Often times, Christians seem to be full of doom and gloom about the future. Ironically, since I am someone who suffers from clinical depression, I am really optimistic about the future, and for the most part I’ve always been.
I think it is ultimately because Christianity is a religion of hope. Even when I feel down, I can never abandon the fact that there is a ray of hope for me. And when I am not feeling down, it is so obvious that I find content.
Contrast that with the pictures we see out of the Middle East now, as the riots continue because of the Mohammed cartoons. I’ve read several pieces on the internet written by Christians who say that Christ has been depicted far worse in many cartoons. That, to me, is really beside the point. The point isn’t that our views have been mocked before, it’s that when they’ve been mocked the worst we do is write letters of complaint. Even the secularists in America are hard pressed to find a radical Christian who is violent towards others. Sure, they point to the abortion bombings–but that was what, three people? And when was the last abortion bombing?
Contrast that with the thousands of people rioting in the streets across many countries in the Middle East, threatening death. Their threats are not idle, as they’ve already proven that they have no problem murdering innocent people for political gain. The difference is, indeed, vast.
Naturally, someone might ask me why I still remain optimistic then, if these Muslims exist in the world. Frankly, it’s because the Muslims are showing their true colors right now. The “religion of peace” is anything but peaceful, and it’s on display for the whole world to see. On the other hand, the secularist regimes who are provoking this response are likewise demonstrating that they are intolerant and intellectually elitists snobs. This, too, is out for the world to see.
While this, of course, is a relatively new thing, it only underpins the things that I have felt for a long time. I think that God is moving in America. He is either bringing about a Reformation, or He is going to bring about our downfall–but in either way, Christianity will advance. And honestly, of the two options, I really think that Christianity is very close to another Reformation, something akin to the Great Awakening.Â
Do I have proof for this beyond a feeling? Well, nothing concrete. But crime statistics are mostly down, as are teen pregnancies and drug use. These sorts of things give us a general barometer of the culture (although one cannot make dogmatic claims based on them, naturally). I don’t think there will necessarily be an immediate shift, but perhaps in the next ten or twenty years (as, to put it bluntly, the Baby Boomers start to die off, along with their attitudes cultivated during the 60s), our culture will gradually improve even more.
Could it be a pipe dream? Yes. But could it really happen? That too is yes.