Welfare Christianity

By Robert

Today’s article is taken from the best selling business book, “Good to Great.” It may challenge your thinking and theology. However, I believe there is a huge key here to what keeps people from fulfilling their destinies.

Good to Great Quote

“The ‘leadership is the answer to everything’ perspective is the modern equivalent of the ‘God is the answer to everything’ perspective that held back our scientific understanding of the physical world in the Dark Ages. In the 1500s, people ascribed all events they did not understand to God. With the Enlightenment, we began the search for understanding – physics, chemistry, biology, and so forth. Similarly, every time we attribute everything to leadership, we are admitting our ignorance. Not that we should become leadership atheists (leadership does matter), but every time we throw our hands up in frustration – reverting back to, “Well, the answer must be leadership!” – we prevent ourselves from gaining deeper, more scientific understanding about what makes great companies tick.”

Hyper-Spirituality

It is so easy to be hyper-spiritual. We have some sort of problem and we make comments like, “God will just have to give me His grace here,” or “God will just have to do a miracle.” It is not that there is not some truth to these statements, but what about stewardship or personal responsibility? Think of it this way. Your teenage son is going to mow the lawn as he has done many times before and the mower won’t start. He responds, “Dad, fix it.” This is not much different than, “God will just have to come through (and fix whatever problem).” At some point, we expect our teen to take a little personal responsibility, be a little proactive and problem solve. Did he check and see if there’s gas, is the switch on, does it smell flooded?

Depravity versus Treasure

We have this idea, based on a Calvinistic man’s a worm theology that says, “I can do nothing,” “in me is no good thing,” “it is only by God’s grace,” “that unless God comes through we are helpless.” God has invested in most of us many skills, understanding, faith and experiences. At some point He expects us to step up and do some problem solving, use our faith, apply some prayer, and look for some scriptural principles to apply. The depravity of man is a real doctrine, however, it is also true that God invests His treasure in us and He expects a return on His investment.

Comments

  1. Fount Shults says:

    Thanks Robert. These thoughts are along the same lines I have been thinking.

  2. Linda says:

    Thanks for the spiritual 2×4!

    I often reflect on a similar teaching by Jack Frost: ‘life is 1 part spirit, 1 part natural. Pray for spiritual help in things you can’t do, and do all you can using God’s gifts to accomplish what you can do in the natural’

    I believe Jack was referring to battles with addictions and behaviors where sometimes we just need to “say no” (from gossip to drugs) and pray for spiritual help.

    Thanks for your very practical reminder of this spiritual/natural principle!

  3. Randy Peck says:

    Hi Robert,

    Thank you for sharing this powerful message. I agree that stewardship and personal responsibility are extremely important. Each of us makes choices every day to oversee what God has entrusted to us.

    Many blessings to you and Cindi!

    Randy
    “Blessed to be a blessing”
    THE CONNECTOR and The Journal Guy

Speak Your Mind

*