Here is a book that is well worth
reading, written by Brad Bright, the youngest son of the late
Bill Bright. In 1989, after a variety of work experiences, Brad
joined the Campus Crusade for Christ staff and now resides in
Orlando, Florida. You will appreciate his brief overview of
today’s culture. Bright’s thesis is simple - the issue today is
God and everything else is symptomatic. He joins a host of
others who are critical of the church for failing to communicate
how to know God and who He is; however, he does not advocate
abandoning the church. Rather, he challenges the church to equip
members to know the Word and to understand the world. He says,
“When a person desires to become a member of a local church, we
should seek to ensure a biblical understanding of who God really
is.” He observes that often. There is a good emphasis on
doctrine in preparing people for membership in the church.
However, it is easy for God and His character to be
shortchanged.
With all the good things that
evangelicals and the church are doing, Bright contends that our
impact on the world around us will only come as we focus on the
real issue—God. Everything else takes a back seat to that one
issue. Two good examples of the heart of the book follow: 1. “If
we want our children to behave as if there is a God, we must as
a culture teach them that there actually is a God. If we do not
teach it, they will not believe it. And, if they do not believe
it, they most certainly will not act like it.” 2. “We must take
every opportunity to educate them, as well as reeducate those
who have been marginalized by a system that portrays God as
irrelevant to real life.”
I appreciate Bright’s emphasis on
discipling God’s children with an intentional understanding of
who God is, which he maintains is the only way to “inoculate
them from the messages with which culture is going to bombard
them.”
Bright also challenges Christians
who are growing in their understanding of God and His character
to come together and develop a means of impacting the culture
around them. For Bright, God is the environment in which we live
and “if we continue to solely debate ‘behavior’ in the current
cultural vacuum of moral relativism, we cannot win the war.”
This book will appeal to church
leaders, family leaders, and individuals, especially the rising
generation. He echoes the idea that our focus should be on a
behavior that grows out of knowing God because that is the
issue.
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