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The Future of Today’s Christianity

We have news to offer that is good for us and our children’s children.

The Future of Today's Christianity

The Future of Today's Christianity

Christianity Today stands squarely in the evangelical tradition of the faith. We believe this is worth reaffirming precisely because of the way the word evangelical has become debased in our time.

Evangelicalism has become identified, at least in the media that shape so many Americans' imaginations, with the politics of fear—both Christians' fear of losing crucial cultural battles and secularists' fear of theocracy coming just around the bend.

When the word evangelical becomes associated with one position or party—let alone when it is uttered with a whiff of fear in the air—it falls far short of the glorious hope that makes the Good News good. That hope has nothing to do with the rising or falling of political parties or even nations. Instead it is the announcement of a coming kingdom that will never pass away. And the announcement of that kingdom begins with, "Be not afraid."

To be sure, evangelical Protestants have often gloried in being, as sociologist Christian Smith once put it, "embattled and thriving." The postwar evangelical movement saw itself, not entirely without reason, on the outside looking in at the institutions of global Christianity. Theologian Karl Barth once dismissed a pointed question from this magazine's original editor with a facile joke about "Christianity Today or Christianity Yesterday?" Carl Henry, never one to back down, promptly replied, "Yesterday, today, and forever."

Henry's publication was of little consequence to the great German theologian, but Henry's chutzpah was warranted. Evangelicalism—in the true sense of the word—was never meant to be a marginal movement within the Christian faith. And the focus of this magazine is not a small piece of the Christian story, but rather its living heart, the Christians in every tradition and communion who seek to love God with all their heart, mind, soul, and strength.

The focus of this magazine is not a small piece of the Christian story, but rather its living heart, the Christians in every tradition and communion who seek to love God with all their heart, mind, soul, and strength.

There will always be Christian fundamentalisms—strident calls to flee the world and purify the church—and Christian liberalisms—misguided attempts to align the church with the world's agenda. But as the past century shows, both are self-limiting movements. They are unable to retain their children or persuade a wider public. Only evangelical faith—immersed in the Word, animated by the gospel, waiting in hope, and empowered by the Spirit—can offer news that is good enough to pass on to our children's children and to engage a wary, weary world.

If this is true, though, it requires a new and deeper seriousness from us. Christianity in our time, especially in the West, suffers from a host of self-inflicted wounds. All too often, the story of American Christianity, not least its evangelical varieties, is about the depth and power of the gospel being poured into the shallowest of vessels.

North American evangelicals can be astonishingly innovative and entrepreneurial, but we can also be indifferent to history and unconcerned about the future. We can be remarkably generous and dedicated, and blithely enslaved to consumerism and technology. We can be amazingly concerned about the needs of the world, and infuriatingly condescending to leaders from places where the needs are greatest. We can be unsurpassed in our cultural savvy, and embarrassingly thin in our cultural production. We are experts at building movements that last a few short years, and innocents at what it takes to sustain change over time.

As Fuller Seminary's Richard Mouw likes to say, "The church is in really bad shape today. It's almost as bad as it was in the first century." The church that Christ promised to build survived the license of Corinth, the legalism of Galatia, and the lukewarmness of Laodicea. It will survive, and more than survive, in our time, because it is built not by human hands but by Christ himself. He constantly renews and reforms his people. He breathes new life and new forms into being in response to institutional decay. And every day he calls sinners from every nation to himself, transforming them into sons and daughters in a new family.

Christianity Today is for everyone who has been caught up in that story, everyone who wants to know how that story is unfolding in our time. We cannot imagine a more exciting time to be Christians than today, and we can't imagine a better job than leading Christianity Today. We hope you will join us for the adventure ahead.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

Here Come the Radicals!

Django Unchained and the Quest for Revenge

Testimony

The Atheist's Dilemma

News

Why Latino Enrollments Are on the Rise

Who Defines Doctrine?

My Top 5 Books on Creativity

More Than a Right

Review

Is Longer Life Better?

Review

Anxious About Assurance

I Love You—I Just Don't Trust You

Bigger Than We Think

Happy Meals

News

Flip That Church

The Sabbath Swimming Lesson

What Classic Spiritual Discipline Needs the Most Renewal Among American Christians?

Hotter Than All the Fifty Shades in the World

News

How a Catholic-Pentecostal Split Could Help Nigeria's Militant Islamists

Letters to the Editor

News

Gleanings

News

Quotation Marks

News

Go Figure

Giving It Everything

The Love Shack

News

Radical Proposal to Weed Out 'Fake Pastors' Splits Kenyans

Quick Takes

Wilson's Bookmarks

Excerpt

Jesus Doesn't Need Help

News

Should an Iowa Dentist Have Fired his Attractive Assistant?

Orphans in Limbo

News

Sovereign Grace Ministries: Courts Shouldn't 'Second-Guess' Pastoral Counseling of Sex Abuse Victims

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