Sunday, August 29, 2010

Glenn Beck, Left/Right, and What is The Gospel Again?

Russell Moore:

A Mormon television star stands in front of the Lincoln Memorial and calls American Christians to revival. He assembles some evangelical celebrities to give testimonies, and then preaches a God and country revivalism that leaves the evangelicals cheering that they’ve heard the gospel, right there in the nation’s capital.
The news media pronounces him the new leader of America’s Christian conservative movement, and a flock of America’s Christian conservatives have no problem with that.
If you’d told me that ten years ago, I would have assumed it was from the pages of an evangelical apocalyptic novel about the end-times. But it’s not. It’s from this week’s headlines. And it is a scandal.
Fox News commentator Glenn Beck, of course, is that Mormon at the center of all this. Beck isn’t the problem. He’s an entrepreneur, he’s brilliant, and, hats off to him, he knows his market. Latter-day Saints have every right to speak, with full religious liberty, in the public square. I’m quite willing to work with Mormons on various issues, as citizens working for the common good. What concerns me here is not what this says about Beck or the “Tea Party” or any other entertainment or political figure. What concerns me is about what this says about the Christian churches in the United States.
It’s taken us a long time to get here, in this plummet from Francis Schaeffer to Glenn Beck. In order to be this gullible, American Christians have had to endure years of vacuous talk about undefined “revival” and “turning America back to God” that was less about anything uniquely Christian than about, at best, a generically theistic civil religion and, at worst, some partisan political movement.
Rather than cultivating a Christian vision of justice and the common good (which would have, by necessity, been nuanced enough to put us sometimes at odds with our political allies), we’ve relied on populist God-and-country sloganeering and outrage-generating talking heads. We’ve tolerated heresy and buffoonery in our leadership as long as with it there is sufficient political “conservatism” and a sufficient commercial venue to sell our books and products.
Too often, and for too long, American “Christianity” has been a political agenda in search of a gospel useful enough to accommodate it. There is a liberation theology of the Left, and there is also a liberation theology of the Right, and both are at heart mammon worship. The liberation theology of the Left often wants a Barabbas, to fight off the oppressors as though our ultimate problem were the reign of Rome and not the reign of death. The liberation theology of the Right wants a golden calf, to represent religion and to remind us of all the economic security we had in Egypt. Both want a Caesar or a Pharaoh, not a Messiah.
Read the rest.

7 comments:

JIBBS said...

Did anyone else notice the guy who prayed and kept referring to "Lord Gods" over and over. He kept using the plural when addressing God.

amy romero said...

a m e n. thanks for posting this.

Anonymous said...

Just a thought. If anyone listens to Beck on a daily basis, esp. when he spoke about Christian salvation, he could have been reading out of a Catholic catechism. I don't care what he says he is now, he is a Roman Catholic, by virtue of his baptism and upbringing. That doesn't disappear because someone starts going to a different church or temple. Pray for Beck because whether he knows it or not, he's more Catholic than Mormon, and I can easily see him returning to the Catholic Church. He constantly quotes B16 and really "
"gets" him. God works in mysterious ways, and I believe, if he is sincere in what he says, that God is calling him home to the Catholic Church. Many Christians who seek the truth come "home".

Pebblekeeper ~ Angie said...

I watched a friend's home who flew to DC from the West Coast to gather with these Americans. She is amazed at what is coming out of the press and what she actually experienced there. She is a bible believing Gospel Loving Christ Follower. Spirit Filled. Fruit bulging. Gifts Flowing woman. The event inspired her to hope in America - to our faith based on the bible and Christ. Her joy was filled with the gathering of the people stepping up to show how many Americans love Christ. It wasn't about a man, or his political history. It was about Christian Americans. Gathering. Peacefully. Please do not take time to join those who wish to show Christians as crazy, lazy, doctrine stretched/focused nuts. :) But rather those who Love Christ. Love the Body. Love America.

Anonymous said...

Sounds like the author of this post has serious doubts about what God can do in these situations. Bummer.

Still Waters said...

You may want to check out this article as well! Very thought out!
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs019/1101818841456/archive/1103648540449.html

Wish we were not so desperate that we would get dupped!

Buffy said...

I came about this post via another blog, and I am embarrassed that I even read it. I am not a faithful Beck follower, however, I do believe that his heart and message are appropriate for our times. He is not pushing a religious agenda (faith conversion). He is standing up for faith in a public platform. Good for him. We are a lost world in need of saving. No, Beck is not our saviour. He is merely a disciple, as we all should be. He is calling all Christ followers to stand up and fight for what is right and good. We can only do that if we stop faith-bashing long enough to see that we are all brothers and sisters in Christ...not brothers and sisters in Catholic church...or Mormon or Mennonite or non-denominational. We are our own worst enemies.