This week a concern was brought to me that has been something that
in my personal life I have avoided.
Maybe it is from the way I was raised.
Maybe it is I haven’t given it the attention that I should. Nevertheless, I have now be forced to face my
own concern about this issue.
I was reared by parents that gave their devotion and love to the
church. They were faith in attending
every service—twice on Sunday and once on Wednesday. Church attendance came first. Nothing and I mean nothing came before our
dedication and loyalty to the church.
All other activities were scheduled around church attendance. Sound boring?
Well, it wasn’t. This became
important to me just as it was to my parents.
In over 44 years of married life there have been very few worship services
I have missed. Our vacations have been
planned around our duty and obligation to the church where we have been
members. Our three boys were reared with
the same sense of duty and obligation, although they do not have the same sense
of loyalty and dedication to church attendance as their parents.
Over four decades as a pastor I have seen a major change in the
young families in America. There are a
large number of parents who were professed Christians now rejecting the Christian
faith. Some feel that if the current trend continues that churches will be closing
at a rapid rate. Why is this?
Many young adults within the church have never accepted the
covenant of salvation. They have called
themselves Christian without truly accepting the duty and obligation that comes
with being a Christian. Becoming a
Christian requires one to accept the New Covenant. Even though, “God so loved the world that he
gave his only son” the acceptance of his son and the ratification of the
covenant is required which means, an acceptance and agreement to “keep my commandments”. God will do his part but He requires us to do
ours.
Young adults among those who attended church regularly during
their elementary and high school years are now leaving church and taking their
young children with them. Almost half of
those raised in the church now claim no religion. Among
these young adults they no longer hold a Biblical worldview. Moral truth does not exist, the Bible is only
a book, Jesus is only a man that has no relationship with mankind and God does
not answer prayer.
This is the generation that is moving our country to a secularized
nation. In the next few years there will
be hundreds if not thousands of churches closing because America’s young adults
are rejecting the Christian faith. What
is sad about all this is that many within the church think everything is
fine. Everything is NOT fine.
American style Christianity is broken. We have created a society where Christianity
is not important. Young parents today
are more concerned about the social growth of their children than
spiritual. Many parents have used the
excuse of their children’s activities to avoid their loyalty and obligation to the
church where they hold their membership.
It is not uncommon among those who are Christian to place sporting
events, secular entertainment and other activities before their obligation and loyalty
to serve the LORD.
We have never taught our children to trust the Lord so why should
we be surprised that they are godless.
We are just reaping what we have sown.
They have struggled in their marriages, their children are
disrespectful, they need two incomes to meet the demand of their life-style,
their family life is dysfunctional and they have never felt the close
relationship with the LORD that allows the trust needed to feel satisfied in
life. No wonder they are leaving.
The result is angry, bitter skepticism and rejection of the
Christian faith. So how did we get to
the place that we are losing the next generation of Christians? Could it be that we are more concerned with
numbers than in the spiritual growth of the individual? Or is it that we have reduced being a “Christian”
to a superficial form of Christianity that has inoculated them against an
authentic life changing faith?
So what can we do? I have
struggled with this. From personal
experience hammering them with biblical truth will not work, ignoring the issues
will not resolve the fact they have left the faith. This brings me back to my growing up in the
church. There were those in my life that
prayed for me.
First, my mother during our family devotions she would pray and
weep for her children calling each of our names in prayer. Her tears brought results. She knew, “They
that sow in tears shall reap in joy. He
that goeth forth and weepth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again
with rejoicing bring his sheaves with him.” Ps. 126:5-6
Next, there were those within the church that would pray for us
during worship again calling out our names in prayer asking the LORD to speak
to us, keep us from sin, and give us the desire to serve the Lord. These individuals felt that somebody has got
to intercede, weep, pray and mourn to see the salvation of their children.
When you have spent time mourning over the lost condition of our
young adult parents, weeping with a burden in intercession for them, the
scriptures says we “will DOUBTLESS come
again rejoicing bringing your sheaves with you.” Maybe the reason we are losing the battle to
Satan is we have not taken the time to pray for them, never taking the time to
intercede and mourn for them. Is that
what we are lacking? Is that the reason
we are losing the battle for the souls of our young adult parents?
Most pray within the church is about praying for the sick or those
who have lost their jobs, very seldom do we prayer for those who have left the
faith. Our pray life should change if we
are to see results in bring the prodigal back into the fold.
All the questions I have asked in this blog, I have directed to
myself. My answers are not those I would
be proud to make known, but I realize if there is to be a change in direction
it must first start with me, not those who have left the faith. As Christians we are experts at leaving the
wounded to die on the battlefield in search for “newer converts”.
As Paul wrote to the church at Rome, “Brothers and sisters, my heart’s desire and
prayer to God for the Israelites (young adult parents) is that they may be
saved.” Join me in intercession for those who have
left the faith, who once knew the LORD but now have turned away from Him.
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