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Mark GalliMark Galli

SoulWork

We've Won the Lottery—Now What?

The meaning of evangelical scandals—including our own.

Why does the evangelical community end up with sinners like Governor Mark Sanford (adultery) and Ted Haggard (immorality) and CEO Kenneth Lay (fraud) and evangelist Jim Baker (licentiousness)—to take but a very few examples! A year doesn't go by that we aren't treated to another major scandal. Who will be next?

Unfortunately, history is a discomforting witness to the truth that church leaders and followers are all too easily mesmerized by money, sex, and power—or just plain sloth. In recent history, evangelical jeremiads were usually lamenting the sorry state of liberalism. Today, the jeremiads are self-directed, from The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind to The Scandal of Evangelical Politics to Pagan Christianity. It's now pretty much agreed that the evangelical church mirrors the dysfunctions of secular society, from premarital sex stats to divorce rates to buying habits. Much to our dismay, we are hardly a light to the world, nor an icon of the abundant, transformed life.

What has gone wrong? The first answer seems to be that we are not thinking right or doing enough. Some put their chips on redefining the gospel in social terms; they assume the problem is individualism. Others bet on spiritual formation; the problem is that we're lazy and spiritual disciplines point the way to a more godly future. Some say we need the dynamism of the Holy Spirit; the problem is formalism. Others plea for more accountability groups or more thoughtful worship music or more time in prayer or more of some other magic bullet. If we only do something more, things will improve.

We've tried all these, and tried them time and again. The lamentable conclusion seems to be that while the gates of Hades will never prevail against the church, the spirit of moral mediocrity has pretty much won the day. This is not to deny those wonderful moments when the church really acts like the church, when outsiders notice Jesus Christ as a result! Such moments are pure gifts, signs of the coming kingdom. But history suggests they are intermittent. The usual reality is that the church, from corrupt Corinth to amoral America, remains a sinful institution, full of sinful people.

Perhaps it's time we try a new approach, and do less.

* * *

To do less seems scandalous, because the very justification of Christianity is on the line. Jesus promises that we'll not only enjoy full life (John 10:10), but that we'll be salt and light to dying society (Mt. 5:13-16), and an example of love to a watching world (John 13:35). Paul says that in Christ we are a new creation (2 Cor. 5:17), that we are called to become like Jesus (Rom. 8:29). If we do not evidence a transformed life, the Christian faith will seem like a fraud. If our churches look no more vital than the Kiwanis' Club, what's the point?

No wonder we panic in the face of our own corruption—or when someone tells us that there may be something more important to do than reckless striving for righteousness.

The problem is not a new one. Many early churches were a mess—just read Paul's correspondence to the divisive, sexually libertine Corinthians. In fact, Paul, for all his ethical admonitions, admits that while he wants to do good, he often seems unable to do it (Rom. 7). Even at the end of his life, after decades of living for Christ, he thinks of himself only as the foremost of sinners (1 Tim. 1:16). This does not sound like the victorious life to me.

And yet Paul seems unfazed. He remains confident of his transformation in Christ. How can this be?

SoulWork

In "SoulWork," Mark Galli brings news, Christian theology, and spiritual direction together to explore what it means to be formed spiritually in the image of Jesus Christ.

Mark Galli

Mark Galli

Galli is editor of Christianity Today and author of God Wins, Chaos and Grace, A Great and Terrible Love, Jesus Mean and Wild, Francis of Assisi and His World, and other books.


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 51 comments

Joe

August 07, 2009  10:50pm

I know that the author has great affinities with Anglicanism, but he must be of the Puritan variety because Reformed theology is pretty deep in his bones. He is certainly not the broad Anglicanism of the Caroline Divines and John Wesley who thought fairly highly of transformation and sanctification. Besides I weary of the Luther comment simul iustus et peccator since much of the time it's taken out of context. What did they teach at Fuller anyway? Justification must be at every moment to facilitate transformation. Surely Paul's comment at the end of his life (if it was Paul) has a different meaning and what he means by chief of sinners after a life spent in service is different than what he might have meant at the beginning? Is it not akin to John Newton's "wretch like me" comment? Does that imply that Newton, good Anglican that he was, did not undergo radical transformation? Please a little theological acumen in the next column rather than Reformed platitudes and false dilemmas.

Johann

August 07, 2009  9:02am

The problem is that the bar to evangelical demi-god status is very low. If you've got a silver tongue or a good looking face, you don't even need to go to one of the myriad evangelical diploma mills in order to become a minister, who in evangelical circles- especially Pentecostal- is treated with semi-divine worship. That, plus the fact that the evangelical minister is expected to entertain as well as be worshipped, attracts a lot of narcissists and ambitioius people to the ministry.

Stuart Appleton

August 04, 2009  7:21pm

We don't sin because we are trying "to do too much." Charity and works are no less valuable to those who receive them because they come from a sinner. Paul admits imperfection, not great sin. He considers himself the least of the saints because he once persecuted the church.

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