The RenewaNation Review 2019 Volume 11 Issue 2 | Page 10

By John Stonestreet Worldview Work Isn’t Optional: We Were Saved to Be Truly Human Some are saying that Christians have lost the culture. But what if it was never a war to win, instead it was a calling to embrace? IF THERE is an overarching theme for BreakPoint— starting with Chuck Colson and now with Eric Metaxas and me—it’s culture. Specifically, how Christians can understand it, engage it, confront it, even restore it— through the clarity of a Christian worldview. As Brett Kunkle and I explain in our book, A Practical Guide to Culture, what we mean by culture is not some mysterious thing cloistered in art museums. No, culture is the sum of everything we as human beings create, write, say, do, and think—the marks we leave on our world. In that sense, “engaging the culture” isn’t really optional. It’s human. It’s as much a part of being alive as breathing is. We don’t decide whether we’ll engage the culture. Just how. I say this because lately, a few people have suggested that Christian efforts in the culture have failed. One gentleman recently wrote me saying that worldview-style training like the kind we do in our Colson Fellows Program or at Summit Ministries or other places like that just hasn’t worked. We’re losing the next generation, he said, and mainstream culture is as dark as ever. 10 But I want to push back against this idea, at least on a couple of fronts. First, it just isn’t true! You can’t convince me that the work of people like Francis Schaeffer, Chuck Colson, David Noebel, or the work of groups like Summit Ministries or the Colson Center, teaching Christians how to approach culture from a Christian worldview, hasn’t made a difference. I’ve seen young faces light up when they get this Christianity thing for the first time, realizing it’s true, and that faith relates to culture. I’ve seen too many to believe that it hasn’t made an impact. I was one of those faces in 1994 thanks to Bill Brown and Gary Phillips. And stats back me up on this. Far from the doom and gloom we often hear in the media, and from Christian sources, the Church isn’t collapsing in America. In fact, evangelicals have one of the highest retention rates of their young people of any Christian group. And to say that “worldview hasn’t worked” is to ignore the incredible inroads made in the academy in our life- time. Consider that the entire discipline of philosophy was flipped on its head in the late 20th century by people like