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We Need Another Jesus Movement

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J. Lee Grady

In today’s hip, sophisticated
churches, we often forget to preach about Jesus. Let’s get back to basics.

I became a serious Christian at the tail
end of the Jesus movement. I was too young to remember the hippie beads,
tie-dyed shirts and “Jesus Is Groovy” slogans, but the songs were still popular
when I was in college (from musicians such as Andrae Crouch, Love Song and
Barry McGuire), as were the movies (especially The Cross and the Switchblade.)

The Jesus movement was like a spiritual
tsunami that washed over hundreds of thousands of young people in the late
1960s and early ‘70s and brought them into a personal relationship with Christ.
Some of these kids had been drug addicts and social misfits; most were just
average Joes and Janes who discovered that Jesus is a lot more exciting than
traditional churches had led them to believe.

  In
my travels this past year I’ve been horrified to learn that many Spirit-filled
believers have given up the discipline of reading their Bibles even
semi-regularly. They prefer a steady diet of culturally relevant, fast-paced,
techno-theology that is a poor substitute for discipleship.”


Because the movement was pioneered by
untrained leaders it sometimes resulted in abuse. But despite its flaws, it
gave rise to a new musical genre (contemporary Christian) and new denominations
(Calvary Chapel, Vineyard). It also fueled organizations such as Bill Bright’s
Campus Crusade for Christ and made it a powerhouse of evangelism for the next
decade and beyond.

Lately I find myself waxing nostalgic for
those days—not because I want to return to the awkward fashions and hairstyles
of 1972, but because I miss the spiritual simplicity of that era. The Jesus
movement was primarily focused on—surprise!—Jesus.
Theology was not complicated, pastors weren’t trying to be hip or sophisticated
or tech-savvy; and we hadn’t yet created a Christian subculture with its own
celebrities and political power bases.

Today, we just don’t preach enough about
Jesus. This is certainly true in many charismatic churches, where we’ve become
experts on everything but basic Christian theology 101. In my travels this past
year I’ve been horrified to learn that many Spirit-filled believers have given
up the discipline of reading their Bibles even semi-regularly. They prefer a
steady diet of culturally relevant, fast-paced, techno-theology that is a poor
substitute for discipleship.

Many charismatics have developed the
attitude that a simple focus on Christ isn’t enough. We’d rather go to a
“prophetic encounter” to hear what Obama’s chances are in 2012, or experience
some exotic spiritual manifestation (gold dust, gems falling out of the
ceiling), or ask Rev. Flash-in-the-Pan to pray for us for the sixteenth time so
we can receive yet another “special anointing” that we will probably never use.


In the midst of all this charismatic
gobbledygook, where is Jesus? Am I the only one out there who is weary of this
distraction?

Call me
old-fashioned, but I’ve decided to get back to the basics of the faith. That’s
why I am reading What Jesus Is All
About?,
a classic book written more than 50 years ago by Henrietta Mears, a
Bible teacher who helped mentor both Billy Graham and Bill Bright in the 1940s.

Mears explains in her book how each of
the four gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke and John—give us a unique,
four-dimensional portrait of the Savior. According to Mears:

  • Matthew was written to Jews to tell of a Promised Savior who is also a King—and it uses the word “kingdom”
    55 times.
  • Mark was written to Gentiles to tell of a Powerful Savior—and it reports more miracles than any other gospel.
  • Luke was written by a Gentile to tell of a Perfect Savior—and it has the most references to Jesus’ humanity.
  • John was written by “the disciple whom Jesus loved” to tell of a
    Personal Savior—and it has the most
    references to Jesus’ divine nature.

The Holy Spirit who inspired the Bible
knew we needed more than a one-, two- or three-dimensional look at Jesus. The
Spirit gave us a four-dimensional view so that we could gaze at Him from all
sides and become captivated by His magnificence—His supreme kingship, His
compassionate mercy, His supernatural power, His perfect justice, His amazing
humility and His love for sinners like you and me.


There’s so much more to Jesus than we
realize. And there is so much more to say about Him than we are telling our
generation. That’s why I’m spending most of my study time in the four gospels
for the next few months. I want a fresh revelation of Jesus!

Perhaps another Jesus movement will be
unleashed in our country when we discard our distractions and focus on Him
again.

J. Lee Grady is contributing editor of Charisma. You can follow him on Twitter at leegrady. He is preaching in Sydney,
Australia, this week.

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J. Lee Grady is an author, award-winning journalist and ordained minister. He served as a news writer and magazine editor for many years before launching into full-time ministry.

Lee is the author of six books, including 10 Lies the Church Tells Women, 10 Lies Men Believe and Fearless Daughters of the Bible. His years at Charisma magazine also gave him a unique perspective of the Spirit-filled church and led him to write The Holy Spirit Is Not for Sale and Set My Heart on Fire, which is a Bible study on the work of the Holy Spirit.


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