Christian asked:
Has the church grown spiritually or has it declined?
I will sugest that the answer to the above qeustion is not simple.
I will aslso suggest that both may have happened.
The Bible and Ellen White, as I understand them, are clear that the Christian life is a life of growth. at every stage, I will suggest, that God has more to teach us, if we are willing to listen. In my opinion, growth has taken place in that we have become more focused on Christ and what he accomplished at the Cross. We are more able today, in my thinking, to distinguish between the central focus and tennants of salvation and those that are not central. WE have become more oriented on Righteousness by Faith. We have becom less legalistic. NOTE: I Did not say legalism is totally gone.
At the same time, the Bible is clear that in End Time the "world" will have infiltrated the Church. The typical Adventist depends less on prayer and devotional reading of the Bible. [We still use the Bible to pound others.] We live less in the certainty of the 2nd Comming and are focused more on living in the world. We typically have less of a personal sense to evangalize--bring othrs into a personal relationshlp with Christ. We all to often focus more on the "sins" that we claim to see in our fellow Adventist than we do on our personal relationship wiht Christ. We often present a God ot others that is either unattractive or not important.
You may notice that in my listing of problem areas, I have not mentioned the flash points of music, dress and adornment. Why? Because in the overall structure of our spiritual life, I consider the issues that I have mentioned to be much more important that the questions of music, dress and adornment. These three are all culturally conditioned. the boundaries differ in differing cultures. And, they differ from time to time. I am thinking now, of a Conference where members were subject to discipline to include expelling from membershilp, if they were seen wearing blue jeans in public. I kid you not.
We are not an International denominstion with 17 million members, most of whom live outside the United States. These members travel. They come to the U.S. and they bring their specific spiritual and cultural backgrounds with them. It is painful, and confusing, to some of our members to be confronted by the realith that some Adventists just do not look, live and believe exactly like us.
The easy reaction to this is often to pint fingers to what we call the decline in standards taht we think we see. In doing so we often forget that those with whom we are pingint the fingers are often confused when they look at us. I have preached in Asia, with a translator. There have been times when my translator has had to explain comments that I made in my sermon in the context of cultural differences.
Yes, God has standards that apply everywhere and in all cultures. They are simply uniform. But, I do not think suchto be tru for everything. Some things I think are culturally determined. God expects Christians to not be offensive within the culture inwhich the Christin is living. No, if itis ofensive to follow God, then be offensive and follow god. But, some cultureal issues are not of such. Wearing blue jeans is not cnetral to the gospil. But, if one is in a culture in which blue jeans would be offensive to what Christians want to portray, then don't wear blue jeans. But, allow others, in other cultures, to wear them.