A Compromised Gospel Produces Compromised Fruit





F-Brown Nancy-G-Brown

"The dawning of the 21st century finds the church of America in a moral and spiritual crisis. Decades of self-centered living and worldliness have taken their toll. Years of compromise and toothless gospel preaching have had their effect.”

Thirteen years ago in 2000, I wrote that admonition in my book The Jesus Manifesto. Ten years before that, in 1990, I sounded a similar alarm in my book How Saved Are We?:

“For years, we have preached a cheap gospel and peddled a soft Savior. We have taught salvation without self-denial and the crown without the cross. We have catered to the unsaved and compromised with the world. Now we are paying the price.”

Tragically, what I and others warned about has now run its dangerous and deceptive course.

You don’t have to look too far today to hear Christian leaders teaching that it’s wrong to expect born-again believers to change their conduct, calling those who do “religious” (as if that’s a bad word) or, worse still, “legalistic” if they preach repentance to the church and to the lost. Today, you can practice almost any sin, work in almost any ungodly profession and still be accepted as a follower of Jesus Christ.

How in the world did we depart so far from the transforming power of the gospel  of Jesus?

Consider these examples:

  • A glamorous spokeswoman for conservative Christian values explains that, “I am a Christian, and I am a model. Models pose for pictures, including lingerie and swimwear photos.”
  • A well-known rapper claims a conversion to Christianity and states, “I love God, Jesus Christ is my savior, and I’m still out here thuggin’.” He has been baptized, attends church regularly and says, “I still love the strip club, and I still smoke and drink. I’m faithful to my family, so I wanted to make an album where you could love God and be of God, but still get it poppin’ in your life.”

I am not making this up.

And we don’t dare call out anyone on their sinful, public lifestyle lest we be guilty of what is now considered the worst sin of all—judging. Yes, these days it’s considered worse to judge someone for sinning than it is to commit the sin.

With regard to the lingerie model and, even more so, the rapper, it would be one thing if we said that they were spiritually and morally confused, totally immature in their faith, in need of serious discipleship and a real encounter with the Lord. But so often that’s not what you hear. Instead, many believers in America today find nothing wrong with the idea of a “Christian” lingerie model or a “born-again,” profanity-using, smoking, drinking rapper who frequents strip clubs. What kind of nonsense is this?

The New Cross for Sinners

More than 50 years ago in his classic article, “The Old Cross and the New,” A.W. Tozer wrote, “The old cross would have no truck with the world. For Adam’s proud flesh it meant the end of the journey.” In contrast, he noted with profound insight, “The new cross does not slay the sinner; it redirects him.”

Today we could take his insights one step further and say that the new cross does not slay the sinner; it empowers him or her: Jesus came to make you into a bigger and better you. Jesus came to help you fulfill your dreams and your destiny. Put another way, the gospel is all about you—not Jesus.

Scan the programming on Christian TV and listen to the latest “hit” sermons, and take note of how often you hear messages about all the wonderful things God can do for you—including prosper you financially. Contrast that with how seldom you hear messages about the wonderful things we’re called to do for the Lord. And see if you can count even five times in the last year that you heard a message challenging you to sacrifice and service for Jesus (and I’m not talking about making a financial sacrifice for the TV preacher).

Yet Jesus said, “If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it” (Luke 9:23-24, NIV). When is the last time you were stirred to the core of your being with those words? Yet their message runs throughout the Gospels and forms a fundamental part of the message of the Lord. (See Matt. 10:37-39; 16:24-25; Mark 8:34-35; Luke 14:26-33; 17:32-32; John 12:24-25.)

“Join with me in suffering, like a good soldier of Christ Jesus,” Paul wrote to Timothy (2 Tim. 2:3), as opposed to, “Enjoy personal success with me as a good entrepreneur of Christ Jesus.” And he exhorted Timothy to use the Word to “correct, rebuke and encourage—with great patience and careful instruction,” warning him that, “the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths” (4:2-4).

The Gospel of Hyper-Grace

We are living in such a time today, a time in which the gospel of personal success has been merged with the gospel of hyper-grace, thereby rendering the listener impervious to warning or correction or rebuke: “If it doesn’t make me feel better about myself, it’s not from God. If it draws attention to my sin, it’s not from God. If it challenges me in any way, it’s legalism, it’s bondage, it’s the law.”

According to the latest version of the message of hyper-grace:

  • Nothing you do will negatively affect your relationship with God.
  • As a believer, you never need to confess your sins to God or repent of your sins.
  • God doesn’t see your sins; He always sees you as perfect through the blood of Jesus.
  • You can follow Jesus effortlessly.

And still, there is more. We have become obsessed with the need to be “relevant,” trying to become like the world to win the world. We want lost, confused sinners to know we are just like them: “Is your life messed up? Our lives are messed up, too. You will feel completely at home in our church. And you will really be able to relate to our pastor. He’s up on the latest hit movies—even the raunchy ones—and sometimes he spices up his sermons with off-color language. We are not uptight religious people here.”

Misleading Our Young People

Moreover, as young people leave our churches by the droves, we compromise our message even more. We fail to realize that young people are leaving our churches because they have not seen us living out the gospel. We haven’t told them the truth, and we haven’t ministered to them in the power of the Spirit.

But where the gospel is going forth with power and conviction, young people are flocking to hear the Word and be changed. The more we water down the message, the fewer disciples we will produce and the less God will back us.

During the days of the Brownsville Revival, I wrote a little poem called “Pablum From the Pit.” It seems apropos to share it again now:

Cootchie, cootchie, cootchie-coo,
God loves me and God loves you!
Smile sinner, don’t be sad;
God’s not angry; He’s not mad.
Even when you leave the path,
There’s no hell and there’s no wrath.
So don’t you fear, just do your best.
Judgment Day won’t be a test.
God sees your heart and that’s enough.
The Judgment Seat won’t be that tough.
For you can’t sin away His grace
Or take that smile from His face.
’Cause God is love and love is good:
He’ll treat you like you think He should!
Just trust me, sinner, to the end.
My name is Satan, I’m your friend.

May God awaken His church again today beginning with us, His leaders. And may we take up the cross and preach the cross regardless of cost or consequences. 

In more ways than we realize, the fate of the nation is in our hands. And if a compromised, watered-down message could bring death and destruction, an uncompromising, Spirit-empowered, compassion-birthed message could bring life and transformation. 

Now is the time.  


Dr. Michael L. Brown is president of FIRE School of Ministry and host of the nationally syndicated talk radio show, The Line of Fire. His classic book on holiness, Go and Sin No More, has just been reprinted. 

Comments   

 
0 #81 D.T. 2013-04-24 09:54
Truthseeker, YOU can do NOTHING to save yourself! You are equating your level of obedience to your level of salvation. Instead, equate your level of obedience to your level of COMMITMENT. Being "saved" means saved from death, which means I am trusting that when I drop dead, Jesus will catch me. You are saved from the effect of sin, not the temptation of sin. If you are having a problem with sin, keep pushing back against it! Sin wants you to think you're losing, but regardless of the outcome of your resistance to it, you have already won! Fight the Good Fight, and believe Jesus when He says "I will never leave you, or forsake you"
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0 #80 Tom2013 2013-04-24 09:51
Quoting Truthseeker:
The sin I struggle with now are not the sins I committed (without struggle) before conversion. But, I do fall flat on my face REGULARLY. So, the times I've heard the "hyper-grace" message, I grabbed hold of it tight. But, I've always thought a relationship with Jesus will (as it did with me) change your life and if you didn't WANT to obey, you need to question your salvation. However, this WANTING to and not ATTAINING the level of obedience I desire has me actually questioning my salvation, which sends me in a tailspin.....

Truthseeker, aspects of what you wrote, match what St Paul said in Romans chapter 7. IE you both sound frustrated that you are unable to attain perfection. But I think that this is where grace comes in. It's preferable that we are perfect, but we are saved by faith. So as long as you are committed, dedicated and repentant, you are saved due to God's grace taking care of the rest.
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0 #79 Truthseeker 2013-04-24 09:16
The sin I struggle with now are not the sins I committed (without struggle) before conversion. But, I do fall flat on my face REGULARLY. So, the times I've heard the "hyper-grace" message, I grabbed hold of it tight. But, I've always thought a relationship with Jesus will (as it did with me) change your life and if you didn't WANT to obey, you need to question your salvation. However, this WANTING to and not ATTAINING the level of obedience I desire has me actually questioning my salvation, which sends me in a tailspin.....
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0 #78 D.T. 2013-04-09 16:17
The problem with this is, unless one is perfect, one cannot claim another is un-saved due to sin in their life. If you have ANY sin in your life, then it's merely a matter of degree. At what point is the sin too much, and one either loses their salvation or the sin amount is evidence of never having been saved? We may have our suspicions of another's lack of salvation, but isn't THAT what Jesus was talking about when He said "Judge not..."? I don't believe Jesus was talking about not judging sin, because there are so many places in the Bible where we are told to rebuke sin, so He must have been talking about judging another's salvation, because, after all, HE is the Judge! Could it be that dissertations such as this one speak more to what offends the author, than to the personal, intimate relationship people (Christians) have with Jesus Christ? One may not understand the relationship another has with a third, but that lack does not make the other's relationship any less valid.
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0 #77 Chad Kidd 2013-04-03 16:15
Michael - I appreciate your article. I too am burdened for the level of sin many will excuse and defend in the hyper-grace movement. However, I know I am his and the reason I do not do the things that displease him is because I am his son. He loves and accepts me as I am, so I don't want to do anything to displease him. Why would you want to do things that anger or upset your friend, if you value your relationship? So, I don't draw lines based on my own preferences, but I draw lines saying: Does this activity draw me closer to God, does it cause me to love more?
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-1 #76 Bertie 2013-03-24 07:42
I can see that you don't really understand what LAW or GRACE is. I feel sorry for those that get confused in the public fights in LAW vs GRACE. I have found very few preacher really understanding GRACE. Those that are living from HURT under the LAW pushes things out of line, for sure.

Dr, I must say that the scriptures you use are powerful but I can clearly see you don't understand the context they are in. I and have been evolved in debates many times. No person gets convinced of the other persons view by underlying sarcasm. When a letter is written, what is written is not as clear as the spirit it is written in.
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0 #75 Ed C. 2013-03-23 02:43
Brother Michael, I'll graciously take your "rebuke" but I'd just like to point one little thing: In all of the recent exchanges that I've had with you, I have not personally attacked you -- I have only critiqued your theological ideas.

The fact remains that you have not substantively established at what point a Blood-bought believer, whose soul is anchored firm and secure in Jesus, permanently departs from eternal salvation. I know the reason why you won't answer the question is that you don't know the answer and for some reason, you won't admit that you don't know the answer.

What you teach about the loss of salvation for a true believer is every bit as wretched and error-ridden as the presumptuous doctrine of universal salvation.
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+1 #74 ChristineC 2013-03-20 17:32
The poem "Pablum from the Pit" is so interesting and valid. Its strong title and final "punch line" are highly effective . . . and *affective.*

I grew up attending a New Age ministry; my mother was even a minister of this "church." I think that early on it was well-intended, and it drew wonderful people. Today I barely recognize it, really.

I've heard Warren Smith talk about waking up to the surprising source of New Age pap. I believe the title of his book on this topic is "When the Light is Dark."

Like many of us, he discovered that what he had thought was a most-enlightened spiritual journey turned out to be insidious. These "ministries" present in such an appealing way. But when you hear some of the "teachings" a little farther on . . . for me, it was shocking.

Thank you for your insight -- and for this article and poem, which may wake some people up. Two thumbs up.
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0 #73 Daniel Ben Levi 2013-03-20 01:11
Very important point you raise- if you don't have a baseline of beliefs how can you stand for anything right? Certainly a world without physical laws would be madness, or a world without social laws would be impossible to have a functioning social contract. So why should we forfeit spiritual laws? Better to understand their true purposes, and live accordingly. So, yes I totally agree with the core of your message.That being said, smoking and drinking, rapping and modeling are not exactly the potent sinful issues on the grand canvas of madness which is our modern society. Why don't we talk more about the rampant love of money, material wealth and status which has totally hijacked our cultures? What about the inept top-down, community-weakening social structures we are accepting which stigmatize the poor and compartmentalize people into cliques detached from the reality of the world? Theoretically, if there was no heaven and hell, would our actions remain the same? That is the question
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0 #72 B.J.Stone 2013-03-18 11:40
Threads(like HERE)REQUIREdebate(AS IFacross tables JosephPrince,MichaelBrown,"CHA RIS"MINISTRIES,rules beingSCRIPTUREonly,CONCISEabou t"GRACE,omatic"charismaticisms "reasoningsONLY). PrinceMAKESstatements like"reconcilitationMINISTRYis tellingWHOLEworldGODis notNOW HOLDINGtheirSINagainstTHEM", Brown sayingUNconditionalPROMISESalr eadyMADEbyGODtoMAN, UNreversable. CharismaMAGsayingMINISTRYtoday NOWbeingJUDGED IN/BYflesh.
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