After the Reformation, the new Humanism that changed our contemplation of God as the creator, and focused our attention to God’s creation, not to praise Him, rather, to doubt Him, then attacked Christianity. With the Enlightenment, humanity seemed to have grown up, and did not need the out of fashion belief of a powerful and all loving God, and of Jesus. Those who held such views were seen as to hold back progress. Voltaire, the great French Revolutionist, predicted that in 100 years, the Bible would be no “forgotten and eliminated”. In the last century, Time magazine had an issue in which it declared God as dead, on April 8, 1966. And of lately, there’s a group within Christianity, the Emergent Church, that calls for Christianity to die in order to survive.
There seems to be a fascination with the death of Christianity. I think it is because that while Christians exists, they will be a reminder that Jesus is the Lord of all, and that the world needs a saviour. Although the world may wish for the demise of God’s people, we hold on to Jesus’ promise, Mat. 16: 18 “And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it. “
Luis A. Jovel
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