Is Christianity About 'Living Strong?'
A couple months back I wrote about Reader's Digest Christianity, and how it reduced the Christian faith to pithy, easily-achievable goals that ensure our personal improvement. Here, I have a different (though depressingly similar) target: "LiveStrong" Christianity. LiveStrong bracelets are today even more popular than the infamous WWJD bracelets were 10 years ago, despite the public fall from grace of their namesake, Lance Armstrong.
In the minds of many people inside the church, "Livestrong" is the essence and goal of Christianity. You hear this obsession in our lingo: We talk about someone having "strong faith," about someone being a "strong Christian," a "prayer warrior," or a "mighty man/woman of God." We want to believe that we can do it all, handle it all. We desperately want to think that we are competent and capable- we've concluded that our life and our witness depend on our strength. No one wants to declare deficiency. We even turn the commands that seem to have nothing to do with strength ("Blessed are the meek" or "Turn the other cheek") into opportunities to showcase our spiritual might. I saw a church billboard the other day that said, "Think being meek is weak? Try being meek for a week!"
We like our Christianity to be muscular, triumphant. We've come to believe that the Christian life is a progression from weakness to strength-"Started from the bottom, now we're here" (Drake) seems to be the victory chant of modern Christianity. We are all by nature, in the terminology of Martin Luther, theologians of glory-not God's glory, but our own.
Read more at http://www.christianpost.com/news/livestrong-christianity-114302/