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Where Do Preaching and Culture Meet?

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Christian Post Reporter
Tue, Apr. 08 2008 10:12 AM ET
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WOODBRIDGE, Va. – Hundreds of pastors and ministry leaders grappled Monday with the basic but difficult to answer question of how to stay plugged in to the culture to gain access and share the Gospel with a younger generation that is “fundamentally atheistic.”

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James Emery White
(Photo: The Christian Post)
Pastor James Emery White of Mecklenburg Community Church in Charlotte, N.C., gives a plenary address titled 'Where Do Preaching and Culture Meet?' on Monday, April 7, 2008.

Attendees – who range from small-town preachers to world-renown Christian leaders – converged for the 19th Annual National Conference on Preaching outside Washington, D.C. The three-day conference, which kick-off on Monday, will explore the role of preaching in addressing cultural, social, and political issues under the conference theme of “Where Do Pulpit and Culture Meet?”

Opening the conference, Pastor James Emery White of Mecklenburg Community Church in Charlotte, N.C., gave a plenary address titled, “Where Do Preaching and Culture Meet?” In it, he presented the Acts 17 model of preaching of Paul who was able to connect with different people despite the pluralistic cultures he encountered.

White says that preachers today should follow the Acts 17 strategy which is simply explanation. He said preachers should start off even with the simple explanations that the Bible is made up of the Old Testament and New Testament and contains 66 books and is “really one story. It tells the story of us and God.”

“When it comes to apologetics, perhaps we need to talk less about reasons to believe the Bible and move towards ‘this is the Bible,’” White offered. “Maybe we need less Easter messages that say ‘did Jesus rise from the dead’ and maybe we need to move on to say ‘so what if he did?’”

“So where do preaching and culture meet?” the opening speaker asked. “At the cross.”

The cross shows that even in Jesus’ agony he was trying to tell one more lost person about God’s heart and how they could be in paradise.

“[The cross is] the clear signal that God would stop at nothing to reach. Stop at nothing to communicate. Stop at nothing to connect – nor should we,” White declared.

During a panel discussion that ensued, Pastor Joseph Evans of Mount Carmel Baptist Church in Washington, D.C., voiced his concern that increasingly a cross-less Christianity is being presented by churches. Messages that don’t talk about the “bloody transaction” and that it “cost something for us to be Christians” are popular and acceptable to culture, but Evans argues that Christianity that preaches the cross will “always be powerful.”

“Some people are not willing to come, but yet others will because that cross absolved our guilt,” Evans said. “They want to know if Christ can still forgive sin and we ought not to shy away from that.”

He added, “Christianity when you preach the cross will always be powerful because in its context Christianity was counterculture. The cross of Christ was never popular. It was rebellious at best. I don’t want a Christianity that conforms to everything we see. Christ is not a popular culture. We have to have the irreverence to stand up and proclaim the Gospel. Not everybody wants to hear that, but a lot of people do.”

Fellow panelist, Pastor Mark Batterson of National Community Church in Washington, D.C., agreed that preachers must talk about the cross.

“Wherever you find the truth you find tension,” stated Batterson, who was listed by Outreach Magazine as pastor to one of America’s most innovative churches in 2008. “Couldn’t we all agree on this – if we preach every weekend and people never get to the foot of the cross, then what is the point? There is no point,” Batterson argued.

Pastor Rick Warren, best-selling author of The Purpose Driven Life and founding pastor of Saddleback Church in southern California, is scheduled to give a sermon Tuesday evening.

Other speakers at the event include Chuck Colson, founder of Prison Fellowship; Barry Black, chaplain of the U.S. Senate; and Larry Mercer, president of Washington Bible College/Capital Bible Seminary in Maryland.

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Aardvark1
  • Tue Apr 08, 2008 11:28 pm
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Every church is to blame for this! They have concentrated so much on buildings and programs etc that they forgot the Cross and the Lord who brought us here!

Secondly, the same seeker-sensitive movement which dumbed down the Bible, gets to now define it! Look who is giving the sermon on Wednesday - RICK WARREN!! Was Joel Osteen unavailable?!!

It is so-called (by the left-wing media) "America's Pastors" like Warren, Hybels and Osteen (WHO?) who are responsible for Biblical ignorance, which leads our kids astray when they go to even some of our best "Christian" schools like Wheaton etc!

So conferences like this are good at addressing problems, but they will never go back to prayer, repentance and the Raw Word of God, which is the only way to reach a lost world of our youth!
DannyPoo
  • Tue Apr 08, 2008 3:56 pm
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the statement that our culture is "fundamentally atheistic" is probably not correct. Most people in our culture are "spiritual" in some way or form, however many are Christophobic and this is where we need to encounter the culture.
gmac0961
  • Tue Apr 08, 2008 1:12 pm
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I don't necessarily agree that we live in an atheist society. Most people profess a belief in God, although what they think of as God varies alot (which is, of course, part of the problem). I think the main problem is that the Church makes a good case for why you should care about Jesus after you die, but not a great case for why living before the Lord is truly a better, happier existence in this life. The world has the idea that we are all repressed and just dying for some fornication if only God would look the other way for a while, Our task is to show them that way is destruction and we DO NOT long for these things, as they think we do.

We need to get back to why it is better to live the Christian way. For example, we have huge problems with violence in this world. Go to the Sermon on the Mount and you will see how Jesus' way solves that problem. There are 1000 more examples, but that is just the first.

Be clear, I am not saying water down any of the Gospel and tell people it will all be angels and white light. Just make the case that the Gospel is as relevant to this earth as it is to the next.
JHS
  • Tue Apr 08, 2008 12:34 pm
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White's church is southern baptist, I wonder why they try so hard to hide that hmmmmmm
canadianchristian
  • Tue Apr 08, 2008 11:48 am
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serbant424,
Amen and well said !!! Sorry feet you are mistaken, the church is a body of believers who willingly serve the LORD JESUS CHRIST and NOT the culture they happen to live in, whether here or across the world. Followers of CHRIST should expect to be mocked, ridiculed, hated,and killed possibly for the message they bring- they are not to conform to the world and it's cultural sin's but to be a shining light in the darkness of man's culture, IN JESUS NAME
servant424
  • Tue Apr 08, 2008 11:09 am
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Amen and amen to the comments of Evans and Batterson. In our sincere efforts over the past decade to reach an increasingly hostile and Biblically illiterate culture, we have watered down the Gospel to a "feel good, be happy, Jesus loves you" message. However, the Word - Old Testament and New - clearly illustrates that the God's amazing grace and love can only truly be understood and accepted - and eternally change lives - when they are presented side-by-side with the Holy God Who hates sin with a judgmental wrath. We are under His wrath unless and until we accept His grace provision of Jesus Christ. Music styles, dress codes, service times, and much more can be altered to "fit" today's culture and attempt to attract the lost - but the message must not be compromised. We've tried - it didn't work. We now have churches full of undiscipled and, in many cases, unconverted attendees whose lives and lifestyles attest to that fact. It is God and His Word that never changes - and it is only the Word of God, through His Spirit, that has the power to reach the lost, regardless of their culture.
feetxxxl
  • Tue Apr 08, 2008 10:31 am
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without a doubt the church is the culture and the culture is the church. you cannot seperate one from the other, as is evidenced by the recent article about divorce.
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