The Christian news lately has been filled with commentary on
the “departure” of Josh Harris and Marty Sampson from the faith. (Good articles
can be found here
and here.)
These have made the news because they are fairly well known names, but they are
not unique. The fact is that such “de-conversions” happen every day in churches
around the country. Some studies
have said as many as 60-80% of Christian youth disengage with their faith when
they head to college. We’ve probably all seen faithful attenders disappear from
the pews. There are numerous reasons why people may abandon the faith they once
proclaimed. Some may include:
- Inadequate training in the foundations of faith that can’t stand up to scrutiny in the public square.
- Lack of ongoing meaningful relationships with older Christians in the church.
- Perceived hypocrisy in the church such as leadership failures, church splits, misuse of authority, and exclusivism.
- Lack of application and a perceived conflict between faith and real world issues.
- Believing that there’s no hope for sinners to really be reconciled with God, thus failing to understand the true gospel.
Most churches probably could do better in terms of teaching
and training people and fostering deeper relationships. No church is perfect,
and every church member has their faults. Ultimately, though, each departure
from the faith is a failure of belief—a decision that the god that I think I
know is not worth dedicating my life to. That may happen as a fairly quick
abandonment of the faith, or as a slow growth of apathy. In His parable of the
sower (Matthew 13), Jesus indicated four conditions: the seed may get snatched
away before it can root; it may grow shallow roots and immediately fall away;
it may start to grow but get choked out by the cares of the world and be
unfruitful; or it may take deep root and grow powerfully. The seed is the same
in each case, but the soil conditions make the difference.
While I believe from Romans 8:28-30 and other passages that
the true believer can never lose their salvation, I also believe that there are
those who think they are Christians who are putting their faith in other gods. Some
may believe that God promises health and peace and positive answers to every
prayer, and when they get disappointed they lose what faith they had. Some may
believe that God shouldn’t judge people for doing what gives them pleasure, and
they can’t accept that God is holy and just and righteous. Some may believe
they are Christians because they assent to the faith of family members but
never really investigate or embrace it for themselves.
If someone’s beliefs about God are false, they need to
abandon that faith and get to know the one true God. We should pray that many
will do just that. However, I fear that some of the big name de-conversions
will instead lead people to edit their Bibles and write a “choose-your-own-god”
faith. Let’s remove everything about
rules and sin and judgment, and have a god of love who supports the
marginalized, empowers the weak, and accepts everyone into a paradise of
personal pleasure forever. We’ll keep the baby in the manger, but forget about
the coming King.
That may sound good, but has some major problems—one being
that it defeats its own purpose. If our faith is solely about love and
acceptance, what is to be done with people who are more interested in committing
murder and rape and theft? If some people are to be judged for their actions,
who sets the bar? Can we really trust humanity to establish morality when we
can’t even agree on who should run our country? Removing universal truth
results in anarchy, not love.
I too had a time of questioning my faith. The church was not
being a good witness; I had no faithful friend to talk me through things; and I
didn’t much like God’s standards of holiness when the world’s ways seemed more
appealing. I questioned whether I wanted to keep following Him. But in the end
I had to say “You’re God and I’m not.” My ways may seem more enjoyable for a
time, but they will not bring ultimate fulfillment, satisfaction, and peace.
As John Owen wrote in Overcoming Sin and Temptation (in 1675!):
“False opinions are the work of the flesh.
From the vanity and darkness of the minds of men, with a mixture more or less
of corrupt affections, do they mostly proceed. The apostle was jealous over his
Corinthians in this matter. He was afraid lest their minds ‘should by any means
be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ’ (2 Cor. 11:2-3); which he
knew would be attended by a decay and declension in faith, love, and obedience…
We have seen some who, after they have received a sweet taste of the love of
God in Christ, of the excellency of pardoning mercy, and have walked humbly
with God for many years in the faith and apprehension of the truth, have, by
the corruption of their minds from the simplicity that is in Christ, by false
and foolish opinions, despised all their own experiences, and rejected all the
efficacy of truth, as to the furtherance of their obedience…
“We have
innumerable instances hereof in the days wherein we live. How many are there
who, not many years since, put an unspeakable value on the pardon of sin in the
blood of Christ—who delighted in gospel discoveries of spiritual things, and
walked in obedience to God on the account of them—who, being beguiled and turned
aside from the truth as it is in Jesus, do despise these springs of their own
former obedience! …And this is one way whereby indwelling sin produces this
pernicious effect of drawing men off from the power, purity, and fruitfulness
attending their first conversion and engagements unto God… There is not
anything we ought to be more watchful against, if we intend effectually to deal
with this powerful and subtle enemy” (378-379).
“Therefore we must pay
much closer attention to what we have heard, lest we drift away from it… How
shall we escape if we neglect such a great salvation? It was declared at first
by the Lord, and it was attested to us by those who heard” (Hebrews 2:1, 3
ESV).
“By rejecting this,
some have made shipwreck of their faith” (1 Timothy 1:19b).
© 2019 Dawn Rutan. Unless otherwise indicated all images are
copyright free from pixabay.com. The opinions stated do not necessarily reflect
the views of my church or employer.