July 28
Unheeded Prophetic Voices by Mark Ledbetter
Some will call it being an alarmist. But nevertheless, recent events
not only in the U.S. but globally indicate the age many thought we would
never see is unfolding before our very eyes.
We should not be
dismayed, however. The prophets of old, the teachings of Jesus and the
writings of the apostles all told us this day was coming—we simply
didn't believe it would come within our lifetime.
What we are
witnessing did not happen overnight, and to lay out before you how and
when the "process" of societal reconstruction would take several posts.
Suffice it to say that, by the 1970s many saw what was unfolding in
American culture and the devastating effects that would take place once
the cultural shifts gained momentum (Leonard Ravenhill, Francis
Schaeffer, David Wilkerson, and others).
Here we have the world
spirit of our age—autonomous man setting himself up as God in defiance
of the knowledge and the moral and spiritual truth that God has given.
Here is the reason why we have a moral breakdown in every area of life.
The titanic freedoms that we once enjoyed have been cut loose from
their Christian restraints and are becoming a force of destruction
leading to chaos. When this happens, there really are few alternatives.
All morality becomes relative, law becomes arbitrary, and society moves
toward disintegration. ... At this point "right" and "left" will make
little difference. Those choices are only two roads to the same end; the
results are the same. An elite—an authoritarianism as such—will
gradually force form on society so that it will not go into chaos,
leading most people to accept it.
"We can expect the future to be
a further disaster if the evangelical world does not take a stand for
Biblical truth and morality in the full spectrum of life. For the
evangelical accommodation to the world of our age represents the last
barrier against the breakdown of our culture. And with the final removal
of this barrier will come social chaos and the rise of authoritarianism
in some form to restore social order." – Francis A. Schaeffer, The
Great Evangelical Disaster (1984)
Schaeffer laid it out before us so vividly, but no one heeded the call. The consequences are now obvious.
We live in a Post-Modern era that is marked by Neo-Pentecostalism and Neo-Propheticism.
In this Post-Modern era of the "Emerging Church" what has emerged is a
Neo-Pentecostal movement that embraces charismatic figures rather than
the charismata of the Holy Spirit. Rather than embracing the power of
the Holy Spirit, it embraces a message of personal empowerment and
entitlement.
Much of the worship is designed to solicit an
emotional response rather than worship of the true and living God.
Congregants have become addicted to a feeling rather than seeking a
clear revelation from God.
We live in an age of idolatry. Yet
today's idols are not figurines crafted from stone, wood, or metal but
are images of success and prosperity. Americans worship the bold and the
beautiful, celebrities, athletes, power brokers and even thugs and
gangsters that shape values and morals upon which many within the church
pew make their decisions. Rather than the Scriptures shaping core
beliefs and values that determine attitudes and actions, Hollywood, Wall
Street, Madison Avenue and the sports arena hosts the prophets of the
age and influence who and what we are.
Americans spend billions of
dollars on movies, videos, sports, and an endless array of ways to
absorb the heart and mind of the millions who believe they can find
fulfillment by filling their spirit with sound bites, dazzling visual
effects, unnecessary realism, violence and voyeurism. One entertainment
insider said the driving force behind entertainment is
"self-actualization."
Americans live vicariously through actors,
athletes, pop and western singers, and perpetuate their idolatry by
emulating them, purchasing their clothes designs and attempting to live
their lifestyles. If we say the Post-Modern church isn't tainted by this
influence, we deceive ourselves.
Neo-Propheticism finds itself
powerless to address the Neo-Paganism of the American culture. There are
many self-proclaimed prophets and prophetesses who wrap empty promises
in packages of gold and glitter.
Listening to the false prophets
of wealth and prosperity with the intent of positioning itself to
receive the mantle or an impartation, the church is hardly equipped to
fight the issues that once laid dormant but now rear their ugly heads
with a vengeance—child and spousal abuse, drugs, family disintegration
and pornography.
No amount of binding and loosening or
declarations of prosperity present effective measures to address the
shift of moral values in the church pew much less outside the four walls
of the church. No longer can the church claim to be salt and light but
it has played the fool and become insipid ( Matthew 5:13).
The
Apostle Paul saw the solemn descent the world would take. Some call it
an apostasy, a deterioration of faith in the church. But the word is
actually better translated "rebellion." It isn't simply a falling away
from the faith; it is shaking an angry fist in the face of God. This
rebellion doesn't deny His existence as much as it launches a militant
campaign against Him—and the remnant of believers who remain faithful.
Paul wrote in II Thessalonians 2:
"Do not let anyone deceive you in any way. For that Day will not come
unless a falling away comes first, and the man of sin is revealed, the
son of destruction, who opposes and exalts himself above all that is
called God or is worshipped, so that he sits as God in the temple of
God, showing himself as God. ... Now you know what restrains him that he
might be revealed in his time. ... and with all deception of
unrighteousness among those who perish, because they did not receive the
love for the truth that they might be saved. Therefore God will send
them a strong delusion, that they should believe the lie: that they all
might be condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in
unrighteousness. (II Thess. 2:3-4, 6, 10-12,)
The true
Post-Modern Day prophet faces a daunting task, but it isn't unlike those
who have gone before. Challenging the status quo has never been easy,
nor has it always been successful (in terms used for success today).
There is a remnant, a number of believers who are becoming more and more
discontent with the status quo, of being entertained, of being fed
self-helps rather than the Word. There are those who are tired of
preachers who place their message above the Word and whip the
congregation into a co-dependent altar service.
There is a growing number who are looking for revival, restoration, and reformation. It can happen.
Leonard Ravenhill wrote in his introduction to his book Sodom had no Bible (1979):
"When we get humble enough, and low enough, and desperate enough, and
hungry enough, and concerned enough, and passionate enough, and broken
enough, and clean enough, and prayerful enough, then God will send us a
revival that equals and surpasses the awakening this country experienced
in the days of Charles Finney."
Schaeffer and Ravenhill had
their fingers on the pulse of America and recognized the fading
heartbeat of the church and sounded the alarm. They were prophetic
voices we did not heed. Consequently, should the church in America
attempt to sound an alarm today, not only may it be too little too late,
congregants remaining true to the faith may also experience something
they thought they'd never see—American societal persecution.
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