Faith Unfeigned

The Many Gods of Evangelicalism

with 5 comments

There is one looming question that no one is asking concerning the worship wars in evangelicalism. Is it possible that the central reason for our inability to worship together is because we worship different Gods? Our imaginations are being informed by drastically different influences, which are leading us to radically different conceptions of God. When we understand that it is through the organ of the imagination that we cultivate a concept of God, it is then that we begin to perceive a problem in Evangelicalism.

It has been said before that our whole concept of God is something that develops in our imagination. It is not that we create God in our imagination but that we conceive of God through the organ of our imagination. No man has ever seen God. We do not experience Him directly with our senses. The Bible uses anthropomorphisms and other literary devices to help us better apprehend a God we have never seen or have experienced directly.

What is influencing evangelicals’ imaginations? Many have their imagination primarily informed by popular culture. For these evangelicals, popular Christian music is not a reflection of their conception of God, it is what is shaping their conception of God. Their imaginations are being informed by a Christian entertainment industry that incorporates books, blockbuster movies, children’s television, music, standup comedy, and theme parks, all which have a profound effect on the imaginations of modern Christians. For these Christians, worship must incorporate popular culture in order for worship to engage their imagination and give their worship meaning.

Many other Christians correctly identify the great chasm that has developed between modern Christianity and historic Christianity. They understand that things are different, and they lament those differences.  Amongst this group, there are many ideas on how we can “get back” to the right sensibilities of past generations. One idea is to employ the forms and liturgy of historic Christianity. The idea is that if we change the forms, we will change the imagination. While this is true at some point, I am not sure it will produce the effect they desire.  There are many that love and use traditional Christian forms that do not love or even believe in God.

What should be informing the imagination of a Christian to help them conceive of God? I believe it is creation.

Romans 1:20 For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse,

Paul uses a literary device in this verse that had direct importance to the subject at hand. He claims that the invisible attributes of God are clearly seen. They are apprehended through the organ of our imagination. Paul is saying that creation properly informs our imagination so that God’s eternal power and deity are clearly seen. Paul says that this revelation of God is so clear that all mankind will be held accountable for their reaction to it.

The problem in modern evangelicalism is that our imaginations are being informed by everything but what God originally intended. The glue that held a metaphysical understanding of God together throughout historic Christianity was not a shared liturgy or the authority of the church, it was God’s creation. It was the same glorious stars overhead in the time of Bach as it was for David.  It was the same sunrise and sunset. It was the same fields of grain and fruit of the vine that produced thankfulness for our Sustainer. It was the same creation that brought Jonathan Edwards to awe and wonder as it was for Augustine.

On the other hand, modern man has isolated himself from God’s creation and the invisible things of God that are clearly seen. We pay little attention to sunrises and sunsets. Generations of city people have only seen but a few stars at once. We have little notion of where our food comes from or how it is grown. We are not thankful for the rain that waters the grass that feeds the cattle. Our imaginations are not filled with scenes of glory and majesty, but K-Love and Ted Dekker.

Have we violated the second commandment and created God into our own image rather than worshiping God as He has revealed Himself in creation? Do these varying concepts of God result in the worship of different Gods? Are we no longer worshiping God in spirit and truth?

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Written by Christopher Leavell

April 1, 2011 at 02:20

5 Responses

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  1. Great post! Tozer said in his introduction to “Knowledge of the Holy” that what a man thinks about God is the most important thing about him. If we fail to think and imagine God within the contexts that He has intended we create a false god. Would you say that there is a combination of things going on in the creation of false gods? What I am thinking is imaginations that are fueled by popular culture rather than creation combined with minds that are not equipped with biblical truth about God yield worship to a false god. Mix in a little bit of pride and you not only are worshipping a false god, but you become angry when anyone suggests to you that you may be worshipping incorrectly. Minds without the truth of God and imaginations without the creation of God are deadly to the worship of God. Love the post. Great stuff to think about. Thanks.

    Jason

    Jason Ehmann

    April 1, 2011 at 19:26

  2. “Minds without the truth of God and imaginations without the creation of God are deadly to the worship of God.”

    Great quote! Yes, I think you are right. I have been reading on the importance of the imagination in comprehending God but many of the writers do not say much about what is, or should be, informing the imagination. Paul makes it clear in Romans 1:20 that creation has a huge role in properly informing the imagination. Paul goes on to state that all mankind suppresses this truth and exchanges worshiping creation for the creator. It seems the fact that man so consistently responds poorly to God’s creation that it leads many thinkers to dismiss creation as unimportant or deficient. Man, left to himself, will make idols of just about anything, but Christians should be able to get this right as David, Job, and Paul were able to.

    I might be taking it a bit further than you are here. I’m thinking that minds can be biblically equipped with the facts about God and still end up with deficient worship or even worshiping a false god. Imagine a world without fathers. When the Bible speaks of God the Father, we would know the term in relation to God but we would have no idea of its meaning. I think the same is true with words like glory, majesty, power, divine nature, beauty, and goodness. We know the terms and we know they are about God but we don’t have our imaginations properly informed so that we can give them their proper meaning. I believe that Paul states in Romans 1:20 that it is creation that gives these terms their meaning… “invisible things clearly seen”.

    Christopher Leavell

    April 1, 2011 at 23:52

  3. I think that I am right there with you. It really takes both minds equipped with the truth and imaginations focused on the works of God to worship with the whole of man. One may be able to have the truth in his mind, but have his imaginations limited because he is not seeing the works of God in creation. The flip side is true as well. One may be having his imaginations fueled by the works of God in creation, but not measured by the truth of God in Revelation. Both are deficient. One in truth and the other in imagination. The truth of God is fleshed out in the works of God, and our worship will reflect deficiencies in either or both. Hence the importance of seeing God in the Word and God in His works. Maybe I could go as far as to say that the truth of God in the Word elicits true worship only as we are seeing those truths manifest in the Works of God.

    Wish that we could have this discussion over a good cup of coffee in the woods. Great post.

    Jason Ehmann

    April 2, 2011 at 00:26

  4. Thanks… How about an ice tea in the desert?
    Stay warm up there.

    Christopher Leavell

    April 2, 2011 at 06:46

  5. Sounds good to me. Would love to get down there sometime soon.

    Jason Ehmann

    April 2, 2011 at 22:51


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