lunes, 30 de noviembre de 2015

Christians Losing "Home-Field" advantage!!!...El Enemigo ya esta adentro!!!...Where to buy if you are a Christian?

Christians Losing 'Home-Field Advantage' as US Reels from Political and Religious Polarization


By John Stonestreet | November 30, 2015 | 12:19 PM EST

A billboard erected by atheists in Oklahoma City reads "Don't believe in God? Join the club." (AP Photo)
Polarization is not just evident in American politics; it’s also evident when it comes to religion. And the two are intensifying.
When it comes to faith, times in America are changing. In fact, in many ways, they’ve already changed. Just ask Ed Stetzer, the executive director of LifeWay Research and my co-host for “BreakPoint This Week.” Commenting on a recent Pew Research Center report, Ed told the Washington Post, “America is undergoing a religious polarization.”
Indeed. According to Pew, “the percentage of adults … who describe themselves as Christians has dropped by nearly eight percentage points in just seven years. And the percentage of Americans who describe themselves as atheist, agnostic or ‘nothing in particular,’ has jumped more than six points.
And on the other hand, we’re seeing an increase of those who are serious about their faith when it comes to spiritual disciplines and activities: higher levels of at least weekly Bible reading, participating in weekly prayer or Bible study groups, sharing faith with others at least weekly. So, as Christianity Today reported, “The rich in faith get richer while the poor get poorer.”
Stetzer sees several implications of this religious polarization. First, he says, Christians no longer have what he calls a “home-field advantage” in American culture.
“For years,” Ed states, “Christians could assume a person with whom they struck up a conversation was probably a fellow believer. If not, the other person would at least share their cultural values. But that is no longer the case. Increasingly, Americans are just as likely to have no faith background, be of another religion or even hold a hostile view of faith. That’s new territory for most Christians.”
Second, Ed says, we “have lost cultural privilege.” Gone are the days when most stores were closed on Sundays, or schools cleared their schedules on Wednesday nights so that families could go to prayer meetings. But Ed says, that’s not all bad. “Historically,” he writes, “Christians have survived—and thrived—as a passionate and convictional minority.”
The third implication, Ed says, it will be easier to tell who is a Christian and who isn’t.  More and more people are facing life without God and without the hope—and they know it. In some ways, that makes the task easier on us. Our mission, Ed reminds us, is “not to moralize the unconverted, but to reach the broken and hurting with a gospel message of hope that changes everything.”
So what can we do to bridge the polarization gap? First, we need to be among those Christians who are sharing the good news with our neighbors. The Lord has planted us in this culture, in our neighborhoods, families, and places of employment, and communities. A great resource to help us confidently reach out to our lost friends and neighbors  is one that we’ve told you about before—“The Sacrament of Evangelism,” by Jerry Root and our own Stan Guthrie. “The Sacrament of Evangelism” helps Christians come alongside hurting people with gospel hope, and encourages them to see Jesus as the answer to their longings—longings that secularism will never satisfy.
Second, we’ve got to get serious about worldview. That’s exactly why the Colson Center and BreakPoint are here. As J. Gresham Machen said more than a hundred years ago, “We may preach with all the fervor of a reformer, and yet succeed only in winning a straggler here and there, if we permit the whole collective thought of the nation or of the world to be controlled by ideas which, by the resistless force of logic, prevent Christianity from being regarded as anything more than a harmless delusion.”
So we cannot underestimate the significance of the world of ideas, and their consequences if we are going to be able to live well in this culture. It’s always been important, but as we’ve gone from what Chuck Colson and Francis Schaeffer called a “post-Christian culture” to what I think we can safely call “a consciously post-Christian culture,” it’s even more important.
Ed Stetzer and I talk more about this study and what we can do as the Church on "BreakPoint This Week." Come to BreakPoint.org, and click on the link for “This Week” to listen.
John Stonestreet is President of The Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview and BreakPoint co-host.
Editor's Note: This piece was originally published by BreakPoint.

 Wayuu Bags

El enemigo de la sociedad abierta está dentro

Ataque Paris Nov 2015La sociedad abierta occidental tiene a sus enemigos dentro. Puede y debe ir a buscarlos a los remotos desiertos desde los que se les influye y alienta, pero los enemigos viven en los barrios y ciudades que rodean París, Londres, Bruselas, Amsterdam o Barcelona. En lo que llevamos de año ya por dos veces han hecho correr mucha sangre por las calles de París, asesinando a muchos inocentes –todas las víctimas de todos los terrorismos son por definición inocentes-, no por un puro impulso asesino, sino para infundir terror y de este modo someter a todos los occidentales.
Bruce Bawer describió perfectamente en Mientras Europa duerme su estupefacción cuando, al cruzar equivocadamente el puente sobre uno de los canales de Amsterdam, se encontró súbitamente en medio de una ciudad musulmana, regida por la ley islámica y declaradamente enemiga de los valores de la sociedad abierta occidental.
Hay muchos barrios y ciudades en Europa como el bruselense de Molenbeek. Europa ha consentido e incluso ha alentado que millones de personas vivan bajo una ley distinta dentro del territorio europeo. Un poder con fuerza de obligar que no nace del consentimiento, sino del origen étnico o religioso de las personas. El multiculturalismo políticamente correcto ha condenado a millones de musulmanes europeos a vivir sometidos a la sharia, en nombre de un respeto a la diversidad entendido al revés de como es propio de una sociedad fundada en la idea de libertad individual.
Giovanni Sartori lo explicó hace ya casi dos décadas en La sociedad multiétnica. Pluralismo, multiculturalismo y extranjeros, al rechazar el concepto político de multiculturalismo y oponer en su lugar el de pluralismo. En una sociedad pluralista cada persona se comporta como libremente elige, dentro de un marco de reglas jurídicas iguales para todos. Su opuesto, en cambio, confunde el respeto a la diferencia con la admisión de una sociedad escindida en grupos diferentes y enfrentados, a los cuales se les permite autoimponerse normas jurídicas diferentes a las del resto.
Europa tiene ahora el fruto de su debilidad. Ha renunciado a creer en sí misma y en los valores occidentales. Ha permitido que los enemigos de la sociedad abierta, como la describía Karl Popper, adquieran la certeza de que nadie va a salir a defenderse de verdad. La mayoría de los europeos ya ni siquiera creen que haya que defenderse. Ni tampoco quieren ver que el fanatismo que está ante sus ojos y que dispara cuando quiere, es real y no es una exageración episódica de un puñado de lunáticos.
Aux armes, citoyens (A las armas, ciudadanos), dice La Marsellesa. Muchos europeos la han cantado en estas semanas, en reacción a la terrible matanza islamista. Lo malo es que casi nadie en Europa piensa de verdad que su libertad valga tanto la pena como para tomarse el trabajo de defenderla.

Posted in ActualidadAnálisisAsuntos internacionalesEstudiosEuropaLibertad humanaOpiniónPensamiento PolíticoSeguridadSociedad civilTerrorismo

Linda Harvey: Anti-Gay Activists Are Running Out Of Places To Shop!

In her WorldNetDaily column yesterday, Mission America’s Linda Harvey lamented that Religious Right activists like herself who boycott pro-LGBT businesses are running out of places to shop.
“Well, it’s that time again — time to get out the Christmas list and start hitting the stores,” she wrote. “The problem is — what stores? For any Christian who wants to spend hard-earned dollars with family-friendly, Christian-affirming retailers, restaurants and service providers, the list is growing shorter all the time.”
Harvey urged readers to avoid stores such as Macy’s, Target, Walmart and JC Penney, along with items from Mattel, Levi-Strauss and General Mills. For online shoppers, Harvey said that Amazon, Google and Facebook should also be off-limits.
Companies that post high scores on the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index, Harvey wrote, are joining “Satan’s Office Party” and “the nation’s leading self-declared enemies of Christians.”
While this may be difficult, Harvey hopes that LGBT rights opponents remember the risks of adopting “anti-American, pro-deviance legislation” supported by these companies and think “about the grave harm homosexuality is doing to American culture, to our schools, to our freedoms, to our churches.”
For companies go to: 
- See more at: http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/linda-harvey-anti-gay-activists-are-running-out-places-shop#sthash.sb0oBcSY.dpuf

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