Monday, January 26, 2009

Inauguration and Religious Talk

I was impressed by the pomp and circumstance of last week’s presi­dential inauguration. And it really is quite remarkable how this transfer of power has come off peacefully for these 200+ years. There’s a lot to thank God for when it comes to our nation’s story.

There was a great deal of religious talk involved. Pastor Rick Warren, for example, delivered his much-anticipated invocation, and it was a God-focused, God-honoring prayer. He wasn’t shy about making his plea in Jesus’ name—in fact, by naming Jesus in four lang­uages he helped the world see that Christ isn’t some contrived Western deity but the life-transforming Savior and Commander-in-Chief over all that is.

By contrast, there was spiritual fog and confusion at Washington DC’s National Cathedral the next day—“The National Prayer Service,” involving Muslim, Hindu, Jewish and professing Christian leaders of Catholic, Ortho­dox, and Protestant backgrounds. This interfaith event featured “newly written prayers meant to emphasize liberty and diversity” in light of Obama’s embrace of religious liberalism (washingtonpost.com). Rev. Sharon Watkins gave the sermon, quoting “a wide range of religious leaders and traditions, from Ghandi to Islam to Cherokee Indians, urging the new president to remain focused on ethical and religious values such as common good, justice and compassion.”

But there’s an elephant in the room—do you see it?


It’s this: the Bible consistently testifies that Christian ethics and good deeds must be grounded in faith; right conduct is rooted in and results from conscious personal faith in Jesus Christ. The New Testament has stinging warnings for wandering churches that separate a regimen of deeds from dependence on the grace of God (e.g., Gal 1-2). Yes, true Christian faith leads to good works (Gal 5:6; Jas 2:14-26), but ethics and morals not springing from trust in the One who changed our hearts and set us free from guilt eternally amount to self-promotion if not self-justification. Further, good deeds that lack accompanying words of witness highlighting the supremacy of Christ, the only Savior (John 14:6; Acts 4:12), are woefully inadequate.

The frightful messages coming out of this event were that you can be a Christian without Christ, that ethical decency is the essence of Christian experience, and that all religions are basically variant paths to the same broad “common good” and the same beige god. All in all, a remarkable failure to represent Christ and Christianity faithfully.

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