• Home
  • About This Blog
  • Contact Me
  • Subscribe
  • Comment Policy

Attempts at Honesty

Reflections on the interplay of the Bible and Culture

  • Westminster Shorter Catechism Series
  • Sermon on the Mount Series
Home Archives for Mark McIntyre

Cancel culture in the church

Posted on August 3, 2020 Written by Mark McIntyre 1 Comment

I recently became aware of the term “cancel culture.” The term is new to me but the idea behind it is not. I have experienced this, and unfortunately, I have experienced this in the church.

Cancel culture happens when someone says something that is unpopular and a group responds by acting as if the “offender” does not exist. Or, in its more punitive (and more juvenile) form, the group seeks to prevent the “offender” from ever speaking again.

Now on to the church.

There are popular methodologies for growing large churches. They usually are centered around being as close to the culture as is possible without stepping over any boundaries. What those boundaries actually are is anyone’s guess because anyone who questions the boundaries . . . well, more on that later.

It is almost axiomatic in these churches that bigger is better and anything that might be construed to be uncomfortable for outsiders should be eliminated because people might be turned off and not come back. Also, there is more emphasis on connecting with popular culture and less emphasis on preaching and teaching the Bible.

The purveyors of this strategy are so sure that it will work and that the results will be good, that they feel the need to squelch, downplay, or cancel any dissenting voice.

Now, who is not for getting more people out to church? No-one would be against having more people respond to the Gospel. But sadly, the one thing that is often missing from these large churches is the Gospel. We have replaced it with social justice or some other form of behavioral modification

Labeling is a key component in the cancel culture mechanism. Anyone who questions the methodology or the goals is either identified as “religious,” “legalistic,” or some other pejorative label. Being thus labeled the one in disagreement can be effectively barred from the conversation. Yes, cancel culture is alive and well in the church.

The problem with this is that to take out all of the uncomfortable stuff leaves us with something that is not Christianity. Jesus himself said things like “deny yourself” and “take up your cross.” Jesus indicated that those who are true followers will have to face difficulties and perhaps even death.

Jesus doesn’t seem to have followed that methodology of never making his listeners uncomfortable. He often offended his hearers by an unequivocal portrayal of what it means to be a follower of God.

Christ’s preaching was hard-edged and demanded a response. The preaching in the wannabe megachurches is often soft as a tub of Play Doh and demands nothing more than 20 minutes of your time and perhaps a “like” or two on Facebook.

The writer of Proverbs tells us that “iron sharpens iron” (Proverbs 27:17), but Play Doh doesn’t sharpen anything.

There is a part of me (and not the healthiest part) that wants a feel-good pep talk every Sunday. There is a part of me (still not the healthiest part) that wants to feel like I’m on the “right side of history” when it comes to social issues. But there is also a part of me (this is the healthy part) that knows that appealing to my pride is not going to get me on the right spiritual track. To feel good about being “woke” or on the “right side of history” does not draw me closer to God. In fact, by stimulating my pride it can actually draw me away from a deeper relationship with God.

As a result, I will ask the lead pastor of any church I am considering attending if he purposely seeks out those who are mature believers but might have a different view of things from his own. I am tired of churches were anyone who has a different option than the lead pastor is shunned or vilified.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection Tagged With: cancel, Culture, labels, Social Justice, Woke

Black, White, and Grey

Posted on August 2, 2020 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

All the way back in the Garden of Eden, the Tempter began his seduction of Eve with the question, “Did God really say . . .”

We, as humans, have succumbed to infinite variations of this same question. But at the core, it is the same old, “Did God really say . . .”

As a result, we have a tendency to look for wiggle room in what God has made very clear in Scripture. We like to muddle black and white and make it grey to suit our fancy or perceived need for expediency.

What prompted this line if thinking is an ongoing discussion that I’ve had with regard to our responsibility to fulfill vows taken before God. In the denomination in which I worship, every officer takes vows before God to uphold the constitution of the church (Presbyterian Church in America).

Scripture in many places reinforces the idea that vows made to God are in a special category and those vows should be considered inviolable. For example, Moses provides these words from God concerning vows:

“If a man vows a vow to the Lord, or swears an oath to bind himself by a pledge, he shall not break his word. He shall do according to all that proceeds out of his mouth.”

Numbers 30:2 (ESV)

Yet I find some who would make the vow and then proceed to act in a way contrary to the constitution they vowed to uphold. Perhaps our culture says this is OK, but based on the verse quoted above, God does not.

I often wonder if the wives of the men that would so easily set aside their vows to God and their congregations would be OK with those men treating their marriage vows in the same manner.

Did God really say that when a vow is taken, it must be fulfilled to the fullest extent of our ability?

Yes, he did indeed say that. Some things are indeed black and white.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection

Perfected by social justice?

Posted on July 20, 2020 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

I wonder if the Apostle Paul were alive today if he would rewrite Galatians 3:3 to say:

Are you so foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by pursuit of social justice?

It is one thing to speak of justice as a result of acceptance of the gospel, it is another thing entirely to present social justice as the mission of the church.

I get why churches have capitulated in this way. It plays well in current society. This thinking is the same thinking that capitulated on the inspiration and authority of Scripture in the last century. The idea is that if the church subscribes to the culture’s way of thinking, the church will then gain new acceptance and its sphere of influence will grow.

The problem is that the exact opposite happened. The church was not accepted by the culture and many “Christian” congregations eventually stopped being the church.

Now, I think that every form of injustice is by definition wrong and Scripture does have much to say about those who perpetrate and those who overlook injustice.

The problem is that when the church allows itself to be reduced to a group of social justice warriors, we lose the war to win the battle. We treat the symptom without curing the disease.

The church’s mission is to make disciples of Jesus Christ, not social justice warriors. By proclaiming the good news that Jesus Christ came to rescue us from our sin and by accepting Jesus as the provision for our sin, we can be changed from the inside out. That inside-out change will affect how we treat each other.

If the church preaches social justice without preaching the good news of Jesus Christ, the church merely provides justification for the hearers to hate the oppressor. Need I remind my readers that Jesus taught us to love our enemies, not rail against them in our social media posts.

It would be great if there was a world where injustice never happened. That world will not come about by the church or any other group taking up a political cause or trying to start a social movement.

That world will ultimately come about in only one way. That one way is when Jesus comes back to set things right.

Now, we have glimpses and hints of what that world will look like when there is an outpouring of God’s Spirit that brings spiritual revival like we have seen in the Great Awakening and other movements of God.

So church leaders, preach the gospel and all the implications for those who embrace the gospel.

We are called to obey the second great command to love our neighbor as ourself. But without the gospel we lack the strength and conviction to actually do it.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection

The danger of virtue-signaling

Posted on June 23, 2020 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

Until a few months ago, I had not heard the term “virtue-signaling.” There doesn’t seem to be a universally accepted definition of the term, but I understand it to be a reference to any effort to appear morally superior by taking a popular stand on an issue. It is usually used in a pejorative sense; it is used as a criticism of the signaler.

The irony of using this term is that one could accuse the user of the term as doing his own virtue-signaling; this is the danger of all criticism. As Christians, we have to keep in mind Jesus’ warning about the log and the speck. It is so much easier for each of us to see the faults of others while ignoring our own.

With Jesus’ warning in mind, I press on.

One of the issues I have seen in Christendom is the desire to establish credibility with those who would be considered the cultural and educational elites. Many Christian colleges have had their Christian testimony compromised or destroyed by trying to win academic respect from the culture at large.

Christianity is by nature counter to many aspects of the surrounding culture and while we may not feel comfortable about it, it is true. Jesus did say:

“Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword.”

Matthew 10:34, ESV

Truth always brings separation. Truth, by definition, is incompatible with what is not true. So any time that we are trying to appeal to the culture around us, we are in danger of compromising the truth. This is the first problem with virtue-signaling.

In Luke 14:7–11, Jesus warns of the dangers of self-promotion. The warning applies to individuals and I also believe that it applies to church congregations. We need to be on guard against the lure of using sermons on the issue of the day as a means of establishing credibility in the community.

We need to constantly remind ourselves that Jesus is the one who has the authority and the power to build his church (Matthew 16:18). If we allow the issue of the day to take precedence over the thoughtful and accurate proclamation of the word of God, we have usurped Christ’s authority and taken on a responsibility that is not ours. This is the second problem with virtue-signaling.

But neither can we ignore the issues of the day. As Christians, we believe that the Bible speaks to every issue that humans will face and it is our duty and privilege to communicate the truth of Scripture and how it speaks to what is happening in the surrounding culture.

But having proclaimed what Scripture teaches, we then need to do it.

James tells us that we are to be doers and not merely hearers of the word of God (James 1:22). Our rhetoric needs to be backed up with action. Mother Teresa was not honored because she talked about working with the destitute, she was honored because she went and did it.

There is nothing wrong with church leaders wanting to speak to the moral issues of the day, but if all we do is add to the rhetoric we are not making a substantive contribution. The danger is that we can form a reliance on how current and (dare I say it?) woke we are to help grow the numbers of people coming to our services.

So the third danger of virtue-signaling is that we can say more than we do. This is true for individual Christians and is also true for church congregations. We need to be on our guard against trying to appear better than we really are.

We need to be ever vigilant against our inner Pharisee.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • …
  • 227
  • Next Page »

Follow Attempts at Honesty

Honesty in your Inbox

Post Series

  • Westminster Shorter Catechism Series
  • Sermon on the Mount Series
November 2025
SMTWTFS
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30 
« Oct    

Categories

Archives

Blogger Grid
Follow me on Blogarama

Copyright © 2025 · Focus Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in