By Jack De Vries on Wednesday, 14 July 2010
Category: The Four Fold Task

Authenticity Over Excellence

What about our Changing Culture? (2)
Neil Cole writes:  "Today things have changed.  Authenticity is more valued than excellence.... The highest compliment, for a postmodern, is to hear you are real.  The greatest offense is to try to be something you are not.  Hypocrisy is a crime of high treason.  In fact, there is hardly another sin that is worse.  Whereas heresy was the worst thing for the modern person, hypocrisy is the unforgivable sin to the postmodern.  Hypocrisy is the new heresy of the postmodern world." (Church 3.0, p. 32)

I grew up in a culture which promoted Coca-Cola as the "real thing."  I remember once seeing a T-shirt with this slogan on it:  "Jesus is the real thing."   Now this might seem a bit trite, but this is what postmoderns are looking for.  In a world full of reality shows, we realise that even with reality shows there is more "show" than "reality."   But here is a chance for us to shine brightly in the midst of the darkness of a fake world.  Jesus is "the way, the truth, and the life."  He is real.  He is the real deal.  And our world needs to encounter that in us -- and this is more than wearing a T-shirt.  We need to show the world how real God is.

This means as churches we must now simply talk the talk, but walk the walk.  Our Sunday worship deals must be lived out 24/7 the rest of the week.  If we as a CRCA denomination attest to the fact that we are "a church reforming to reach the lost for Christ," then we must actively implement this in our church ethos, customs, church order, and all decisions we make.   Are we, like the apostle Paul, becoming all things to all people so that by all possible means we might be able to save some?

How do you see this working out in your life, or the life of your church, or our denomination?   We might do a lot of things with excellence, but is there authenticity?