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​Every Youth = Every Christian 

Solution to Consumer Christianity

21/8/2018

 
Consumer Christians take grace for granted and spend little time desiring obedience and holiness. Consumerist Christians sit back and expect to be served, but spend little time embodying the gospel. Why does this occur?
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The Problem: Jesus...as Lord?

Perhaps one of the problems is our view of Jesus. Underlying both, perhaps, is a pattern of thought that acknowledges Jesus as Saviour, but not as Lord. For a consumer, Jesus is not their Lord who has called them to be holy and obedient, Jesus is not the all consuming ruler of the universe who’s resurrection changes their lives. For the consumerist Christian they see Jesus as the one who serves (them), but not as the one who commands them to “love one another as I have loved you.” An incomplete view of the person of Jesus leads to an incomplete view of the gospel, and an incomplete view of the gospel leads to an incomplete practice of faith.

The Solution: Reclaim it
The solution then for consumers and consumerists is to reclaim the Lordship of Christ and a gospel of transformation. The gospel message is not “the pie in the sky when you die,” but the “steak on the plate while you wait.” The transformation of the Holy Spirit, leads you into a life loving holiness, desiring Jesus’ divine demands and following God’s commandments. “ For I command you today to love the Lord your God, to walk in obedience to him, and to keep his commands, decrees and laws; then you will live and increase,” (Deut 30:16). Don’t get me wrong, I’m not advocating for legalism; but don’t swing too far on the pendulum away from legalism that you forget that God demands your obedience. Following commands does not equate to legalism.  
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Live the Best Life
To achieve our goal of “Every Youth = Every Christian,” CY needs to have leaders who love obedience and holiness: which is a counternarrative of our youth culture. Whereas our culture preaches that freedom lies in an individual’s choice of limitless self-fulfillment, Christianity attests that true freedom lies in a individual’s choice of life within the good limits of God’s design.

To be truly human and truly free doesn’t mean doing whatever we want,
to be truly human and truly free is doing what is good;
and goodness is God’s design in Christ.

Life is lived best, then, when we live under God’s kingship. “Choose life!” (Deut 30:19) becomes a calling for both us and the youths.

Consumer Christian #2 - Consumerism

7/8/2018

 
“What can I get out of this?”
One of the biggest dangers of Christianity in the western world is the unwitting adoption of consumerism into our faith. From a consumerist worldview, church is seen as a service provider, and the body of Christ as customers. “What can I get out of this?” rather than “What can I give to this?” is the question asked.
  • Does youth group supply what I need?
  • What is the target market for this ministry?
  • Is small group worth me putting the time in, when I don’t get much out of it?
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And sometimes this consumerist attitude is perpetuated by churches, youth groups and ministries. We prepare worship time as entertaining and slick, with the most able people at the front. Sometimes we “bait and switch,” inviting people to a night of entertainment, and BAM! we sneak in a 20 minute talk and the invitees sit uncomfortably. Ministries are event-based aimed to attract people to come; success is measured by the number of people attending and whether they put a 9-10 in the “I found this helpful” category. Church becomes a place of choice rather than commitment; faith becomes an experience of gain rather than sacrifice.

Habits and Rituals
Of course, do not hear me wrong. Aside from “bait and switch,” preparing worship in a helpful and slick way, event-based ministries, numbers of attendees and their feedback are not bad things. But to what sort of habits and rituals are we conforming the church?
  • When Sunday services have a pattern of worship as a slick performance, how would church members cope when they move states to a dwindling church where worship includes a guitarist with one string untuned, two children with autism shouting, and an organist who plays too fast?
  • When growing our children’s faith follows the pattern of answering the right question and receiving a reward, how would they know that faith includes acts of mercy and a love for obedience?
  • When the pattern for a youth event is sitting back and having things done for them, ‘consuming’ food, drinks, skits and games, how would a new generation of Christians inhabit Christ’s attitude of foot-washing and self giving love? (See this video!)

We Are What We Do
Philosopher and Theologian James K. A. Smith tells us that “we are what we do.” Our habits, rituals, postures and patterns of life form us spiritually. And when we forget to critique our ingrained habits that have consumerist values or form us to be consumers, we lead a new generation of believers blindly into committing cultural sins.

Are we consumerist Christians? Characteristics of consumer christians:
  • God: I am really only going to come to you when I need help, or when I run out of time to study for an exam, or when I need to discern whether I should date this person. Really, you’re my functional saviour, a vending machine.
  • Devotions: I don’t really do my bible reading or prayer, because I never get anything out of it. I’m just waiting for the right moment when I experience the change.
  • Church: I’m just church hopping, the last one I went to I didn’t really feel connected with the community, so I’m just looking around to see which Church is right for me.
  • Discipleship: Discipleship? Well I don’t feel like I’m fed enough. No one ever discipled me.
  • Commitment: Sorry, I can’t come to [insert prior commitment here] this term, because there might be something better to do. (Of course we wouldn’t say that)


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