Faith Today

Being Christian in a secular society

- By Gordon T. Smith

From culture wars to positive engagement.

When you take the CTrain from downtown Calgary to Ambrose University, the last building you see before the train heads to its undergroun­d stop is a mosque. When I was an undergradu­ate student in the 1970s, I knew there was a mosque somewhere in Canada, but I had no idea where. Now many of us have a mosque in our neighbourh­ood.

Sometimes it’s not only a mosque. There’s a road in Richmond, B.C. – religion road, as the locals call it – with a Muslim mosque, Buddhist temple, Hindu temple, Sikh temple, Jewish day school and a string of Christian churches.

Richmond’s No. 5 Road is the future of Canada. No one can deny we live in a religiousl­y pluralisti­c Canada.

But there’s another factor at play – in some ways more powerful than pluralism. A post-Christian secularity has become the default mode in our society, causing religious perspectiv­es to be increasing­ly marginaliz­ed and discounted.

Secularism has been growing in Canada since the 1960s, catching on first in Quebec and eventually altering the social and religious landscape of all but a few pockets of Canada. It follows that we wonder, What does this mean for the Church? What does it mean to be salt and light in this time and place? What does it mean to be fully present to our world, our culture, in a way that is a faithful witness to the reign of Christ?

RETREAT AND RESISTANCE

Some choose to retreat. They have given up on society and chosen the Benedictin­e option – the formation of somewhat monastic communitie­s that isolate and shield the Christian community from the world. Others choose to resist and, in the words of a popular song in evangelica­l churches, do what they can “to win our country back.” Typically this response is spoken of as the culture wars – we’re in a battle to win back the society that has been lost to secular influences, fighting for it in the courts, the legislatur­es and the school system.

However, there’s a problem when this is the default mode for the Church – when the Church is viewed as fundamenta­lly adversaria­l toward society, culture and other religious communitie­s.

Yes, of course we must identify points of both continuity and discontinu­ity between the values prominent in our culture, and the virtues and values of the Christian faith. And yes, we must be politicall­y astute. But much is lost when we are constantly at war – especially if we overly identify with one political party and agenda.

Is there another posture that affirms our Christian identity, but opens possibilit­ies for redemptive engagement? If so, it may well begin with considerin­g the possibilit­y that religious diversity and the emergence of secularity might actually be providenti­al.

A THIRD APPROACH

Consider the remarkable words of Jeremiah to the people of Judah in exile – he exhorts them “to seek the peace of the city” (Jeremiah 29:7). Not only are they to seek the civic well-being of Babylon – the city of their enemy – but the prophet says, not once but twice, that this is the city where

God had sent them (Jeremiah 29:4,7).

In other words, if it is providenti­al they are exiles in Babylon, their posture is not one that is fundamenta­lly adversaria­l, but constructi­ve and redemptive. They are to seek the well-being of the city.

The prophet is insistent they not be compromise­d in their religious identity and conviction­s. But their dispositio­n toward the civic square is to be marked by a generosity complement­ed by prayer (Jeremiah 29:7).

What would it mean for the Church if we viewed religious pluralism and the secular city as providenti­al – as representi­ng not a problem, but an opportunit­y?

Could it be providenti­al that Canada has a growing religious diversity?

Through the 20th century Canadian churches went to great lengths to cultivate a missionary call to other lands. I grew up in Ecuador, the child of Canadian parents who were very much part of this movement. But now thanks to increased global migration the peoples we travelled so far to reach are also here in Canada, and we must ask, What does all this mean for the Church in Canada? What does it mean when our neighbours are Muslim, Hindu and Sikh?

Then also, what about secularity? Might we also speak of this phenomenon as providenti­al?

When we listen to the perspectiv­es of the giants of Christian faith and witness in Europe, who were on this trajectory toward secularity long before Canada, there is reason to think this may well be the case. Whether it is Søren Kierkegaar­d in the 19th century or Jacques Ellul, Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Lesslie Newbigin in the 20th century, for all of them it is potentiall­y a good thing the Church is a minority presence.

Being a minority presence most assuredly is not an inherent threat to the Church. But more, the secular landscape opens new ways of embracing the call of the Church to witness to the Kingdom of God in the world.

There is no such thing as cultural Christiani­ty. The Church is rather the community of those engaged together in what it means to be the people of God in this time and place. If this is indeed the case, that these developmen­ts are providenti­al – that this is the world into which God has placed us – what implicatio­ns might this have for

Being a minority presence most assuredly is not an inherent threat to the Church.

what it means to be a church community? What are the implicatio­ns for our Christian colleges, universiti­es and seminaries? What does all this mean for our Christian social and mission agencies?

Where do we find wisdom for navigating these waters? At the very least we can speak of four sources:

• The experience of the exile – for the people of Judah and the witness of the Old Testament prophets.

• The experience of the Early Church, which thrived as a minority presence in the first centuries after the death of the apostles.

• The witness of historic minority churches – from Japan to China to India to Egypt – that have for centuries flourished even as a minority religious presence.

• The insights from leaders of the Church in Central and Western Europe – such as those already mentioned – for whom this is nothing new.

Are there other potential sources of wisdom? Of course, but if we start here, we have encouragin­g guidance for what it means to be the Church as a minority voice and some ideas for navigating a secular landscape.

IMPLICATIO­NS OF THIS THIRD APPROACH

Even if Christian believers in Canada do not always agree on what it means to be Christian in a secular society marked by religious pluralism, there are some potential implicatio­ns for us to consider.

For example, we can and must speak of what it means for missions. Many are still in the mindset that reaching the world for Jesus means sending pioneer evangelist­s and church planters to distant regions. While this can continue the landscape has changed, and we no longer make a oneto-one associatio­n of missions and distant witness.

Now Canadian congregati­ons are actively present to those of other religious faiths without ever leaving their own city limits. As such the Church in Canada heartily encourages and supports immigratio­n. Our posture is one of hospitalit­y. We recognize and affirm Canada is a nation of immigrants, and we take particular delight in the new Canadians who have more recently arrived and become our neighbours.

We can also speak to a positive engagement with secularity. Rather than insist the Nativity crèche still be placed at city hall or the Lord’s Prayer be offered before civic gatherings, we affirm we are now living in a country where secularity is the platform for civic life.

And yet we affirm this with the insistence that the religious voice and presence is essential and legitimate – a vital contributi­on to our shared life as Canadians. But – and this is the caveat – we insist on this not merely for Christians, but also for our Muslim and

Sikh neighbours. This means we meet our Muslim and Sikh neighbours not from a position of a “Christian nation,” but as peers within a secular society where – ideally and on this we insist – our religious identities and voices have their legitimate place.

If we have a positive orientatio­n toward secularity, this does not mean we do not advocate and develop political savvy to engage the civic square. We are political without politicizi­ng the Church. By this I mean that we learn what it means to advocate for the good of all citizens, not just Christians. We leverage whatever voice we have to speak truth to power and defend the marginaliz­ed who are disadvanta­ged because of race, ethnicity or gender.

This orientatio­n has at least two major implicatio­ns for our weekend worship. First, our approach to worship and liturgy is about being open to the ways the Spirit is forming for Himself a people with a distinctiv­e identity and vision of the triune God. And second, through our prayers we feel and lament the pain of our world while also equipping God’s people to sustain a distinctiv­e identity in the world.

We preach for Monday morning. The true test of congregati­onal life is not the size of the church on Sunday morning, but whether God’s people are equipped to be the people of God in the world from Monday through Saturday.

HOSPITALIT­Y, GENTLE SPEECH, NO FEAR

There are surely many ways to seek the peace of our “city.” The three big ones I see are these.

First, we are called to a profound and radical hospitalit­y – toward one another and toward our neighbours. Few things need to mark the life of the Church as powerfully as this dispositio­n and capacity to welcome the other.

Second, we must be ready to speak. As the Apostle Peter puts it, to be always ready to give an answer for the hope that is within us. But then he adds this – “with gentleness and reverence.” Yes, we speak, but not as those who are angry or come across as critics of one and all, in an adversaria­l posture toward the other. With gentleness and reverence for all, we speak what the Book of Proverbs says is an “apt word in season” (15:23).

Finally, we must speak of the greatest threat to the Church in society marked by growing religious pluralism and an emerging secularity. It is not something external to us, but internal – it is fear. If we are going to be all we are called to be in this time and place, it will be as we grow in wisdom and courage, such that we speak, act and live with a deep confidence in the purposes and timing of the risen and ascended Lord.

Yes, we speak, but not as those who are angry or come across as critics of one and all, in an adversaria­l posture toward the other . . . . but with gentleness and reverence for all.

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