Why Native American Churches are Hard to Find


by Carl Townsend (written in 1997 from 1990- Census data). Thanks to Dave Hopkins and Richard Twiss who helped me.


The Native American "community" is a complex one. There are some 240
Native American languages spoken on a daily basis in North America. Many of
the tribal languages are as different from each other as Russian and Filipino,
or French and Chinese. What is of great importance in one tribe may be of little
or no value in another. It is a great mistake to talk about native people as
being the same or sharing a single world view. Yet at the same time there are
many commonalties that they share. This paper endeavors to list some of the
most significant values many of the tribes have in common.


Indian people today are faced with living in a modern world. Some have maintained
a strong cultural lifestyle. English is used as a second language; traditional
religion, if practiced, social structures, and personal identity are very traditional.
Others have adopted more of the Euro-American social and cultural values. Others
yet have fully melted into the mainstream of the U.S. culture. Nearly all of
these, though, fully identify strongly with their native ancestry and heritage.
They are a people with a proud yet painful history. They believe, for the most
part, that the future can be good. Many have come to know that only Jesus Christ
and following His ways can provide the power, solutions, and assurance of a
better tomorrow. To quote Richard Twiss, a Portland area Native American leader,
"Jesus Christ is the chief Shepherd and the Elder of our souls."

Native American Demographics



Native American demographic analysis is difficult due to many factors. Indians
have a spectrum of skin color from white to black, from blue-eyed blonds to
the dark skins of some of the Southwestern Indians that intermarried with runaway
slaves. Blood quantum is the primary criteria for establishing someone as Indian,
but the requirement varies from the near zero requirement of the Cherokee Nation
(just trace ancestry back to the 1906 tribal rolls) to the 5/8 requirement of
the Utes of Utah. Most require 1/4 to 1/2. The government only requires the
individual to meet the requirements of the specified tribe. Tribes also intermarry.
Social groups can then be classified as full-blood, tribally-mixed blood, and
racially mixed bloods. In the past there was also wide-spread sexual interaction
between the Indians and Europeans. Settler life was rife with hardships, and
as a result an acute shortage of European women. Because of this imbalance,
there was widespread sexual interaction between European men and Indian women.


At the time of the initial European contact, there were from 800,000 to 30 million
Indians in North and South America. The exact number is unknown. When Columbus
reached America, there were about 5 million in the continental United States.
There were about 500 tribes and 300 languages.


By 1900 (400 years), this was reduced to 237,000 Indians. By 1950 this had grown
to 357,000. The 1990 Census showed about 1.9 million. Of this 437,431 lived
on reservations (23%) and 1,436,105 in urban areas (77%). The two groups have
close family ties and interact culturally.


Oregon has 38,496 American Indians (1990 Census) and ranks 14th among the states
in Indian population. About 1.4% of the state is American Indian. The largest
Native American populations are in Oklahoma, California, Arizona, and New Mexico
(in that order). The states with the largest percentages Indian are New Mexico,
Oklahoma, and South Dakota (in that order).


In Portland, the Native Americans are the largest unreached people group. The
1990 Census showed approximately 10,000 Native Americans in the Tri-county area,
or about .9% of the population (Figure A.1). Dave Hopkins, a cross-cultural
missionary in the area with Interact Ministries, estimated the city had a Native
American population (1993) of about 14,000, which ranks it below Los Angeles
(87,487 in 1990), San Francisco (40,847), Seattle-Tacoma (32,017), and San Diego
(20,066) in west coast city Indian populations. Portland has only two evangelical
Native American churches. One church is non-denominational All Tribes Fellowship,
the second is an AMA church. Dave Hopkins estimates only .002 of the Indian
population (.2 %) attends an evangelical church.


Portland’s Native American population is one of the lowest Native American population
of all West Coast cities, but the city provides more services for the Native
American than many other cities. For this reason the cultural sensitivity in
the area is very high.


The Native American WorldView


For the church to reach the Native American, it must first understand the context,
or the culture in which it witnesses (see Acts 17). The Native American worldview
has nine distinct characteristics.

1. There is no natural/supernatural dichotomy.


The Western culture has adopted a worldview with the spiritual realm (Supernatural)
apart from the natural world. The natural world obeys scientific laws. In this
worldview the events we see always have causes, and miraculous interventions
are quite out of the ordinary. There is a sacred versus secular view of reality.


In truth, there is what contemporary theologians are referring to as the "excluded
middle". In this world view, God can and does intervene in our world creating
His Kingdom. Miracles are ordinary. The Native Americans have always held the
view that the dichotomy did not exist. From this perspective the Native American
worldview is much closer to the Biblical worldview concept.

2. Native Americans have a worldview that places them at one with nature.


This is in contrast with the Western culture worldview that places man as master
over nature. In the Western culture, man assumes Nature’s resources can be exploited,
manipulated, and consumed for the purpose of profit. Native Americans perceive
a balanced relationship between man and the environment.


The Biblical viewpoint is that man has been given authority over nature (Genesis
1:28-30). Man has been given this authority in stewardship; that is, man is
held accountable as to how he uses these.

3. The Native American has a qualitative view of time.


This is in contrast to the quantative view of time held by the Western culture.
To the Native American, an event begins when it is appropriate. As with the
Hebrew world view, Indian events occur in a certain time-phase, or zeitgestalt.
Decisions are made at opportune, or kairos, moments. Most Indian languages
have no time symbols. Priority belongs to the significant thing that is being
done at the present time.


This is in contrast to the commodity view of time held by the Western culture.
In this Euro-American view, time can be sold, purchased, borrowed, wasted, killed,
made up, or (if you run afoul of the law) done.

4. The Native American sees land as something that can not be owned by the individual,
and some land (such as the mountains) as sacred.


This is in contrast to the Western cultural view, which treats land as a commodity
like time. The concept of individual land ownership was alien to the Indians.
The concept that the white man "stole" the Indian’s land is alien
to the Indian world view, as also the idea that someone could purchase land
from the Indians. The issue of land ownership has been one of the main sources
of conflict between the Western culture and the Native American culture.

5. The Native American is much more subject to familial and peer pressure than
the Westerner.


The American culture admires individualism and anyone who overcomes insurmountable
odds to make it on their own. The Native American, in contrast, is much more
subject to cultural, familial and peer pressure, and often fails to "succeed"
because of strong pressures from the family or the community. A decision for
Christ threatens the integrity of the group or family, making it appear as if
the new convert is rejecting his or her family.

6. Power to the Native American has meant the ability to achieve a bountiful harvest, successful hunt, or a healthy birth. The Indian way is to seek power by worshiping the sun, Mother Earth, and the spirit world. Power is often accomplished through traditional ceremonies.


In the Western culture, power is generally associated with the accumulation
of money, land, possessions, knowledge, or fame. Success is equated with the
accumulation of these.


To the Native American with its supernatural orientation, if a hunt fails or
a baby dies, it has been because he or she did not have enough power. If there
is sickness, the question was "Who caused this?", not what. The name
of the game is to accumulate enough power to survive in a mysterious world.
There is a particular concern of powerlessness among the Native Americans today,
hence a new reach for the power they believe they have lost. Even the Indians
who have accepted Christ often believe they remain powerless, and as a result
have far more faith in their traditional rituals than the church rites in bringing
them peace, happiness, and success.


Traditional ceremonies were thought to give the Indian power. For this reason
there is a strong move in the contemporary Native American cultures to restore
many traditional ceremonies, such as the "Sun Dance".


In the spiritual realm, power is dunamis, the ability to do (1 Cor. 4:20).
Unfortunately, the Indian often "adds on" to his existing rituals
and ceremonies his or her new faith rather than trusting Christ completely.
Christ cannot take His place at the center of the Indian’s worldview until He
is perceived as the Source of power (dunamis): past, present, and future.
This raises a theological dilemma. Has the new dispensational supernatural world
view of the church today hindered the receptiveness of a people group whose
functional belief system is supernatural?

7. In the Native American view, children are raised participating in adult activities.


Native American children are taught they must respect and obey their parents
because of the sacrifices of the parents. The children are taught that as they
are weak, the parents are strong for them. As the parents become old, they become
weak and the children, now adults, must care for them. Families ties are close,
and often a behavior problem of a family member is hidden to protect the family
unit.


This is in contrast with the Western cultural view, where adults participate
in the children’s activities. The care of the elderly, impoverished, and the
sick is often delegated to some type of institutional care, whether private
or governmental.

8. Native Americans see themselves as part of a large social unit (such as an extended family) and are much more supportive of each other’s needs than in the Western culture.


Native Americans do not need to be reminded to meet their brother’s or sister’s
needs. They do it instinctively. They feed each other, clothe the poor, provide
shelter, and quickly provide other emergency needs.

9. The Indians have a very spiritual outlook on life.


Although there is much variation of the spiritual expression within the different
tribes, the are some common expressions. All Indian tribes believe in one Supreme
Being. The peace pipe is considered a medium of prayer to the Great Spirit and
attending spirits for many plains tribes. Failing to show respect for the pipe
or using it improperly could be viewed as a cause for disaster.


The first Nations, with their tribal religions, often worshipped corruptible
images of man, birds, and reptiles. The tribes of the Northwest coast have been
called the children of the Raven. The Raven was known as the trickster-creator.
Many of these Indians believed their "cultural hero" (raven) created
the world and could assume the form of a man or bird. He lived an immortal life,
and could change like the wind.


The Indians of the Northwest, for example, maintained a close cosmic relationship
to animal life. Many of the tribes believed that the Salmon people in the underworld
put on the dress of salmon each year and sacrificed themselves as food for mankind
and the animals. In order not to offend the Salmon people, these Indians took
the salmon bones and returned them to the water so that the Salmon people would
return the next season.


Some Northwest Indians also believed in the sisiut, a double-headed serpent.
He was both evil and good, with powerful means of divination. The families of
the Northwest also had their totem spirits. The entrance to each home was marked
with this totem spirit.


The primary person in the tribe with the greatest power with the spirit world
was the shaman. The shaman had the power to heal, to find lost things, and to
predict the future. The bear spirit for many tribes was the spirit of the shaman.
If the shaman in the tribe failed to cure a disease and the patient was lost,
the shaman was at risk from vengeance-seeking relatives. This custom put the
early missionaries with their abilities to heal using medicines and prayer at
risk when they "failed".


For most North American tribal people, salvation is achieved by restoring order
and balance in nature. It will occur in the hereafter, but he seems to gain
some of it in the mortal life. The cultural observances and rites are a means
to this end. To the Christian, in contrast, the relationship between God and
man is restored only through Jesus Christ.


The contrast of the world view with the white culture is perhaps best seen in
a speech given by Chief Seattle in 1854 as he watched the disappearance of the
Indian. Although not theological correct in places from a Judeo-Christian perspective,
it summarized the Indian world view:

"Every part of this earth is sacred to my people.

The shining water that moves in the streams and rivers is not just water

but the blood of our ancestors.

Each ghostly reflection in the clear water of the lakes

tells of events and memories in the life of my people.

The water murmur is the voice of my father’s father.

The rivers are our brothers; they quench our thirst;

they carry our canoes and feed our children.

So you must give to the rivers the kindness we would give to any brother.

Remember that the air is precious to us;

that the air shares the spirit of all the life that it supports.

The wind that gave our grandfather his first breath

also receives his last sigh.

Will you teach your children what we have taught our children,

that the earth is our mother.

Whatever befalls the earth befalls all the sons in the earth.

This we know – the earth does not belong to man.

Man belongs to the earth.

Tribe follows tribe and nation follows nation,

like the waves of the sea.

It is the order of nature, and regret is useless.

And when the last Red man shall have perished

and the memory of my tribe shall have become a myth to the white man;

these shores will swarm with the invisible dead of my tribe.

Tonight when the streets of your cities and villages are silent and you will think them deserted,

they ill throng with the returning host that once filled

and still love this beautiful land.

The white man will never be alone."

The Indians viewed the land, mountains, rivers, animals, and lakes all as sacred.
Mount Rainier in Washington was one of the most sacred mountains of all. Spirit
Lake (near Mount St. Helens) was named from a Salish word and was believed to
haunted by evil spirits of destruction.



Trends
in the Native American Culture


1. The Native American family, though strongly intact, has become increasingly
unstable

This is due to a number of factors:


  • the loss of economic base and its impoverishment.
  • the decline of the role of the male.
  • the increasing role of the government in providing family functions.

The results of this instability include:


  • lack of control; that is, the family is less able to control its members.
  • loss of role models.
  • loss of emotional security.
  • increase in strife between families.
  • increased use of alcohol.
  • youth and behavior problems.
  • academic underachievement.
  • increase in homelessness.
  • more child neglect and abuse.

With the disintegration of the family unit, the children suffer the most.


  • In 1988 on the Macah Reservation in Neah Bay in NW Washington there were 42 births, 85% of which were to unmarried women.
  • In 1988 on the Warm Springs Reservation east of Portland there were 130 births,
    of which 70% were to unmarried women.

  • Divorce rates for Native American women are 2-3 times higher than for U.S. Whites.

  • There is a dramatic rise in children born with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. FAS is 33
    times higher than with non-Indians.

  • Teen suicide is five times the national average for Native American boys and girls. One in six adolescents have attempted suicide.
  • Alcohol mortality is 10 times the rate of all other combined races In Portland this is 23.7 per 100,000 (1987) versus 6.0 for the U.S. as a whole..
  • Tuberculosis is 7.4 times greater than the normal. In Portland, the rate of Tuberculosis
    among the Indians is 4.7 per 100,000 (1987) versus .5 per 100,000 for the U.S. as a whole.

  • Diabetes is 6.8 times higher than with non-Indians. In Portland this is 26.9 per 100,000 (1987) versus 9.8 for the U.S. as a whole.

2. There is a disintegration of traditional Male Role


The two primary areas for a man to prove himself in the past were in warring
and hunting. Warriors risked their lives for the good of the community. They
had respect, self-worth, and a sense of pride. As hunters, they provided for
their family: food, clothing, and shelter. This gave a man honor, respect, and
self-esteem.


Once confined to their reservations, the ability to wage war and hunt declined.
With this came the disintegration of the male role in the family. Today studies
show the role of the male has changed. Surveys have shown that in 81% of the
full-blood families the woman is the decision-maker. The average life expectancy
of Indian men is 45 years (Richard Twiss).

3. There is a movement to tribalism.


An Indian may say they are not an Indian, or Canadian. "I am a Blackfoot.".
There are 240 Indian tribes in North American. The tribal movement, with its
accompanying rituals and customs, is often an attempt to gain the power they
have lost. A growing number identify themselves as being from their nation;
Sioux Nation, Navajo Nation, Apache Nation, etc.. Today, the term "reservation"
is no longer appropriate in referring to Indian lands. The political correct
term for the Indian lands is nations.

4. There is a movement to urbanization.


The Native Americans, like most of the world, are experiencing a movement to
the cities and urban centers. Today 54% of the Native Americans in the United
States live in the cities. In 1952 Congress passed the Relocation Act, which
was designed to move the Indians from the reservations to the cities and to
assimilate them better into the culture. In both Canada and America, these policies
started a much larger migration of the Indians to the cities than expected.
The cities provide education and jobs. The result has been three classes of
the Native Americans: those that assimilate into the Anglo society, the street
Indians (jobless and poor), and a working class of Indians that assimilate into
the white man’s world to survive, but still maintain Indian values and perspectives.
Most natives are in this working class.

5. There is a movement to pan-Indianism.


Although Native Americans consider themselves tribal, there are many common
cultural values. Urbanization, with its powwows and Urban Indian Centers, has
contributed to this pan-Indian movement. Braids and beads often identify Indians
as a group culturally, distinguishing them from other ethnic groups. The changes
to their common culture is irreversible, and by coming together as a group they
can define some common identity factors and exert more cultural power.

6. There is a movement to sovereignty.


Native Americans wants sovereignty, land rights, and autonomy. They want the
rights and privileges of nationhood. At the same time, however, they don’t wish
to give up the government services and privileges they have been granted through
treaties with the U.S. Congress.

7. There is a movement to equality.


To achieve equality and leadership skills today, more Native American are seeing
the need for higher education. Yet Native Americans have one of the highest
dropout rates in high school in the country. Many are actually more "pushed
out" of the system by prejudice and economics. There is a strong interest
on the part of the Indians to study law in an effort to improve the standing
of the Indian in society.

8. There is a movement to justice and reconciliation.


There is more sensitivity on the part of both the Indians and the non-Indians
today about the issues of injustice and the need for reconciliation. To the
Native American, land cannot be "owned". In 1971 The government awarded
the Alaska natives 40 million acres and $962.5 billion.

9. There is a movement to Peyotism and Indian religions.


About 1890 an Indian movement began in Southwest U.S. that centered around the
hallucinogenic drug mescaline (derived from the peyote bud). This eventually
flowed into the Native American Church (NAC), which was incorporated in 1918.
Although some attempts have been made to curtail the use of the drug, the courts
have protected the religious use of the drug.


Some expressions of the NAC blend worship experiences using the Bible, hymns,
and singing with the peyote experience in a fashion said to be syncretistic;
that is, the new religious expressions are blended with former traditions. Although
this movement claims only a small number of members, other forms of tribal religion
continue to grow in popularity. As religion is a center of life for the Indian,
this is not surprising. The expressions involve sweat lodges, sweet grass, and
the pipe. The expressions share much in common with the popular New Age movement.

10. There is a movement to Christianity.


Christianity is moving today among the Native Americans as a result of three
key factors. First, today’s missionaries are slowly becoming more culturally
aware. They identify with the people, acknowledge Native people are equal before
God, have respect for the Indian history, and are committed to indigenous leadership.
These same missionaries, however, have a double dilemma. They are cultural outsiders
who must both unmask the Indian’s spiritism as well as the westernized and materialistic
view of their own culture.


Second, national Christian native movements are having success in North America.
CHIEF (Christian Hope Indian Eskimo Fellowship), NEF (Native Evangelical Fellowship
of Canada), and NANCC (North American Native Christian Council) are examples.


Third, local churches and denominations are identifying the Native Americans
as a hidden people group and mapping strategies to reach them.



Native American Bibliography:



Berreman, Joel V.. Tribal Distribution in Oregon. Menasha, WI: American
Anthropological Association, 1969


Hopkins, David. The Team Approach to Indigenous Church Planting Among Native
Americans
. Boring, OR: InterAct Ministries, 1993.


Lamb and Shultz. More Indian Lore. Manchester, IN: L.W. Shultz, 1968.


Ruby, Robert H. and Brown, John. Indians of the Pacific Northwest. Norman,
OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1981


Russell, George. The American Indian Digest. Phoenix, AZ: Thunderbird
Enterprises, 1993


Twiss, Richard. Introduction to Native American Worldview. Vancouver,
WA: New Discovery Community Church. 1994.




All Rights Reserved


Copyright 2011, Carl Townsend

Recovering America’s Vision

I took a recent test to sense my beliefs and values, which puts you as a simulated delegate for the political campaign for the next election that has really already started. My answers were compared against almost two million others who had taken the same test. Assuming the sample was correct when it compared my expectations, I was shocked. We’ve come a long, long way (downhill) from the nation that was birthed here in 1776 and the vision of those founding fathers – some of who gave their lives for a nation that, essentially, now is on a self-destruct course.

What we have today reminds me more of the Israelite nation described in Judges 21:25:

“In those days …. everyone did what was right in his own eyes”.
Judges 21:25 NKJV

This phrase is actually repeated four times in the book of Judges. Sounds like what we call postmodernism today. No absolutes, you just do your own thing. If you have the courage, try reading the tragic stories in Judges 17-19. Read how the tribe of Dan sank into idolatry and disappeared as a part of the Israelite nation that began to emerge with Samuel at this time. In fact, in the book of Revelation the tribe of Dan is not even mentioned as a part of Israel.

How has America begun to look like this? What idol do our national leaders worship? What is is their moral and ethical compass now? The Constitution today has become what the political leaders call a “Living Constitution”, and is trampled on by our leaders over and over again. The First Amendment has been altered so now it is interpreted as exactly the opposite of what the founding fathers intended. Churches have often redefined the Gospel to something Jesus never intended.
David Wilkerson(1), said this of the American Church:

“For the most part, the church today is experiencing widespread spiritual famine: shallow sermons, dead hearers, “lively” worship that is not backed up by righteous living.”(2)

The great historian Toynbee said if the 22 great civilizations, 19 of them died from within. There were no bands playing or flags waving when they died.

Is this America today?

Into the spiritual desert we see at the end of the book of Judges, Samuel is born. As that story begins the Bible tells us at the beginning of 1 Samuel 3 that there was no vision at that time.

“And the word of the LORD was rare in those days; there was no widespread revelation [vision].
1 Sam 3:1-2 NKJV

Not even the priest Eli could hear the word of the Lord. God had to speak to Eli through the child Samuel.

By the end of this single chapter, Samuel is a man and the situation is completed reversed. Now there is Vision, Place (Shiloh), and Purpose.

“So Samuel grew, and the LORD was with him and let none of his words fall to the ground. And all Israel from Dan to Beersheba knew that Samuel had been established as a prophet of the LORD. Then the LORD appeared again in Shiloh. For the LORD revealed Himself to Samuel in Shiloh by the word of the LORD. “
1 Sam 3:19-21 NKJV

This is phenomenal. God used one man to turn an entire nation around in one generation. This also happens today. I think of John Knox, who was imprisoned during the 1540’s for supporting the Protestant Reformation in Scotland. He prayed daily, “Lord, give me Scotland, or I die”. By the time he died in 1572, Scotland had been transformed and the Scottish Parliament had adopted Reformation doctrines.

Today, often spiritual leaders in nations and cities that lead in the transformation process are often called “John Knoxers” for that reason. I think of Julio and Ruth Ruibal who mobilized the pastors in drug-infested Cali, Columbia and led in the transformation process there – at the cost of Julio’s life, who died a martyr. I think in my own city of Portland of Jr. Joe Aldridge, Terry Dirks, Bob Cryder and others who became John Knoxers in my own city in the early nineties, leading prayer summits for the coming of the Holy Spirit in our city. None of these leaders are around anymore, having gone on to their Glory with others. There is nothing “dated” about what God did with those John Knoxers or Samuel, however. God does it today. Last Easter (just a few months ago) in a suburban Portland church, the Holy Spirit swept through that small church and some 24 people came forward and were baptized. Nothing but a tub and water was available and it was cold and raining; but no one could stop what God was doing there that day.

Thomas JeffersonThomas Jefferson was one of our most brilliant and educated Presidents in the history of America. It is said that John F. Kennedy held a dinner in the White House for a group of the brightest minds in the nation at that time. At the dinner Kennedy made this statement. “This is perhaps the assembly of the most intelligence ever to gather at one time in the White House of the exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone..”

Jefferson was an Episcopalian and some of his writings indicated a strong leaning to Christianity. He was heavily influenced by the Protestant Reformation as well and philosophy of John Locke. He was very supportive of strong state rights and a minimum of federal government. Here are a few quotes attributed to Thomas Jefferson:

“It is incumbent on every generation to pay its own debts as it goes, a principle which, if acted on, would save one-half the wars of the world.”

“To compel a man to subsidize with his taxes the propagation of ideas which he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.”

And another quote is sometimes attributed to him but no hard evidence has been found in his letters. There are many statements from Jefferson, however, that are close to this and he did believe in what is said in the quote:

“I believe the banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will group up around the banks will deprive the people of property – until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.”

Transformation and the necessary change can happen in America, in Portland, in my town. I can still remember a quote Vera Katz (Portland mayor at the time) gave me years ago when I was researching the city. “If this city is ever transformed, it will need to be the churches that do it.”, she said as she challenged a group from local churches. Very insightful wisdom from a Jewish lady. Now that’s a challenge for the local church, of which I am a part. The real transformation, however, always starts in our hearts.

  1. Dave Wilkerson is best known for his book The Cross and the Switchblade. He was the founder of the addiction recovery program Teen Challenge, and founding pastor of the non-denominational Times Square Church in New York. Dave died in an automobile accident in April of 2011.
  2. http://www.worldchallenge.org/en/node/14316

(There is no copyright on this. You may share or backlink as you wish. Thanks to Toni Anderson and Jerry Propst for some of the information here, but the options are my own.)

The American Government and the Judeo-Christian Framework

What does the Bible say about our relationship to the government and how to resolve issues?

  1. Here is a good worksheet for guiding you on these answers. Print out both pages:
    Page one of worksheet
    Page two of worksheet
  2. Our government was founded on a Biblical and Judeo-Christian foundation. The Constitution was written based on that. Read the Foundation of Social Institutions on the second worksheet and related verses.
  3. The first page of the first worksheet has three interesting circles: Government, Family, and Church. Look at each issue in the section Sphere of Responsibility on the second worksheet, look up the verse, and then write that issue in the circle where it belongs from a Biblical viewpoint from the verse on the first worksheet.

When you have mapped each issue, take a hard look at how far our political leaders have gone from the intent of the founders. The destruction of America was done over a long period of time and it is time to take the country back. We can at least begin with the next election.

(worksheet created by Doug Lundin and reprinted by permission)

Signs of Hope – The Imago Dei Community Church in Portland

Whereas church growth leaders are telling us the (institutional) church is dying, here is a church in the Portland area that challenges that. Moreover, the church is attracting and extremely popular with young people. Here is an interview with Kevin Palau of the Palau Evangelistic Association with Rick McKinley, pastor of the Imago Dei Community church:

There is a Part II on YouTube and more stuff from Rick.
The Church is not dying, nor has its mission changed. The Gospel is needed now more than ever. Young people today will serve and are serving in a world very different from the world I knew as I grew up. What do you think this means for a Church today?

The Constitution, Religion, and the Church

The purpose of the Bill of Rights (First amendment to the US Constitution) was to protect the freedoms of each of us: religion, speech, the press, and the right to assemble and petition the government. The exact working is as follows:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

As far as the issue of separation of church and state, the words “separation”, “church”, and “state” appear nowhere in this amendment. What was the intent of this amendment that defines your rights?ConstitutionThe amendment was drafted by the founding fathers who were birthing a nation out of the Protestant Reformation and who were, in large, trying to escape religious persecution and a government-dictated religion in England. The amendment was birthed from Christian leaders, not from liberal groups fighting Christianity. The founding fathers were not trying to put a wall between the Church and government. Heavens no – they were trying to protect the expression of their religious views, Christian as well as other religious expressions.Jefferson did not write this. He was in France at the time. Jefferson did, however, endorse this amendment. When a church in Connecticut became concerned about what this meant to the church, Thomas Jefferson wrote them a personal letter. The church leaders were worried that the government might someday tell them how, where, and when to worship God. Jefferson said not to worry and and that the amendment would protect churches from government interference[1] . Unfortunately, the government has twisted the understanding of what Jefferson meant by “separation of church and state”. That violates the Constitutional intent.

To those who cite the first amendment as reason for excluding God from more and more of our institutions and everyday life, may I just say: The first amendment of the Constitution was not written to protect the people of this country from religious values; it was written to protect religious values from government tyranny. –Ronald Reagan

The intent of that first amendment is well documented in the congressional records and letters of the founding fathers of that time. The amendment had two intents:

  1. To prevent the establishment of any national denomination.
  2. To prevent the Federal Government from stopping anyone from exercising their personal faith.

The two key words in the amendment are “establishment” and “free exercise”. Today this amendment is twisted so as to prevent religious expression, not to protect it. This change began about 1947. Today if a student is publicly praying in school, the school can expel the student if someone says that offends him or her and the student continues. The Ten Commandments are removed from judicial offices because (I believe) the judges themselves are no longer following them and feel convicted and guilty. Legally, they say it’s fine to pray in school if the primary purpose of the prayer is secular. (Now that’s a joke, isn’t it?)Military chaplains have to have their prayers approved by the government. Since when is the government able to speak for the Holy Spirit? (Another joke based on the actions of the foolish judges of the Supreme Court). Want to sell books and related materials in your Church bookstore? Not unless you pay property tax on the space used and income tax on the books sold. That is not constitutional. Neither does your pastor have free speech in the pulpit as that next election approaches. That wall that Jefferson promised and free expression of speech and spiritual beliefs is no longer there.The Minority has moved to take control of the rights of the Majority that are guaranteed by the Constitution. The smaller minorities, the outsiders, are trying to make the majority to appear as they are the outsiders.The very thing that Jefferson feared has come upon us. Since the government is no longer representing the will of the people (see PEW Survey[2]), it’s time to send a LOT of people home with the next election.How do you think we can change this?(No copyright on this – you can circulate.)

  1. Rich Smith. “First Amendment: The Right of Expression”. ABDO Publishing Company. The words “separation of church and state” are actually not in the First Amendment. They appear instead in a letter written in 1802 by President Thomas Jefferson to church leaders in Connecticut. The understanding of what Jefferson meant by “separation of church and state” changed over the long years that followed.
  2. “Religion and Politics”. Pew Research Center. http://pewforum.org/Politics-and-Elections/Many-Americans-Uneasy-with-Mix-of-Religion-and-Politics.aspx. Retrieved 2007-12-31. “Americans overwhelmingly consider the U.S. a Christian nation: Two-in-three (67%) characterize the country this way, down just slightly from 71% in March 2005. A decade ago, Americans were somewhat less likely to tie the nation’s identity to Christianity. In 1996, 60% considered the U.S. a Christian nation. By 2002, however, the figure had climbed to 67%, and since then views on this question have remained fairly consistent.”

The Lost Generation

In my latest book, Beyond Illusion: Leading from Reality, you see in the opening chapters how the young people today have turned away from the institutional church. George Barna and others have written much on “the death of the church” – at least the church as we know it. What’s the answer? The Millennial Generation (born between 1980 and 2000, also known as the Y Generation), is officially the largest generation demographically. It is also the least religious group in American history. Here are the stats on this group; from The Millennials: Connecting to America’s Largest Generation:65% rarely attend church70% agree that the church is irrelevant26% believe they will go to heaven when they die15% are professing Christians13% consider spirituality important84% say job success is importantTo be honest, if I were a millennial today and looking at what people professing to be Christian are doing in politics, education, business, and other areas I would probably give up on the [institutional] church as well. As John Eldridge, C.S.Lewis, and others have said – many men have become no more than geldings instead of the stallions God has called them to be. And geldings can’t bear fruit. How can we reach this generation? What success stories have you experienced?Also see Filed Under: church, Church growth, generation, special, youth Tagged With:

Hugh Halter and the Church

Last night I had a wonderful chance to hear Hugh Halter. Awesome. Hugh (author of The Tangible Kingdom) is working with people such as Reggie O’Neal to help with the rebirth of the Church in America. Most church growth leaders will tell you that the church in America (as an institution) is dying. Abandoned by adults and the youth. These leaders are working heard to network leadership to see the rebirth of the Church. Thank you Hal Grey for inviting me. (Follow people talking about Hugh on Twitter.)Next Tuesday is the local vote for an amendment to the city charter some of us have been working hard on – web site, emails, Facebook, Twitter, blogging – and LOTS of door to door work talking with people one on one.Then, our new business website should be up soon, hopefully within a week. Watch for more news on this. It is going to be one awesome website.

17 Signs of a Fast Growing Church

I love this listing from Brian Dodd of the 17 signs of a Fast Growing Church.http://briandoddonleadership.com/2010/12/17/17-signs-of-a-fast-growing-church/

Teens becoming”fake”Christians

Interesting article about teens becoming “fake” Christians:http://edition.cnn.com/2010/LIVING/08/27/almost.christian/index.html?hpt=P1#fbid=zlwyPToAbvW&wom=false

Atlanta Catalyst Event

Catalyst Atlanta is coming soon. For more information see http://bit.ly/agfgS7. For registration see http://bit.ly/bA8vyZ.