As a full-time church minister since 1981, I have had the
task of observing the lives of thousands of believers. Consequently, I
have come to the conclusion that there are believers in the church who
say they are Christians, while, at the same time, espousing value
systems that are secular. However, these secular believers are slightly
different from what we may identity as a "carnal Christian," whose ways
have to do with the overt sins of the flesh and emotions (read 1
Corinthians 3:1-4).
Of these two types, the secular believer, as with "secular Christianity" (which, by the way, is contradictory and, therefore, a misnomer) is more subtle because they are sugar-coated with spirituality and outward peace but have foundations of secular values.
Of these two types, the secular believer, as with "secular Christianity" (which, by the way, is contradictory and, therefore, a misnomer) is more subtle because they are sugar-coated with spirituality and outward peace but have foundations of secular values.
The following are 10 signs you are a secular believer:
1. You make major decisions without first determining God's will.
Many
believers are functional atheists because they make major decisions,
such as marriage, moving to another region, changing jobs, or changing
churches, without hearing from God, getting input from spiritual
leadership or searching the Scriptures.
2. You care more about what others think than what God thinks about you.
In
this "selfie" secular age, appearance, status, and popularity with
friends are sometimes pursued more than understanding the fear of the
Lord, which is the beginning of wisdom (Prov. 9:10). When we care more
about what people think of us than respecting the ways of God, then we
are secular.
3. You are led by money not by the Holy Spirit.
Whenever
you prioritize money over God's will, you are secular. This is why so
many so-called believers work so many hours; then they rarely have time
to participate in a faith community. Jesus said that if we "seek first
His Kingdom, then all the other things we seek will be given to us"
(Matt. 6:33).
4. You attend church services primarily to socialize.
Secular
believers' primary motivation to attend church services is to meet
their friends, while biblical Christ followers' primary motivation is to
meet God in the context of communing with the saints and hearing what
the Spirit is saying to the church.
5. You mimic the values of popular culture.
Secular
believers espouse the world's values when it comes to dating,
pre-marital sex, dress, popular music, language, etc. This reminds me of
the old adage: "If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, then
it's a duck!" If you internally celebrate the value systems of the
world, then you are worldly-minded (secular), not spiritually-minded.
6. God is a mere part of your life.
True Christ followers do not make God a mere part of their lives. Christ is their life! (Col. 3:1-4).
7. You don't have a lifestyle of seeking God.
Secular
believers may say a quick prayer here and there, usually to bless their
secular lifestyle, but they do not consistently seek God's face in
prayer or pour over the Scriptures.
8. Your life does not impact others for the gospel.
Secular believers do
not have a burden to win others to Christ. Many have never even won one
person for God in the past five to ten years! The reason is because
they are so subsumed with this world they do not have a sense of
eternity. Sadly, many times unsaved family members, friends, and
co-workers are not able to notice the difference between a believer and
an unbeliever.
9. You are not making disciples.
There
are many people in the body of Christ today who have been saved for
many years and have not invested their lives in making even one
disciple. If you are not presently mentoring and helping somebody mature
in Christ, then you are willfully disobeying the Great Commission Jesus
commanded (Matt. 28:19). Just because you have a title of pastor or
elder does not mean you are a disciple maker.
10. You do not practice biblical financial stewardship.
It
is sad that many in the body of Christ do not believe that their money
belongs to God. How do I know? It is because they only tithe and give
offerings when it is convenient. They live as if they are the ones in
charge of their lives, money and wealth. Even those who tithe should
understand that God claims ownership of one hundred percent of their
money, not just the ten percent. When you spend your money as if it were
your own, then you are not practicing biblical stewardship. You are
acting like a secular believer and not like a true Christian.
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