Thursday, April 17, 2014

Pastor's Blog



Christophobia
Pastor Steve Nash

Writing for First Thoughts, Mark Movsesian sounded some notes of caution against the use of “Christophobia”: 
The hostility to Christianity one encounters in the West is mostly ideological. What we have is a struggle between competing worldviews, one of which seeks to win by excluding the other, which it sees as irrational, from public debate. This strategy is illiberal, ill-informed, and childish, but it is not really “phobic” in the way we normally use that term. It reflects not so much a visceral antipathy to Christians as people as a desire for Christians to keep quiet and stop retarding social progress.
Now, things may be changing. When critics denounce Christians as “bigots” — for maintaining the traditional understanding of marriage, for example — that does imply a personal judgment. Bigots are bad people; you wouldn’t want them living next door to you or building a gathering place in your neighborhood. You wouldn’t want your children to associate with them. Maybe the ideological struggle in the West is becoming a personal one, in which Christians are seen as comparable to racists. I don’t think we’re there, yet, but I concede there’s evidence we may be heading that way.”
The above writer seems to be contradicting himself in the same paragraph.  “Things are changing!”  May I suggest that “Christophobia” is more than a label that describes someone who opposes a Christian world view or ideology?  I believe this growing fear is much deeper, residing in the innermost being of a person’s soul or spirit.  It is not merely ideological; it is spiritual.  One could compare this unwarranted hatred to that of “anti-Semitism.”  Have you ever noticed how some people hate others and don’t even know why? 
I also believe the use of the word “phobia” is correct.  When one “fears” another they often respond with hatred and aggression.  As John puts it in his epistle, “perfect love casts out fear because fear has torment.”  This deep-rooted kind of fear or “phobia” is the opposite of love.  The question is why would some hate Christianity to the point where they want to kill those who embrace this faith?  In countries like Egypt, Mali, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Syria, Christians are being murdered and forced to leave their homes in large numbers.  Churches are being destroyed and Christian villages emptied.  “Phobia” accurately describes this phenomenon.  If anything, “phobia” is too mild a term: what we are seeing in these places is the widespread persecution of Christians. 
In the countries listed above, we see a common denominator: radical Islam.  Wherever radical Islam is allowed to flourish, Christians and Jews are severely persecuted and exterminated.  These haters of light have no tolerance for opposing faiths, a truth that cannot be denied!  But it is not only the radical Islamist; it is anyone who embraces a world view that is antithetical to Christianity or a biblical world view.
To offer a graphic illustration, let me offer the one I often use in sermons.  Have you ever gotten up in the middle of the night, turned on the kitchen light and noticed the cockroaches or mice scatter?  Hopefully we don’t live is conditions like that but some of us have at one time or another.  The cockroaches scatter because of the “light.”  Light opposes and exposes darkness; they are contrary to one another.  Jesus said He was the “Light of the world” and that we are called, “children of light.”  When we actively practice our faith in a very dark world, the forces of darkness will not only become disturbed; they will fight to extinguish the light that exposes their sorry souls.  As time moves on, we will see an increase in “Christophobia” all over the world.  This hatred of Christianity will not only come from the Islamist; it will come from anyone who opposes the message of the Gospel and the morality that Christianity proclaims as being God’s standard for the human race.
Easter is all about “light.”  As dark as the scene came to be during and immediately following the Resurrection, Sunday morning brought great light and hope to those who sit in darkness.  The demons do scatter when the “light of Christ” is manifested.  We ought to embrace the “light,” not run from it!
What are we to do?  How are we to respond to the “Christophobic?”  I embrace the words of Paul from Ephesians 5: “Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather expose them…for all things are exposed by light…therefore, awake you, who sleep, arise from the dead and Christ shall give you light!  See then that you walk carefully, not as fools, but as wise.”
Unlike our enemies, we are to love those who oppose us.  We are to love them because we do not fear them.  We are to look beyond their fault and see their need.  We are not to be “afraid” of anyone or anything.  After all, most all of us were at one time possessed by the same fear that our Christophobic friends now embrace.