Category: Worldview

  • Lynn with Friends: Shephen Mbewe I Part 2

    Lynn with Friends: Shephen Mbewe I Part 2

     

    This is the second conversation between Lynn and Shephen Mbewe about racism and Black Lives Matter. It is a deeply moving story of prejudice, rejection and violence at the hands of white people in white Rhodesia—all forgiven and the pain wiped away in one moment of humility and servant-hearted leadership.

    Shephen addresses the issues with painful stories, but no bitterness; as such, he is able to help me (Lynn) with my thinking, feeling and responding to the Black Lives Matter movement.




    **This is a personal facebook page and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

  • Lynn with Friends: Shephen Mbewe I Part 1

    Lynn with Friends: Shephen Mbewe I Part 1

     

    This is the first conversation between Lynn and Shephen Mbewe about racism and Black Lives Matter. It is a deeply moving story of prejudice, rejection and violence at the hands of white people in white Rhodesia—all forgiven and the pain wiped away in one moment of humility and servant-hearted leadership.

    Shephen addresses the issues with painful stories, but no bitterness; as such, he is able to help me (Lynn) with my thinking, feeling and responding to the Black Lives Matter movement.




    **This is a personal facebook page and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

  • We know what we are rejecting, but what do we Want?

    We know what we are rejecting, but what do we Want?

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    Occasionally, someone makes a statement that is so concise and profound that it warrants repeating—often.  Here’s one I heard recently:

    If you don’t do the right thing without coercion, then coercion will be required.

    (Here is a definition of coercion:  The action or practice of persuading someone to do something by using force or threats.)

    The man who said it was Rev. Dr. Kenneth J. Barnes, who was being interviewed by John Anderson, former Deputy Prime Minister of Australia. 

    It is worth watching! 

    The conversation was about business ethics, among other subjects, though the statement about coercion applies to all of life.  But what human being consistently does the right thing, especially as a child, without coercion?  There is no doubt that I required a lot of coercion as a child and well into my teen years!  Usually, the fear of unwanted consequences puts some limits on our otherwise rampant selfishness.

    Our human capacity to make choices is bent towards selfishness from the moment we arrive into this world, and it is the unenvious responsibility of parents to introduce enough coercion, or consequences, into the lives of children to bend them towards right choices and selflessness.  Every parent will know that this often feels like a constant and thankless task.

    Legalistic Compliance

    Even in early years, we discover that we can sometimes obey the exact commands we have been given, but still act out of selfishness.  We can be technically right in our efforts to evade consequences, but wrong in heart.

    As we grow older this ability becomes more sophisticated.  To illustrate, I live in a town where under-age drinking has been a problem for years.  Some of the pubs have a reputation for allowing young people to order drinks without proof of age, so it is not unusual for parents to order their teenagers to avoid those pubs.  More than one of the pubs has a “beer garden”.  So, a young man comes home about midnight, smelling of alcohol and his dad, who has waited up for his late appearance, asks the obvious question, “Have you been to the….pub?”, to which the teenager replies, “No!” His answer might be technically correct because he stayed in the beer garden, but he is still attempting to mislead his father.  Within his own definitions, the young man has complied with his dad’s order, but he has violated the intent.

    Dr. Kenneth Barnes, in his interview with John Anderson points out that few business schools at Universities teach ethics.  They used to, but now they teach compliance.  The idea underlying this shift in education will destroy the freedom and wealth that the economic system of Western nations has provided.  Many businesses no longer ask the question, “What is the right thing to do?”.  Rather, they hire clever lawyers to look for every loophole in the law in their search for more dominance in the market and more profit.

    Ethics are Essential

    Our system only works well, however, if free individuals act ethically.  They must often ask themselves the question, “What is the right thing to do here?”

    As commitment to ethical behaviour declines in our free nations, our system is nearing collapse.  Many young people are intensely aware of the rampant self-interests of many big businesses and are demanding that the capitalist system should be dismantled.  Is it the system that is wrong, or is it the individuals in it?

    As I write, the Black Lives Matter movement is dominating headlines.  I looked at the placards being carried by some of the protestors and they were large photos of Malcolm X and one of his more famous quotes: “You can’t have capitalism without racism”.  What are they saying?

    What Do We Want?

    They want a fair distribution of wealth.  But how could that happen?  The only approach being suggested now is for “the people” to own all the businesses.  That means government.  Does any government anywhere in modern history consistently run businesses well?  Our governments in Western nations are already extremely powerful, especially since they are the only authorities who have the right to use coercion, even deadly force.  Do the protestors and their mentors really want to give government more coercive power? 

    Lord Acton is the person credited with first saying, “Power corrupts; absolute power corrupts absolutely”.   Thoroughgoing socialism has been implemented many times in the last 100 years but to implement it, the socialist party in charge must take absolute power to itself.  In every case, the record of human rights violations speaks for itself.  Loss of freedoms comes first, then progressive poverty.

    Some people would say that China is completely different.  And that is true, in terms of economic development.  But the story is the same when human rights violations are considered.  Has the Chinese Communist Party succeeded in their objective of a more equal society?  Not at all.  The part is full of super-rich families, but hundreds of millions still live in poverty and oppression.

    The peaceful protesters in the streets of our cities and the violent mobs are all part of the same powerful statement of dissatisfaction with the status quo.  But what do they/we want?  Do we intend to destabilise our democracy and the regulated free market and replace it with a government that is empowered to seize wealth from businesses and private individuals and then redistribute it?  Do we really think that the concentration of power will turn out well?

    A Glimmer of Hope

    There is another hope—though it seems small at the moment.  At the most basic level, this is not a systemic problem, it is the collective result of the loss of ethical behaviour by individuals.  Changing the system won’t help, it will make things much worse.

    Let’s shift our focus from changing the system to reforming the system.  We want to keep the system that has brought more wealth and liberty to more people than anything in history.  But it must be reformed, or perhaps it is better to say redeemed.  That is usually a slow process because it consists of countless individuals experiencing a change of values and behaviour. But that is the only way forward.

    Government can’t change the values of individuals.  It can affect their behaviour with the threat of coercion, but we don’t want more of that!  Values are shaped in families, clubs, schools and, most of all, religious influence.  But not just any religion.

    Over 500 years ago a monk named Martin Luther “rediscovered God and changed the world”, as Eric Metaxas writes in his biography of Luther.  The forms of government and economics that grew from the Reformation proved to be the most desirable the world has ever known.  The flow of immigration over the past 200 years bears unarguable witness to that. 

    Christian, You Must Engage!

    Our struggling, hurting world can be redeemed.  It was the Biblical faith that first gave rise to the acknowledgment that all people are created equal.  It is time to proclaim it again.  It is time for Biblical Christians everywhere to re-examine the beauty and desirability of the truth they hold.  It’s time for business schools to teach ethics again, not just compliance.  It’s time for schools to extol the values of ethics and morality as taught and illustrated in the Bible. 

    If you are a Christian, BE BOLD!  Be kind.  Be generous.  Be compassionate.  Be honest.  Be transparent.  But, with all that, stand up and speak for what is right and expose what is wrong!

    There is a way forward, but we must all decide to engage.

    Lynn Green.

  • A Providential Dinner Date

    A Providential Dinner Date

    Photo by Lon Christensen on Unsplash

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    In the mid-1970s Loren and Darlene Cunningham were invited to take a few days to stay in a cabin in the beautiful setting of the big Cimarron Valley in Western Colorado.  Loren had been instrumental in helping my father to be given a property to steward as a YWAM centre, on which he then established a discipleship project for the many young people giving their lives to Jesus through YWAM teams in Southern California.

    While Loren and Darlene were there, Loren was given a very clear word from God about the nature of the Kingdom of God, and how the Gospel message and the Christian values encompassed in it, should be a transforming power for good in all of society.  He wrote down the ideas that God was putting in his spirit, and knew that it was a pivotal word, not just for him, but in due course for all of YWAM and, as it turned out, for the Body of Christ.

    Later he was in touch with Bill and Vonette Bright, who, as it happened, were also taking a break in Colorado just a short drive away. Loren and Darlene were delighted to have the opportunity to deepen fellowship with the Brights, so Loren put his notes in his pocket, and they drove to a nearby valley to have dinner together.

    Later in the evening just as Loren reached for the paper,  Bill Bright began to tell him about how God had spoken to him regarding different parts of society and how the Gospel was relevant to all of them.  He also had a list, and it was virtually identical to Loren’s list.  They knew God was speaking to them, though at the time they didn’t have the language we use now.  Loren recognised that these seven areas were the arenas in which our thinking is shaped.  So for a time he called them the “mind-moulders”.  Others called them “the mountains”, but more widely now in YWAM we call them the “spheres of society”.   Both Bill and Loren agreed that there were seven spheres.

    They are family, religion, education, economics, government, media and celebration (which includes the arts, entertainment and sports).

    Historical Blindness

    At that time, Protestant Christian faith, and especially Evangelicals, had been pushed out of the main public square and into the margins of public life.  It was widely accepted that religion was a private matter and not a subject for public discourse.  However, it was obvious to anyone who read a bit of American or Northern European history that Christian thinkers had articulated the biblical values that undergird the Western world of accountable government and personal freedom.  But, it seems that a great blindness had settled on our nations and the values of biblical Christianity had been marginalised.  By the 1970s it was clear that those values which had provided freedom and prosperity were being eroded and Christians, especially strongly Bible-believing Christians, had no voice.

    A New, Global University

    Within two or three years of Loren receiving that word about the seven spheres, it was clear that training in Youth With A Mission was spreading widely and at an exponential rate.  Within that context, Loren Cunningham felt that God had spoken to him again, and that YWAM training was, at that stage, the beginnings of a global university.  I was one of about 30 YWAM leaders from around the world who gathered for a strategy conference.  There Loren asked the question “would you all please take a couple of hours, go away alone, and ask the Lord whether or not He wants us to have a university?”  We all came back with the same answer:  “yes”.  Again we didn’t have all the terminology, so the Pacific and Asia Christian University began in Kona, Hawaii, where Loren and Darlene were just a couple of years into establishing a new YWAM centre.

    As we took steps of obedience, reflected on the words God had spoken, and saw extraordinary growth, it became clear that God wanted to train more and more young people to serve in all spheres of society as ambassadors for the Kingdom of God.  Personally, when I think back on that I can’t help but recall the Scripture “When the enemy comes in like a flood, the Lord will raise up a standard against him”.  There was a flood of existential and experimental thinking with a new and entirely subjective approach to  values; the idea that there is no such thing as truth was beginning to dominate our universities.

    From One to More than 800 in Fifty Years

    It seems amazing to me that it is nearly 50 years since that first word about the seven spheres was given to Loren.  During that time, well over 1000 YWAM centres have been established, and training courses/schools in the University of the Nations are registered in more than 800 locations.

    Though a lot of time has passed, it would still be too early to say that a new reformation has begun, but YWAM is not the only movement working towards the reformation of all seven spheres of society.  Many churches and countless other ministries are focusing on one or more of the seven spheres.  I am pleased to say that for the most part they understand that this is not about grabbing power, nor is it about the church dominating all seven spheres as it has in some periods of history.  It‘s about public service.  It’s about excellence in vocations, and it’s about creative communication of God’s ways. You might say it is all about maximizing influence for the common good.  Though it is still early days, it now looks feasible, especially with the generation just emerging into adulthood, that we might see a revival of Christian values in all seven spheres of society.  This would provide once again a more caring, compassionate, law-abiding, non-discriminatory, equal-opportunity environment in which all people can thrive.

    Lord, have mercy on us!