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(This is a continuation of Zombie Religion and McGospel Salvation: So easy a dead man can do it., which you can read by clicking here.)

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Like any good network marketer or pyramid scheme advocate, the wise American Churchianity religionist knows that the last thing you want to do in the process of courting a potential convert is tell them anything that might make them feel bad about anything – especially about themselves.

With that being Rule #1 in purpose-driven zombie evangelism, anything remotely resembling the true Gospel of Christ simply must go. It has no place.

Pizza, on the other hand…now that’s a whole ‘nother story.

This pizza-over-Gospel approach really does make perfect sense from a purpose-driven perspective. Remember: All unrepentant, rebellious men and women are born at war with God. They hate what He loves and love what He hates. They love the flesh and hate His Spirit. They are zombies.

Since the things that appeal to zombies are always distinct from the whole, undiluted Gospel of Jesus Christ, so too then must the evangelical call of American Churchianity also be clear in its separation from the whole, undiluted Gospel of Jesus Christ – at least if the church wishes to keep those numbers growing…and it does…above all else.

Numbers are the standard. Popularity the goal. Zombie-appeal is everything.

Church growth has become measured in entirely pagan terms. It’s more than content with professions of faith (without expecting a changed life) and pledges of membership (without expecting regular attendance), so long as those precious, all-important numbers are there.

The ledger is everything.

Numbers are clearly one of the great idols of the present American church age.

Quantity has completely eclipsed quality in the purpose-driven, man-centered mind of American religious leadership, precisely because the quality standards associated with actual biblical evangelism and Christianity, as defined and explicitly recorded in Scripture, are quite literally unknown and unknowable to zombies – all zombies – be they in the streets, in the pews, or in leadership positions within the organizational machinery of American Christianity.

And make no mistake, zombies most certainly permeate all three locations – all by design and, in most cases, to the sheer joy of religious leaders.

After all, leadership has a vested interest in preserving the empire it worked so hard to build, and, in order to keep this train a-rolling, the flesh must be fed.

This sort of thing is nothing new; it’s happened many times before. It’s the norm in human history.

It’s just what fallen men do.

It’s the natural, predictable outcome of zombies playing religion.

From the first century Christian church to today, all zombie religion roads lead, in some form or fashion, to and through one place, conceptually if not literally.

That place is Rome..

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When in Rome

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“All that we call human history–money, poverty, ambition, war, prostitution, classes, empires, slavery–[is] the long terrible story of man trying to find something other than God which will make him happy.”

C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity

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“Man’s nature, so to speak, is a perpetual factory of idols.”

John Calvin

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Zombie religion is, has always been, and will always be, about man.

Man’s desires, man’s goals, man’s concerns, man’s needs, man’s wants, man’s rules, man’s systems, man’s standards…man, man, man. Ultimately, zombie religion aims to appease man’s conscience by pleasing God just enough to gain His favor using man’s standards of goodness through man-made systems and practices, commonly known as religion.

This was true when Jesus lived in Palestine during His earthly ministry and He made war on the dominant religion of the day. It was true when God raised the German Monk Martin Luther roughly 1,500 years later so that he might lead the Reformation against apostate religion that was dominating the world at that time. And it is most certainly true today in the age of American Churchianity.

Practically every protestant denomination in America has adopted a very Roman – in the Roman Catholic sense – notion of who God is, who man is, how salvation works, and what it produces when it does work.

And the supposed Protestants most likely to exhibit this modern day subliminal shift toward Romanism are the common folks who make up the bulk of most congregations – the moms, pops, and kids who occasionally warm the back pews and came in the first place for the programs, socializing, and pizza.

They are theologically casual at best. In large part because church leadership is more than happy to simply tell them what to think, as opposed to insisting that they learn how to search Scripture themselves.

They are practically indistinguishable from the world. This because, even if they’ve claimed membership and done the “get saved” thing, they are, in fact, unconverted. They live like the world, think like the world, love what the world loves, and hate what the world hates.

[Tweet “Most American protestants live like the world, think like the world, love what the world loves, and hate what the world hates.”]

And they just know they’re saved.

Why?

Because their church Father – I mean, Pastor – told them so. They barely, if ever, read their Bible, and feel no need to do so. They have little or no interest in right theology or doctrine. They are happy to go with the flow of the world. And they are depending on what their church father/pastor/system has told them in order to perpetuate the self-delusion of their own salvation.

It’s hard to get more Roman than that.

And it is this very Roman environment that permeates every aspect of the American Churchianity presentation. Whether first or fiftieth time “visitor”, the potential convert has the central tenants of this particular spin on zombie religion reinforced at every turn. The man-centeredness of it all is emphasized again and again as Flu Shot Jesus waits for his grand entry at the end of the show. Several critical elements of the pre-game show are perfected and deployed to aid in setting the seeker-sensitive stage, tone, and vibe, including:

With the seeker sensitive stage and mood set, it’s showtime!

Ideally, an empathetic, charismatic pastor/preacher will present a touching, emotion-driven “sermon” dealing little with biblical truth in context and much with the felt needs of hard core Oprah and Dr. Phil fans. He/she will weave a tale that finally centers on how badly Jesus just wants to be allowed to give you everything that your little heart desires and if you’ll just say yes to him, that’s exactly what he’ll do. Everything from financial peace to physical health to relationship restoration can be yours…

…but wait, there’s more!

Much more!

The biggie – the one ginormous mega gift that this Jesus guy is just begging to give you – is the promise of a secure eternity. That’s right, Heaven can be yours. And all you have to do is say one…little…prayer…

It’ll just take two minutes, tops, so don’t sweat it.

And you won’t have to sweat anything after those two minutes are properly spent, so how can you resist?!

I mean, it’s like: Free Heaven!

That one’s pretty much a no-brainer for the garden variety American zombie.

So there you have it – another fish-in-the-barrel easy score for Pastor Feelgood and the McGospel Product of American Churchianity, another zombie expecting Heaven but destined for Hell, and another tallied member for the Church of the Living Dead.

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The above piece is an excerpt from the book Apathetic Christianity: The Zombie Religion of American Churchianity.

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Please see also:

The (church built) Zombie Apocalypse is upon us…

Waging War on the Church of the Living Dead

Zombie Religion and McGospel Salvation: So easy a dead man can do it.

7 Empowering Truths for Politically Active Christians

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© 2014 Scott Alan Buss – All Rights Reserved.

 

One Response

  1. Don't forget "never question your salvation" (in direct contradiction to Paul's admonition to test whether we are in the faith or not in 2 Corinthians 13).

    This article has brought to mind something I haven't thought of before, and that is that many emphasize God's free gift of salvation in Romans 6:23, but not Jesus' command given all who would want to follow Him, that they must deny themselves, take up their cross, and follow Him. Easy believism, yes, costly discipleship, not so much.

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