Pastor Jim Cymbala prophetically examines concerns of modern
cultural trends and looks at three warning signs God is sending to the church.
Brooklyn Tabernacle pastor Jim
Cymbala believes that the church is on the brink of a major storm. Decreased
church attendance, anemic messages and pastoral burn-out illustrate diminishing
signs of the spiritual life of Christ. Here Cymbala shares three warning signs
that the church needs to be aware of during a time where it is becoming
increasingly important to hear from Heaven.
WARNING NO. 1 – WE’RE NOT AS BIG AS
WE THINK
A quick Google search will reveal
some surprising statistics about Christians in America. For example, one
website says that 246,780,000 people (79.5 percent of the population) in the
United States are Christians.1 That’s a huge percentage of Americans who claim
to be followers of Christ!
But is it true or a bogus number?
If nearly 80 percent of the
population were Christian, wouldn’t we see the effects of that in culture?
Let me ask the question in a
different way. Are eight out of ten people in your school, office, or community
Bible-believing, churchgoing followers of Jesus? That’s not the case in
Brooklyn, where I live and work. My guess is that’s not the case where you live
either.
In the book The Great Evangelical
Recession, author John S. Dickerson takes a closer look at these often
exaggerated statistics and the data behind them and finds that the numbers
don’t add up. He points out that the vast majority of those claiming to be
“Christian” rarely attend any church, nor do they trust in Christ alone for
their salvation, nor do they value God’s Word as the only rule for faith and
practice.
You’ve run into this before, right?
You’re in a conversation with
someone who said they were a “Christian,” but as the conversation moves deeper,
you find their thinking plainly non-Christian. They don’t value the Bible as
God’s Word. Or they maintain that there are multiple ways to receive salvation
and Jesus is just one of those. What they describe is so different from what
you know the Bible teaches, it is hard to imagine how they could call themselves
believers in Jesus.
Jenny, a friend from church,
recently had a conversation with a woman who identified herself as a Christian.
Yet as the conversation developed, the woman also told Jenny that she believed
that everyone should make up their own religion. Perhaps they should also make
up a name for that religion, because it is not Christianity!
To get an accurate count of
Bible-believing Christians in America, Dickerson looked at four studies by four
different researchers who had four different motivations and used four
different methodologies to calculate the number. Their unanimous conclusion was
that “the actual number of evangelical Christians is shockingly between 7 to
8.9 percent of the United States population, not 40 percent and certainly not
70 percent.”2 That’s right, only 7 to 8.9 percent of America.
The truth is that the number of real
believers in Jesus is in a massive decline, and that decline is happening much
more rapidly than we have thought. While many boast of America being a “Christian
nation,” Dickerson’s researchers say it’s fewer than one out of ten. And it
gets worse. He predicts that within thirty years, the number of evangelical
Christians will drop to one in every twenty-five Americans!
These numbers are a clear warning
that the lights are going out.
WARNING NO. 2 – PERSONAL
TRANSFORMATION IS RARE
Over the last decade, leaders from
several denominations have told me that new members, average attendance,
baptisms, and giving have all declined in their churches. The largest
evangelical denomination sadly reports that new converts as measured by baptisms
in 2012 was the lowest since 1948!
Talking with pastors throughout the
country, I know these trends aren’t limited to any one denomination. Recently,
while in Louisiana, I prayed at an altar with a pastor who was distraught over
the lack of spiritual results in his ministry. This man had been a pastor for
nearly thirty years and had weathered many of the typical ups and downs pastors
experience. He had a passion for ministry, and all he wanted to do was lead
people to Jesus. With a heavy heart and tears in his eyes, he said, “Listen,
Jim, I love God, but I haven’t baptized ten new converts in two years! There
are people all around who need Jesus, but I can’t seem to reach them. I don’t
know what to do.” Then he broke down sobbing.
His story isn’t unique or
surprising.
In 2012 the Barna Group found that
46 percent of churchgoers said “their life had not changed at all as a result
of churchgoing.”4 On top of that, “three out of five church attenders (61
percent) said they could not remember a significant new insight gained by
attending church services.”5 What is even more bothersome is that “one-third of
those who have attended a church in the past have never felt God’s presence
while in a congregational setting” (emphasis added).
Think of it: More than
half of churchgoers don’t remember even one significant new insight gained by
going to God’s house!
Something strange is
going on here.
It is obvious the
overwhelming majority of our ministries are not producing much fruit in the
form of converted, changed lives. And people are not experiencing God in our
churches. This would have been unthinkable in the early days of the Christian
church as described in the New Testament. This is a critical warning sign that
something is terribly wrong.
Pastor Jim Cymbala ~
Brooklyn Tabernacle, New York City
WARNING NO. 3 – BIBLICAL
LITERACY IS DECLINING
Not only are the
majority not getting spiritual insight from their church experience, but a
growing number aren’t getting it from the Bible either. According to the
American Bible Society’s “State of the Bible 2013” report, the number of
Americans who are antagonistic toward the Bible has increased from 10 percent
to 17 percent from 2011 to 2013.7 Where will we be in five or ten years if this
trend continues?
To counter that
statistic, at first glance it might seem positive that two out of three
Americans believe the Bible contains everything a person needs to live a
meaningful life.8 But only one out of five (21 percent) actively read the Bible
at least four times a week.9 Even among churchgoers who believe the Bible is
the inspired Word of God, only 20 percent say they think about it during the
day.10 God has spoken to us through his Word, but fewer are taking the time to
listen.
Surveys also show that
there is barely any difference between the lifestyles of Christian churchgoers
and the behavior of those who don’t believe in God at all. Yet the Scriptures
define believers in Jesus as “saints,” a people who have been separated from
the world and belong exclusively to Jesus.
Fewer people inside the
church believe in the truth and power found in Scripture. An even smaller
percentage actively read and apply its truth to their lives. This turning away
from Scripture is another calamitous sign.
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