HomeArchivesSpeakingAudio / Video The ExchangeLifeWay ResearchLifeWay Research Team
Home
Home
Facebook RSS Twitter Vimeo YouTube
Click here to have Ed's RSS feed on your site
Topics
  • Articles
  • Bible
  • Blog
  • Books
  • CPLF
  • Church
  • Church Planting
  • Church Revitalization
  • Church sign of the week
  • City Studies
  • Contextualization
  • Culture
  • Evangelism
  • Gospel Project
  • Humor
  • International Missions
  • Interviews
  • Kick-Starting the Plateaued and Declining Church
  • Leaders
  • Lifeway
  • Meanings of Missional
  • Megachurch
  • Ministry
  • Missiology
  • Missional
  • Missional Manifesto
  • Morning Roundup
  • Multisite
  • Personal
  • Politics
  • Pornography
  • Preaching
  • Presentations
  • Research
  • SBC
  • Seminars
  • Social Media
  • Teaching
  • The Missional Reader
  • Theology
  • Thursday Is for Thinkers
  • Top Issues Church Planters Face
  • Transformational Church Spotlight
  • Transformational Small Churches
  • Video
  • Web
  • Weekly Wrap
  • Worship
Series
  • Guide to the Blog
  • The Meanings of Missional (5 Parts)
  • Multi-site Churches
  • Young Adult Dropouts
  • Calvinism and the SBC
Leadership Interview
  • Thom and Sam Rainer: Essential Church
  • Brad Waggoner: The Shape Of Faith To Come
  • Jared Wilson: Your Jesus is Too Safe
  • Tullian Tchividjian: Unfashionable
  • Skye Jethani: The Divine Commodity
  • Mark Liederbach & Alvin L. Reid: The Convergent Church
  • Scott McConnell: Multi-Site Churches w/ Scott McConnell
  • Steve Ogne & Tim Roeh: TransforMissional Coaching
  • Alan Hirsch & Michael Frost: ReJesus
  • Kary Oberbrunner: The Fine Line
  • Steve Addison: Movements That Change The World
  • John Avant: If God Were Real
  • Geoff Surratt: Ten Stupid Things That Keep Churches from Growing
Most Popular Posts
  • How Should We Talk About Sex?
  • Gabe Lyons and the Next Christians
  • John 3:16 Ad from the Broncos / Patriots Game
  • New Research on the Views of Protestant Pastors in Regard to Evolution and Creation
  • Can Mega Be Missional?
  • Martin Luther King Jr.: A Letter to American Christians in 1956 (and Today)
  • Church Signs of the Week: Roll Tide and Tim Tebow
  • Update on The Gospel Project with some FAQ's
  • Church Journeys: Skyline Wesleyan - La Mesa, Ca
  • Morning Roundup - January 12, 2012
Alltop - Best of the Best
 

Terry Mattingly on Americans and Their Vague Religion

Monday January 21, 2008   ~   3 Comments

getreligionlogo.gif

Terry Mattingly does his usual good job covering religion. He writes a weekly column for Scripps Howard news that is then run in papers around the world.

Terry writes:

The trend is clear. Vague talk is safer than clear action. Personal beliefs are good, but not if these doctrines lead to actions that indicate that some beliefs are right and others wrong.

Seeking is good, but finding is bad. Judging is even worse.

My personal favorite "Terry Mattingly" location is his web site, getreligion.org, an important location on my Bloglines reader. I have mentioned them twice before on the blog.

You can read his coverage of two recent research projects here.

My contribution was:

"There is a sense in our culture that is acceptable to believe in anything spiritual, as long as it makes you a better person and helps you find peace," said Ed Stetzer, leader of the LifeWay Research team. "One's faith only becomes a problem when that belief actually makes claims that contradicts the faith of others."

In an age of "I'm OK, You're OK" spirituality, he added, "American spirituality has glorified 'searching' for spiritual meaning, but de-emphasized 'finding.' In other words, it is good to be looking for spirituality, but it is intolerant to actually believe you have found a right faith. ... Intolerance is defined to mean actually believing that your faith is the correct one."

Terry always moves beyond research to analysis and I was impressed.

Here are my full answers to his questions.

On there being one way.

The change between the "higher or supreme being" question and "the God described in the Bible," would seem to say that Americans want "God," but they are not as sure they want to say God is the exclusive biblical God of Christianity.

For that matter, there is a sense in our culture that is acceptable to believe in anything spiritual, as long as it makes you a better person and helps you find peace.

One's faith only becomes a problem when that belief actually makes claims that contradicts the faith of others. Since Christianity (and other faiths) make exclusive truth claims, it becomes controversial when Christians (and others) start to actually believe and propagate the claims of their faith.


On generic faith.

As best I can tell, those who are not a regular part of a faith community still want to be "spiritual" people, but without a clear faith.

As an evangelical Christian, I would say that many fashion a tame God in their own image-- a generic god for a generic spirituality, not a God who actually intervened in the world through the death of Christ and calls us to follow and live differently.

For many, they want to get all the benefits of spirituality without any of the truth claims of a rigorous faith.


On Spirituality

I think the Oprah-ization of American spirituality has glorified "searching" for spiritual meaning but de-emphasized "finding." In other words, it is good to be looking for spirituality, but it is intolerant to actually believe you have found a right faith and want to invite others to such.

In "I'm O.K., You're O.K. Spirituality," the only sin is intolerance... and intolerance is defined to mean actually believing your faith is the correct one.

On why conservative churches grow even when the majority of Americans lean toward a universalistic faith.

Non-attendees want to ignore a generic God, but when/if they follow a faith, they want one that has robust beliefs and is worth following.

Since growing churches tend to have more defined belief systems, when people start a journey to faith, they want something they see as worth believing and giving their life to. A generic god is hardly one worth committing to.

Posted on January 21, 2008 at 1:07 AM   ~   3 Comments

Tagged with: faith, intolerance, seeker, terry mattingly

Subscribe via RSS or Follow us on Twitter
Follow us via RSS Follow us On Twitter

Share This Post
Facebook
del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Digg
TwitThis
Mixx
Technorati
NewsVine
Reddit
Google
LinkedIn
co.mments
YahooMyWeb

3 Comments

By Tim Rogers on January 21, 2008 1:33 PM

Brother Ed,

You need to be careful. Now that you actually own more than one suit and are writing statements like; Since growing churches tend to have more defined belief systems, you may be classified as a Traditional Fundamentalist. :^)

Great analysis.

Blessings,
Tim

By Ron Kidd on January 21, 2008 6:50 PM

Bro. Ed,
You just explained that as well as I have ever read or heard it explained. Plain talk for a complex issue. Sort of like Sunday's message, except that was plain talk for a simple issue. Obedience. Great job.

By Ed Stetzer on January 21, 2008 9:52 PM

Tim, I as ok with that description... as long as I get to define the terms. Grin.

Thanks, Ron.

Comment Policy

Comments are welcome on discussion posts.  Comments are not moderated but do require a keyword to avoid spam.  If this is your first time commenting, please review the comment policy.

Leave a comment


 
Recent Comments
  • Ed Stetzer commented on Terry Mattingly on Americans and Their Vague Religion.
  • Ron Kidd commented on Terry Mattingly on Americans and Their Vague Religion.
  • Tim Rogers commented on Terry Mattingly on Americans and Their Vague Religion.
Comment Policy
Twitter Feed
    My Books
    Compelled by Love Comeback Churches   Breaking the missional Code
    Planting Missional Churches 11 Innocations in the Local Church   Spiritual Warfare and Missions
    Mission Shift Lost and Found   Viral Churches
    Small Group Resources

    Install Flash

    Get Adobe Flash player

    Schools Where I Teach
    Compelled by Love

    Ministry Partnerships
    Christianity Today Outreach magazine
    Catalyst Monthly Facts and Trends
    Christian Post
    imb connecting Baptist Center
    LifeWay: Research - Biblical Solutions for Life
    LifeWay: Biblical Solutions for Life
    Noteworthy Items
    Noteworthy Items
    • The Death of Steve Jobs Shows That We Are All Fundamentally "Religious"
    • Gospel Notes: Suffering and Our Savior
    • Be Humble Scholars of Christ
    • A Magazine is an iPad that Doesn’t Work
    • Why Your Community is More Diverse… or Soon Will Be
    • The Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy
    • Between
    • Celebrate your “Rivals”