiritual hungers of the world today the hunger for spirituality and the hunger for social justice.
The connection between the two is the one the world is waiting for, he said.
Wallis admitted that Christianitys reputation as hypocritical, judgmental and otherworldly posed some image problems, and that the likes of televangelists and pedophile priests had created baggage.
People are confused about what we think and what we believe, he said.
Wallis painted a positive picture, however, of Christianity coming back from the margins as the answer to some of the worlds biggest challenges, including poverty, human trafficking, environmental degradation and amoral culture.
Politics is broken. Politics is failing to address the great moral issues of the time. When that happens, social movements rise up to change politics and the best social movements always have spiritual foundations, he said.
Wallis pointed to the great changes that movements rooted in Christianity had already made in history, including the abolition of the slave trade, child labor law reform, and womens suffrage.
He told the audience, Things no one thought could change became possible to change because of movements, and every single self reform movement
didnt succeed without the significant involvement of people of faith.
Todays generation of believers could make the same difference, he insisted.
Your generation is applying your faith to the biggest challenges we face in our time and thats the good news.
Wallis, who heads the U.S.-based Christian network Sojourners, acknowledged that the challenges in todays world are huge, but encouraged believers to rely on their faith to make the difference.
What [these issues] feel like are mountains, but you know what? Thats why we call it faith. Thats the whole point, he said. The Bible says if youve got faith the size of a mustard seed, what can you move? Mountains. Movements are in the mountain-moving business.
Wallis pointed to his new book, which calls Christians to make seven commitments that he believes will dramatically change the world.
These big seven challenges require commitments from people of faith and if we make these commitments maybe this will be one of those moments of great awakening of revival when faith comes alive.
He spoke of a tipping point when the problem yields to solutions, but stressed that the commitment to social engagement had to first begin on the individual level and within the home.
If you are not doing it on the home front, forget it, said Wallis.
Its millions of commitments from people to the movement that make the big change possible.
He urged churches to lead by example and not bend to fit politicians agendas, but compel the politicians to fit the churchs agenda.
[Martin Luther] King and [Mahatma] Ghandi knew you have to change the wind, he said. But change the wind and its remarkable how quickly they (politicians) respond. They have an agenda. We cant just fit into their agenda. We have to have an agenda that they respond to. Thats what movements have done
. Thats the big possibility.
Wallis also appealed to Christians not to fall into cynicism but to continue to have hope in change.
The big choice is the choice between hope and cynicism, he said.
[Cynics] are against all the bad stuff but you dont think it could ever change. And so your cynicism becomes a buffer against commitment.
Hope on the other hand isnt a feeling or a personality type. Hope is a choice people make, a decision they make, because of the thing we call faith. Hebrews says faith is the substance of things hoped for
hope means believing in spite of the evidence and then watching the evidence change.
Christians need to invest their time, money, talents and faith into making change happen, Wallis stressed.
If you dont put everything into it, there wont be any movements that change much of anything. But if you do, there is no telling what this generation will accomplish.
He concluded: Weve seen a lot of bad religion. Bad religion pulls up the worst stuff. But good religion brings out our best stuff the compassion of Christ, a hunger for justice
. Good religion is the answer to bad religion. That time is coming again.
Wallis was joined on the platform by Steve Chalke, the founder of Christian movement Faithworks, which hosted the evening.
He echoed Wallis sentiments, saying, Jim is right, politics is broken. Politics isnt working.
Chalke admitted however that our (Christians) theology is broken a lot of the time and spoke of the need for a move away from disembodied and spiritual good news towards a more socially engaged and holistic theology.
We have got to read our Bibles more closely than we have done and engage more fiercely than we have done, he told the audience, adding, Faith isnt about an escape and materialism.
Chalke also told Christians that they have nothing to fear from new atheists like Richard Dawkins, author of the God Delusion, saying the fact that Dawkins recently identified himself as a cultural Christian was tantamount to an admission that atheism is morally bankrupt.
Secular humanism is going to produce a moral desert, he said.
In an age where Christians no longer hold power in society, Christians are going to have to demonstrate faith, he continued.
What actually matters is who delivers something down on the ground. Thats the challenge to us.
Maria Mackay
Christian Post Correspondent
He concluded: Weve seen a lot of bad religion. Bad religion pulls up the worst stuff. But good religion brings out our best stuff the compassion of Christ, a hunger for justice . Good religion is the answer to bad religion. That time is coming again.
Does that include the “man-centered” heresies you preach Jim?
Wallis sounds great in that speech, but once one brushes away the detrious, and looks at the roots of his views, the rot is apparent.
The apostle John warns “Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.”
“Wallis pointed to his new book, which calls Christians to make seven commitments that he believes will dramatically change the world. “
So if we read his book we will change the world. The man is a little to full of himself.
That doesn't sound like Christ's Great Commission to me. "make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you."
Those things Wallis says are only a “part of” the things to do to follow doing the things you rightly said. They are avenues through which you can share the Gospel too, not an end all as Wally Boy is saying.
Jim Wallis works for Howeard Dean.
Wallis is the Peace Studies Pastor. Those kinds of programs and liberal causes just love him. He sounds good but...look beneath the covers.
Bad religion points you to the sin in your life. Good religion points you to Marxism and liberation theology.
He was around a lot longer than the Purpose Driven stuff, but I guess it’s all from the same pot.
yup. He’s a wolf in sheep’s clothing definitely.
Howeird Dean? Not surprising. Dean appears to be UCC which I think Wallis must be (how far from Christianity can you get?) and his wife is Jewish and their kids are being raised Jewish.
HMM!! That reminds me of another liberalizing Christian Evangelical:
yup. Jim Wallis and Rick Warren are theological brethren even though Warren verbally denounces Christian Marxism, he puts forth his own alternative version of the social(ist) gospel.
-PJ
I agree... at least with the last part. I've never heard Wallis sound good. He always sounds like a wolf.
Our best stuff is as filthy rags I thought! Guess when he focuses on all those verses on the ‘poor’ he forgets about the verses on SIN!
I heard this guy on the BBC (Simon Mayo’s afternoon show 5 Live) - he was flagged up as an evangelical. Given the lack of evangelicals on the BBC I decided to listen.
Just a lot of liberal social gospel as far as I could tell.
Ho Hum.
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