WHAT IF SATAN CONTROLLED ATHENS?


What do you think a city would like if Satan took control of it?  Although it is pure speculation, I think that if Satan took control of Athens, Tennessee, all of the bars would close, pornography would be banished and the streets would be filled with happy people who smiled and greeted each other pleasantly.  There would be no swearing, children would pray non-sectarian prayers in the schools, say “yes sir” and “no ma’am,” and the churches would be filled to capacity every Sunday!

These churches would preach morality, pietism and strong “family values.”  There would be an emphasis on patriotism, warnings about liberalism and above all, the sermon would be relevant.  What would be missing would be a crucified, resurrected Christ who came to save sinners from the wrath of a holy God.

Satan is known by many titles in the Bible, two of them are “a roaring lion” and a “transforming angel of light.”  In 21st century America I think he is far more dangerous as the latter rather than the former.  He is much easier to recognize when he is being sinister than when he is being subtle.

Survey after survey shows that millions of Americans believe that God exists for the pleasure of humankind.  He is in heaven solely for our benefit and utility.

Eighty-two percent of Americans (and a majority of evangelicals) believe that Benjamin Franklin’s aphorism, “God helps those who help themselves,” is a biblical quotation.  A majority believe that “all people pray to the same god or spirit, no matter what name they use for that spiritual being” and that “if a person is generally good or does enough good things for others during their life, they will earn a place in heaven.”‘

It should not surprise us, then, when former President Bush said in an interview some years ago, “I believe that all the world, whether they be Muslim, Christian, or any other religion, prays to the same God.  That’s what I believe.”

The well known pollster George Barna says,

“…the spirituality of America is Christian in name only….We desire experience more than knowledge.  We prefer choices to absolutes.  We embrace preferences rather than truths. We seek comfort rather than growth. Faith must come on our terms or we reject it. We have enthroned ourselves as the final arbiters of righteousness, the ultimate rulers of our own experience and destiny. We are the Pharisees of the new millennium.”

We must be vigilant that we do not replace the gospel of Jesus Christ with a pietism that makes men moral but does not save them “…from the wrath to come.”

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