Want to Engage the Culture around You? Begin and End with the Bible
We live in the era of my truth being for me and your truth being for you. So, when we begin to engage the people around us, we have to think about the starting point for engaging those people. How can this work? Where am I supposed to start? Is there any way Christians think differently from the world beyond our opinion? If so, what is it?
What we believe matters. Why we believe what we believe matters. There is no doubt about this: wherever we go and whatever sphere we find ourselves in with people, what we believe and how that belief causes us to live matters. The truth is that our starting point for what we believe has massive implications for life. In addition, the whole point of Impact is to think about how Christians can impact the world around them. The area that sets Christians apart from the people around them in the way that they think is, namely, the Bible. There is a powerful truth to cultural engagement, and it is that we must start and stop with the Bible. Do you want to engage the culture? Begin and end with the Bible.
Beginning with the Bible
16 All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, 17 that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work. 2nd Timothy 3:16-17
If there is a fundamental belief that impacts the culture around us, it is found in the belief that the Bible is the very Word of God. When we look at the verse above, we learn several things. First, the Scriptures are inspired by God. When Paul writes about the Scriptures, he makes sure that Timothy understands that these Scriptures are breathed out by God. While Paul is the human author of Timothy and other books will have human authors, the stress is that a divine author is also composing the words, namely, God.
So when Christians understand that God’s Word calls them to act and live in a certain way, it is not out of personal preference that they follow but because it is God’s instruction. So when we allow the Bible to frame the way we engage the culture, we are saying, “I am trying to live within the boundaries that God has established that will lead to flourishing on the part of everyone who pays attention to this instruction and obeys.” The benefit of this when it comes to engaging the culture around us is that we are not moved by someone’s personal opinion or personal stance, but we can unite around God’s Word.
Notice how this particular text tells us how we are going to be shaped by God’s Word:
Doctrine
The Bible will inform us what we should and shouldn’t believe. It will ensure that our theology is correct and in agreement with God’s expectation for what we should think and then, in turn, for how we should live. When we think about engaging the culture on social and political issues, we don’t tend to think about our doctrine, but if we were to take a step back, we could see that it must affect how we engage people. For example, it is the doctrine of the imago dei (humanity created in the image of God) that causes Christians to oppose such things as abortion and assisted suicide. We don’t just neutrally come to these conclusions, but rather, our doctrine and theology inform our cultural engagement.
Reproof
As we are informed by doctrine, it is by that proper doctrine that our thinking is reproved and aligned with God’s Word. Both doctrine and reproof have to do with making sure that the believer’s theology is correct before moving to the actual way in which they live. One thing that this text reminds us of is that the Scriptures ensure that even our thinking goes through a correcting process, which will naturally impact how we live.
Correction
As our thinking is corrected, then our lives naturally follow suit. It is not enough to think correctly and never let that correction be evidenced in our lives. Instead, as the Scripture shapes our thinking, we look at how we live and make corrections based on what the Scripture says. In this way, effective cultural engagement begins because we have corrected how we walk first and then called others around us to join us as much as we are following Scripture. Once again, the Scripture outlines how we live, not our settled opinions.
Instruction in Righteousness
If we think the Bible is mainly a book that tells us what we do wrong, we fundamentally miss one of its more comprehensive functions. The Bible not only corrects our wrong living but also instructs us on proper living. We shouldn’t think of the Scriptures as a place where we are constantly corrected but as where God explains how we can experience true flourishing by walking with Him. The issue regarding how we live then expresses itself along one of two paths: will I follow God, or will I only follow myself?
Conclusion
Christians should be concerned about the world around them and engage it with the hope of the Gospel and Christianity. The main struggle is ensuring that we try to help the world around us through God’s Word. Is what we are telling the world our opinions and strategies, or is it tied to God’s Word? If we want to effectively reach and challenge the world to change, we must ensure our message is tethered to the word of God. If not, we must remind ourselves how the hymn writers described that ground as sinking sand. Let us be resolved to build our life on God’s Word and encourage others to build there too!
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