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Christianity &
Culture: Gods Double Sovereignty
By Dr. Gene Edward Veith
Most of the world's faiths are cultural
religions. Hinduism with its caste system and social rituals, is inextricably
tied to the culture of India. Islam seeks to apply the Koranic law to every
detail of society and so creates a specific culture, as evident throughout the
Middle East. Tribal religions mythologize tribes' customs, history, and social
organization. Secular sociologists go so far as to define religion as a means
of sanctioning the social order. According to this line of thought, cultural
institutions are invested with a spiritual, divine significance, so that people
will more obediently go along with them.
Christianity, on the other
hand, is not supposed to be merely a cultural religion. To be sure, sociology's
laws and the tendencies of our fallen nature give us a penchant for human-made
or culture-made faiths that often hijack the church. The Bible, though,
outlines a much more complex approach to culture, one that offers a radical
critique of culture while encouraging believers to engage their culture in
positive ways.
In the Old Testament, God elects the tribes of Israel,
giving them a law and a covenant that turns them into something like a holy
culture. But, far from having their social practices sanctioned by their God,
the Hebrews are constantly being chastised for their failures to obey God's
transcendent demands. Their kings, for example, are constantly being condemned
for their unrighteousness by the prophets and the inspired writers of the
historical books, something unthinkable by Israel's Canaanite neighbors, for
whom the king was an avatar of a god. The people of God were strictly forbidden
to follow after the ways of their pagan neighbors. When they nevertheless
adopted the lax sexual and ethical mores of their neighbors and developed a
syncretic theology that allowed the God of Abraham to be worshipped in the same
culture-friendly terms as in the pagan religions, they experienced the full
measure of his wrath.
The coming of Christ complicates the believer's
relationship to culture even further. Christianity is to be a faith for all
cultures, "for every nation, tribe, people, and language" (Rev. 7:9). Cultural
differences are not to obstruct Christian unity, as the controversies in Acts
and the Epistles over the status of gentile believers demonstrate. Though Jesus
tells his followers
to be salt, light, and leaven in the world, he also
warns that the world will hate them (Mat. 5). Christian
freedom and service extend to every dimension of life, yet Christians are
warned about the temptation of worldliness. Christians are commanded to obey
the secular authorities (Rom. 13:1-7), and yet
to obey God rather than men (Acts 5:29).
Then we have the curious counsel of St. Paul: "I have written you in my letter
not to associate with sexually immoral people not at all meaning the people of
this world who are immoral, or the greedy and swindlers, or idolaters. In that
case you would have to leave this world. But now I am writing you that you must
not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral
or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a
man do not even eat" (1
Cor. 5:9-11). Apparently, we should not associate with immoral Christians,
but we should associate with immoral unbelievers.
Jesus, in his prayer
in Gethsemane, sets forth the principle that his followers are to be "in the
world," but not "of the world": "I have given them your word and the world has
hated them, for they are not of the world any more than I am of the world. My
prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you protect them
from the evil one....As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the
world" (John
17:14-18). Christians are somehow to be separated from the world, while
still being involved, redemptively, in it.
How are we to untangle
these paradoxes? The question is especially urgent today. Our culture has
virtually cut what ties it may have once had to biblical faith. An ascendant
popular culture whose only values are hedonism, entertainment, and consumerism
is sweeping away both the traditional values of the folk culture and the
rational standards of the high culture and is now demanding supremacy in the
church. Though Christianity is facing dangerous cultural contamination, we, as
Christians, are still called to serve, influence, and communicate the gospel to
this culture. In order to navigate through these cultural challenges, while
maintaining both theological integrity and cultural relevance, Christians need
to understand the double sovereignty of God.
Theological
Alternatives
Richard Niebuhr, in his classic book Christ and
Culture outlines the different possible relationships between the two, each
of which has been advocated in the history of the Church. One option is to put
culture above Christ. In this view, Christianity serves culture, or, in the
words of the National Council of Churches slogan: "The world sets the agenda
for the church." When the culture changes, Christianity must also change to
maintain its relevance. This is the path of liberal theology.
There
have been many different kinds of theological liberalism in church history.
During the Age of Reason of the eighteenth century Enlightenment, many
theologians jettisoned the supernatural teachings of scripture in an effort to
turn Christianity into a "rational" religion. When the rationalistic vogue gave
way to the emotional focus of nineteenth century Romanticism, the liberal
theologians changed their tune and taught that Christianity is a matter of
religious feelings. After Darwin, Romanticism gave way to a trust in utopian
social progress, and the liberal theologians said thats what Christianity
is all about. The twentieth century has seen a plethora of intellectual
fashions and social movements existentialism, socialism, the peace movement,
gay rights, feminism and each has had its liberal theologians revising
Christianity accordingly.
Today, in our postmodern era, belief in the
supernatural is once again socially acceptable, though the relativism now in
vogue makes doctrine and absolute standards of morality highly suspect.
Generally, people in our contemporary American culture want to have a good
time, have their consumer needs met, and be left alone to their own values,
beliefs, and vices. These new cultural attitudes have given rise, as always, to
another form of liberal theology.
Churches that were once evangelical,
boldly standing up for the gospel and the authority of the Bible against
modernist culture and its liberal theologians, are now changing their teachings
and their practices to keep up with the culture. They conduct market surveys to
find what the religious consumers of their culture want, then they respond like
any other successful business. They throw out time-tested modes of worship in
favor of whatever styles are most popular. Told that people do not want to hear
about how sinful they are, they switch to more positive messages of
self-esteem. They comb the Bible for principles for successful living rather
than preaching that Christ died for sinners. Though these Christians may have
the best of motives in trying to reach their culture, they often fail to see
that, instead, their culture has reached them. Though they often call
themselves evangelical, those who uncritically follow the dictates of the
culture are not evangelicals at all but simply the latest version of an old
theology: they are liberals.
The problem with liberal theology in all
of its manifestations is that it turns Christianity into what it must never
merely be, a cultural religion. The Church, in passively agreeing with a
godless world, and in trying so hard to be relevant, actually loses its
relevance. Why should anyone go to church if it offers nothing more than what
the culture has already provided? Disabled from being able to criticize or
influence the culture and having surrendered its transcendent moorings,
religion is reduced to the role that sociologists have assigned it making
people feel good about their society by peddling the illusion that their
culture is the ultimate reality.
Instead of placing culture above
Christ, as the liberals do, other Christians have, more nobly, placed Christ
above culture. In this view, Christianity offers standards to which the culture
should be made to conform. Those who place Christ above culture will attempt to
develop and promote distinctly Christian approaches to art, music, economics,
science, and every other sphere of life. Society should be reformed until it
approximates a Christian civilization.
This option has also been found
throughout the history of the church. The Lordship of Christ over the earthly
kingdoms has been emphasized by medieval popes, Reformation commonwealths,
nineteenth century social reformers, twentieth century liberation theologians,
and some contemporary Christian political activists. Christians with this
cultural stance have boldly stood up against social evils and in many cases
have exerted a powerful influence for good. Many have adopted this approach,
from Puritan revolutionaries in seventeenth century England and eighteenth
century America to today's Reconstructionists who seek to make the Bible the
law of the land.
While I cannot find anything about theological
liberalism to respect, I do admire those Christian reformers and
revolutionaries who defy their cultures and attempt to make them conform to
God's law. And yet, there are problems with this position. In the first place,
it often underestimates the effect of the Fall and the scope of human
sinfulness. No human being, much less a culture, can in fact keep God's law. No
earthly kingdom, even one ruled by or consisting of Christians, can be a
utopian paradise this side of Eden. All are transient and will prove
disappointing, corrupted by injustice or pride, until Christ rules directly in
the kingdom of heaven.
There can be no such thing as a Christian
culture as such, because Christianity comes from faith in the Gospel, not the
works of the Law, and God saves individuals, not nations. Not every member of a
culture is going to be a Christian. Since conversion is the work of the Holy
Spirit, it is impossible to coerce or require anyone to become a Christian. The
unregenerate cannot obey biblical principles so as to be part of a Christian
culture. Neither, while they are in their fallen flesh, can Christians.
A culture ruled completely by Christ is a reality in heaven and will be
realized on earth at his return, but attempts on the part of human beings to
establish heaven on earth prematurely by their own efforts and on their own
terms, are doomed to fail. At the worst, they result in the divinization of
culture, with Christianity reduced, once again, to a cultural religion.
Another option cited by Niebuhr is Christ against culture. This view
recognizes the sinfulness of human institutions and calls Christians to
separate from the corrupt culture, withdrawing into distinct Christian
communities. The church becomes an alternative to the mainline culture, and
Christians refuse to take part in the culture as a whole.
This
approach characterized the early monastic movement, the Anabaptist subcultures,
fundamentalist separatism, and the various experiments in Christian communal
living of the last few decades. The Amish are a continual example of a group of
Christians refusing to compromise with the worldly culture, rejecting military
service, contemporary dress, and modern technology as being unworthy of their
commitment to radical discipleship.
Again, this kind of integrity and
radical commitment commands respect. But it too is problematic. Besides denying
God's sovereignty over the rest of the world, it violates the words of Jesus:
"My prayer is not that you take them out of the world....As you sent me into
the world, I have sent them into the world" (John 17:15, 18). Jesus
directs us not into the protection of a fortified bunker; rather, he sends us
into the world in service and evangelism.
Furthermore, the option of
separatism, in forming a Christian subculture, has the effect of reducing
Christianity into just another culture. The Amish may end up defining
themselves by their beards and buggies, rather than by a transcendent gospel.
Christianity, once again, becomes a cultural religion.
Two Kingdoms
Under One King
The remaining possibility for the relationship
between Christ and culture appears to be the one that best accounts for the
scriptural injunctions. Niebuhr calls it "Christ and culture in paradox";
Luther calls it the doctrine of the Two Kingdoms. This view accounts for the
insights of the other positions, acknowledging that we are cultural creatures,
that God is sovereign over every sphere of life, and that Christians must be
both separate from the world and actively involved in it.
The doctrine
of the Two Kingdoms has been explored not only by Lutheran theologians but by
Augustine in his great work The City of God and probably describes the
way most faithful Christians have always carried out their fidelity to Christ
in their secular callings.
According to this view, God is sovereign
both in the church and in the culture but he rules the two in different ways.
In the church, God reigns through the work of Christ and the giving of the Holy
Spirit, expressing his love and grace through the forgiveness of sins and the
life of faith. God also exercises his authority and providential control
through all of creation upholding the very universe, so that the laws of
physics, the processes of chemistry, and other natural laws are part of what he
has ordained. Similarly, God rules the nations even those who do not
acknowledge him making human beings to be social creatures, in need of
governments, laws, and cultures to mitigate the self-destructive tendencies of
sin and to enable human beings to survive.
Thus, God has a spiritual
rule in the hearts and lives of Christians; he also has a secular rule that
extends throughout his creation and in every culture. God reigns in the church
through the gospel, the proclamation of forgiveness in the Cross of Jesus
Christ, a message which kindles faith and an inward transformation in the
believer. He reigns in the world through his law, which calls human societies
to justice and righteousness.
Notice that, according to this view,
morality is not a matter of religion. Contrary to those who would silence
Christian objections to abortion, for instance, on the grounds that moral
issues are inappropriate intrusions of private religious belief, the doctrine
of the Two Kingdoms insists that God's Law is universal in its scope and
authority. As C. S. Lewis has shown in The Abolition of Man, it is
simply not true that every culture and every religion has its own morality.
Principles of justice, honesty, courage, and responsibility to one's neighbor
are universal. Though revealed most fully in Scripture, God's law is written on
the hearts even of the unbelieving gentiles (Romans 2:14-16).
Human beings and cultures are, however, in a state of rebellion against
him. No individual can keep God's law and entire cultures are subject to
corruption, injustice, sexual depravity, and every other kind of evil. While
the world is condemned and all human institutions will pass away, God saves
some in the ark of his church. Christians, strictly speaking, are no longer
under the law at all their new life of faith will make them spontaneously do
what God requires, though because of their fallen nature full perfection will
be found only in heaven.
In the meantime, Christians have a vocation
in the world. They are called to evangelize, serve others, and do good works in
the unbelieving world. Christians also must continue to play their part in
their cultures, serving God in his secular kingdom in secular ways. A Christian
farmer is expressing his love for God and neighbor by growing food for
everyone, not just fellow believers; a Christian CEO serves God and neighbor by
selling useful products, giving a livelihood to employees, making money for
stockholders, and contributing to the good of the economy.
A Christian
is thus a citizen of two kingdoms-the kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of this
world. These spheres have different demands and operate in different ways. But
God is the King of both.
This doctrine has sometimes been
misunderstood to mean that the secular government has absolute authority as an
agent of God. This is the farthest from the truth. God is the king. His law
judges the kingdoms of the earth. A governmental system, such as that of Nazi
Germany, which is in stark violation of that law is in a state of rebellion and
can demand no allegiance. A nation, however, need not be ruled by a Christian
to exercise legitimate authority. The ruler's faith is a matter of the other
kingdom and a function of the gospel; even an unbelieving ruler, however, can
be held accountable to God's law and to its corollaries in the secular
requirements of effective government.
Both kingdoms are binding, but
they are not to be confused with each other. The secular values of the culture
are not to be imposed upon the church. Nor may the spiritual realm be imposed
upon the secular culture. Saving faith is a gift of the Holy Spirit and cannot
be a matter of coercion. Nor can the freedom created by the gospel be applied
to unbelievers, who are stiff in their sins.
People today who oppose
the death penalty, for example, because we should forgive, would be confusing
the two kingdoms, as would pacifists who oppose all war because we are told to
love our enemies. I recently came across a book that addressed the problem of
crime by advocating that all criminals be released from prison. Jesus said that
he came to proclaim release to the captives, the author argued. Therefore, we
should do as he said, trusting that the gesture would transform the criminals'
hearts.
Christians must certainly express the love and forgiveness of
Christ in their relationship with others, both inside and outside of the
church. But God's other kingdom operates in terms of power, coercion,
punishment, and the sometimes harsh demands of Justice. The lawful magistrate
is "God's servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer" and
"does not bear the sword for nothing" (Romans 13:4). As a
citizen in both kingdoms, a Christian may thus operate in different ways in the
two spheres. No Christian should take private revenge, but a Christian soldier,
judge, police officer, or juror may well have to "bear the sword."
If
the government bears the sword, the church bears only the Word. Though the
local church is also an earthly institution and so must be concerned with
committees, by-laws, and even politics, the church is not to be run like a
business, a nation, or the surrounding culture. It should be a haven of love
and mutual forgiveness in the midst of a fallen, sin-sick world.
Christians exercising their vocations in the secular culture must assess their
activity in secular terms, which are also under God's sovereignty. A Christian
artist may well express his faith in his art, but the quality of the art lies
primarily not in its theological message but in its aesthetic excellence, since
the laws of aesthetics have been ordained by God in his creation. There is no
need for a distinctly Christian approach to music, plumbing, computer science,
physics, or wood-carving, because all of these things, no matter how secular or
non-religious they appear, already fall under God's sovereignty.
Conversely, the church must never uncritically capitulate to the culture.
Money-making, marketing techniques, entertainment ventures, power politics, and
intellectual fashions must never set the church's agenda, which must be
governed instead solely by the Word of God.
The Two Kingdoms and
the Culture Wars
The doctrine of the Two Kingdoms is most often
applied to the Christian's obligations to the state, but it also illuminates
the cultural controversies which are causing so much confusion in today's
church.
Should Christians get involved in politics? Yes, as part of
our vocation in God's secular kingdom. The goal should not be necessarily the
election of Christian rulers, nor to make America a "Christian nation." Rather,
it should be to apply God's law in our social relationships and to establish
justice and righteousness in our land. Abortion, for example, is a monstrous
crime against the weakest and most defenseless in our society, and Christians
are right to work against this evil, as against many others. Christians in
politics must play by political rules, whether hard-ball power plays or the
arts of compromise and consensus building. The church should be gentle and
loving, while never compromising its doctrines. The rough-and-tumble of the
political process, however, means that Christian politicians should not be
prevented from exercising power or from making a tactical compromise by the
charge that to do so is "not Christian." That confuses the kingdoms. Christian
politicians, however, like all politicians, must exercise their power justly
and in accordance with God's law.
Can a Christian take part in the
expressions of the surrounding culture? Yes. Christians are still part of their
culture and can be expected to share the tastes of their neighbors. A Christian
can enjoy, perform, and get involved in secular art forms; they need not be
religious, but they are subject to God's law. Christians need to draw the line
at music or any other form of entertainment that violates God's canons of
morality by tempting us to sin.
Can a Christian, then, like rock
music? Yes, for the most part. This does not mean, however, that Christians
should demand rock music in church. The secular kingdom, again, must be kept
separate from the spiritual kingdom. Churches must keep themselves distinct
from the surrounding culture.
To return to our earlier categories, a
liberal would have little trouble accepting any brand of currently popular
music and would even import it into the church. By this way of thinking, the
church must always give in and conform itself to whatever the culture is doing.
A Christian who believes in Christ above culture would reject secular music and
try to devise a completely distinct Christian style, to which every subsequent
piece of music should conform. A Christian who believes in Christ against
culture would allow the world its own music but never listen to it, developing
instead a separate Christian musical style.
A Two Kingdoms approach
would allow the Christian to enjoy secular music, even, for those with the
God-given talent, to pursue a musical vocation. The Christian's standards for
this music would be God's moral law, but also God's aesthetic laws, which were
built into the created order and human nature by God himself. The Christian
musician might express his or her faith artistically, but the work would be
assessed not primarily by its theology but by its aesthetic merits, which also
come under God's dominion. The music, though, would not have to be explicitly
religious at all it is part of God's dominion even in its secularity.
This same Christian musician, whether a rock 'n' roller or a concert violinist,
would very likely object to electric guitars or chamber music in church. Art
designed to please and to gratify the senses has its place, but worship belongs
to the Word of God. Here, theological truth must take priority. The purpose is
not to entertain the congregation but to convict them of sin and convert them
to Christ. The audience is not the culture but God, whom the entire
congregation is seeking to glorify in his terms, not ours.
Ken Myers
has said in his brilliant book All God's Children and Blue Suede Shoes
that the contemporary church has reversed Christ's injunction to be in the
world, but not of the world. Instead, he says, we are not in the world with our
separate schools, bookstores, music companies, and other cultural institutions,
so that we seldom interact with non-believers and yet, we are of the world. Our
music, stores, schools, and corporate structures, may be separate, but they are
exactly like their secular counterparts.
Recognizing God's double
sovereignty over all of life can enable Christians to be engaged in a positive,
transforming way, with their culture without succumbing to the deadly,
spirit-quenching sin of worldliness. It is a formula for both faithfulness and
relevance.
Dr. Gene Edward Veith is Dean of Arts
and Sciences at Concordia University, Mequon, Wisconsin.. A member of the
Council of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals, Dr. Veith is also the
author of Postmodern Times: A Christian Guide to Contemporary Thought and
Culture (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 1994), and a contributor to Here We
Stand!: A Call from Confessing Evangelicals (Grand Rapids: Baker,
1996).
This article was originally published in the January/February
1997 edition of Modern Reformation magazine published by the Alliance of
Confessing Evangelicals. Permission to publish this article was granted by
ACE.
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