88 — Persecution?
At tentpegsquestion@yahoo.com there are several versions of the same genre of question. I will shove them together and present them as two questions.
"The Bible says that we will suffer persecution if we are Christians. I’ve been a Christian for a long time and I don’t think I’ve ever experienced it. Does that mean I’m not a Christian? Am I missing something?"
AND
"Don’t you believe that the persecution we are going through in America — the war on Christmas, the crassification of our culture, the removal of the Ten Commandments from our schools, etc. — is a sign that our nation has been abandoned by God? Is this a sign of the end of the world or will God raise up another country to take our place since we failed?"
Jesus certainly did say that believers would suffer persecution, but he didn’t indicate that every believer throughout the ages would be persecuted. He was speaking to a specific group at a specific time. When reading such things we must remember who was speaking, to whom were they speaking, why were they speaking, and what was going on at the time of their speaking. All of those questions help us when we try to "rightly divide" the Word.
I do not believe that every Christian will be persecuted, but I DO believe that every Christian should be willing to suffer persecution — or suffer financially, personally, or career-wise — for the Kingdom’s sake. Living out your faith in a real and vital way often means you are more likely to be persecuted… but not everywhere. Christians can be the butt of jokes and prejudice in America, but I cannot call what happens here persecution. If you can’t be a Christian in America, you can’t be a Christian. We have Christian radio, Christian TV, Christian movies, Christian fiction, Christian nonfiction, Christian colleges, Christian elementary schools…. it keeps going and going, doesn’t it? You can sit at your computer and read dozens of versions of the Bible for free, download tens of thousands of sermons, and get newsletters and emails to help you raise your children, love your spouse, pay off your debts, witness to your friends… you get the idea.
This is a safe and easy place to be a Christian. Sure, you can take on a hard job such as racial reconciliation or feeding the homeless or praying for a crime ridden neighborhood and that might bring you into harm’s way, but you will have more back-up and support here than anywhere else I can think of (and I’ve lived in a good number of other places!).
I don’t care if they take the Ten Commandments out of schools. While I might wish they could stay there, it isn’t the school’s job to raise, socialize, or teach our children about doctrine. We should be teaching our kids about God’s ways at home. In my own informal survey done a few years ago (I was given the idea by my son-in-law, so kudos to him), almost none of the people who were upset that the 10 Commandments had been removed from an Alabama courthouse could actually name more than half of them!
Real persecution is out there. The UN and other agencies have estimated that more Christians died for their faith during the 20th century than in all other centuries combined. As I have done before, I ask you, as a personal favor to me, to go to www.persecution.com and sign up for the newsletter from the Voice of the Martyrs. Consider buying the new version of Foxe’s Book of Martyrs and sharing some stories with others. Read the DC Talks books on martyrdom ("Jesus Freaks") that have helped many teens (and their parents) realize the importance of prayer and sacrifice.
See the women who, after having their breasts cut off because they were Christian, have forgiven their attackers and continued in their faith. See the men who have had arms cut off, houses burned down, and seen their children killed because of their faith… and see their faith continue in the midst of their agony and THEN tell me you’ve been persecuted because the greeter at Wal-Mart said "Happy Holidays." Uh… no.
If you have never experienced persecution, don’t feel bad about it! Instead, thank God for that and then do something for the persecuted church. Pray, give, visit, serve… just don’t sit there because, one day, it might be our turn to be under the hammer and those we have served can come and save us in turn.