left behind, second coming, holy hoover, holy dyson
For me 'Left Behind' has become much more than a book.  Much like 'Tea Party' has colloquially become a descriptive for a particular archetype of a group of people, Left Behind has become the same for me.

Recognizing that I am working with generalities here and that generalities always do a disservice to some people who identify with the group, for me 'Left Behind' has come to describe a particular type of church goer. (I use 'church goer' here because I find that some of the people, while they might identify strongly as Christian, exhibit far too many actions that call to question the authenticity of their identity. They do, however, tend to be very good at going to church).  This group believes that one day those who have not been 'good Christians' will be separated from the love of God – left behind as all the 'good' people get sucked up in God's magical, over-sized Hoover (actually probably a Dyson, I can't help but believe God would have upgraded by now). That may not be exactly how they would put it, but you get the idea.

Along with this perspective comes a few other... well, let's call them personality quirks.  Frequently, Left Behinders have a quiet (mostly unspoken) air of superiority. Let's face it, if you know you are going to be saved (sucked up by the Holy Dyson) and that others are going to be left behind to wallow in their heathenness... it would be sort of hard not to feel the littlest bit superior.  Along with that comes a few things: very little spiritual growth because they already have it right, a general sense of entitlement, resistance to 'other,' resistance to new ideas (or change),  and the ability to be thought of as 'nice' without actually having to consistently demonstrate love of neighbor and enemy.

This all creates a problem with moving the church forward.  I have to completely agree with John Spong's assessment that the Church must change or die.  As a matter of fact, I am no longer interested in participating in arguments that suggest otherwise. There is much work to do and anything that distracts from moving forward puts the Church that much further behind.

That's the crux of the problem.  As a church tries to reclaim the foundations of Christianity (to reassert the necessity for love of God and neighbor and those we may perceive as enemy; to actively minister and worship with those who have been marginalized; to stand up to the status quo, hypocrisy, piousness, and those who take advantage of 'the least of these'), we meet great resistance from two places. 

The first is the Left Behinders, who do not like the change that comes with doing all of those things.  What the change looks like can be offensive to people who believe they already have it right.  It confronts who they have been for years and can even suggest to them that they were wrong. Understandably that can introduce doubt in a place where there had only been blessed assurance that they had their one way ticket to the Holy Dyson in the sky.  It also means letting in people who may have previously been thought of as outsiders, 'others' and quite possibly the ones that would miss out on the great vacuum ride to the heaven. 

Typically, the Left Behinders, have established some place of power, prestige or position and the change needed in the church to avoid slow death threatens those places.  They are likely to hunker down without any real regard to the theological soundness of the movement forward (or movement back to biblical foundations) and will cherry pick verses, make appeals to tradition and even demonize the leaders of the change.  Their reactions are completely understandable considering what they believe and how they have experience Christianity thus far.  It also happens to be a path whose tangent would continue to lead the church further and further away from it's calling...and it is not acceptable.

The second resistance will come from those who agree with the need for change. They tend to have a real passion for the life and teachings of Jesus and in their own lives you can see those teachings mirrored in their passion for those some might think of as 'other.' These are people who have frequently themselves been marginalized within the traditional church; their voices, while allowed to be expressed, are lovingly (possibly 'nicely' is a better word) minimized by the Left Behinders who hold the power.

As change begins to be realized, it is this group that will put up the most earnest and biblical arguments to slow the change down – they don't want to leave the Left Behinders behind.... ironic, isn't it? ... (and we're not even done with the irony yet).  Their love of neighbor will lead them to advocate for those who, in one form or another, had previously 'nicely' marginalized their voice - the marginalized voice speaking up for the powers that be (and the irony still isn't done).

It is actually easy to see why they would react that way.  It is exactly what they wish, on some level, someone would have done for them when their voices had been marginalized and it does seem to be the loving thing to do.... and it is, for awhile.  There is a point, however, when it should be clear that, while some have chosen to be a part of the change, others do not have ears to hear and out of love for the overall Body of Christ (of which they are a part) we must shake the dirt off of our collective feet and continue on our journey forward.  While we do, we can still wish blessings upon them, but in a time when transformation is essential for the longevity of the Church, holding our forward movement back for those who have made it clear they do not have ears to hear is analogous to shooting the Body of Christ in the foot.

Ironically, there will be Left Behinders that chose to remain behind.  They will act as an anchor pulling the Body backwards as it tries to move forward.  The funny thing is, if we don't move forward we will continue to move on that tangent further and further away from God's will and when the second coming does arrive,  at least in terms of their own theology, we will all be left behind...even them.


 


Comments

10/18/2010 13:57

This time of change and transformation will require confrontation, even if on the ideological level. The challenge is to speak the truth in love, something that can undoubtedly be difficult. I suggest, and propose, that those that do not move forward are not against us, just not 'for the Kingdom.' My prayer is not that they reason themselves 'on board,' but that they have life-changing, faith-changing experiences that might even take them to the desert where the silence of God looms. At the end of the day, Christianity must move forward, as you say, not because we want it to, but because God beckons us to continue moving.

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10/18/2010 14:01

Well said Zac. This is not an us vs. them, it is simply a question of figuring out how to follow God's call. It'd would be wonderful if no one were left behind as we do it, but the reality suggest that that may not be possible. We must move forward toward God and pray that the full Body will move with us.

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Michael Jordan
10/18/2010 14:59

Why do so many people think that all this has anything to do with music and styles of worship? This is about reaching out to those who are "the least of these my brothers" Frankly, the poor and needy often make much better art and music than anyone in the church, so as we reach out we enrich our artistic and musical lives while responding to Christ's commandments.

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10/18/2010 15:10

Michael, I think they associate it with music and styles of worship because we both have to have to make them more diverse to reach a more diverse group of people and as we open our doors to a greater variety of people we will experience an even greater variety of both.

Thanks for your comment!

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10/18/2010 15:49

There's always this too: Ephesians 5:11 Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather EXPOSE them.

This doesn't necessarily mean a particular person or group per see, but rather a doctrine, or a system that is obviously "of darkness."

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10/18/2010 15:55

TCL - so true. It is interesting to note that they will probably use the same verse (or ones like it) to attack what both The Christian Left and The God Article are doing...

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10/18/2010 16:00

"It is interesting to note that they will probably use the same verse (or ones like it) to attack what both The Christian Left and The God Article are doing..."

Undoubtedly.

All sides would be wise and safe to look to the life and words of Jesus for answers. No one can go wrong when they do that.

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Laurie Valentine
10/18/2010 16:28

A friend I have not been close to in several years but have reconnected with on FB asked me recently how I could reconcile my very pro gay marriage stance with the teachings of the Bible. When I gave her a very long response of my faith journey of the past years and Bible study, she responded quite bitingly that I am "simply false." Later apologized but refuses to engage in constructive conversation. She doesn't know how to, but mostly, is scared to, I think.

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10/18/2010 16:42

TCL - ...amen... and amen...

Laurie, I know that I am in a smaller group of our colleagues, but I honestly think we need to move on. I hesitate to call 'us' the non-traditionalists or the progressives...I'm becoming more and more fond of the originalists, but let's face it, no one would now what were are talking about if I said that.

I believe it is time to boldly cast a sound theological vision of the peaceable kingdom of God, invite everyone to journey with us, and simply bless those who do not choose to and move on without them.

I believe it to be the biblical, loving and logical things to do. I also hear God calling us to it. Let those who have ears to hear....

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10/18/2010 18:11

Laurie and others having the same conversation with the same people:

My response to them is:

1) I love you as God loves you - without exception and without qualification.

2) I find in the Bible, a God of unconditional grace and unrelenting love. If this is not the God you find, then what God do you find and what does that God offer instead of unconditional grace and unrelenting love?

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10/18/2010 18:29

Beautiful response Doug.

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Lee
10/18/2010 18:36

The personality type you describe in the paragraph starting "Along with this perspective..." - the authoritarian personality - has been extensively studied by Dr Bob Altemeyer, an Associate Professor of Psychology from the University of Manitoba. It is the topic of his ebook, The Authoritarians:
http://members.shaw.ca/jeanaltemeyer/drbob/TheAuthoritarians.pdf

Altemeyer's interest is social and political, not so much religious, but due to the pervasiveness of religion in Canadian and American societies, there are still clear and deep intersections, and he naturally points them out.

Have a go at reading this book and see what you think. It was your own set of observations, so closely reflecting Altemeyer's conclusions after decades of research, that inspired me to recommend this. If you have questions, objections, or comments, by all means write to him in the Comments off this page:

http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~altemey/



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10/18/2010 19:11

Lee,it sounds fascinating. I'm definitely checking it out.

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Lee
10/19/2010 01:42

It's also just been recommended on The Christian Left Facebook page:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Christian-Left/109200595768753

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Regina
05/09/2011 12:04

Great article ! If I may offer a few ideas though : The Christian Right" is also a label-- and I very frequently notice very degrading (close to hate speech) by many who call themselves "Christian Progressives". Comments like "I hate Bush" I hate Republicans" are not uncommon. Republicans, tea baggers and Christian rights are our neighbors too. I don't agree with most of their political and theological views either, but "hate the sin and not the sinner" so to speak goes for everybody. Also, while I agree that many, if not most, of the "traditional church going humans" warrant some soul searching and "thinking for themselves" change of direction -and even though I personally don't believe in the literal "rapture" or salvation via believing in the "right doctrine" ----notwithstanding I know MANY traditional Christians though while believing in "literal physical rapture, salvation through their particular believe system/interpretation of the Bibl only etc", many are the most loving , caring people with much humility and DEEPLY care about the world and their fellow human beings and sincerely reach out to others to "save them", even if being mocked or ridiculed for doing though. Many of them also are willing to help out those in need and live with consideration and caring towards others. I don't agree with their basic theology about salvation, but there are many very caring, loving Christians who are not walking around with a sense of "superiority", but rather a desire to help other's "find Jesus". Also, last time I checked, to this day most homeless shelters, programms to help run away teenagers, feeding the hungry in oher parts of the world etc---are still organized and run by "traditional Christians". Other religious groups or secular ones participate as well, but the higher percentage is still by Christians. I don't agree with their political and many of their theological views, but I respect and honor their personal commitment to Christ, however many seemingly "ignorant"holes their theology may have ---and let's face it, we on the left don't have it all together either, sense of "superiority", sarcasm and downright meaness to "those over there on the right" are constantly displayed. Maybe the "Christian left" needs some transformation of it's own as well. Or maybe we could all learn to respect each other and just maybe we could even learn some things from each other. I agree. Fundamentalism is dangerous in many ways, and hat's true whether it originates from the Christian faith, Moslem, Hundu, Mormon,Jewish Zionists or whatever) Let's face it, this phrase belongs to all of us, left, right or somewhere in the middle:
"So, what shall we do in the highly unlikely event that we are incorrect?"
hhmmmm ----Let's all pray, seek God with all our heart and seek to love All our neighbors....let's follow the greates commandment of all...

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Charles A. Knicely BSC, BSS
05/09/2011 14:15

so well said, the bigotry and small mindedness i found in the dogma of my theology actually gave my not a vrisis of faith but rather an enlightened moment of clarity when I decided to turn away before ordination. My four decades of study in theologies has made me realize that in order to preach a dogma one must lessen God to fit the smal box many religions try to put him in. How can the creator be condensed in to a small minded mostly bigoted dogma that teach lack of inclusion as Christ called everyone as he died for their sins. why could he not have family when the Bible contradicts itself as it tells of his siblings? these and many more contradictions made me turn myself away from the church and allow God to guide me.

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