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BY
RUSTY BENSON | AFA Journal Associate Editor
Voddie Baucham is hard to ignore. At 6 feet 3 inches tall and 300
pounds, the Houston, Texas, teacher/author is an imposing figure
in the pulpit.
But his size isnt the only thing about Baucham that demands
attention. Its his simple, but persuasive, analysis of whats
wrong in America and how to fix it.
According to Baucham, 36, a return to a Christian consensus of
values in America will come only when believers re-evaluate the
nature of the church and more fundamentally the role
of the family as the preeminent disciple-maker of their children.
Baucham contends that God intends for the home to be where Christian
children are spiritually nurtured into mature adults who can influence
all spheres of life for Christ. At the same time, every new generation
of Christian parents must pass their faith on to their own children.
He calls the concept "multi-generational faithfulness" and argues
that the chain is broken when Christian parents abdicate their discipling
duties to church programs.
According to Baucham this lack of discipleship in the home is why
statistics show that many young people from church-going homes leave
the faith during their college years and why Christianitys
voice in American culture is waning.
In this third installment in a series of interviews with notable
Christian culture-watchers, AFA Journal spoke to Baucham
after a recent address at Blue Mountain College, a small private
school in northeast Mississippi.
AFAJ: Tell me how your own personality, gifts and background
have factored into your ministry of applying Scriptural principles
to the issues of contemporary culture.
Baucham: The most influential
factor in my life was my upbringing. I was raised in a Buddist home
in South Central Los Angeles and never even heard the Gospel until
I got to college. I was saved in college, then discipled by two
football teammates at Rice University. Because I came from a different
worldview, I examined Christianity from a broader perspective, not
just assuming it was true from the way I was raised. I think having
investigated it from that more objective perspective has given me
a greater respect for Christianity as a worldview.
It has caused me to analyze things that many Christians who grew
up in the church take for granted. So when I see certain behaviors
and patterns in the church that are not Biblical, an alarm in me
goes off.
AFAJ: In addition to the Scripture, what theologians and
writers have influenced your thinking?
Baucham: Francis Schaeffer,
C.S. Lewis, D.A. Carson and Jonathan Edwards among others.
AFAJ: How do Christians engage the culture without conforming
to its values?
Baucham: This is where the family is so important.
When you understand multi-generational faithfulness, its an
idea that completely changes how you view cultural impact. I can
look at influencing the culture by going out and getting the right
legislation passed or the right person on the school board
and theres nothing wrong with those things but the
bigger picture of cultural impact is me being a Godly husband and
father. So as I am training my children and at the same time part
of a larger community of faith that is doing the same, we are equipping
a generation, not just to pass good laws, but to be transformed
people.
In my opinion, this is what makes the homeschool movement so important.
Because you are getting children out of the public school system
that has them for 45-50 hours a week and inundates them in this
anti-Christian, secular humanistic mentality and into a situation
where discipleship is the key to their education. Its only
here that multi-generational faithfulness can take place.
AFAJ: What role does the local church play in changing the
culture through multi-generational faithfulness?
Baucham:
I believe the church is a family of families. One way we have gone
astray is that we see the church as a corporation that breaks us
into individual groups. We have something for this group and something
for that group and we are breaking families apart when we get to
the church house. Were expecting church programs to disciple
our children rather than that happening in the home in the context
of the family.
God has given us a mechanism for multi-generational faithfulness
and that mechanism is the family. And so one of the things the Church
must do is to rediscover and re-emphasize the importance of the
family as that discipling agent and build up the family because
that is whats crumbling.
My message is a call for parents and grandparents to disciple their
children and grandchildren. This is the answer. God has given the
family to preserve the community of faith! If there is a generation
that is not discipled, they will not know God. That is the significance
of the family. The role of the local church is to come alongside
families and help them fulfill their call.
AFAJ: In a recent sermon you referred to a study of youth
and religion by the Sociology Department of the University of North
Carolina. That study shows that children overwhelmingly practice
the religion of their parents as long as they live at home. However
you claim that other studies indicate that by the end of their freshman
year in college, between 75-88% have left the church. Is there any
recapturing this generation?
Baucham: With Christ there is
always hope, but currently I dont see any indication that
that will happen. In fact, the institutions of our culture the
public school system, the media, our universities, politics, corporate
America, the judiciary all are perpetuating the acceptance
of ungodly practices such as same-sex marriage and euthanasia.
The one hopeful sign I see is that the home-schooling movement
is thriving. If there is an answer, I believe that is it.
AFAJ: What particular issues are you watching that you think
will dominate our cultural in the future. In other words, where
is the front in the culture war?
Baucham: The life issues,
including abortion, euthanasia, partial birth abortion. These issues
are still critical because the acceptance of them indicates that
we are moving further and further down the road of devaluing life.
For example, right now I believe we are quickly moving from a discussion
about the "right to die" to the "obligation to die."
These issues of life go right to core of the very nature of man
and the very worth and dignity of human beings. Those are at the
foundation of every other issue.
AFAJ: Is there a connection between the devaluing of life
and the devaluing of the family.
Baucham: Supporters of abortion
have always said that when a women doesnt think she can afford
to raise her child, abortion should be a choice. Even in the church
we look at a Christian lady with five or six children like shes
committed a crime.
Another thing Im concerned about is the nature and role of
the government in our nation. We have moved so far toward a socialist
mentality, largely through our schools, that many people believe
with all their heart that its the governments job to
take care of people. That misunderstanding impacts many other issues
including the role of family.
Voddie
Baucham has served on numerous church staffs, and currently serves
as an elder at Grace Community Church in Magnolia, Texas. He is
an adjunct professor at The College of Biblical Studies in Houston,
Texas, and Union University in Jackson, Tennessee. He has authored
two books and written for academic journals and magazines. Voddie
and his wife Bridget have been married since 1989. They have three
children, and currently live in Spring, Texas. For more information,
visit www.voddiebaucham.org.
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