|
Roaring Lambs
Stop Complaining About the World and Start Engaging
It!
Bob Briner
From: Roaring Lambs (Zondervan, 1993)
Click here for a printer-friendly version of this article
Let’s face it.
Despite the fact that roughly 80 percent of Americans claim to
believe in Jesus as the Son of God, we’re not doing so hot.
Collectively, as the church of Jesus Christ – the church against
which the gates of hell shall not prevail – we’re struggling.
I can almost hear the chorus of
defense. What do you mean we’re struggling! Church attendance is
at its highest in decades. Look at all the big, active churches
we’ve built. Consider the tremendous contributions of Christian
television – networks that span the globe with the message of the
Gospel. And what about the church-based anti-abortion victories?
Why, we’ve gotten so strong that the president listens to us on this
and other issues.
The chorus continues.
Look at all the truly Christian
colleges and universities that are turning out graduates who go into
the world with the Gospel. And what about the Christian publishing
industry? Why, almost every community has a Christian bookstore
where people can buy Bibles and helpful Christian literature.
Okay, Bob, things might not be
perfect, but don’t blame the church.
Well, things are not even close
to being perfect and to a certain extent, I do blame the church.
For despite all the fancy buildings, sophisticated programs, and
highly visible presence, it is my contention that the church is
almost a nonentity when it comes to shaping culture. In the arts,
entertainment, media, education, and other culture-shaping venues of
our country, the church has abdicated its role as salt and light.
Culturally, we are lambs. Meek,
lowly, easily dismissed cuddly creatures that are fun to watch but
never a threat to the status quo.
It’s time for those lambs to
roar.
We don’t need to take the rap
that we’re just a bunch of do-gooders who need to be placed now and
then by highly publicized visits with the president or an occasional
feature story in the local newspaper on one of our many conventions
and crusades.
We don’t need to take the
palliatives from our leaders who tell us, “Don’t expect too much”
when we decide to get involved in positive, constructive ways in our
communities.
We don’t have to be satisfied
with a half-page religion section once a week when, in reality,
religion is so much more than an add-on feature to life.
We don’t have to sit back and
wring our hands at the way our culture is going down the drain.
We don’t have to be content with
a position on the sidelines when our Lord Himself has assigned us a
starting role on the winning team.
My point is really quite
simple. Look around you. Can you honestly say that Christian
influence is felt in Hollywood? That a Christian presence is
evident in the major art galleries and museums of our land? That
when you turn on the television you are aware of an underlying
foundation of Judeo-Christian values in that medium? That as you
pick up the morning newspaper you see objective (not favorable, just
objective) treatment of religion in your community? That when you
browse through the best-sellers at the airport bookstores you will
find even one novel written by an active, church-going, born-again
Christian?
Do you honestly believe that our
big churches and highly visible Christian leaders have brought about
a movement that is taken seriously in this country?
We feel we are making a
difference because we are so important to ourselves. We have
created a phenomenal subculture with our own media, entertainment,
educational system, and political hierarchy so that we have the
sense that we’re doing a lot. But what we’ve really done is create
a ghetto that is easily dismissed by the rest of society.
We need to reclaim the
territory, not in a triumphalistic sense, but out of a strong
conviction that this is where we belong. Our churches are growing.
Our colleges are full. Subscriptions and sales are up at our
magazine- and book-publishing companies. And our broadcast media
continue to bring our own music and teaching into our homes. In
short, our subculture is healthy. It doesn’t need more attention.
It’s the world that needs help.
It’s time for the lambs to roar.
What I’m calling for is a
radically different way of thinking about our world. Instead of
running from it, we need to rush into it. And instead of just
hanging around the fringes of our culture, we need to be right smack
dab in the middle of it.
Why not believe that one day the
most critically acclaimed director in Hollywood could be an active
Christian layman in his church? Why not hope that the Pulitzer
Prize for investigative reporting could go to a Christian journalist
on staff at a major daily newspaper? Is it really too much of a
stretch to think that a major exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art
could feature the works of an artist on staff at one of our fine
Christian colleges? Am I out of my mind to suggest that your son or
daughter could be the principal dancer for the Joffrey Ballet
Company, leading a weekly Bible study for other dancers in what was
once considered a profession that was morally bankrupt?
I don’t think so. In fact, I
believe it has been the pessimistic vision of the church that has
prevented generations of young people from venturing out into the
culture-shaping professions of our world. I’ve always wondered why
we could be so quick to sacrifice our children to become
missionaries but stand in the way of their becoming broadcast
journalists, film and television actors, photographers, and
painters. It’s almost as if we believe God is strong enough to take
care of his own only as long as they stay within the safety of the
Christian ghetto. And yet, the Bible gives us countless examples of
people, like Joseph, who no only served as an advisor to the
“president” of his day but also used that position to influence the
entire land.
Can’t we do that today?
Shouldn’t we be encouraging and equipping our sons and daughters to
become Josephs too?
I believe it’s not only possible
but absolutely necessary for Christians and Christian values to
become a vital element in the overall moral and cultural discourse
of our nation. Without our strategic involvement in the
culture-shaping arenas of art, entertainment, the media, education,
and the like, this nation simply cannot be the great and glorious
society it once was. If we are to be obedient to our Lord’s call to
go into all the world, we will begin reentering the fields that we
have fled.
Are you ready to roar?
From: Roaring Lambs: A Gentle
Plan to Radically Change Your World, © Zondervan Publishing
House, 1993. Used by permission.
Bob Briner was a sports agent
and media entrepreneur before turning his attention to writing. His
best-seller, Roaring Lambs, was a bold call to Christians to
stop complaining about the world and to start engaging it. The book
inspired thousands of evangelicals to do just that, especially in
the Christian music industry. Bob Briner died of cancer in 1999, but
his legacy lives on not just in books, but also in a CD called
Roaring Lambs, which features a wide range of talented Christian
artists.
|