Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Opinion|Tue, Mar. 17 2009 04:45 PM EDT

How Fast Is America Losing Faith?

By CP Guest Contributor|David Sanford

The most viewed and arguably the most controversial article published in The Christian Science Monitor this past week? An analysis of the massive economic tsunami waves hitting billions around the world? Instead, it's a a deeply troubling must-read article on "The coming evangelical collapse" (http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0310/p09s01-coop.html).

On top of that comes a brand-new report from the American Religious Identification Survey from Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., that religion in America is declining rapidly. Americans are losing their faith at unprecedented rates.

How are we to interpret such news? It's important to remember that everyone has or will face crises of life and faith. That fact alone shouldn't alarm us. Instead, we need to see these pivotal times as a necessary part of each person's spiritual journey.

No Christian is exempt. Not even Billy Graham, who suffered a profound faith struggle in the late 1940s, shortly before his evangelistic ministry captured worldwide media attention. This largely unknown part of his early life story is an integral part of the movie Billy, which ran in select theatres across America during the fall of 2008.

Again, no Christian is exempt. Not even Mother Teresa, who had a close, vital relationship with God until she started fulfilling her calling in Calcutta, India. Suddenly, prayer, Scripture, music, meditation, and other spiritual disciplines felt dry. Except for a marvelous five-week reprieve in 1959, that remained true to her dying day. Yet she obeyed God's calling.

In biography after biography, in interview after interview, I see the same pattern. God allows us to go through a deeply troubling, faith-testing period that can last for weeks, months, years, even decades. The question is always the same: Will we remain true to God no matter what?

If we persevere, God does something remarkable. He blesses our life's work and impact to an extent we never could have imagined. That certainly is true in my own life and experience. And I find the same thing true through history-and around the globe.

In my new book, If God Disappears: 9 Faith Wreckers and What to Do about Them (SaltRiver, Tyndale House Publishers), I mention that my wife and I have had the privilege of trekking through the Amazon jungles, hiking through the Andes and Alps, and traversing the Sahara desert. The most daunting and memorable of all those travels, of course, was traveling across the Sahara desert.

The sub-Sahara desert west of Sudan and south of Libya is no-man's land. Travel nine hours by truck due east from N'Djamena, capital of Chad, and you'll come to the tiny village of Korbo. There you'll meet Tchere Ouday.

Tchere Ouday is dressed in a long white robe. His face is weathered and his mostly bald head sports some white stubble. He sits cross-legged on a mat inside his mud hut.

More than 40 years ago Tchere became the first Christian among his people, the Dangaleats in the Guera region of Chad. For many decades he worked as a mason. He is more than 70 years old now and has reduced his activities-yet he still continues to serve as an elder of the Korbo church.

In the past two years drought and caterpillar infestations have substantially reduced the amount of food the Dangaleat people have been able to raise. Typically Tchere would offer guests a meal. But on this day he offers a small cup of sweet tea, a bowl of peanuts, some washed lettuce, and a few slices of tomato dipped in salt and ground red pepper.

"How can we pray for you, brother?" you ask him.

Usually Dangaleat Muslims and Christians say the same thing: Please pray that God will give us more food. That is on Tchere's mind too. But it's not the first thing. Instead he says, "Pray that we might remain firm in our faith in our old age."

Who could be more faithful than Tchere? Even against threat of death he refused to recant his faith during the horrific Chadian civil war that raged through the Guera in the late 1970s. He's served the Lord steadfastly ever since. Still, Tchere knows better than to take his Christian faith for granted.

Although Tchere doesn't have the complete Bible in his language yet, he knows that one of the greatest temptations you and I will ever face in this life is to spiritually drift away from the Lord. No one is immune-no matter how long and faithfully they have walked with God.

So, let's take the news about the decline of religious faith in America personally.

Is your faith growing stronger? If so, great! If not, let's talk. You'll find my e-mail address on my www.IfGodDisappears.com website.

___________________________________________

David Sanford and his wife, Renée, founded Sanford Communications, Inc., which recently joined Credo Communications LLC. In his new role at Credo, David continues to work with leaders, organizations, and publishers to develop life-changing books and other resources.
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  • Tue Mar 31, 2009 12:04 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    If someone tells me that America is loosing it's faith in God, I would consider the source.
    I believe that the Muslim religion is gaining ground. I believe that non-believers are a large portion of the American public. I believe that a sizable portion of the American Christian population is "lukewarm". I DO NOT believe that a group of men and women, who belong to God are loosing their salvation at a measurable rate. In fact, I'm not even sure if it's possible to fall from grace, once God takes residence in your life.
    I DO believe that the statistic is measuring a population that was never saved to begin with. The men and women who belonged to Christ yesterday, still belong to Christ today. There are close to 7 billion people on the planet today. I am quite certain that there are more believers alive at this very moment, than have existed in the history of the earth....period. We are not loosing this battle. Remember, Christ didn't win the battle for a group of Jews who lived 200 years ago, he gave victory for everyone who ever has lived and ever will live.

    They can say that America is loosing faith, I don't believe a word of it.

  • Sat Mar 21, 2009 8:15 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I highly recommend for all to go to David Wilkerson's site. www.worldchallenge.org and read his latest message. "Urgent message". It's coming.

  • Thu Mar 19, 2009 10:28 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    "Fortunately for many, there are those who fight against this onslaught and keep to the concept of the religion itself.."

    WOW, a real, rootin',tootin' Crusader wanting to persecute Bible-believing Christians.

    (hmmm....I wonder if he lights his patio with the burning heads of the saints mounted on poles.)

    Religion IS a concept.

  • Thu Mar 19, 2009 2:42 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 8

    Sadly, in my opinion, one of the main things driving people from religion is the current rise in fundamentalism in all the various religions. Certainly in an industrialized nation, we see many turning from the rigid, hell and damnation, blindly obey types of theology and it's hardly a surprise. It is those involved in religion who are driving others away. Fortunately for many, there are those who fight against this onslaught and keep to the concept of the religion itself. In the case of Christianity, the idea is to love one another not judge one another.

  • Thu Mar 19, 2009 2:25 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    Mike,
    Sorry about the lost job. Hope you have been talkng about a hypothetical situation, and not a personal one. In some ways, however, your post is not one whit different from the Israel crowd folowing Moses out of Egypt en route to the Promised Land. They weren't out of Egypt and they got shrill. Check out Exod. 14: 11- 13. They were dumping on Moses in Numbers 14: 2-4. You know the story. No water. Freak out. No food. Panic attack. Moses must have had the patience of a saint.
    Now, in your case, you really don't want randomly quoted Bible verses. A massive up-turn would do nicely. Still, what is the point of Christianity. Turmoil happens. How to resolve it? Curse God and die (Mrs. Job's advice)? Shallow. To cope in these times is the strength of faith. Perhaps the economy was God's way of asking "What do you really trust?" Perhaps we did become a little greedy, self-absorbed, and arrogant. A dose of down-turn migh be the medicine this country needs.
    To blame God for all the woe in the world has been done to death. Maybe it's time to become introspective and ask what God will have in store for those who trust Him. We have been too influenced by "burger philosophy" - "You deserve a break today" and "Have it your way." Maybe it's ime for "soul food."

  • Thu Mar 19, 2009 1:22 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    "people are asking to find answers not religion."

    The answers are in Jesus. That's why He spent so much time attacking religion. Jesus attack religion? Absolutely! He had very few kind things to say to the religious leaders.

    Religion is about one's beliefs. Christianity is about what Jesus believes. This is where the road forks between Christianity and religion.

  • Thu Mar 19, 2009 11:36 am Agree: 4   Disagree: 0

    We're losing America because we love our sin. The Church has become corrupt and is preaching a gospel that is far removed from what Jesus and the Apostles left behind. We are fascinated with the world and our culture and refuse to "come out from among them". Rather than preaching a convicting Word that might offend, we have shut up heaven to men by preaching "smooth things". We don't live what we preach because we don't believe what we preach. We have set aside God's Word and have reasoned that the world can be reached through worldly methods. (Name one place in scripture where the spirit of the age was used as an evangelistic tool). We have become inwardly focused because we're frightened of the prospect of being hated by the world. We want to be esteemed and loved not hated and persecuted...so, we compromise the Gospel message to gain a few seeker-sensitive backsliders who have no intention of surrendering life and liberty to God. Instead, we dress the Gospel message in cultural garb and prop it up as "truth" - but in fact it is like the scarecrow in the Wizard of Oz - it's truth without a brain. We've replaced the Holy Ghost with psychology and culture. But isn't it true that when the Holy Ghost is no longer present men HAVE to invent new methods to play church? We adorn "Christian tv" (an oxymoron indeed) with buffoonery passing itself off as Christianity when in fact it looks nothing like Christianity at all. Some of our leaders have turned from the faith to perverse lifestyles giving credence to the godless mindset that our base instincts can't be overcome with holiness. We have learned how to parrot the Gospel because we've heard it preached our whole lives, but we just don't know how to LIVE the Gospel, because we don't pray, we don't go to God's Word, and frankly we don't care. So, let's please stop whining about the decline of the American Church. The American Church for the most part is already dead. A false gospel parroted over several generations - like successive copies on a Xerox machine - after a while begins to lose the original image. What you're left with is only an "after image" of the original Truth. Unless we determine to surrender all and seek revival in our own hearts, we can kiss Christianity goodbye and the nation we once revered as Christian will fall into memory like old Europe.

  • mike »
    Wed Mar 18, 2009 7:19 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    america losing faith? why? people with struggles ask the question HOW. with today's turmoil, people are asking to find answers not religion.

    here are some of the answers of christianity
    (let's say a person lost his/her job)

    it's because of SIN

    that is not biblical

    like the blind man asking for healing, the people rebuked him and said SHUT UP!

    give your 10%, & god will bless you.

    be contented with $11.00/hr.

    don't think of yourself, christ said 'deny yourself'; self is a sin; S I N the middle of sin / pride is I.

    an arrogant christian/pastor would say: you want me to say what you want to hear.

    no wonder there are those who are losing faith bec. they are given a 'snake when they are for a fish' & with this answers 'more weight on the shoulders' who are ALREADY suffering.

  • Wed Mar 18, 2009 12:53 pm Agree: 3   Disagree: 0

    It seems that Americans are not finding Christ for many reasons. While many aresearching, we preach a weak and feminine Jesus (Jesus was not feminine) or we preach the Jesus that we desire to see (like the 2nd Temple Jews who saw Messiah as a political force and who would bring reckoning upon their enemies. Media certainly plays a part but it is only a secondary source of our ills. We also have a tendancy to preach a Christ that will always keep you happy (usually people speak of joy as it means happiness) or we speak only of the suffering we will face (Jesus did say we would face trials and troubles) but leave out the joy. Much of the time we speak in the negative about issues and forget that people need Someone who is for them and that we are for the good things in life (including eternal life).

    Do we need to be grounded in His word? Absolutely but lasting faith requires more than just His words, it requires action. We need action but not without the right reasons. Services are to build up His body, not be a time of preferences over substance (although there is nothing wrong with having preferences in style and such) or we will continue to have weak and untethered people who don't have a reason to be for im and His purposes.

    We must stop preaching universalism (there is only one Way)and preaching Americanism (personal liberties over our responsibilities for and to each other)and get back to preaching Christ, His sacrifice and the joy or servanthood to the King.

    When we start preaching the Great News and following His commands and example, we will not only be used to bring ore of His rebellious creatures to reconcilliation but we will strengthen our own faith in the process.

    Grace and Peace,
    Jim

  • Wed Mar 18, 2009 11:52 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word. If we don't stay in the Word of God around the clock our faith will begin to diminish. What has happened to the 'old timers'? And I don't mean that in a disrespectful way. The older generation when I was very young (1950's) were the men who counseled the younger men, and the older women counseled the younger women. You just don't see that anymore. They have dementia and alzheimers now. That is very very sad. It breaks my heart. What has brought this horrible disease on them?

  • Wed Mar 18, 2009 9:29 am Agree: 4   Disagree: 2

    The Christian men need to get off their couches and start living their faith. Their children will see this and will respect it more than their mother's prayers. Doubt this?

    Every Sunday in the USA women drag their children to church. Its mothers and children and elderly in the church, where are the young men? the boys? the middle ages men?

    This is the root of our problem. Our men are sedated by the media and the future generations suffer crisis of faith.

  • Wed Mar 18, 2009 8:09 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 0

    What I see is the body of Christ that has been letting itself fall into a sedentary lifestyle. We need the evangelicals and all the other denominations to collectively say to the world "sinners we are, every one of us. But it's not about us. It's about Jesus." And in spite of our self-inflicted divisions, we still remain the body of Christ.

    Though the journey may be arduous, friends, keep walking toward the Promised Land. Just keep walking...

  • Wed Mar 18, 2009 7:05 am Agree: 7   Disagree: 0

    Faith is like a muscle, it must be exercised to be strengthened. And how do we make our faith stronger? By studying the word of God, by prayer, and successfully enduring the trials of this life. We are the most fortunate and unfortunate generation ever. We are fortunate in that we have access (via internet, software, books...) to biblical study that our ancestors and even great ministers of the past only dreamed of having. But those same accesses alos provide some of the biggest distractions and sins available in history.
    How many of the people claiming to be losing their faith have spent any substantial time in prayer or studying the word of God? How many have actively persued knowledge of the Bible? I suspect few. I listen to the Bible, or Bible studies, or commentaries on my Ipod on my daily commute. On my lunch and at home. We have at our fingertips tools that will help us, but we must decide to use them.
    May God strengthen our faith and bless us all.

  • Tue Mar 17, 2009 7:49 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    Faith is something everyone struggles with. Who among us can't say...; I believe, but... or I have faith, but or the biggest...; I'm Christian, but.... When people look at their faith, if their honest, at one point or another they woujld have to admit either 1. am I missing something? Do I really believe what I'm saying/ or even portraying? Am I being the best Christian I can be? Always remember "all have fallen short of the glory of God.... Faith without doubt is human.

  • Tue Mar 17, 2009 6:38 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    Faith is a hard item to evaluate. But smbga is spot on about feelings. While our feelings can be tied to faith, it is truly confidence in what we count on for all good. Elijah had a lapse in faith in I Kings 19, and this after a major triumph over the priests of Baal in the previous chapter. It would eventualy be the still small voice that summons the prophet out of his doldrums, he same still small voice that sent the flames in the previous chapter. Perhaps what God was telling His messenger was that the super-sensational would have no impact on hardened hearts, but consistent preaching would. Perhaps this is the message for our times.
    Maybe God needs no earthquake-scaled cataclysm to make His point. Just faithful followers who can talk through he confusion and chaos of the days in the pursuit of those whose confidence, whose faih is not squarely set on the Word and promises of God.

  • Tue Mar 17, 2009 5:56 pm Agree: 10   Disagree: 1

    We cannot rely on our emotions. That is soulish. We must rely on the Word of God to sustain us on a daily basis. Yes, I have struggled with my faith in the past. But going thru the hard times and trials, it made me realize that I needed those times to shake me and put my faith in God no matter how bleak it looked. Everything is being shaken. Our emotions are up one day, down the next. But God's Word will never ever change. We can rest in Him.

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