Theology

Christians, Stop ‘Giving Up God’ for Lent

In an age of functional atheism, ‘tis the season for traditional fasting and prayer.

Christianity Today March 21, 2023
Illustration by Mallory Rentsch / Source Images: Unsplash

“I’m giving up God for Lent,” said the post on my social media feed.

I had to reread the line again while my brain did a bit of reorienting. Wasn’t the person who posted this a Christian?

For some believers, the argument goes like this: By intentionally “giving up” God for a season, we give ourselves the chance to put to death any inaccurate idols we may have unintentionally created out of him.

Engaging in this practice, they argue, allows us the chance to see what life would be like without God—and that, in turn, should make us want to draw closer to him. The principle goes that by choosing to lean away from God and depriving ourselves of his presence, we can learn His true value in our lives.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, this practice is also promoted by atheist philosopher Peter Rollins, who is offering an online course called ‘Atheism For Lent’—aiming to critique theism and set aside “questions regarding life after death to explore the possibility of life before death.”

As a native and resident of the Bay Area in California, none of this is shocking to me. But what’s intriguing to me after searching online is that so many Christians, and even some churches, are intentionally engaging in this practice as a form of spiritual formation.

My question is this: Aren’t most Christians already “giving up God” in their daily lives?

Many of us are living our day-to-day existence without reference to the Lord instead of involving him in the day-to-day choices and decisions we make. Some have called this “functional atheism,” which I find a fitting phrase. Parker Palmer defines this concept as “the unexamined conviction within us that if anything decent is going to happen here, I am the one who needs to make it happen.”

I see this all the time here in the Bay Area, where we have almost everything at our fingertips. We have access to astronomical amounts of data, excellent healthcare, and high-paying jobs—commonplace riches beyond the imagination of much of the world. These realities make it easier for us to feel no need for God and try to figure out life for ourselves.

I believe it’s the traditional Lent we truly need because of its ability to slowly unwrap our fingers from the steering wheel of our lives.

This isn’t just for the individual either. It’s especially important in certain modern church contexts where structured programs are key, the expected is expected, and the curveballs unsettle us deeply. Lent is a chance for the Church to allow a “holy disruption” into our communal rhythms. That disruption’s ultimate goal is getting us back to God as sovereign over all we do, including that which is done in our sacred spaces.

My story with Lent is relatively brief. It’s only in the past several years that I’ve felt convicted to press into the season in intentional ways.

One year, I followed the traditional Eastern Orthodox fast from food. It was challenging, changing my daily meal schedule and impacting what I ate. It also allowed my concept of Lent to move from my head to my heart. I went from a fully intellectual conception of faith to an embodied one.

This minor adjustment in what I was eating challenged my regular rhythms and heightened my sense of conviction about other habits in my life. It refined my senses and drew me closer to God. I realized how much I took God for granted, especially the goodness of His creation. I heard the constant refrain of the Doxology in my head: “Praise God from Whom all blessings flow!” and finally gained deeper insight into what that line of praise means.

To this day, that season of Lent has had a lasting impact on me.

Instead of leaving God out of the process, involving him created an intimate, radically conscious dynamic of prayer throughout the day. Without God firmly at the center of that time, my Lenten fast would simply have been doing what one of my friends once called “a Christian diet season.”

For me, the difference between a diet and fast is ultimately about the orientation of our affections: Fasting relies on God to change us, while diets are programs we create on our own for a desired outcome. John speaks to this well in 1 John 2:15–16:

“Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world—the desires of the flesh and the desires of the eyes and pride of life—is not from the Father but is from the world.”

A constant companion on my Lenten journey was Beginning to Pray by Anthony Bloom. Though in reference to prayer, his opening paragraph spoke into my fasting:

“We should think, rather, in terms of an increasing progression from depth to depth, from height to height, whichever formula you prefer, so that, at every step, we already possess something which is rich, which is deep, and yet always go on, longing for and moving toward something richer and deeper.”

What I discovered for the first time in my life was that forgoing a chocolate bar or a meal is not meant to create a void in us, but rather to invite God into the negative spaces our fasting has made. The idea is to seek further riches from God, not remove him from the process.

Lent is the process of asking our Father to be the all-in-all that we truly need in place of many things in our lives that numb us with comfort. Lent was allowing me to value God’s character, and to need His presence. Lent has always been about “giving up” those things that blocked us from him in the first place.

We don’t mind the verses where Jesus calls us to be a “good” or “better” person, but we sometimes forsake or forget the harder passages about camels and needles (Matt. 19:24) and lukewarm water (Rev. 3:15–16), the passages about suffering and being hated by the world (John 15:18) and repenting for the sake of the kingdom (Matt. 3:2).

Lent is all about those passages because they speak of Christ’s call to surrender and sacrifice—and fasting implies our need to repent and recenter ourselves on him by denying the things of this world.

If some people want to try “giving up God” for one reason or another, that is their prerogative—but personally, I think it’s completely missing the point of Lent. Indeed, without God, there can be no Lent.

At the end of the day, Lent is about learning to ask ourselves whether we are living like Christians or functional atheists in our daily lives: Are we waking up and choosing Christ? Are we listening to the Spirit when we encounter someone in need? Are we caring for the least of these in our midst? Are we truly loving our enemies?

Lent is not a vibe intended to appeal to our aesthetic preferences or provide us with “emotional release.” Instead, it’s about sacrificing some of the small but illusory comforts of our modern lives to stay in daily alignment with God as our Creator, provider, and sustainer.

Nik Bartunek is a worship pastor and musician in the Silicon Valley Bay Area. He is passionate about the overlap of faith and culture, and also about Wizards and Elves.

Culture

Dante Bowe Navigates Worship in the Spotlight

After leaving Maverick City Music, the singer is launching his own label focused on authenticity in a field increasingly crowded by celebrity.

Dante Bowe

Dante Bowe

Christianity Today March 21, 2023
Courtesy of Dante Bowe

Grammy Award–winning worship artist Dante Bowe is starting a new chapter.

After years with some of today’s most influential worship music collectives, Bethel Music and Maverick City Music, Bowe has launched TRUE Music, a label and management company that he hopes will become a hub for creativity and spiritual growth for emerging artists.

Bowe has shared a worship stage with the biggest and hippest names in the industry: Chandler Moore, Upperroom, Housefires, We The Kingdom, Crowder, Pat Barrett, and Brandon Lake. He’s known for his soulful, raspy voice and powerful performances on “Old Church Basement,” “Take Me Back,” and “Yes and Amen.” His energetic stage presence and emphasis on spontaneity in worship make him a dynamic and sought-after performer.

Bowe left Maverick City Music in September 2022; a social media post by Maverick City announced the departure, citing “behavior that was inconsistent with [its] core values and beliefs.”

The 29-year-old singer has reemerged after a social media hiatus with a new song “Hide Me” and a clear vision and a desire to foreground authenticity in his new project. His prominence has put him in the realm of Christian celebrity, though his heart is still to put Jesus at the center.

“I think there is a misconception that a lot of us want fame. It’s not that we want fame. We just release songs that we really sit at home, that we live with—it’s our real stories and our real life,” he said. “The general public makes it famous because they’ve encountered God through it, or they feel healed or like they can fight in their marriage or whatever the case may be. It’s the inspiration. It’s their theme song. That’s when fame comes into play and that’s when arenas come into play. It’s when God’s breathing on it.”

Bowe spoke with CT about his plans for the future, what he’s learned about music in the spotlight, and how he is navigating the public pressures that have come with his success.

What was the catalyst for TRUE Music?

I’ve been working in this industry for seven years, three years professionally, and I’ve seen a lot, been through a lot, experienced a lot. I felt like I wanted to use my influence and all I’ve acquired by working in the industry to reach back and help friends out and give them a healthy environment to be creative, to dream—you know what I mean? As an artist, I feel like I’m in the best position because I know what it’s like to be them, and I’m creating an atmosphere that I feel like I would’ve always wanted.

How central will worship music be in this new venture?

It has always been central for me, since I met Jesus. It’s just a part of my life. It’s the center of my life. I live surrendered to Jesus. I’m not perfect. Obviously I make mistakes, but I am living surrendered to Jesus, so everything I do will come from that place. Whether it be a song that makes you dance, a soft ballad, a worship song with Bethel, it’s going to always be Jesus at the center of my life. Worship is in everything I do, everything I aspire to do. It’s always at the center.

You’ve talked about wanting to pursue new and innovative ways of developing artists. What do you mean by that?

I want the actual recording atmosphere to be conducive to Jesus and what he would want and to the Holy Spirit. I want it to be a pure process when people are creating and making music, or maybe even if they’re painting. I don’t know what all TRUE will do in the future. I want us to always be pouring back into not just art and the artist but also the staff. I want them to feel healthy.

You’ve been part of some of the most influential worship music collectives working right now— Maverick City Music, Bethel. How do you navigate in an industry where worship leaders become celebrities, where the line between performance and worship is blurry?

Authenticity is a bend of transparency and truth, and it’s very, very hard to find. But you have to find a place where you can be really transparent, very honest, very aware of who you are and where you are. And blend that with the truth. Because everything you feel and everything you go through is not necessarily the truth. Our emotions and feelings—it’s hard … The Bible talks about not even trusting your own heart because it’s wicked. You have to lean into the truth of what God actually thinks about us. Then you have this authentic creation. This person can be free no matter if they’re selling out an arena or helping their mom with the groceries.

I believe when people are truly authentic, when they’re truly humble, they’re serving. Fame and all that stuff is not even a thought when you’re just operating in your purpose and being truly who you’re supposed to be.

Do you remember your first opportunity to lead worship in an arena or stadium? What was that like?

My first opportunity to sing in a stadium was in Brazil. When I did get the opportunity to sing there, it didn’t feel any different. I mean, you knew you were in a different place. You knew there were a lot of people. But I had been leading in excellence for so long. Even just in my church, I always took it so seriously, even if it was just 50 people in the crowd. I always wanted to create an encounter—not just for them but for myself.

I was always trying to access heaven, so when I had the opportunity to stand before a sea of people, I just kind of did the same thing, if I’m honest. Because—and that’s what people love me for—I just kind of stick to who I am. I don’t really change or take it all in, like “Oh, I’m in front of masses of people.” I just kind of do my thing. I get to worship again.

No stage fright?

No, I have stage fright. But it’s usually because I want to do well. It’s not because of the opinion of man. A lot of times I’ll feel nervous because I’m like, “Okay, God, what are you saying? What Scriptures do you want me to pull from?” I also like to go into my worship set with a theme. I’m like, “God, tell me what’s today for. Is there depression here? Or is someone dealing with anxiety, fear, or divorce?” I really want to know. So it’s my seeking that leads to nervousness.

Over the past year since your departure from Maverick City Music, what have you learned about navigating public scrutiny and the complicated nature of Christian celebrity?

Well, it’s never fun to be under fire. You know, on social media people can just be rude and say things that they don’t necessarily mean. It all comes with it, right? At one point, I would be so sad, or I would feel down about a comment or something someone said about me or a friend who I love dearly. But it doesn’t mean anything; I really have to stay committed to Jesus. I really have to live my life in obedience, and as long as I’m living my life in obedience to Jesus, he will lead me, guide me, direct me. And there will be people in my life, fans in my life, that he’ll place there to always build me up and encourage me to keep going and to keep fighting and believing in God and believing in what he put inside me.

The greatest day in history was a man under scrutiny. I just follow Jesus’ example. He always loved his enemies, and he always invited them to the table even if he knew they would betray him. He understood that it was not flesh and blood that he was combating.

You can get really distracted and unproductive when you focus on flesh and blood. It’s a fight we were never meant to fight. If you don’t follow God’s will, you’re going to be miserable. I feel forced to follow God, in the best way! If I do the opposite, it’s not going to be great. It’s not the better thing. I want the better thing always. Fame follows that. Money follows that. Because I think, as Christian creators, we’re healing the world.

It seems like worship music as a genre has a heightened profile in the Christian music industry and in the mainstream music industry compared to 10 or 15 years ago. What do you make of that shift?

I feel like when I came into the music industry, there wasn’t a lot of transparency and truth—you know what I mean? In the last few years, through me and my friends over at Maverick or Bethel, they’ve started being very truthful, putting God at the center of it all. I feel like a lot of people can relate now more than they could in the past to Christian radio or Christian music in general. When you hear myself or Naomi Raine or Tasha Cobbs [Leonard] sing, it brings God so close.

I feel like [worship music] is a bit grittier, a little bit more real. People are responding in great numbers because they find themselves in the music now.

Do you think that has to do with authenticity in the content of the songs themselves or with how artists are thinking about and presenting themselves?

I mean, I think the best artists are the best communicators. The audience can just, you know, catch their eye—there’s conviction in their eyes and in their voice. When you’re worshiping God in spirit and in truth, it’s impossible to sing something you don’t believe with conviction.

I remember the first time I heard Kari Jobe sing “The Blessing.” You just know she’s been through something and she really means it. It’s her real story. You don’t sit on your couch and casually write that song. That’s a song you have to think through and live with. Then you have to communicate it.

When you have made a decision to follow Jesus and you make a decision to do worship music or Christian music, you’re literally taking a risk. It’s so much more of a sacrifice. A lot of these guys could write anything or do anything. But they haven’t. They’ve made a choice to serve the church locally and worldwide.

Do you think worshipers in the church are able to discern the authentic from the inauthentic?

It’s very hard to speak on matters you don’t understand. Especially things of the spirit. If you’re writing, and you’re writing about the God of Abraham—“You’re the God of covenant and faithful promises”—you have to know that it’s true. You can’t just conjure up cool things to say. There’s a difference between writing [sings] “You raise me up so I can stand on mountains” and writing “I’m gonna wait on you. I’ve tasted your goodness. I trust in your promise.” That’s totally Scripture. There’s a difference.

The accusation that we’re going to have people getting into this for the money—I want to say, I can show you how much songwriters on the CCLI [Christian Copyright Licensing International] make. I promise you, if someone’s getting into writing Christian music for the money, they’re in the wrong genre.

As you start TRUE Music and look at the landscape around worship music in the music industry, what are you excited about? What are you hopeful for?

I hope to see healthy, inspired, hardworking Christian artists. I’m excited to be around all these new artists around me and in other collectives like Bethel. I’m glad they’re excited and wide-eyed again.

I just want to be prayerful and follow his will.

Kelsey Kramer McGinnis is a musicologist, educator, and writer. She holds a PhD from the University of Iowa and researches music in Christian communities.

Ideas

Christianity Is Not Necessary For Democracy

Contributor

The basic freedoms and human rights we enjoy as Americans do not require a cultural Christian majority.

Christianity Today March 20, 2023

A recent Pew Research report suggested that American Christians could become a minority of the population in less than 50 years. And for some, this has led to a fear that the decline of cultural Christianity in America could spell bad news for the prospects for democracy here.

Because, while many people today are talking about how Christianity (especially when combined with nationalism) might be a threat to democracy, it is still more common to think that Christianity is overall good for democracy. In fact, many conservative evangelicals believe Christianity is necessary for a free society.

After recently publishing a book on Christian nationalism, I’ve given numerous talks, interviews, and podcasts and have had countless conversations with friends and colleagues in evangelical circles on the subject. And I have found that there is a possessive, proprietary attitude toward America and democracy—along with an insistence that a Christian culture is practically a prerequisite for democracy to survive.

The conversation goes something like this: Whenever I argue that it’s a mistake to look to the government to sustain a Christian culture, they counter that the government should have an interest in promoting Christianity because it is essential to sustain our democratic society.

For example, Al Mohler, president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, said at the National Conservatism Conference in September, “I am thankful to live in a society that is the inheritance of a Judeo-Christian civilization because it has established the very freedoms that we know.” So far, so good. Mohler is right that Christianity played an important role in shaping America and inspiring some of our founding principles.

But then he said, “Where else do we have access to any stable notion of human dignity? Where else do we have any access to the notion and defense of human rights in any substantial form?”

I can point out several examples of non-Christian (or fairly new Christian) societies that are, in fact, democracies: for instance, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, Ghana, Mauritius, São Tomé and Príncipe, Samoa, the Seychelles, Mongolia, Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands, the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau, Nauru, Tuvalu, Kiribati, and Timor-Leste. These African, Asian, and Oceanic societies are all democracies that Freedom House ranked as “free” in 2022 for their recognition and protection of human rights.

The ranking also includes a much longer list of “partly free” countries across Africa and Asia, including India, Senegal, Comoros, Malawi, Sierra Leone, Tunisia, Bhutan, Madagascar, Liberia, Benin, Indonesia, Nepal, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Kenya, and more—countries where human dignity and human rights are at least partly recognized and respected.

Most of the countries on the “free” list and a handful of those on the “partly free” list have Christian majorities (including Malawi, Madagascar, Liberia, the Philippines, and Kenya). But their Christianity is a relatively recent import, dating back one or two centuries at most, and not the sort of institutional roots I take Mohler to be referring to.

The same can be said of the dozen or so democracies in the Caribbean, mostly made of up Christian majorities but with strong cultural influences from indigenous religion and animism.

The point is that American freedom is not especially rare anymore and is certainly not limited to America, to the “West,” or to European Judeo-Christian societies. This should demonstrate that Christianity and democracy are indeed separable, but my arguments fall on deaf ears—many of my friends and colleagues still insist that Christianity and democracy are inextricably linked.

Why do so many people insist on the connection between Christianity and democracy? Why is it so important to affirm not only that Christianity helped shape America in the past but also that it must continue to do so if we are to remain a free society?

The strange thing is, prior generations of Christians would be baffled by the idea that our faith is important to sustain a democratic society. Most Christians were probably monarchists of some ilk or other from the Roman Empire straight through the Wars of Religion in the 17th century.

To the extent that theologians thought about the relationship between Christianity and democracy or republicanism at all, they generally argued the two were in conflict, not that they went together. Christianity supposedly stressed otherworldly piety, while self-government required this-worldly virtues, such as public-spiritedness, vigilance against self-dealing, and the ability to put public interest above private gain.

The British and American republicans of the 17th and 18th centuries were essentially the first generation of Christians to argue that Christianity and self-government were compatible. As it happens, I think they were right—but it would not threaten my faith if they were wrong.

Supporting democracy is not the point of Christianity.

It may be a happy side effect—after all, godliness “has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come” (1 Tim. 4:8)—and so it is entirely plausible that Christianity has positive, unintended consequences that makes sustaining democracy easier. But Jesus did not become incarnate to make possible the First Amendment or inspire the US Constitution.

Civic virtue is essential to sustaining an open society. But civic virtue is not the same thing as Christian belief, and Christianity is not the only source of it.

Again, Christianity is probably good for democracy—social scientists have argued that the Protestant emphasis on individual conscience, the priesthood of all believers, and universal literacy were contributing factors to the rise of democracy in the past two centuries. But God’s common grace allowed non-Christians (like pagan Greeks) to discover and practice the principles of political freedom long before we did.

If it turned out that Christianity actually didn’t go well together with democracy, what then? Would that somehow disprove Christianity or shake my faith? Would it show that Christians have nothing to contribute to the world? Of course not. If anything, it would show that Christianity has an important role in speaking against the prevailing assumptions of our age.

Insisting that Christianity and democracy must go together seems to give some people a sense of validation and relevance. It affirms us in the terms most cherished by the standards of our contemporary culture: We helped the cause of freedom, we tell ourselves, and thus Free societies need us to survive.

There’s a grain of truth in the claim, of course: It honors our tribe by highlighting an important historical contribution of our faith. But it is also a self-serving argument because it just so happens to conclude that our tribe needs to remain culturally predominant for the sake of our nation’s well-being and future.

It cloaks an agenda of tribal prerogative in the language of selfless service. It is easy to convince ourselves that our power is intrinsically righteous if it turns out that our faith is the key pillar upholding America’s constitutional order.

And so, we keep telling ourselves that democracy will not survive without Christianity—because it is the myth behind every compromise we make to get or keep cultural or political power. To be clear, it is not wrong to seek or use political power; we do so every time we cast a vote. But Christians are sometimes faced with a choice between maintaining our principles and maintaining our power.

The myth tells us that the choice is illusory: that our power is inherently principled, that the survival of America itself is at stake, that our country will not survive unless we remain in charge, which compels us to do whatever is necessary to keep power.

It might be a comforting myth, but a myth it remains.

Paul D. Miller is a professor of the practice of international affairs at Georgetown University, a research fellow with the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, and a veteran of the war in Afghanistan. His most recent book is The Religion of American Greatness: What’s Wrong with Christian Nationalism.

News

Company that Trademarked ‘Worship Leader’ Makes Others Drop the Term

Popular meme accounts lose social media pages after being reported by Authentic Media, which says it coined the phrase.

Christianity Today March 20, 2023
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Images: Unsplash

Worship Leader Probs was a meme account and podcast dedicated to the challenges of music ministry, but last week its creators revealed that they’ve lost social media pages and had to censor their brand due to a company claiming ownership to “two out of the three words” in their original name.

That company is Authentic Media, which runs a church resource called Worship Leader, once a print magazine and now available online. Authentic Media holds the trademark for “worship leader” and last year publicly stated that it planned “to continue to defend our trademark, as we have for decades.”

The dispute between Worship Leader and Worship Leader Probs dates back to October 2022, when Authentic Media explained its concerns about the name during a phone call with the creators of the meme account.

According to Joshua Swanson, editor in chief of Worship Leader and managing partner at Authentic Media, the company “woke up to the fact that people were using our brand,” and in 2022, he and others at Authentic Media became particularly concerned about brand confusion with Worship Leader Probs.

“It became a material issue for us. Our mission and their mission do not align,” Swanson told CT. “It became a major conflict. We would be at events, and people thought we were them and they were us.”

The phone call last fall did not resolve things, and after months at an impasse, Authentic Media began reporting Worship Leader Probs’ social media accounts for trademark infringement in February 2023.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cpw_mbluT6P/

Before losing its accounts, Worship Leader Probs had 15,000 followers on Facebook and 45,000 followers on TikTok. Its YouTube page has also been taken down. On Instagram, where it has the largest following—133,000—Tabor has been able to rebrand and keep the account as “Worship Probs,” with a Band-Aid over the L in its WLP logo.

What started as an anonymous meme-sharing account has grown into a community and resource for worship leaders looking for inspiration and commiseration. Its growth from a silly diversion into a full-fledged ministry—running it has become creator Brian Tabor’s full-time job—likely led to the conflict with Worship Leader.

Tabor started Worship Leader Probs in 2016 and joked about the scenarios worship leaders know all too well: tech crises, unrehearsed musicians, and holiday exhaustion.

“It started to catch on and grow. People started to ask ‘Who are you? How do you know what I’m dealing with today?’” said Tabor, who has served as a worship pastor in Indianapolis since 1993.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp3K860DNH_/

The conflict between Worship Leader Probs and Worship Leader was not public until last week, when another popular social media creator got caught up in the trademark infringement dispute.

This third account, Rogue Worship Leader, was known for Star Wars–themed memes and mash-ups poking fun at the tropes and quirks of worship music and music ministry: One popular entry is a video of the band Leeland performing “Way Maker” spliced together with footage from The Phantom Menace of Anakin Skywalker yelling, “It’s working” from his podracer.

Scott Leonard, the page’s creator, was blindsided when the Facebook page was taken down without warning for violating community guidelines—specifically, for trademark infringement. Leonard appealed to Facebook and found that it too had been reported by Authentic Media.

On March 16, Leonard posted a video to Instagram, saying (with “Cantina Band” from A New Hope playing in the background), “Hey worship leaders … your job title is actually a trademarked term.”

Authentic Media told CT that it was not their intention to initiate the removal of the Star Wars–themed meme page but that it included it in a list of other similar accounts in the process of reporting Worship Leader Probs. Swanson claims Facebook made that decision and acted without the prompting of Authentic Media.

“We made a mistake and we’re owning up to that,” Swanson said. As of Monday afternoon, he said the company was able to get six reported accounts restored on Facebook.

Before its removal, the Rogue Worship Leader page had thousands of followers on Facebook— its accounts on Instagram and TikTok have 82,500 followers and 46,600 followers, respectively.

Leonard isn’t convinced that his page was just collateral damage. He told CT that he was able to confirm that eight individual posts on his page had been reported to Facebook for copyright infringement by Authentic Media.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp50UHUpUFH/

Leonard also said that after he posted his video to Instagram last week, Authentic Media reached out to the church office where Leonard leads worship, as well as to the church’s pastor and elder board.

Leonard is pursuing an appeals process through Facebook and fears that he may soon be reported on TikTok and Instagram and lose those accounts too. A veteran worship leader of 18 years, Leonard was surprised to find himself in a conflict over a phrase that he considers very much part of his identity.

“I expected to have to fight off Disney and Lucasfilm, not a Christian company,” said Leonard. “Copyright, CCLI, there is room for all of that to maintain some order in the worship community, but this goes beyond that.”

In other trademark conflicts between Christian entities, leaders have had to weigh the importance of protecting and stewarding their brands with the desire to avoid legal fights with fellow ministries. In 2011, the former Mars Hill Church in Seattle dropped its cease-and-desist against a church with a similar name and logo.

At the time, several executive pastors and lawyers saw some benefit to trademarking church names to avoid confusion, though Jim Tomberlin of MultiSite Solutions told CT, “Since most church names are derived from the Bible or commonly used words, it would be difficult to trademark their name only, but it is certainly appropriate to protect a church's name and logo from those who would misrepresent it accidentally or misuse it intentionally.”

Since 2016, Authentic Media has owned the rights to the phrase “worship leader” when applied to periodicals, online publications, and websites with resources around worship. Prior to that, the trademark had been owned by Maranatha Music, Worship Leader’s previous owner, since 1993. The company also holds trademarks for “worship leader workshop” and “song discovery.”

The Worship Leader website featured the claim that the organization “literally coined the term ‘worship leader,’” citing its founder, Chuck Fromm, who died in 2020.

“We have a long history that goes back to the Jesus Revolution and we’re just fortunate enough that our founder [Fromm] and his team essentially created this term ‘worship leader’ and then trademarked it and built our business off of it,” Swanson wrote in an article titled “Why We Defend Our Worship Leader Trademark” on the publication’s website in June 2022. That article was removed last weekend.

Swanson said that before Worship Leader Magazine began in 1991, “the term ‘worship leader’ was not one commonly used in church ministry.”

“It’s been our name since the beginning,” he told CT. “Prior to us, they were music ministers, and they were off to the side.”

A quick search of American newspaper archives reveals the term was in use to describe music ministers and church leaders across Christian denominations throughout the 20th century. A 1959 article from the Sunday Times of Bridgeport, Connecticut, refers to the “Rev. Joseph Church, worship leader” at First Methodist Church. A 1958 article in the Lewiston Daily Sun (Maine) detailing plans for ecumenical Lenten services gives six different individuals the title “worship leader.” It’s also not difficult to find hymnals from the early and mid-20th century that occasionally use the term.

Another page on the Worship Leader website offers a more circumspect take on Fromm’s use of the term: “While Chuck did not invent the term ‘worship leader,’ he did more than anyone to define the role, to establish its significance, and to equip those who were called to this ministry.”

Here, the claim seems to be that although the term “worship leader” was used prior to the ’90s, it had no standardized definition. And when Worship Leader trademarked the words, it was because Fromm had identified and codified an emerging concept of what or who a “worship leader” was in the contemporary worship space.

But it’s difficult to say whether Fromm’s use and elevation of the term was a singular accomplishment or part of a larger movement that was already underway. Historians Lester Ruth and Lim Swee Hong trace the rise of the term back to the late ’70s, particularly to influential books on praise and worship like David Blomgren’s The Song of the Lord.

Ruth and Lim note that Blomgren used three terms for the lead vocalist in worship services: “song leader,” “leader in worship,” and “worship leader” and that he preferred the latter because it indicated the spiritual leadership inherent in the musical role. Ruth and Lim cite Fromm’s dissertation as a useful and influential source on the changes in worship music culture during the ’60s and ’70s. Fromm completed his dissertation in 2005.

Branding ‘worship leader’

Despite any questions about the origins and development of the term worship leader, Authentic Media has the trademark and therefore has a stake in protecting its Worship Leader brand.

“Our own business has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars over the years on our trademark,” wrote Swanson. “We have ‘invested’ in our trademarks and so we are compelled to continue to defend all of them and ensure that our investments are protected.”

The creators of the meme accounts insist that it’d be difficult to confuse their brands, full of movie clips and jokes, with the polished and ministry-oriented articles and interviews offered on WorshipLeader.com.

Worship Leader recently began speaking out about the trademark issue on its Instagram, days after the concerns from Worship Probs and Rogue Worship Leaders became public.

“‘Can I still use Worship Leader on my website, my Facebook group, my job title, Instagram, etc?’ Yes. You can,” read a post on its Instagram account on Sunday. “The narrative that we are going after all accounts using Worship leader is a lie and a manipulation tactic to divide the worship community.”

In the past, Christian ministries have faced trademark disputes with brands like Adidas or the Italian denim company that secured the trademark for clothes branded with Jesus’ name, but they also have come into conflict with each other. Attorney Brock Shinen weighed in a decade ago around the issue of churches claiming name trademarks.

“If a church is on the receiving end of a cease-and-desist letter, it should ask this question: ‘Does the church that sent the letter have an exclusive legal right to the name?’ If the answer is ‘yes,’ then why be offended? Comply. Romans 13 obligates us to submit to government laws like this,” he wrote for CT’s Church Law and Tax.

But Shinen also said, “A church applying for trademark protection won't necessarily take away another church's right to have its name and logo: If a church’s name and logo are unique, trademark protection will be granted. If the name and logo are generic or descriptive, it won’t.”

Worship Leader’s protection of its trademark is nothing new; in 2017, when the magazine was still owned by Maranatha! Music, it sent a cease-and-desist letter to Alex Enfiedjian, creator of Worship Ministry Training (originally Worship Leader Training).

“They basically said, either change the name, or they’d take me to court,” Enfiedjian said.

He was able to arrange a personal meeting with Fromm through a friend to try to resolve the conflict person-to-person.

“I really wanted to do the Matthew 18 thing. You know? I’m not going to go to court,” Enfiedjian said. “In person, [Fromm] obliged and said, ‘It’s okay, we’ll just make it work, you can keep the name.’ But on the drive home, they called and changed back to their original stance, that I need to change the name.”

At that point, Enfiedjian decided to let it go.

“The next Scripture to follow is what the apostle Paul says in 1 Corinthians 6:7, where he says that we should not take each other to court in front of a watching world. It’s better to be defrauded. He says, ‘Why not rather suffer wrong?’ (ESV)”.

Enfiedjian changed the name of his organization and podcast and moved on. In hindsight, he has no regrets. Watching the current conflict unfold six years after his experience with Worship Leader, Enfiedjian says that he hopes for healthy, kingdom-oriented perspective for everyone involved.

“What we have is not our own,” he said. “God has entrusted us to build the kingdom. Not our kingdom, his kingdom.”

The now-public nature of the dispute between Worship Leader and Worship Leader Probs raises some uncomfortable questions about the nature of branding, ownership, monetization, and power in the worship music industry.

Fans of Worship Probs defended the creators in the comments to the recent post about the ongoing dispute over their name. Many were surprised or dismayed that a company would attempt to restrict the use of a term as common in today’s churches as “worship leader.”

“Trust us, no one is confusing the brands!” one wrote. “We’re with you Worship [redacted] Probs!”

News
Wire Story

Former SBC Pastor Johnny Hunt Sues Denomination He Once Led

Hunt admits to “kissing and some awkward fondling” but alleges defamation after the account was reported in last year’s Guidepost abuse investigation.

Johnny Hunt speaking at TBI in 2020.

Johnny Hunt speaking at TBI in 2020.

Christianity Today March 20, 2023
Courtesy of Baptist Press

A disgraced former Southern Baptist president is suing the denomination he once led, saying he was defamed by allegations he assaulted another pastor’s wife.

In a complaint filed in the federal court for the Middle District of Tennessee, lawyers for the Rev. Johnny Hunt, a longtime Georgia megachurch pastor, admit Hunt “had a brief, inappropriate, extramarital encounter with a married woman” in 2012, but claims the incident was consensual and that it was a private matter that should not have been made public in a major 2022 report.

“Some of the precise details are disputed, but at most, the encounter lasted only a few minutes, and it involved only kissing and some awkward fondling,” according to the complaint.

The complaint said Hunt sought counseling and forgiveness for the incident, which the complaint said was “a sin.” However, Hunt never disclosed the incident to the First Baptist Church of Woodstock, Georgia, where he was the pastor for three decades, or to the SBC’s North American Mission Board, where he was a vice president until resigning in 2022.

But the incident became public in May 2022, after it was discovered by investigators at Guidepost Solutions, a consulting firm that had been hired to investigate how SBC leaders had dealt with the issue of abuse.

Guidepost’s investigators included the incident as part of their report and described it as a sexual assault. Those investigators said they found the allegations against Hunt credible. The former SBC president at first denied the allegations, then claimed the incident was consensual.

The complaint alleges the SBC and Guidepost engaged in defamation and libel, that they invaded Hunt’s privacy, and intentionally caused emotional harm.

“The decision to smear Pastor Johnny’s reputation with these accusations has led him to suffer substantial economic and other damages,” according to the complaint. “He has lost (his) job and income; he has lost current and future book deals; and he has lost the opportunity to generate income through speaking engagements.”

Hunt also claims he was made a scapegoat to pay for the SBC’s past sins. He said current SBC leaders and Guidepost were engaged in damage control to repair the 13 million-member denomination’s reputation.

“By focusing on the allegation against Pastor Johnny—an allegation by an adult woman that involved noncriminal conduct—and by then taking aggressive action against Pastor Johnny, the Defendants sought to create the appearance that the SBC has learned from its previous mistakes and is now working to protect victims of sex crimes,” the complaint claims.

The complaint accused current SBC leaders and Guidepost of intentionally causing him “personal anguish and harm.”

“Defendants’ decision to feature the allegation against Pastor Johnny in their public report was a strategic decision to deflect attention from the SBC’s historical failure to take aggressive steps to respond to reports of child sex abuse and other sex crimes in its past,” the complaint claims.

A spokesperson for the SBC’s Nashville-based Executive Committee said SBC leaders are aware of the suit.

“We are reviewing the complaint and will not be commenting on active litigation at this time,” the spokesman said in a statement.

Guidepost Solutions declined to comment.

Hunt made a defiant return to the public in January at a Florida megachurch, after a group of pastors announced that Hunt had been through a restoration process and was fit to return to ministry after a brief hiatus.

During that sermon, Hunt said “false allegations” had ruined his life. But he told the congregation that if God calls someone to do something, that calling can’t be undone—and God called that person, knowing the person might sin and fail.

“Anybody can quit,” he said. “That’s why so many do. It’s easy. I mean, it hardly takes any energy whatsoever.”

Hiland Park Baptist Church in Panama City, Florida, which hosted Hunt and whose pastor oversaw Hunt’s restoration, could face consequences at the upcoming SBC annual meeting in June. The church has been reported to the SBC’s Credentials Committee for hosting “an individual who has been credibly accused of sexual abuse, according to the standards adopted by the Convention.”

Hunt spoke Sunday at New Season Church in Hiram, Georgia, as part of the church’s series entitled “Battle Ready,” about resisting the devil, according to Baptist News Global.

“My attorney has asked me to allow the case to play out,” Hunt told Baptist News Global. “However, if I had done what that report says I’ve done, there is no way I could have preached today.”

Church Life

Should Evangelicals Observe Lent? What 6 Brazilian Theologians Say

How the church can serve and worship in the period between Carnival and Easter.

Christianity Today March 20, 2023
Illustration by Mallory Rentsch / Source Images: Getty

In the majority-Catholic country of Brazil, the biggest cultural festival is Carnival, a spectacle of eye-popping costumes, samba dancing, and raucous parades in the week leading up to Ash Wednesday. Due to its popularity, everyone in the country is aware of when Lent begins.

Established in 325 at the First Council of Nicaea, Lent had long been observed by the time the Portuguese landed on what is now Brazil in 1500. But despite its long history, the recent exponential growth of evangelicals—especially Pentecostals and neo-Pentecostals—in Brazil has led to a decline in the observance of Lent. Unlike Easter, Lent receives little attention from many Protestants, either because they assign less importance to liturgical rituals or because they want to distance themselves from Catholic traditions.

CT asked six Brazilian leaders and pastors from different denominations: Should Brazilian evangelicals leave Lent to Catholics? Answers are arranged from those who don't observe Lent to those who do.

Esequias Soares, pastor of the Assembleia de Deus (Assembly of God) in Jundiaí, São Paulo, and a leader with the Sociedade Bíblica Brasileira (Brazilian Bible Society)

The Brazilian Assemblies of God do not celebrate Lent because they do not follow the Christian liturgical calendar like the Catholic and Reformed traditions. However, we celebrate traditional Christian feasts such as Christmas and Easter, and in some places, we have begun to make room for Pentecost.

Also, the founders of Pentecostalism wanted to draw a clear distinction between Roman Catholicism and the churches that came from the Protestant Reformation. For example, the 1937 general assembly of the Assemblies of God discussed the use of the cross on the façade of churches. Despite the cross being used by evangelical churches in other countries, they decided to not use any symbols because of “Brazilian idolatrous culture, full of fetishes, symbologies, idols, and icons.”

It is likely that these are some of the reasons why we do not follow the liturgical calendar.

Vanessa Belmonte, lecturer in the area of spiritual formation, collaborator in L'Abri Brasil

Evangelicals should not follow this tradition as a duty or an obligation. However, they can see it as a spiritual formation resource. I would not suggest that they observe Lent in isolation but that they consider adopting the full Christian calendar, as each season highlights a different theme from the narrative of redemption.

We like the season of Easter and the celebration of the Resurrection. However, there would be no Easter without Lent, for there is no resurrection without the cross. Lent can enrich us by allowing us to reflect on our fragility, vulnerability, and dependence on God. We are encouraged to reflect on Jesus’ sacrifice for us and to make space in our routine for self-examination, fasting, and prayer. Lent is a time to exercise self-denial and self-giving in love. It ’s a period where we can prepare ourselves to celebrate Easter and ensure we understand the meaning of what we practice.

Tiago de Melo Novais, assistant editor at Associação Brasileira de Cristãos na Ciência and guest professor at Campinas Baptist Theological Seminary

Unlike other periods of the Christian calendar, such as Christmas and Easter, we evangelicals are not familiar with the Lenten tradition—but we should be! This period preceding Easter is an especially important time because in it we set aside 40 days for a continuous exercise of self-evaluation and repentance before God, which prepares us to relive the apex of our history: the Savior’s death and resurrection.

What ’s more, in times when the demand for productivity seizes control of our days and forces us to seek profit and consumption, we have the opportunity to experience an alternative time, marked by pauses, fasting, and prayer. Ironically, fasting during Lent satisfies the hunger of our souls by allowing us to deeply reflect on the Cross and Resurrection. When evangelicals practice Lent, it's a sign of a penitent heart, one that is content and ready to do the will of God.

Daniel Vieira, director of the Lectionary Project

Lent, like every liturgical tradition, directs our imagination toward the kingdom. Christians who follow the entire church calendar recognize that it helps us follow Jesus week by week, from the beginning of his kingdom mission in Galilee, to his travels through Gentile territory, to his journey to Judea.

Lent is a season that prepares us to relive the story of the Messiah who entered Jerusalem on a donkey and received judgment in the temple, before being arrested, tried, sentenced, and crucified on a Roman cross, ensuring the victory of God’s kingdom.

Lorrayne Muniz , pastor of Trinity Anglican Church in Vitória

In an attempt to demarcate an aesthetic and theological distance from Rome, evangelicals often close doors that connect us to church history and bring depth to our faith. Lent is often one of those doors. This approach minimizes one of the highlights of our faith: the celebration of Easter—that is, the death and resurrection of our Savior.

Lent is an invitation to experience this date with all the strength and intensity it deserves. In a movement of conversion, immersion, and growth, we are inserted into the narrative of Christ’s life. We experience expectation and anguish as we understand the value and cost of the Cross. There is a richness in this experience that all evangelicals should participate in.

Gutierres Fernandes Siqueira, author and journalist

The importance of Lent lies in the cultivation of a time of contrition. We evangelicals have a tendency to engage in triumphalism and to see faith as entertainment and festivities. But it is also necessary to cultivate times of memory, lamentation, and silence. Lent fills this role.

Additional reporting by Marisa Lopes.

Inkwell

Paying My Way to the Promised Land

On Mammon, Manifest Destiny & the Art of Richard Mayhew

Inkwell March 19, 2023

If there is an unofficial religion of the West, its liturgies can be found all over downtown San Francisco. The sky here swarms with billboards inscribed with different versions of the national statement of faith— promises that artificial intelligence software will optimize your productivity, that new wealth management programs will multiply what you own, that wellness apps will finally put your anxieties to rest—which, written out plainly, would say something about how money paired with human ingenuity can rebuild the Eden we lost.

Regardless of your location or nationality you can probably see the seductiveness of this idea. It takes an unresolvable cosmic longing and advertises a resolution, projecting an endpoint to misery, waste, drudgery, toil. It sounds so much like the Gospel, which is why for most of my life I couldn’t differentiate between a faith in money and a faith in God.


In my twenties I joined an economic justice nonprofit with an office in the heart of downtown. The work was methodical and ambitious, involving collaborations with tech executives and philanthropists alike to complete projects that achieved, in the words of one of my colleagues, results in six months that took other nonprofits two years to even hope for.   

Our methods were expensive, which meant you had to be comfortable chasing money to work there. For awhile I didn’t think this was a problem, especially because the hand of God and the invisible hand of the market seemed to operate in indistinguishable ways. Here I was, working in San Francisco in the middle of a tech boom, watching corporate donors turn on spigots of money in support of a good cause, and spending it in service of impressively worded goals and data-driven metrics that we always hit, every time. If God and Mammon were indeed separate entities, at least they seemed to share the same priorities.

If this period of my life had its own piece of religious iconography it would be the 19th-century painting by John Gast titled American Progress. The image features a line of settlers marching westward, beginning with men on foot and then on increasingly sophisticated means of transportation and colonization—men on wagons, then railways. Above them floats a woman in white who, although she symbolizes the American empire, evokes for me the cloud guiding the Israelites toward Canaan. The painting is like a mashup of all the billboards downtown with their messages around the transformative potential of money and power, all the chirpy slogans I repeated about economic opportunity for a better world, and all my vaguely syncretistic beliefs around God and American prosperity—an ambiently threatening picture of the human capacity for turning the wilderness into a paradise.


This kind of belief couldn’t last long. Bad theological ideas are usually exposed when they collide with circumstances they can’t account for, which is a mild way of summarizing what inevitably happened.

A year into this job one of my clients at the nonprofit was murdered. They had come from a Christian family to overcome a set of Dickensian obstacles; they had worked hard and were on the cusp of a major financial breakthrough. I couldn’t understand how someone I assumed to be unimpeachably prepared for success could be obliterated in a moment. They had been shot on a city sidewalk while attempting, of all things, to do a good deed.

After they died, most things at my job began to feel stupid. It wasn’t the job’s fault; the issue is that I had found this work compelling because I truly believed that godly intentions bankrolled by huge amounts of cash could change the world. Even if I was surrounded by intractable problems, like inequity that would not be solved in any of our lifetimes, I liked showing up at the office in my heels and crisp little outfits knowing that we had so many resources within our power to dispense. These spiritually charged acts of purpose and control were the best way I knew to refute every bad thing I saw in the world, but my client had done many things right and the outcome had still been unspeakable.

I didn’t last much longer in my role. I eventually found work with a nonprofit outside San Francisco and didn’t go downtown anymore unless I absolutely had to. Then after the pandemic, when everything began to slowly reopen, my husband expressed a desire to go visit SFMOMA.


The post-COVID landscape in downtown San Francisco matched my mood. All the familiar tech firms and finance buildings were still there, still gleaming, newly emptied. They looked like shrines to a religion no one cared about anymore. If all this was a metaphor it was kind of on-the-nose, but also not inaccurate. After I changed jobs things had continued to unravel; I switched to working with immigrant communities just as the Trump administration was sworn in and no longer felt that I understood anything about why terrible things happened to some families and not others, or why there was no direct correlation between goodness, wealth, and power. Some of the deserted buildings still carried their nonsensical slogans celebrating productivity and optimization, which made me feel both nostalgic and annoyed. The implied relationship between human effort and a better world no longer made any sense.

On the day we visited the MOMA there was an exhibition of works by the landscape painter Richard Mayhew. Mayhew, who is of Afro-Indigenous descent, says he paints the landscape with an eye to America’s most dispossessed, which means, among many things, that he doesn’t present the landscape to the viewer as if it is something to be dominated and possessed. The shift in perspective that comes from walking through San Francisco into a gallery of Mayhew’s paintings is so jarring that it is like being gripped by the shoulders and physically reoriented toward the world.

In Good Morning, Mayhew renders a dark line of trees against a neon yellow sky. The grass beneath fades into patches of bright red earth. As the viewer, you are positioned in this landscape at the angle of someone lying on their belly and gazing up at their surroundings. The experience of looking at this painting is the spiritual opposite of surveying the plains in John Gast’s work and thinking about all the ways we are preparing to remake the world in our own image.

It is not only the change in perspective that make Mayhew’s paintings feel incongruous to the city that houses them. His images seem realistic except for their unnatural, luminescent coloring. Good Morning looks like a landscape done on a bed of yellow highlighter. His other works are colored in a way to make the image appear unstable, as if the background is bleeding into the foreground. Seen through his eyes the world is both alien and familiar, capable of arresting you with its gorgeousness while erasing your sense of certainty about what you are looking at, or what it all means.


When things were going very badly at work and then very badly in the broader world, someone asked if this meant I was going to deconstruct my faith. I don’t remember how I responded but I remember hating the word almost immediately because it was so inadequate. The deconstruction of faith sounds like a self-directed process of sifting through your beliefs to determine what can be trusted as true or false. For those of us who suspect that our reasoning may have led us to form faulty conclusions about many important things, deconstruction sounds like the last thing we should be doing.

Anyhow, I couldn’t take credit for how much my faith in my own ideas had deteriorated. I didn’t feel like I was actively deconstructing anything as much as I felt like I was being interrogated by something outside myself.

The Old Testament was among the few things that comforted me during this time because I felt allergic to every form of sanctimony, religious and political, that seemed unable to acknowledge humanity’s inherent brutality and powerlessness against our own worst impulses. Within the Old Testament I was briefly obsessed with Job, which is why I think the Richard Mayhew paintings struck me the way they did.

Job endures a long list of traumas which I won’t pretend to identify with, but which lead him and everyone close to him to do what I felt myself to be doing: speculate uselessly about the nature of earthly suffering, suffering that apparently cannot be averted even by someone as rich and as good as Job. Their speculations are inconclusive. Towards the end of the book, the Lord arrives to speak for himself.

“Brace yourself like a man,” the Lord says, “I will question you, and you shall answer me.” 

In response to questions that have never lost their resonance—why does the world seem so arbitrarily evil? Why does human goodness seem to avail so little?—the Lord speaks in a series of images. The earth, taking shape at the beginning of time. The ocean newly unleashed. Rain pouring across an uninhabited desert, stars being configured in the sky. These concluding chapters of Job are like a supercut of geological history in which humans barely appear.

There are no answers here, at least not the kind I’d like. The Book of Job left me with the image of God himself, standing in the center of time as planets form, life multiplies, as creatures live and die. The Richard Mayhew paintings made me feel dissatisfied and provoked in the same way. Evidently the anxieties that seemed so unique to me and my culture are old as time; the attempts to get a foothold on a shifting, unpredictable planet are no different.

I had come to the gallery with my whole body feeling like a clenched fist and yet when I saw those paintings I wanted to fall to my knees. Was this what God had wanted me to see? He was not answering me in words, only in shape and color suggestive of the terror, beauty, and wonder that come with being alive in the world, and with the sense that he remained at the center of forces that seemed so disastrously unmanageable.

I left the MOMA wondering if this was what it felt like for Job to stand before God with unanswerable questions, or for the Israelites to walk through the desert, led by a column of flame. Here was a presence wrapped not in certitude but in mystery, extending an invitation to enter in.

Yi Ning Chiu is a writer who has contributed features to Relevant and Teen Vogue. You can find more of her work here: yiningchiu.com. This piece was first featured in our Ecstatic Newsletter.

News

Russian Christians Make Theological Case for Peace

Anonymous Christmas condemnation of invasion offers insight into antiwar movement as it seeks reconciliation with Ukrainian believers—who want names.

An Orthodox church stands damaged from artillery on February 27, 2023 in Bogorodychne, in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. The church grounds had reportedly been used as a headquarters for occupying Russian forces and was the scene of intense fighting with Ukrainian troops, who liberated the town last fall.

An Orthodox church stands damaged from artillery on February 27, 2023 in Bogorodychne, in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. The church grounds had reportedly been used as a headquarters for occupying Russian forces and was the scene of intense fighting with Ukrainian troops, who liberated the town last fall.

Christianity Today March 17, 2023
John Moore / Getty Images

On an Advent Sunday in a small Protestant church in St. Petersburg, a Russian pastor nervously approached the pulpit. While his senior leadership was publicly neutral about the war, he was about to preach from the Sermon on the Mount against the invasion of Ukraine.

And in the pews before him was another potential land mine.

A congregant had been bringing along a childhood friend, who happened to be a Wagner Group mercenary. Wounded during combat for Russia’s private paramilitary company, the man was not there to spy. Yet while the pastor knew his close-knit congregation well, he could not predict the fallout from his message.

Relations remained good with the pastor’s mentor afterward, while the mercenary recovered and returned to the front lines. For now, the pastor has been left free to continue in ministry and—whether known to the intelligence services or not—in clandestine theological work against the war.

“Of course, we could go out and protest, but this would get you in jail,” he said, requesting anonymity. “For us, the most effective means are to work within your spheres of influence—and ours are very small.”

Over the course of the yearlong conflict, only a tiny minority of Russian Christian leaders have voiced complaint publicly. The response from authorities has been uneven: Minor church figures have been fined or jailed, while others continue to use their names on social media.

But no major denomination in Russia has condemned the war outright.

The St. Petersburg pastor, along with about 25 of his scattered multifaith colleagues, desired to confront their silence at the biblical source. Christianity Today spoke with three of them, on condition of anonymity, for insight into the antiwar movement.

The group released its declaration to “all Christians of Russia” in advance of Christmas.

“We are terrified by the fact that many church officials and theologians … are distorting the truth of the Holy Scriptures,” the Russian Christians stated via their Christians4Peace website and Telegram channel. “[But] we are convinced that participation in this war—on the side of the aggressor—is unacceptable for any Christian.”

The provided Russian and Ukrainian downloads of the declaration include an appendix with an extended theological treatise.

Last summer, the pastor and a few like-minded friends began a study group on Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the German dissident theologian executed for his opposition to Adolf Hitler. But it was no mere Western appropriation; though concentrating on a Protestant, they could also have drawn from celebrated Russian author and pacifist Leo Tolstoy, or the 16th-century Saint Philip II of Moscow, murdered for condemning Ivan the Terrible’s massacres.

The pastor named his son Philip to honor this heritage, inspired by the arrest of Alexei Navalny. (A film focused on this Russian opposition leader’s 2020 poisoning and subsequent jailing won the 2023 Oscar for best documentary.)

By fall, the group had grown to ten people. Three Protestants and one Russian Orthodox priest then decided to pen their declaration, soliciting feedback from about two dozen mostly Orthodox laypeople and clergy. And the website launched with a YouTube video in which unnamed Russians abroad read the text with their faces visible.

“The church has a right and a duty to exercise not only a liturgical but also a prophetic ministry … to modestly but firmly rebuke those who violate the commandments of Christ,” continued their theological justification. “The realm of politics cannot be excluded.”

None involved are significant public figures, but most had already been quietly working against the war. Some, early on, put up stickers and graffiti. Others engaged their students in the classroom. Priests changed the wording of official pro-war prayers added to the liturgy.

The Christmas declaration called all believers to pray for the repentance of Russian leaders, to resist mobilization, and to serve Ukrainian refugees with humanitarian aid. But in shielding their identities, the authors stopped short of full commitment to the declaration’s most difficult exhortation—in accordance with the discernment they impress on readers.

“Stand up against the war,” it states. “Taking into consideration all the risks involved, we urge you to condemn this evil.”

This decision took the attention of Russians and Ukrainians alike.

“I am always suspicious when no names are cited,” said one Protestant ministry leader, requesting anonymity because of the overall climate in Russia. “This letter could be anything.”

Ruslan Maliuta was less doubtful, but still cautious.

“The fact that they decided to stay anonymous is a big downside,” said the task force leader for the World Evangelical Alliance’s coordination of Ukraine relief. “While I may understand the reasons, it significantly weakens the message.”

Vitaly Vlasenko, general secretary of the Russian Evangelical Alliance, said that the dozen-plus leaders and invited guests present at the Consultative Council of the Heads of Protestant Churches meeting in late December had no information about the declaration. He commended it as being well written in literary Russian, noting the Orthodox terminology throughout.

Anton Ponomarev, a Russian Orthodox leader serving with a network of evangelical agencies, said the statement was “risky” but also odd. The declaration cited Christmas but coincided with its Western date, not its Russian celebration of January 7. And an odd phrase written with the non-Russian letter I made him suspect Ukrainian hands were at least partially at play.

The St. Petersburg pastor acknowledged the declaration was reviewed by a few Ukrainian friends, but said the product was written by Russians, for Russians. And the phrase in question reflected the Old Church Slavonic liturgy—“Pray for peace for the whole world”—to undermine the concept of “Holy Rus.”

Following the invasion of Ukraine, Russian Orthodox Church patriarch Kirill modified official prayers to link the two Slavic nations as one, petitioning God for “victory”—reflecting the ideology of Russki Mir, the Russian World. But the dissidents’ use of Slavonic not only hearkens back to an earlier era but also distinguishes the homophone мiр, which means both “world” and “peace.”

But their theological treatise went further still. It said that nationalism hinders the spread of the gospel, condemning the 2014 Russian-backed separatist movement in Donbas. They knew this latter step would cost them supporters, given popular sentiment against Ukraine’s alleged restrictions on its ethnically Russian citizenry concentrated in its east.

“You don’t get people to speak Russian by bombing their cities off the face of the earth,” said the pastor’s Orthodox colleague. “Before February 24, these restrictions bothered me. Now, they don’t at all.”

Sergey Rakhuba was appreciative of the effort, but lamented the lack of identifying names.

“I commend this appeal for its firm position and the hard work in putting it all together,” said the president of Mission Eurasia and a former Ukrainian church planter in Russia. “But being anonymous, it won't have much power.”

The overarching critique was made by Ponomarev.

“Rather than a sign of a brewing protest movement, it is a channel for those who are against the war to have their voice heard,” he said. “Quite a few people I know post similar declarations but mostly on encrypted social media platforms like Telegram.”

Roman Lunkin said the protesters’ number is very small. Counting subscribers to the most popular channels, such as Meduza and We Can Explain, and recognizing that many of these have left the country, he tallies an estimate of half to 1 million peace activists in Russia.

Nevertheless, antiwar views are fairly widespread among the educated elite, said Lunkin, head of the Center for Religious Studies at the Russian Academy of Science’s Institute of Europe. But citing the declaration’s failure to address Russia’s legitimate grievances against NATO expansion, he had harsh words against what was otherwise a “well-written” document.

“The statement is hypocritical and will not lead to peacemaking,” he said. “It is a political declaration disguised as a theological text.”

Andrey Kordochkin disagreed, but only in part.

“I haven’t seen anything so deeply theological,” said the dissident Russian Orthodox priest, appointed to serve in Madrid. “But an antiwar movement, as such, does not exist.”

He did his part to identify one. A key figure in the March 2022 campaign by Russian clergy that gathered a few hundred signatures, Kordochkin said there was no effort to build a network—especially after the law forbidding use of the word war. While many remain in communication, there is no organized agitation. No cosigners have been arrested, he said, but others have been ecclesiastically censured, and several are now abroad.

He does not fault anyone for staying anonymous.

In agreement with Lunkin’s assessment of the elite, Kordochkin also characterizes antiwar attitudes as generational—and anticlerical. Yet as the institutional church loses trust, there are some signs of young people seeking Christ on their own terms, as among the friends of his 19-year-old daughter.

But many families have been torn apart, as seen in the documentary Broken Ties.

For those over 45 years old, there is the “learned helplessness” that recalls a similar Soviet mentality. For those younger, there are VPNs to connect with the outside world.

In addition to Meduza, Kordochkin subscribes to Christians Against the War, which runs the website Shalt Not Kill. But while news channels on Telegram attract thousands of subscribers, like the BBC (400,000), Novaya Gazeta (262,000), and the Moscow Times (30,000), the religious effort has only 2,600 in its virtual network.

As such, the Christmas statement’s orientation somewhat misses the mark.

“Most Russians who are uneasy with the war are not facing theological questions, but existential,” said Kordochkin. “They are asking, ‘How can I continue as a Christian in a church that is like this?’”

To answer, the unassuming Alexey Markevich speaks with quiet clarity.

Publicly known for his signature on a March 2022 evangelical declaration, he has suffered no consequences from either the Russian authorities or his Baptist leadership. His church prays against the war, and he discusses Martin Luther King Jr. in his classroom.

“All I can do is express my position,” said the vice rector for academic affairs for Moscow Theological Seminary. “We don’t need to be political, but we must make theological and ethical statements.”

He commends the Christmas document.

But Markevich somehow avoids controversy. In January, he was invited to participate in a major denominational youth conference and was even assigned the topic “The Confessing Church of Nazi Germany.” The room was packed.

Discussing Barth and Bonhoeffer, he made no direct connection to the war in Ukraine. Yet afterward he was barraged with questions: What should we do now?

“I don’t have a good answer,” Markevich said. “But the confessing church is a template for us, doing what it could according to its convictions.”

Young adults queried how to avoid mobilization. Some spoke of going on missionary service to Central Asian nations. Others just wanted to know how to keep their jobs.

And many, like Markevich’s wife, are serving Ukrainian refugees.

He commended Home with a Lighthouse as a reputable agency with many evangelical volunteers. His family has hosted several displaced Ukrainians, helping them transition to residence in Europe. And his church has sent supplies to assist in the ruined city of Mariupol, along with other sites in the occupied Donbas.

Markevich knows it is a controversial initiative and blames Sergey Ryakhovsky for soiling the reputation of simple humanitarian aid. The Pentecostal Union leader advocates for the integration of these churches into Russian denominational networks, similar to what was done in occupied Crimea.

In January, Ukraine sanctioned him, along with 21 officials from the Russian Orthodox Church.

“Ryakhovsky is louder than we are, and this is why Ukrainians don’t like it,” said Markevich. “But most of us feel like this is the extent of what we can do.”

Public demonstrations are impossible, he said, and wouldn’t help.

So instead, some vote with their feet.

Upper estimates of emigrants since the announcement of mobilization reach 700,000. Even earlier, Lutheran archbishop Dietrich Bauer spoke out against the war before leaving for Germany.

And last summer, Vitaly Kogan, a Pentecostal bishop in Siberia, resigned his position and left Russia in protest. His anonymous colleague, also in opposition, tried to put in context his church’s stance in line with the Russian authorities.

“They have something to lose—the church, the people, and the ministry,” reported Shalt Not Kill. “Today it is very easy to make a case against Pentecostals as an extremist organization, as has been done with Jehovah’s Witnesses.”

Last December, Russia jailed four church members, for seven years each, for illegal meetings. And last summer, raids were conducted among the Pentecostal New Generation churches, unaffiliated with Ryakhovsky, which were accused of collaboration with Ukraine’s controversial Azov Battalion.

In Ukraine, the Word of Life Pentecostal churches broke with their Russian denominational colleagues, frustrated by the failure of senior leadership to condemn the war.

Markevich keeps good relations with his Ukrainian evangelical friends, but some have distanced themselves, lumping him in with the claim that “all Russians are guilty.” Kordochkin reports the same, though one Ukrainian in the Spanish parish left frustrated that his priest was not praying for his nation’s victory.

But the onus, Kordochkin said, is on Russians to confess their sense of moral superiority against an allegedly decadent West. Germany was able to confess its ethnic superiority after World War II, and he feels that Russian relations cannot be restored with Ukraine without it.

And thus, the Christmas declaration.

“This text aims to build a future together, showing that some Russians have spoken out against the war—and why,” said the St. Petersburg pastor.

“It is a tiny step toward reconciliation.”

Editor’s note: CT offers select articles translated into Russian and Ukrainian.

You can also now follow CT on Telegram: @ctmagazine (also available in Chinese and Russian).

Books
Review

Can Westerners Atone for Their Sins Without Breeding Resentment and Ingratitude?

An imaginary soirée with Douglas Murray, the Christian-friendly agnostic author of “The War on the West”.

Christianity Today March 17, 2023
Illustration by Mallory Rentsch / Source Images: Getty

Run this thought experiment: If you could split a bottle of fine wine and converse at leisure with a contemporary author that you respect, who would it be—and why? My own short list would include Douglas Murray, associate editor of The Spectator and best-selling British author of The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity, Islam and The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race, and Identity. Watching videos and listening to podcasts that feature Murray, my hunch is that a tête-à-tête with this man would prove fascinating.

The War on the West

The War on the West

Broadside Books

320 pages

Associated with the so-called “intellectual dark web,” which Jonah Goldberg describes as “a coalition of thinkers and journalists who happen to share a disdain for the keepers of the liberal orthodoxy” (e.g., Sam Harris, Jordan Peterson, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Michael Shermer, Christina Hoff Sommers), Murray intrigues me as a sagacious conservative (à la public intellectual Roger Scruton), a nonconformist gay man (à la commentator Andrew Sullivan), and a Christian skeptic (à la Victorian novelist Thomas Hardy). The last two epithets need further elaboration: As a “nonconformist gay man,” Murray eschews the narcissism of sexual identity and the tribalism of identity politics; as a “Christian skeptic,” his questioning has a decidedly Christian coloration, owing to his upbringing and sympathies, even though he is not currently a practitioner. It seems God is so near to Murray that he does not yet feel him at his shoulder.

Watch the video of Justin Brierley, host of the podcast Unbelievable, moderate a conversation between New Testament scholar N. T. Wright and Murray on how we live in a post-Christian world. Murray confesses his discomfort as both an agnostic who recognizes “the values and the virtues” of Christianity in Western civilization and “a nonbeliever who is disappointed by the behavior of the believing church,” which, he reckons, has ceased preaching the gospel in favor of the latest social and political tropes.

Murray’s latest title, The War on the West: How to Prevail in the Age of Unreason, strikes me as a coda to his previous books. He culls the dizzying number of stories from current events into a bricolage confirming our intuition that denizens of the West are practicing an extreme form of self-flagellation to atone for the sins of white supremacy, colonialism, patriarchy, and heterosexism. Worrisomely, this masochism appears to have no terminus of forgiveness, healing, or reconciliation because the inexhaustible will to power is at stake for the new masters. The juvenile chant of a marginal protest more than 30 years ago at Stanford University—“Hey hey, ho ho, Western Civ has got to go”—has mushroomed into the pseudosophistication of today’s woke herd.

Any attempt to make Western civ optional or obsolete is a fool’s errand. We are inescapably bound up in its heritage. Instead of engendering the vanity of self-hatred, our geographic location should propel an earnest inquiry into the failings and glories of Western civilization and an appreciation for its gifts. Failure to do so results in ignorant enlightenment (not knowing the genealogy of ideas) and ungrateful achievement (not crediting our forebears who cleared the way to progress). Given the historical mistreatment of ethnic, sexual, and gender minorities in the West, Murray acknowledges the need for honest reckoning, but it is not as if the reckoning never occurred before. The pendulum has now “swung past the point of correction and into overcorrection,” he says, even igniting a thirst for revenge in formerly disenfranchised groups.

It is not my goal to recount dispatches from the war zone, which the author vividly narrates and whose cumulative force increases the plausibility of his thesis. If I were sharing a bottle of wine with Murray, I would focus on three aspects of his engrossing book: first, the appropriateness of invoking a metaphor of war to describe our contemporary upheaval; second, the centrality of antiwhite animus in his account; and third, the oddity of an exhortation to gratitude as a (partial) remedy to the pathology afflicting the secular West.

Wars old and new

At the start of the evening, I would question the framing of Murray’s book: Is there actually a war on the West? American poet Carl Sandburg delineates the evolution of war:

In the old wars clutches of short swords and jabs into faces with spears.

In the new wars long range guns and smashed walls, guns running a spit of metal and men falling in tens and twenties.

In the wars to come new silent deaths, new silent hurlers not yet dreamed out in the heads of men.

Obviously, the war Murray has in mind does not belong to “the old wars” or “the new wars.” Perhaps “the wars to come” have already arrived; their “new silent deaths” are the casualties of cancel culture, typically anyone (Aristotle, Thomas Jefferson, Winston Churchill) or anything (math, logic, classical music, opera) that is redolent of Western hegemony. Black, indigenous, and people of color are the new white; female is the new male; gay is the new straight; secular is the new Judeo-Christian. These “new silent hurlers” use violence that is less physical than ideological, cultural, and political.

As an unapologetic defender of the West—“the side of democracy, reason, rights, and universal principles”—Murray fights admirably. “To assess the natural quality of even the cleverest heads,” Friedrich Nietzsche says in Daybreak, “one should take note of how they interpret and reproduce the opinions of their opponents. … The perfect sage without knowing it elevates his opponent into the ideal and purifies his contradictory opinion of every blemish and adventitiousness: only when his opponent has by this means become a god with shining weapons does the sage fight against him.” Even by his own standard, Nietzsche failed to apotheosize his enemies, such as Plato and Paul. Murray approximates the status of sage by directly engaging with the words and actions of his opponents, whether critical race theorists, antiracist ideologues, education administrators, federal bureaucrats, Antifa-BLM rioters, the 1619 Project revisionists, statue topplers, anticolonialists, Enlightenment foes, and trendy clergy.

Some perspective is in order. War has been written into the cosmos ever since Lucifer, the bearer of light, esteemed himself equal to the Light, “and with ambitious aim / Against the throne and monarchy of God / Raised impious war in Heaven, and battle proud / With vain attempt,” as John Milton puts it in Paradise Lost. War moved from its cosmic battlefield to earth, but it will ultimately suffer the fate of the one who started it: defeat.

In the meantime, spiritual warfare animates every conflict—a reality not lost on previous generations of the church who recognized that “the sloth of disobedience,” or a failure to keep our zeal serving the Lord, is the ultimate cause behind war. In the opening of his sixth-century guide to monastic life, The Rule, Saint Benedict invoked martial imagery: “This message of mine is for you, then, if you are ready to give up your own will, once and for all, and armed with the strong and noble weapons of obedience to do battle for the true King, Christ the Lord.” As everyday monks, Christians belong not inside the walls of a cloister but to the church militant, which vigilantly campaigns against evil in the world and, more lamentably, in ourselves—not afraid, “for the Lord [our] God is the one who goes with [us] to fight for [us] against [our] enemies to give [us] victory” (Deut. 20:4).

The decisive battle in the Great War, which vanquished “the prince of this world” (John 12:31), was fought at the skull-shaped hill in ancient Jerusalem. Everything that follows Golgotha is a skirmish, including the cultural war against the Western tradition that Murray chronicles. Exaggerating the scale and severity of this war, Murray writes, “If we allow malicious critics to misrepresent and hijack our past, then the future they plan off the back of this will not be harmonious. It will be hell.”

No, hell occurs on the cross when “Christ’s body was given as the price of our redemption,” as John Calvin interprets the claim “He descended to hell” in the Apostles’ Creed. Besides the excruciating physical pain, “he paid a greater and more excellent price in suffering in his soul the terrible torments of a condemned and forsaken man.”

‘What do you like about being white?’

Midway through the bottle of wine, I would turn to a second aspect of interest in The War on the West: the antiwhite animus. What all of Murray’s enemies hold in common is a contempt for how the West underwrites the “parasitic-like condition” of whiteness, which does not yet have “a permanent cure,” according to psychoanalyst Donald Moss. “To delegitimize the West, it appears to be necessary first to demonize the people who still make up the racial majority in the West,” observes Murray. “It is necessary to demonize white people.” Murray correctly perceives internecine strife in the West, which makes Europe and North America weak as China vies to become the world’s unipolar superpower, but should we frame this strife primarily as a racialized conflict?

It is certainly worth asking how any white person today could answer Marc Lamont Hill’s gotcha question to a guest on the Black News Channel—“What do you like about being white?”—without setting off a tripwire. After all, society celebrates just about every species of identity pride except for white pride, which is judged inherently evil. Murray imagines two soft options for answering Lamont Hill’s question: either a colorblind outlook, which repudiates racial essentialism, or a reinterpretation of “white culture” as “a part of a universal culture,” open to all human beings, regardless of race. Though respectable, critics would still claim these answers betray white privilege.

At “the very edges of permissible sayability” is what Murray calls “the nuclear answer,” which takes stock of the good things that come from being white (read: Western). These include “almost every medical [and scientific] advancement”; “most of the world’s oldest and longest-established educational institutions”; “the invention and promotion of the written word”; “interest in other cultures beyond [one’s] own”; “the world’s most successful means of commerce, including the free flow of capital,” which has “lifted more than one billion people out of extreme poverty just in the twenty-first century thus far”; “the principle of representative government, of the people, by the people, for the people”; “the principles and practice of political liberty, of freedom of thought and conscience, of freedom of speech and expression”; “the principles of what we now call ‘civil rights,’ rights that do not exist in much of the world”; the music, philosophy, art, literature, poetry, and drama “that have reached such heights that the world wants to participate in them”; America as “the world’s number one destination for migrants worldwide”; and finally, “the only culture in the world that not only tolerates but encourages” self-criticism.

While this nuclear answer carries some truth, it also returns us to modern tribal lines of racial identity that are deeply problematic from a Christian point of view, which holds that there are only two “races” of human beings: the old creation of the first Adam and the new creation of the second Adam (2 Cor. 5:16–17). In an article for First Things, Anglican theologian Gerald McDermott, editor of Race and Covenant, claims the apostles taught that “the work of Jesus does not destroy the old creation unity of the one human race but redeems it and brings it to its God-given destiny by the power of the Spirit.” In another article for Public Discourse, McDermott disabuses evangelicals of racial essentialism because “there is a broad consensus among biologists and anthropologists that race as a clear distinction separating groups and individuals is a notion of modern origins without solid grounding in biology or genetics.” Moreover, biblical authors “grouped people by nations and cultures,” not by skin color. If skin color is only skin deep, then accident is not essence, lest Christians make a categorical mistake and sacralize the secular.

Gratitude and resentment

Near the end of our bottle of wine, I would address a third aspect of The War on the West. Of all strategies to fight this war, it is peculiar that Murray, as a lapsed Christian, exhorts his readers to wield the weapon of gratitude, which belongs to the arsenal of theists more than nontheists. Murray takes “an unauthorized loan from the theistic capital that he officially repudiates,” to borrow the words of philosopher John Cottingham. “True thankfulness has no really secure place in a worldview where ‘gift’ is nothing but a specious metaphor.”

To understand why gratitude plays a role in Murray’s account, we must first consider its opposite: resentment. Drawing on Nietzsche’s psychological insight that people “sanctify revenge with the term justice,” Murray avers that a disconcerting number of today’s social-justice warriors are motivated by resentment; they aim “to turn happy people into unhappy people like themselves—to shove their misery into the faces of the happy so that in due course the happy ‘start to be ashamed of their happiness and perhaps say to one another: “It’s a disgrace to be happy! There is too much misery!”’”

How can we be happy while watching a theatrical production of William Shakespeare’s Othello if we know his works are “full of problematic, outdated ideas, with plenty of misogyny, racism, homophobia, classism, anti-Semitism, and misogynoir,” according to a touchy librarian? How can we be happy while listening to George Frideric Handel’s Messiah if we know he “invested in a company that owned slaves”? How can we be happy strolling the world-famous Kew Gardens in London if we know its “plants were central to the running of the British empire,” as one botanist bemoaned? Behind calls to diversify and decolonize, the author detects “a pathological desire for destruction.”

People of resentment forbid “the best emotions,” and in Murray’s estimation, “the most important, without doubt, is gratitude.” He writes:

Without an ability to feel gratitude, all of human life and human experience is a marketplace of blame, where people tear up the landscape of the past and present hoping to find other people to blame and upon whom they can transfer their frustrations. Without gratitude, the prevailing attitudes of life are blame and resentment. Because if you do not feel any gratitude for anything that has been passed on to you, then all you can feel is bitterness over what you have not got. Bitterness that everything did not turn out better or more exactly to your liking—whatever that “liking” might be. Without some sense of gratitude, it is impossible to get anything into any proper order.

To be sure, resentment crowds out gratitude, which explains why the implacable critics of the West make woebegone society. But Murray’s notion of gratitude as an emotion is thin compared to the thick conceptualization in Christian ethics, which regards gratitude as a virtue that involves affection between a poor recipient and a prodigal giver, namely humankind and their Maker. Since God owes us nothing, everything he does give us—including himself—is gratuitous, consistent with his nature of gratuitous love.

In Learning the Virtues, Catholic priest Romano Guardini lamented how the virtue of gratitude has receded in the modern world, where democratic rights and economic transactions suppress the relational dynamic that is essential to gratitude. Guardini sets forth three conditions to gratitude:

Gratitude can exist only between an “I” and a “thou.” As soon as the consciousness of the personal quality disappears and the idea of the apparatus prevails, gratitude dies. Gratitude can exist only in the realm of freedom. As soon as there is a “must” or a claim, gratitude loses its meaning. Gratitude can exist only with reverence. If there is no mutual respect, gratitude perishes and turns to resentment. Anyone who gives assistance to others should think about that. Only the assistance which makes gratitude possible really deserves the name.

All three of these conditions have a theological character that Murray overlooks.

Is Murray guilty of what Nietzsche derisively calls “English logic,” as typified by Victorian novelist George Eliot: “They have got rid of the Christian God, and now feel obliged to cling all the more firmly to Christian morality”? In Twilight of the Idols, Nietzsche castigates this kind of sophistry with reasoning that is strikingly orthodox for a putative atheist:

When one gives up Christian belief one thereby deprives oneself of the right to Christian morality. For the latter is absolutely not self-evident: one must make this point clear again and again, in spite of English shallowpates. Christianity is a system, a consistently thought out and complete view of things. If one breaks out of it a fundamental idea, the belief in God, one thereby breaks the whole thing to pieces: one has nothing of any consequence left in one’s hands. Christianity presupposes that man does not know, cannot know what is good for him and what evil: he believes in God, who alone knows. Christian morality is a command: its origin is transcendental; it is beyond all criticism, all right to criticize; it possesses truth only if God is truth—it stands or falls with the belief in God.

More than just “a fundamental idea,” gratitude is a vital practice of Christian living because of the gift economy that God set into motion with the creation of the universe and humanity, where “every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights” (James 1:17). “Giving and thanking, which lift man above the functioning of a machine or the instinct of animals, are really the echo of something divine,” writes Guardini. “For the very fact that the world exists and embraces such inexhaustible profusion is not something self-evident; it is because it was willed; it is a deed and a work.”

Divine logic, contrary to unsound “English logic,” holds that gratitude is not possible without recognition, even adoration, of the ultimate Giver. If there is no Giver, to whom do we express gratitude? It is rather silly to thank the Earth, as if a plausibility structure in the secular West makes room for Gaea. It is silly to thank dead geniuses because the secularist, unlike the Christian, is not surrounded by “a great cloud of witnesses” (Heb. 12:1).

So, I heartily agree with Murray that the weapon of gratitude is needful in these sour times, but we cannot rely on the vagaries of an emotion. The virtue of gratitude swims against “the corrupted currents of this world,” which is how Hamlet describes the rotten state of Denmark. Strength for exercising this virtue does not reside within us, as if we could retard the flow of water, but comes to us as another gift for which we give thanks to God.

Our gratitude, then, must go well beyond the blessings of the Western tradition to the inexpressible joy of salvation made available by the Man of Sorrows. Jesus has given us an identity and mission far nobler than custodians or saviors of Western civilization. We are his “chosen race”—notice the premodern and biblical sense of the word race—“a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that [we] may proclaim the excellencies of him who called [us] out of darkness into his marvelous light” (1 Pet. 2:9, ESV).

Christopher Benson is the director of culture and instruction at Augustine Classical Academy in Lakewood, Colorado. He worships at Wellspring Anglican Church in Englewood and blogs at Bensonian.

Theology

Buddhism Went Mainstream Decades Ago. US Churches Still Aren’t Ready.

Why Christians need to learn about the religion Asian immigrants brought to the US.

Christianity Today March 16, 2023
Illustration by Mallory Rentsch / Source Images: WikiMedia Commons

This is the first article in the Engaging Buddhism series, which will explore different facets of Buddhism and how Christians can engage with and minister to Buddhists.

Churches dot Linwood, a predominantly Black neighborhood in Columbus, Ohio. Yet drive down a quiet road past Holy Spirit Church of Columbus and Christ Centered Apostolic Church and you’ll find an unexpected sight: a brightly colored Buddhist shrine with ornate gold accents and a pointed roof typical of Laotian architecture.

Twin red dragons guard the pathway to the shine, surrounded by reflections ponds. In the same compound is the Watlao Buddhamamakaram Buddhist temple, built in 2009 by Laotian immigrants. Inside, monks in saffron robes pray in front of golden statues of Buddha.

This Buddhist temple is a visible marker of the changing landscape of the United States. Since the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act ended national origin quotas, the number of immigrants from Buddhist-background countries has grown drastically.

Today, Asians are the fastest-growing ethnic group in the United States, making up 7 percent of the US population, or 22 million people. Arriving to pursue higher education or job opportunities or to escape wars and turmoil, Asians will continue moving to the US, and demographers project the community will grow to 46 million by 2060.

This trajectory means US churches and Christians will more likely encounter neighbors who are Buddhist or from a Buddhist-influenced culture, as the religion significantly influences more than a billion people worldwide. Around 500 million people practice Buddhism, most of whom live on the Asian continent. China has the largest number of Buddhists (with about 245 million adherents), while seven countries have Buddhist majorities, most in Southeast Asia.

This provides ample opportunities for US churches to minister to Buddhists, yet most Christians are ill-prepared to reach out to them, said Sam George, director of the Global Diaspora Institute at the Wheaton College Billy Graham Center. A 2019 Pew study found that 58 percent of Americans said they knew nothing or not much about Buddhism, the second least understood religion behind Hinduism.

“We need to get every member of our church exposed and equipped to some level of knowledge and cross-cultural skills and comfortability to engage people from a Buddhist background,” said George.

To help the church better understand Buddhism, CT is launching Engaging Buddhism, a biweekly series that will look at different facets of the religion and how Christians can engage and minister to Buddhists. First, we will explore Buddhism’s spread through Asia to America’s shores, its influence in the US, and the opportunities churches have to reach the Buddhist diaspora.

‘Go now and wander’

Buddhist beliefs vary based on country and tradition, but all adhere to several fundamental doctrines: The religion centers on the teaching of Siddhartha Gautama, also known as the Buddha, who was enlightened to see the dharma or the truth. Buddhists don’t believe in a creator God but rather seek to end suffering in this life and the cycle of rebirths by following the Eightfold Path to reach nirvana (see sidebar for more on Buddhist beliefs). Humans are impermanent; instead, one’s karma—or tally of good and bad deeds—remains after death, dictating one’s place in the next life.

After Buddha’s death in 483 B.C., his teaching spread through his disciples, whom he called to “go now and wander for the welfare and happiness of many, out of compassion for the world. … Let not two of you proceed in the same direction. Proclaim the Dhamma that is … utterly perfect,” according to the Pali Canon, the Buddhist scripture.

The first Buddhists followed their teacher’s instructions and found a receptive audience. In caste-conscious India, Buddhism’s emphasis on the equality of all human beings attracted people in low castes and women. In the third century B.C., India emperor Ashoka converted to Buddhism and used state funds to send Buddhist missionaries to China and the rest of the world through the Silk Road.

When Buddhism entered different countries, the religion’s elasticity allowed it to integrate with local religions. Because it rarely challenged local norms, many could easily accept Buddhism alongside their existing faiths. This practice of syncretism led the religion to look quite different depending on the country. In China, Buddhism was mixed with Daoism and traditional ancestor worship. In Cambodia, its cosmology includes ghosts and spirits, ancestors and Brahma deities.

By combining with local religions, Buddhism created a strong bond with people’s nationalities. Often when trying to minister to Buddhists, Christians find that the greatest barrier to evangelism is the mindset that “to be Thai (or another nationality) is to be Buddhist.”

Appealing to the disillusioned

As Asians moved to the West, migration trends brought Buddhists into all regions of the United States. Americans’ first official introduction to Buddhism was at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, where the World’s Parliament of Religion invited Buddhists from Sri Lanka and Japan to explain their beliefs. Zen master Soyen Shaku argued that the idea of karma was compatible with modern science, while Buddhist reformer Anagarika Dharmapala spoke about the Buddha’s ideals of tolerance and gentleness.

Today the United States has around 1,000 Buddhist centers, and about 3 million Americans identify as Buddhists (although the number of those who practice some form of Buddhism is higher). Westerners who have “postmodern disillusionment with the church and Christianity” are easily drawn to Eastern mystical experience, George said. Today, Buddhist ideas have influenced American culture, from Star Wars to meditation retreats to mindfulness self-help books. Celebrities like Robert Downey Jr., Steve Jobs, and George Lucas have turned to Buddhism, while the Dalai Lama is quoted and revered.

“The materialistic world leaves us empty and wanting more,” George said. “Augustine said that we all have a God-shaped vacuum inside of us and we are trying to fill that with something.” When money and sex don’t fill that deeper need, some turn to the alternative provided by Buddhist evangelists.

Yet while Westerners view Buddhism as a philosophy, Paul De Neui, a former missionary to Thailand and professor of missiology at North Park Theological Seminary, noted that this concept isn’t embraced by Buddhists in the East, who see Buddhism as a cultural identity. This means they are Buddhists because their parents are Buddhist.

“That is not so appealing to the West,” De Neui said. Collectivist values “clash with a lot of the independent individualism that we have in this country.”

Instead, Americans often pick and choose aspects of Buddhism—such as meditation or veganism—that align with their worldviews, while rejecting ideas such as celibacy or abstaining from intoxicants.

Buddhists in the East don't see a problem with this “as long as nothing is spoken badly about Buddhism,” De Neui said, noting that the lack of orthodoxy is what makes the religion appealing. “Buddha not only approved that but mandated that: Go find it, go do it your own way.”

Opportunity in reaching the diaspora

At the same time, Christians have a unique opportunity to minister to the influx of the Buddhist diaspora in a way missionaries to Asia don’t have, George said.

“They are more open to the Christian gospel witness than in their home country,” said George. “Displacement causes longing and struggles—‘How do I see myself in light of being new people in this land?’ … That process deepens the longing for spirituality.”

Asian culture is also much more communal, so spiritual conversion in Asia often entails going against the family, the community, and even one’s nationality. But in the US, “now you are individually pursuing truth … so you don’t have to fight social and communal pressures you would face back in India” or other countries, George said.

For churches interested in engaging Buddhist neighbors, George proposes several practical steps:

1. Prepare spiritually: If this is something your church feels called to because of the Buddhists who live in the neighborhood, start by praying. Ask for a heart to care for Buddhists and for opportunities to reach out to them.

2. Do your homework: Read about the basics of Buddhist faith, but also seek to understand what Buddhism looks like in the country and culture your neighbors are from. Gather a core team of people in your church to do a study about Buddhism.

3. Visit Buddhist temples: Be curious and get to know the monks in your local area. It’s important to spiritually prepare yourself before you put yourself in an environment of that sort. Build relationships, get to know who they are, and be genuinely interested. Don't focus on just converting them or turning them into a project.

4. Love your Buddhist neighbors: As you get to know them, find ways to love and serve them. Earn the right to share your faith in Jesus Christ. They need to see something worthwhile in our faith: a genuine love for Jesus and love for others.

George noted that at times this can take months or years of relationship.

“There’s no quick fix, no magic wand,” he said. “There are many genuine followers of Buddha. … So they’re not very attracted unless your Jesus is more compelling. We need to make Jesus look real and relevant and attractive to those who have come from a very high spirituality of Buddhism in Asia.”

Next time in the Engaging Buddhism series, we will take a look at karma: what it means, what it doesn’t mean, and how Christians can engage with its implications.

The 411 on Buddhism

Siddhartha Gautama, commonly known as the Buddha, was born in 564 B.C. into an affluent royal family in what is now Nepal. Protected and closed off from the world, he was 29 before he went outside his palace and saw death and suffering in the world. Shocked, he decided to renounce his wealth and live as an ascetic: fasting, begging, beating his body, and meditating. Yet he still didn’t find satisfaction.

According to tradition, while meditating under the Bodhi tree (the tree of awakening) in what is today Bihar, India, he reached enlightenment. Suddenly he understood his past lives, how karma works, and how to end suffering. He began teaching “the middle way” between indulgence and asceticism’s deprivation, bringing the dharma to the Indo-Gangetic Plain. After his death, his disciples continued to spread his teachings in northern India and beyond.

Gautama’s teachings could be summed up in the Four Noble Truths: (1) Suffering is a basic human condition. (2) It is caused by desire and passion. (3) By eliminating desire, one can stop the endless cycle of rebirth, suffering, and dying. (4) To do this, one must follow the Noble Eightfold Path, which includes having the right wisdom, morals, and meditation.

Buddhists believe that there is no creator God; rather, Buddha was a human who pointed people toward enlightenment, which is the end of suffering and samsara, the circle of rebirth. Humans are temporal and impermanent; the only part of them that transfers to the next life is their karma. Karma determines the quality of one’s next life.

Individuals can make merit not only by having good intentions and living good lives but also by having merit transferred to them when they give money to monks. People can also transfer merit to living and dead family members. The goal is to work your way up to nirvana, which means “blowing out” or “becoming extinguished,” where the cycle of desires, suffering, and rebirth ends.

Today there are three main schools of Buddhism: Theravada Buddhism, which is practiced in Southeast Asia and Sri Lanka, is the oldest school and believes that only true believers, or monks, can reach enlightenment. Mahayana Buddhism, common in China and East Asia, believes that bodhisattvas are higher-level beings who stay behind to help others reach nirvana. The third school is Vajrayana Buddhism, widely known as Tibetan Buddhism, which mixes tantric practices to reach enlightenment.

Within these broad categories are many different types of Buddhism. For instance, Mahayana Buddhism includes Zen Buddhism (focused on mindfulness meditation) and Pure Land Buddhism (which teaches that by repeating the name of the Amitabha Buddha, one can reach Pure Land, where it’s easier to reach enlightenment).

addApple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseellipseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squarefolderGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastprintremoveRSSRSSSaveSavesaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube