OVERVIEW OF THE
CULTURE WAR FOR SOUTH AFRICA
Sometimes it is helpful to step back from the short term skirmishes and
look at what is happening locally, internationally and on a generational time
scale - many Christians seem clueless, fighting badly or even fighting on the
wrong side of the culture war.
In the 1980s, we had a four way cut-throat fight in South Africa . Marxism, National Socialism, Christianity and
Liberalism competed for dominance. At
the time, the two most powerful seemed Marxism and National Socialism
(Apartheid). Marxism and National
Socialism both collapsed in the early 1990s, leaving the fight to Christianity
versus Liberalism. While the African
Nationalist brand of Marxism and National Socialism (Apartheid) were supposed
enemies, they had a lot in common: Both drew on ethnic support and both
believed in an 'super powerful state' to solve all problems. The fall of the Soviet
Union took away South African Marxists funding, arms, their
inspiration and training. It also
removed the main argument used by the apartheid government to stay in
power. Liberals, who were a small
minority at the time except in academia, seized the power vacuum and gained key
positions in government, the judiciary and the official opposition.
In the early 1990s, most Christians viewed their faith as a personal or
church matter and were poorly equipped to engage culturally. After decades of international isolation due
to apartheid, they were unprepared for the tidal wave of liberalism arriving
from the West. Liberalism was boosted by
the media and an influx of foreign money to fund liberal lobby groups that push
agendas like abortion, pornography, condoms in schools and prostitution. Two exceptions were however Community Radio
and Education. Christians took the
initiative to start up radio stations, home school children, start private
schools and serve on school governing bodies – successfully wresting power from
the state, with Christian lobby groups defending their right to do so. While
state control of pornography was lost, most shops stopped stocking it due to
consumer pressure. Had we not won these
key battlegrounds, South Africa
would probably already be in a state like Europe . Instead of South
Africa being taken over by Marxism, South African
missionaries penetrated every part of the former Soviet Union and its allies
with the gospel – most significantly our neighbour Mozambique . Namibia , instead of going Marxist
as feared, kept the Christian laws and got rid of the bad laws of the Old South
Africa.
What happened to the Church in the 1990s? The Protestant mainline
denominations allowed their ministers to be trained at state funded
universities – which all except for NorthWest went liberal. Disastrously, these denominations are now
liberal dominated. But liberalism itself
had its own revolution – moving from Modernist denial of the supernatural to
Post-modernism. Most church growth was
within the Charismatic oriented Churches – which began as a supernaturalist
rival to Modernism within the Mainline denominations, but these left to form
their own churches – leaving most of Protestantism to the liberals. A minority of Protestant churches, mostly
English Calvinists, who did not rely on Universities for training pastors
maintained a modest but steady growth.
Afrikaans Calvinist Churches relied on state funded universities for
pastors, and mostly went liberal. The
new Charismatic churches rapidly absorbed the youth of the liberal
denominations, but in many cases were hijacked by personality cults.
In the mid-2000’s many evangelical churches began to try to adapt to the
changing culture to attract youth – first the seeker sensitive movement,
followed by the postmodern movement – which took things a step further. Many young pastors didn’t know where to stop
in accommodating culture – and ended up with a loss of quality in holiness
truth in favour of entertaining the masses.
The result was short term unhealthy growth, followed by long term stagnation. Spiritual decline is eventually followed by
numerical decline. The Postmodern
movement, unlike Modernist liberalism was open to the supernatural and thus
could penetrate Charismatic churches, albeit with a false spirituality. A few
Charismatic pastors studied for degrees at liberal universities and ended up
liberal themselves – no one is immune.
Positively, the 2000s saw a surge of interest in prayer, with prayer
rallies filling major stadiums. Unfortunately,
when these got really big, the focus moved off repenting and seeking God for
revival and church leadership politics and the media limelight.
Internationally, Western liberalism followed the decline described in
the Bible in Romans chapter 1. Ironically,
the ex-Marxist nations have not. Each
year, more depraved laws and entertainment come from Europe and America and
South African liberals in and outside the church march lockstep following these
fads. In the mid 2010s (now), Western
postmodern liberalism shifted from individual rights emphasis to fascist
‘political correctness’ – attempting to bulldoze away Christian religious
freedom, attacking us by any means possible. This trend naturally arrived at South Africa
– most aggressively led by gender and sexuality revolutionary activists.
But at the same time the West is declining, our cold war enemy China , which
had around a million Christians in the 1970s, now has around 100 million,
outnumbering communist party members. It
is a matter of time, before this translates into political change. Central Africa, once called the Dark Continent – and predicted by Christians a hundred
years ago to become Islamic - is being cited even by liberal scholars as ‘The
Next Christendom’.
WHAT ARE THE LESSONS?
* We must realise there is a culture war on and help other Christians to
do so. Some haven’t got that far yet. Some haven’t even realised the Bible has
anything to say about culture or if they do, that we have any hope of changing
it.
* We must protect the church from becoming corrupt by:
- Keeping pastor training in church control and out of state control. We need men full of the Word of God. Degrees are optional.
- Realising every Christian denominational grouping is vulnerable to
corruption.
- Maintaining biblical checks and balances, realising the sinfulness of
human nature, to prevent fascist personality cults and cartels governing the
church.
- Church adapting to culture in
every generation is necessary but must be done carefully, lest we absorb
cultural corruption.
- Aiming for healthy church growth through spiritual revival rather than
through cultural adaption.
- Keeping the focus on seeking God for spiritual revival.
* We are in an international fight – for the whole world.
- Our modest investment in missions has had a huge return in other
nations.
- Bad ideas from overseas tend to come to South Africa and we have to fight
them as they arrive. We need thus to
watch overseas trends and learn from Christians there fighting these battles
before us.
* The successes in schools, shops and community radio should be an
encouragement that we can substantially influence the culture.
* We have to fight for our freedoms, otherwise we will become just a
persecuted minority.
* While Western liberalism seems powerful in the 2010s, so did Marxism
and National Socialist apartheid in the 1980s.
Liberalism doesn’t have to be the future. Our enemies are not invincible.