The Best Is Yet to Come for World-Wide Christianity

The Easter promise of Christ’s resurrected life is applied to our resurrected life, too.  That is the message preached in Christian churches all over the world.  What wonderful news!

The preached promise of Easter, however, loses some of its power in three ways:  when resurrected life is reduced to the springtime freshness, when the resurrected life is focused only on the next life, and when resurrected life is deprived of the Spirit’s power.

  1. When we lived in Los Angeles, I noticed an ad for the Easter Sunrise Service at the Hollywood Bowl.  The featured speaker for this Christian celebration was—a Jewish rabbi.  How could someone who does not recognize Jesus as the true Messiah make sense out of the New Testament resurrected life in Christ?For those who do not recognize Jesus as the promised Messiah, Jesus was just a popular itinerant rabbi who crucified and buried.  End of story.  How could this man come to life again?  He can’t, according to the Modernist interpretation of Scriptures.  That would take a miracle, and supernatural miracles have no place in their world view.

    Thomas Jefferson was a leader of the Enlightenment movement that was emerging roughly two hundred years ago.  It became popular in the mid-twentieth-century scientific Modernist movement.  Jefferson famously cut out all references to miracles in his Bible.  If your starting assumption is that a supernatural God does not exist, you have no category for evidence that he does.

    Today that assumption persists in a wing of traditional churches now labeled liberal.  Their Modernist’s assumptions are directly related to their on-going swift decline.  In American culture, there now is a growing demand for the authority found in the inspired Scriptures.

  2. Basic to the great and glorious New Testament message is that when believers die we will be resurrected to eternal life in the hereafter.  In most of church history, that promise was a powerful motivator for church life.  In affluent America today it no longer is.  Much more persuasive is the promise that believers will experience new life not just later but here and now.
  3. The deficiency with conventional Easter preaching is that it does not explain how this new resurrected life happens now.  There is a leap in logic.  The too-often-omitted step is explained in the Apostle Paul’s preaching and writing.  Central to his message is the role of the Holy Spirit in the everyday lives of believers.  In Martin Luther’s words, Christ’s Spirit calls individuals to faith, gathers them as the church, brings deeper insights, and moves them toward more Christ-like living here and now.

As Jesus taught, the Holy Spirit influences human spirits.  Through him, we are born again into a resurrected life.  Christ’s Spirit changes our emotions and motivation.  You can spot the Spirit’s work in the fruit he produces, like love, joy, peace, patience, faith, and hope.  Where you see believers living with more joy or more peace or more hope, you see evidence of the Holy Spirit’s influence here and now.

Among those biblical promises you can trust, included is a trust that the Holy Spirit will influence you day by day, changing your heart and motivations.  In Christ’s redemption, we have hope for the next life.  Through the Holy Spirit’s influence, we have hope that the best is yet to come in this life.

By God’s grace through Christ’s redemption, we are saved for eternity.  By God’s grace through Christ’s Spirit, we can have a better life now!

Is the best to come for Christianity throughout the world?  What does the future look like for your congregation?  What can you do for better days ahead?

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