| THE
JESUS MANIFESTO: A CALL TO REVOLUTION*
[Download this file in Word format: click
here]
The dawning of the 21st century finds the church
of America in a moral and spiritual crisis. Decades of self-centered
living and worldliness have taken their toll. Years of compromise
and toothless gospel preaching have had their effect. And now we
have reached the moment of truth: Either we wake up, stand up, speak
up, and act up, or we run the risk of becoming a mere historic curiosity,
an irrelevant religious sideshow, an entertaining, harmless spectacle.
Something must change, and it must change now. There is no other
choice.
Forty years ago, a counterculture revolution swept
through America, resulting in a sudden, steep moral decline. Since
that time (from the early ’60s until today), the divorce rate
has doubled, the teen suicide rate has tripled, reported violent
crime has quadrupled, the prison population has quintupled, the
percentage of babies born out of wedlock has risen six-fold, and
couples living together out of wedlock has risen sevenfold. And
the end is not in sight.
The last generation’s counterculture of rebellion
has become this generation’s establishment of revulsion, and
what was unthinkable forty years ago – daytime talk shows
celebrating adultery and incest; homosexual love scenes on major
network TV; eleven year-old multiple murderers; massacres in our
schools and houses of worship – is a matter of course today.
We need a revolution!
But this revolution will be different than other
revolutions – including the revolution that birthed our nation
more than 200 years ago. This revolution will not be fought with
earthly weapons of destruction – not with guns and knives
and bullets and bombs. It will not be fought with hatred, anger,
intimidation, or brute force. No. It will be fought with the message
of the gospel, with the love of God, with the power of the Spirit,
with radical holiness, with sacrifice, compassion, and courage.
It will be a Jesus revolution, an intense clash between two spiritual
kingdoms, a heavenly attack on the enemy’s strongholds, a
no compromise stand for morality and truth. And it will impact society
in a lasting way. It must!
Revolution means upheaval. Revolution means the
overthrowing of the status quo. We dare not downplay the significance
of the word. Revolution is a matter of life and death, and our revolution
flows from the blood of the Savior to the blood of the martyr. We
put down our sword and take up our cross, overcoming Satan by the
blood of the Lamb, by the word of our testimony, and by not loving
our lives so much as to shrink from death (Rev. 12:11). Nothing
can stop a revolution like this!
Our revolution is fueled by the power of the gospel,
and the gospel does violence to the forces of hell. We must recover
the fullness of the gospel of Jesus! It is nothing less than a direct
assault on the kingdom of Satan, a frontal attack on hostile, spiritual
powers, a mortal confrontation of light against darkness. It brings
about the ultimate counterculture conflict.
That’s why Jesus said to His disciples, “If
the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated Me first. If you
belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it is, you
do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world.
That is why the world hates you. Remember the words I spoke to you:
‘No servant is greater than his master.’ If they persecuted
Me, they will persecute you also. If they obeyed My teaching, they
will obey yours also” (John 15:18-20).
That’s why Paul explained that “everyone
who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted”
(2 Tim 3:12), reminding the disciples that, “We must go through
many hardships to enter the kingdom of God” (Acts 14:22).
God’s people march to the beat of a different drummer. God’s
obedient people will always offend the world, no matter how much
we seek to be peacemakers and to walk in compassion and love. Our
very lifestyles are a reproof to the ungodly.
That’s why Joseph Parker could say more than
a century ago, “The man whose little sermon is ‘repent’
sets himself against his age, and will for the time being be battered
mercilessly by the age whose moral tone he challenges. There is
but one end for such a man -- ‘off with his head!’ You
had better not try to preach repentance until you have pledged your
head to heaven.” The gospel means conflict and confrontation,
and all who stand for righteousness will be resisted.
That’s why Jesus was accused by his own people
of being “a Samaritan and demon-possessed” (John 8:48),
why Paul and Silas were accused of “throwing cities into an
uproar” (Acts 16:20) and “causing trouble all over the
world” (Acts 17:6), why Paul himself was mistaken for being
an “Egyptian who started a revolt and led four thousand terrorists
out into the desert” (Acts 21:38). The gospel is subversive.
The gospel is a threat to the kingdom of darkness. The gospel is
revolutionary.
We’re in a war, and war means conflict, hardship,
and sacrifice. As Leonard Ravenhill wrote, “When a nation
calls its prime men to battle, homes are broken, weeping sweethearts
say their good-byes, businesses are closed, college careers are
wrecked, factories are refitted for wartime production, rationing
and discomforts are accepted -- all for war. Can we do less for
the greatest fight that this world has ever known outside of the
cross -- this end-time siege on sanity, morality, and spirituality?”
Satan’s strategy is to institutionalize the
Church, to turn the Body of Christ into a powerless religious system.
If that tactic fails, he tries to desensitize us and lull us to
sleep until we lose our convictions and our sense of outrage is
gone. And he is always seeking to seduce us into sin until we become
just like the world, enslaved by its passions and lusts. And when
he thinks he has succeeded, when he no longer feels threatened by
the people of God, then he gets aggressive and brazenly puts forth
his agenda. He’s doing it today. We need a revolution!
The cat is out of the bag. The secret is no longer
a secret. Anti-God forces are after the soul of our nation, and
if we don’t wake up now, if we don’t take a stand now,
if we don’t repent and pray and rise and speak and act now,
then instead of this great country being “the land of the
free and the home of the brave” our nation could become “the
land of sleaze and the home of depraved.” We need a revolution!
DNA tests to find out who fathered the baby are
here. (In fifteen of our nation’s largest cities, more than
90% of the babies born to teens are illegitimate.) Legalized same-sex
“civil unions” are here. Children’s textbooks
encouraging adolescent fornication are here. School hallways splattered
with teenage blood are here. Bans on using the name of Jesus at
our graduations are here. Topless, feminist “worship services”
on our college campuses are here. We need a revolution!
We live in a time of ethical madness and social
uncertainty, a time when talk of a moral revolution should be everywhere.
Instead, the best-selling “revolutionary” books are
books about new diets. What does this say for us as a people? When
we need to be talking about the call to die for the gospel, we are
talking instead about the call to diet for good looks. What a sad
indictment! And what does it say of our self-deception and lack
of discipline when we are at one and the same time the world’s
best-read nation on diet and nutrition and the world’s most
obese? Even our pets are overweight. We need a revolution!
The United States boasts the highest percentage
of professing evangelicals in the industrialized world, with more
than 36% of Americans – meaning more than 90 million people
– classified as born-again. Yet America has:
• The highest percentage of single-parent
families in the industrialized world
• The highest abortion rate in the industrialized world
• The highest rate of sexually transmitted diseases in the
industrialized world (the rates of syphilis and gonorrhea transmission
are almost 500% higher than the highest rates in the other industrialized
nations)
• The highest teenage birth rate in the industrialized world
(by far!)
• The highest rate of teenage drug use in the industrialized
world
We need a revolution!
Our society is deteriorating all around us and
even non-believers sense that something is wrong. Why? It is because
we, the people of God, the army of the Lord Jesus, the messengers
of liberation, the ambassadors of reconciliation, have been sidetracked
by the love of this world and distracted by the cares of this age.
As a result, we have not changed this generation. This generation
has changed us!
Rather than seasoning the world like salt and brightening
the world like light, we now smell and taste like the world, and
its darkness is snuffing out our lamps. Rather than setting captives
free by the power of Jesus’ blood, many of us are being ensnared
and enslaved, making a mockery of that sacred blood. Rather than
making disciples of sinners and teaching them the ways of God, many
of us are being discipled by them, learning their ways, imitating
their lifestyles, and conforming to their values.
A 1997 survey conducted by George Barna used 152
different items to compare the church and the world. He found virtually
no difference between the two. In fact, the divorce rate today among
evangelicals is higher than the divorce rate among atheists. We
need a revolution!
Communist educators visiting America have been
shocked by the materialism and worldliness of many of our Christian
young people, while Islamic leaders are appalled by the rampant
sexual sin and shameless immodesty among many who profess Christ
as Lord. The ideals of the unsaved are often more lofty than the
ideals of the saved. We need a revolution!
Just consider how far things have fallen, despite
decades of 24-hour gospel radio and TV, hundreds of Bible colleges
and seminaries, thousands of Christian schools and bookstores, and
churches and ministries too numerous to count. Forty years ago,
men having sex with men and women having sex with women was considered
perverse. Now it is considered perverse – homophobic, hateful,
mean-spirited, and bigoted – to call such behavior wrong.
We need a revolution!
Forty years ago, not even science fiction writers
would have predicted that American companies would be making money
off the sale of the skin and brains and limbs and spinal chords
of aborted babies. Today, Congress will not even pass legislation
to make this thriving practice illegal. We need a revolution!
Jesus rebuked the leaders of his day who said of
themselves, “If we had lived in the days of our forefathers,
we would not have taken part with them in shedding the blood of
the prophets” (Matt 23:30) – and then they took part
in shedding the blood of the greatest Prophet of them all. How hypocritical!
Yet we do this very thing, saying, “If we had lived in the
days of our forefathers, we would not have taken part with them
in the detestable sin of slavery. We would never have tolerated
such evil. We would surely have done something about it.”
Yet on our watch, in our day, we have tolerated
an even more heinous sin: the slaughter of forty million babies
in their mothers’ wombs. In what way have we been better than
our forefathers who tolerated slavery – or better than the
European “Christians” who tolerated the Nazi extermination
of six million Jews? How much have we really done to stop this generation’s
holocaust?
Bloodshed pollutes the land (Num 35:33), and the
blood of these helpless victims – oceans of blood of these
aborted little ones – has been crying out for justice for
decades. What will our God do? We need a revolution!
In 1960, only 2.3% of percent of white women had
children out of wedlock. By 1997, more than 25% -- a ten-fold increase!
– were having children out of wedlock (despite millions being
aborted before they ever left the womb). In the African American
community, that number rose from 23% percent to more than 68%. We
need a revolution!
In 1962, the Supreme Court outlawed organized,
public prayer in our schools (without citing a single historic precedent
to back its decision), and we complied with that ruling. In the
year 2000, the Court has banned voluntary public prayer in our schools.
Why have we complied with this ruling too? At what point do we say,
“We must obey God rather than man”? At what point do
we say, “Enough is enough”? We need a revolution!
On April 12, 2000, at Pearl River Central High
School in Carrierre, Mississippi, the Spirit of God fell upon the
students attending a voluntary, pre-class assembly led by the Fellowship
of Christian Athletes. As students lined up fifty deep to confess
their sins and get right with God and one another, the principal,
Lolita Lee, herself a Christian, decided to let the meeting go on
through the day. Civil libertarians were outraged, but, as Time
magazine reported (June 5, 2000, p. 61), “The school received
hundreds of congratulatory e-mails. ‘Thank you for your courage,’
wrote an Ohio man to Lee. ‘You have done the equivalent of
not moving to the back of the bus.’” Isn’t it
time we follow suit? If not now, when? What more needs to happen?
For more than two hundred years, the Bible was
commonly used as a textbook in our schools, and generations of children
learned the ABC’s with a Scripture truth for each letter.
But in 1963, the Supreme Court banned required reading of the Scriptures
from our schools, and once again, we complied with the ruling. Why?
By 1980, the Court had ordered the removal of the Ten Commandments
from public view in our schools and by 1985, it outlawed benedictions
or invocations in formal school activities. Some lower courts even
ruled against students praying out loud over their cafeteria meals.
We need a revolution!
When the governing authorities seized the apostles
and charged them not to speak in Jesus’ name, Peter replied,
“Judge for yourselves whether it is right in God’s sight
to obey you rather than God. For we cannot help speaking about what
we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:19-20). And they kept speaking!
As a result, they were arrested, whipped, and strictly ordered not
to speak any more in Jesus’ name. But, Scripture records,
“The apostles left the Sanhedrin, rejoicing because they had
been counted worthy of suffering disgrace for the Name. Day after
day, in the temple courts and from house to house, they never stopped
teaching and proclaiming the good news that Jesus is the Messiah”
(Acts 5:41-42). Can we learn something from this?
Christians around the world today are severely
persecuted because they refuse to obey oppressive, unjust laws.
Many of them are model citizens in every way, obedient, respectful
and peace loving. But when the government – or religious establishment
– forbids them to read their Bibles, forbids them to baptize,
forbids them to share their faith, forbids them to gather together,
forbids them to make disciples, then they say with the apostles,
“We must obey God rather than man.” At what point does
this apply to us?
Our persecuted brothers and sisters around the
world have been discriminated against, deprived of their livelihoods,
imprisoned, tortured, and killed, all because they refused to render
to Caesar that which does not belong to Caesar. Yet we are afraid
to take a stand for Jesus if it would threaten our income, or cost
us a scholarship, or make us unpopular. Why this double standard?
Why do they refuse to comply – even when threatened with imprisonment
and death – while we willfully comply, even when there is
no threat? We need a revolution!
When Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were commanded
to worship an idol or be subject to a fiery death, they refused
to bow down (Daniel 3). But today, with no one commanding us, we
freely worship the idols of our society, bowing down to the gods
of unclean entertainment, sensual fashion, and unbridled materialism
and greed. Our obsession with sports is idolatrous as well, to the
point that many churches throughout the land make sure their Sunday
services end in time for the afternoon football games, canceling
their meetings entirely the night of the Super Bowl. We need a revolution!
When Daniel was told that an edict had been passed
declaring that “anyone who prays to any god or man during
the next thirty days, except to [the] king, shall be thrown into
the lions’ den . . . he went home to his upstairs room where
the windows opened toward Jerusalem. Three times a day he got down
on his knees and prayed, giving thanks to his God, just as he had
done before” (Daniel 6:10-12). It’s time that we follow
his lead. Godly defiance spells triumph while retreat spells defeat.
We need a revolution!
Year by year our religious freedoms have been taken
away, while special rights and freedoms have been given to those
whom the Bible calls “unrighteous” (see 1 Corinthians
6:9-11; in the Scriptures, homosexual activity is classified along
with adultery, fornication, theft, drunkenness, hatred, anger, greed,
and hypocrisy, and all who practice such things are called “unrighteous”).
Thus the Supreme Court ruled that a school full of Christians cannot
choose to have prayer before a school sporting event since it would
offend and exclude the minority who don’t want to pray. But
when homosexuals introduce children’s textbooks into our schools
outlining in graphic detail the intricacies of gay sex, the offended
majority is told to accept it. Right is now wrong and wrong is now
right, and the will of the godless is imposed on the will of the
godly. We need a revolution!
When a gay man is beaten to death because he is
gay – this is a reprehensible, despicable act that every decent
person should abhor – it causes a national uproar, with loud
voices in the government calling for new legislation against hate
crimes. And we should speak out against such deplorable crimes.
But when Christians students are shot to death as they profess their
faith in God, the government raises its voice to forbid the placing
of memorial crosses on school property. The handwriting is on the
wall. The strategy is clear. We need a revolution!
Teachers in our public schools can give condom
demonstrations to our teens and use books like “Heather Had
Two Mommies” to teach our kids to read, and we are required
to support this with our own tax dollars. But let a teacher read
from the Scriptures to a seeking, needy student, and that teacher
could be out of a job – all because of the First Amendment’s
so-called separation of Church and State.
But that is not what the First Amendment intended.
It simply stated that, “Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,”
meaning, first, that the government could not form a national denomination
(like the Church of England of old) and require all Americans to
be part of it, and second, that there would be religious freedom
for all. As emphasized by Stephen Carter, professor of law at Yale
University, “The wall of separation of church and state is
not there to protect the state from the church; it is there to protect
the church from the state. It stands as a divide to preserve religious
freedom. And one needs to protect the church from the state because
the latter will utilize its enormous powers to do what the state
has always done – either subvert the religion or destroy it.
If we continue our slide toward a state that breaches the wall of
separation whenever it is convenient, then I worry about the great
risk to religious freedom. In the end, such a breach could destroy
our ability to form the communities of resistance that are crucial
if we are going to have a chance to transform the nation.”
Our forefathers wanted to ensure that the government
would not be able to impose its will on the church. For more than
one generation now, this has been totally reversed and stood on
its head, and the price has been very high, with skyrocketing crime
rates and plummeting rates of morality and literacy. And what has
become of the First Amendment’s guarantee of “the free
exercise” of religion when the courts tell us that we cannot
use religious symbols on public property, cannot post the Ten Commandments
in government buildings, and cannot use the name of Jesus in public
school events? We have lost our religious freedom. We need a revolution!
In 1999, a bill was brought before Congress that
would have required businesses – which by implication could
have included churches and religious institutions – to hire
gays and lesbians if they were qualified for the job in question,
despite their sexual preference. And the bill failed by only one
vote! Even more distressing is that if the bill did pass, there
was another bill ready to follow, calling for a ban on even speaking
against a person’s sexual orientation. (A similar bill has
now been passed in Canada.) Such speech would be deemed hate speech,
punishable by law, and potentially meaning that a pastor simply
expounding the Scriptures to his flock could be arrested. Yet this
is the very thing from which our Founding Fathers were trying to
protect us. So much for the First Amendment and religious freedom!
The fact that such laws could even be crafted for Congress proves
that we have long since passed the breaking point – yet some
Christian leaders would have felt obligated to obey these laws if
they had passed. We need a revolution!
We have gone from debating a woman’s “right
to choose” to sucking out the brains of third trimester babies
(with the backing of the courts!), from arguing about the medical
definition of death to legalizing physician-assisted suicide, from
needing metal detectors at airports to needing metal detectors at
schools (and soon at houses of worship?), from tracking down absentee
fathers to trying to figure out who the father is, from the outlawing
of mandatory school prayer to the outlawing of voluntary school
prayer. We need a revolution!
Without a holy, counterculture revolution, America
could become a society where candid religious expression is outlawed,
a society where it is almost impossible to keep our children free
from the pollution of the world, a society teetering perilously
close to the thunderous judgments of God. Such things have happened
to other nations, and such things could happen to us.
But all is not lost! The gospel has changed societies
before, and the gospel can change societies again. For countless
centuries, India engaged in the practice of widow-burning, where
the widow of a deceased man was sometimes burned alive with her
husband’s corpse. This horrific practice was outlawed through
the tireless efforts of missionary William Carey. Both slave-trading
and unjust child-labor laws were abolished in Britain through the
fearless work of the Christian political leader William Wilberforce.
And this followed on the heels of England’s transformation
through the sacrificial labors of John Wesley and his Methodist
followers, saving the nation from the anarchy and violence of the
French Revolution. Around the world today, whole communities are
being impacted by united prayer and evangelism, and here in our
land, there is a rising momentum of concerted, twenty-four hour
worship and intercession not seen for decades.
There are pockets of spiritual renewal throughout
the country, and the tides of a radical youth revival are rapidly
rising. Another Jesus people movement could be near, a heaven-sent
revolution far greater than the worldwide Jesus movement of 1967-1975,
when hundreds of thousands of hippies and radicals were swept into
the kingdom. Even now, it is at the door. And not only will multitudes
of lost sinners be truly saved, but multitudes of casual church
goers will also be truly saved. Just think of what would happen
if even one-quarter of America’s professing believers got
totally and uncompromisingly right with God – and then each
of them touched just five or six other people. It would quickly
reverse our nation’s moral decline. Despite our perilous condition,
it’s still not too late!
If our nation could be changed for the worse in
one decade – this is what happened in the 1960s, despite progress
in Civil Rights and some other social areas – it can be changed
for the better in one decade. If angry student protests on college
campuses could help stop an international war (Vietnam), what could
holy student “protests” on our campuses accomplish?
America can be impacted for the good, and as followers
of Jesus, we are called to make that impact. We do it by walking
in the light, as He is in the light; by calling the lost to turn
back to God in repentance; by preaching the gospel and making disciples;
by proclaiming liberty to the captives; by pursuing righteousness
in every area of public and private life; by acts of kindness, mercy,
and compassion, overcoming evil with good; by prayer, fasting, and
the power of God; by living holy lives and setting holy examples;
by being a prophetic voice and a moral conscience to society; by
Spirit-led community involvement and godly political action; by
non-violent resistance of injustice and oppression.
What else should Christians do? Should not the
presence of tens of millions of believers be felt in a nation? Should
we not make a difference for God? Should we not be a force for spiritual
and moral reformation? Should we not actively extend the kingdom
of God? Should not the Great Commission leave tangible results in
its wake?
This is our sacred moment, our solemn time for
action. If we will unshackle ourselves from the love of this world
– from our lusts, our addictions, our obsessions – and
give ourselves wholly to the purposes of God, we can shake this
nation. If we learn the principle that to save our lives is to lose
our lives, while to lose our lives for the Lord is to save our lives,
then we can really live. As Martin Luther King declared in 1965,
“A man dies when he refuses to stand up for that which is
right; a man dies when he refuses to stand up for justice; a man
dies when he refuses to take a stand for that which is true.”
It’s time we take our stand!
The counterculture revolution of the 1960s began
when people said, “Something is missing. Something is wrong.
There must be something greater than this.” And they were
right! There must be something greater than eating and drinking,
working and sleeping, existing. There must be something greater
than the American dream. There must be something greater than simply
getting a good education so that you can find a good job and have
a good family so that your kids can get a good education and find
a good job and have a good family so that their kids can a get a
good education . . . . Is this really it? Is this why God put us
here on this earth? There is more!
Our goal is revival, not survival, the transformation
of the human race, not the preservation of the human race. There
is a divine purpose and destiny to our time here on earth. Even
atheistic revolutionaries understand that there must be a higher
purpose to life, and they give themselves for their cause, freely
dying for their revolution so that their families can live in what
they hope will be a better world. And they do this without the promise
of heaven or eternal life. How much more should we give ourselves
to the cause of our Master? How much more readily should we hear
the call?
Nate Saint and Jim Elliot, martyred as missionaries
in 1956, understood this well. They recognized that life was far
more meaningful, far more rich, far more significant than most of
us ever realize, even if we live to be 100 years old. As Nate Saint
wrote, “People who do not know the Lord ask why in the world
we waste our lives as missionaries. They forget they too are expending
their lives and when the bubble has burst they will have nothing
of eternal significance to show for the years they have wasted.”
Yes, everyone’s bubble will burst one day.
The dust will return to dust and the spirit will return to God who
gave it (see Ecc. 12:7). On that day, only one thing will matter:
Did we fulfill the purpose of God? Did we make a lasting impact
for Jesus? Did we leave behind a blessed legacy for the generation
to come? All the silly little things that seemed so important to
us during our few years here on earth will seem utterly insignificant
when they are viewed in the light of eternity.
How wise it was for Jim Elliot to write these now-famous
words: “That man is no fool who gives what he cannot keep
to gain what he cannot lose.” And how wise it was for him
to lift up this petition before the Lord as a young man in college:
“God, I pray, Thee, light these idle sticks of my life and
may I burn for Thee. Consume my life, my God, for it is Thine. I
seek not a long life, but a full one, like you, Lord Jesus.”
Oh, that all of us would lead truly full lives!
Columbine martyr Rachel Scott was not wrong when
she wrote in her journal, “I have no more personal friends
at school. But you know what? I am not going to apologize for speaking
the name of Jesus. I am not going to justify my faith to them, and
I am not going to hide the light that God has put into me. If I
have to sacrifice everything, I will. I will take it. If my friends
have to become my enemies for me to be with my best friend Jesus,
then that’s fine with me.” Jesus is worth it to the
end!
Fellow-soldiers, holy servants of the risen Lord,
blood-bought disciples of the Master, heed the call. It’s
now or never, time to put up or shut up. Either we take a stand
once and for all or forever we hang our heads in shame. History
is eagerly anticipating our next move. This is the hour we have
been waiting for. So, on with it – by life or by death. The
revolution won’t wait.

*The Jesus Manifesto: A Call
to Revolution (Copyright © 2000, 2005, Michael L. Brown)
is distributed jointly by FIRE School of Ministry (www.fire-school.org)
and ICN Ministries (www.icnministries.org). It may be reproduced
and distributed freely in any form, provided that it is reproduced
unedited, in its entirety, and with proper attribution, and is
not sold or distributed for profit. Some material in The Jesus
Manifesto has been adapted and excerpted from Michael L. Brown,
Revolution! The Call to Holy War (Ventura, CA: Gospel Light, 2000).

Download this document in Word format: click
here
To view this file in Adobe PDF format click
here, to save the PDF file to your PC right click and
choose "Save Target As".

Dr. Michael L. Brown
ICN Ministries
PO Box 1446
Harrisburg, NC 28075
704-782-3760
e-mail: ministry@icnministries.org
|