I Prayed have prayed
Lord help us to not get bogged down in "team" competition but keep us focused on the end goal of winning souls to Christ.

A few months ago, the good folks at the ​Center for the Study of Global Christianity released the 2019 ​edition​ of their “Status of Global Christianity” report. There’s a lot of fascinating info in there. Some of the more significant stats are detailed in the LifeWay ​article​, 7 SURPRISING TRENDS IN GLOBAL CHRISTIANITY IN 2019, like the fact that Christianity is growing faster than the population is, or that the percentage of unevangelized individuals in the world has shrunk, from 54.3% in 1900 to 28.4% today.

Perhaps most fascinating, though, is the projected decrease in atheism worldwide. According to the report, atheism reached its peak in 1970, with over 165 million atheists worldwide. Since then, atheism has been steadily decreasing, with 138 million today, a number that’s expected to drop to 129 million by 2050. That’s huge. Right?

Well…it’s important, when reading stats like this, to take into account the host of other statistics that complexifies the issue. For instance, a 2015 ​study​ from Pew Research showed that while the number of nonbelievers will likely shrink over the next 25 years, this decline will not be evenly distributed: Europe, Ameri​ca and China will continue to move away from religion while Christianity grows exponentially in Sub-Saharan Africa, resulting in what researcher Alan Cooperman ​calls​ “​the secularizing West and the rapidly growing rest.”​ We also can’t forget that Millennials are ​three times as likely​ to consider themselves atheists when compared to Baby Boomers.

In other words, atheism may be projected to decline, but don’t get the party hats out just yet, believers. There are a lot of factors at play.

So what should Christians do with this information? I was joking about the party hats, but for many Christians, that’s not too far from the truth. Somewhere along the way, atheists became the rival team. They’re the villains in Christian movies. They’re the kids we warn our kids to be careful around. They’re the “white whale” of evangelism, the biggest catch you can reel in. They’re a nice thing to have been—we’re very proud that C.S. Lewis and journalist Lee Strobel used​ to be atheists because it demonstrates that, hey, intelligent people can find their way to God, too!—but they’re a horrifying thing to currently be. So, when you hear that atheism is going to drop in the next few decades, maybe you breathe a sigh of relief, without necessarily knowing why.

Maybe that’s why, when Christians hear that atheism is diminishing, they feel like celebrating. Ding dong, the witch is dead! A point for the home team. But is that the best response, I wonder. Or is there a, dare I say, more “Christian” response?

I think there might be. First off, as we’ve already seen, this issue is not black and white; it’s far more complex than simply one team losing and the other team winning. For instance, one of the complicating factors that Christians would do well to explore is the fact that many Millennials, despite moving away from traditional belief, still consider themselves spiritual. In 2017, students from Harvard Divinity School released this tremendous ​study​ that explored the ways that Millennials are creating new forms of spiritual community. The study points to organizations like Crossfit, SoulCycle, The Millennial Trains Project and the Harry Potter Alliance, groups that “use secular language while mirroring many of the functions fulfilled by religious community,” including “fellowship, personal reflection, pilgrimage, aesthetic discipline, liturgy, confession and worship.” I don’t know about you, but I find this profoundly encouraging. To me, I see this study as evidence that human beings can’t get away from their need for something bigger. We have “restless” hearts, to quote St. Augustine.

My hope would be that, starting immediately, Christians would not assume that Millennials are void of all religious impulse. In fact, quite the opposite: Millennials are in desperate need of purpose and connection, so much so that they’re forging their own. Christians would do well to acknowledge them.

Second, and last, I think it’s high time for the war between Christians and atheists to end. I know it’s a two-sided conflict—I can picture the face of many a smug atheist, and I’m sure you can, too—but someone has to lay down their arms, and who better than those called to “turn the other cheek?” Atheists are not the enemy, folks. Sin is. Human frailty and pride is at the “root” of all “evil.” But not a particular group of people.

As usual, whenever we turn people into a monolith, that’s when we get into trouble. We make assumptions that may or may not be true. We fear them. We avoid relationships, because we’re afraid that we’ll lose our faith as a result. The truth is, obviously, God is bigger than atheism. God is big enough for you to befriend an atheist.

And you better do it quickly, too. Apparently, atheism is in decline. And how much a bummer would that be, to not have befriended an atheist when you had the chance?

(Excerpt from The Christian Post. Article by Hayden Royster.)

 

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Deborah Stevens
October 31, 2019

II Cor 6:14 tells us not to be unequally yoked with unbelievers. That means we are not to befriend them! For what fellowship can light have with darkness? Psalm 1:1 – 3 also says BLESSED IS THE MAN WHO WALKS NOT IN THE COUNSEL OF THE WICKED, NOR STANDS IN THE WAY OF SINNERS, NOR SITS IN THE SEAT OF SCOFFERS, BUT HIS DELIGHT IS IN THE LAW OF THE LORD & ON HIS LAW HE MEDITATES DAY & NIGHT! You need to back up what you are saying with verses, because my Bible doesn’t tell me to make friends with the enemy! God calls us to plant seeds! Not rub shoulders with them. Ii Cor 6:17 tells us to come out & be separate from them. I know someone who is an atheist & he believes that we should embrace every form of doctrine out there. He will mock you to your face for doing what’s right if you don’t embrace the worlds ways. For those who are willing to hear & receive the gospel message & who recognize their need to make a change, they’re in a good place. But until such a time comes, our greatest weapon is praying for them. As I have prayed for this atheist, the Lord has told me He is turning his life around! Sometimes all we can do is pray & trust God to bring the right people at the right time to share the things that will impact their lives. Each person must decide what is right for themselves.

Michael
October 29, 2019

You’re not too far off about the “party hats”! Here in Denver, there is a church called “The Party Church”! And they live up to it! Anything goes there. Lord help us to wake up, and see what’s really going on. Look at who and what is behind the scenes, especially in the political realm. We only see what the TV tells us, but there is far more to it.

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