This blog used to be called “TRUTH – Christ To A Post-Christian Culture (v. 3.0)” Even before that, it was called “Seeking the Truth”. I recently (in case you’re a new visitor or someone who spent hours wondering why the title had changed) re-titled it so it’s become “Christ To A Post-Christian Culture – Shifting Paradigms” Because I’m casting about desperately for content since the ill-conceived H. Jackson Brown fiasco, I decided to spend this post on the very inane ‘why I changed the title’ subject.
A very pessimistic young man once wrote in his journal ‘life is change’. In the years since I wrote it I’ve come to some pretty startling understandings about what it actually means, understandings which I hope that I can redeem from the culture that produced them and that you can receive as valid and worthwhile.
First – it qualifies nothing. Yes, life is change, and when I was thinking about it I was also reading Dan Simmons’ Endymion, and his messiah for the human race condensed her message to two words – choose again, which probably influenced my thinking at the time. I wanted to be concise in my understanding of the world. but that conciseness has been at the expense of a number of other things. So to simply say ‘life is change’ is simply saying that things need not affect you, nor need you take them as formative or destructive. This opens the doors to some very strange understandings.
Second – It alleviates one from the responsibility to try and effect change, because it nullifies causality, distancing oneself from it. Change happens, but what do you do about it? How is it started? Is it for the good or for the bad?
Lately, this belief has been coming back to haunt me. But I’m going to use it for good, now. Because life is change is also a very concise message of optimism. You’re never anywhere, or in anything for long, and that can be very liberating. I think of Tristran Thorne in Stardust, whose statement “I”m not a shopboy” is the rallying cry for taking the steps you need to take in order to effect that change. And to truly believe that life is change is to truly believe that the condition in which we find ourselves is not a permanent one.
And that brings me ’round to why I changed the title. “Paradigm’ means two things. First, a paradigm is an example that serves as a model or standard by which to measure. Secondly, it means a set of assumptions, concepts, values and practices that constitutes a way of viewing reality. These are very limited Wiktionary definitions, but their essence is important. I’ve given this blog the title “Christ to a Post Christian Culture – Shifting Paradigms” for two main reasons. First, it intimates that the message of Christ necessitates radical change. The assumptions by which we govern the world must be altered to have as their foundation the call to take up our cross daily, to come from labour and heavy drudgery and receive rest. The call to deny mother and father so that we might be counted worthy of Him, to count everything as loss that we might gain Christ. Yes, even the call to suffer and rejoice that we have been counted worthy to do so in his name. The call to do greater works than these. The call to go out in the world and make disciples of all men. We must demand of ourselves adherence to the new standard of Christ, by which we must measure all things.
Second, the understanding of shifting paradigms that I hold is that life is change for this reason – we are always in motion, at the physical, at the molecular, and at the spiritual levels. We are always in the movement of sanctification, we are always changing. But the object of that change must be Christ-likeness, and the fitting for the glory for which we hope. Thus to bring Christ to a post-Christian culture means that we must be so different as to be intolerable to a world that already tolerates so much. That we must be party to collapsing worldviews (even our own) and be there to preserve the hearts and minds of those who emerge afterwards. And finally, to bring Christ to a post-Christian culture means that we need to understand that everyone else is always moving, too. Or at least, always being moved.
Blessings;
Christ-bearer.