America Headed to the ‘Ash Heap of History’?
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CBN News
LANCASTER, Pa. -- America just marked its 239th
Independence Day, the birth of what many consider the greatest nation on
earth. But after all these years of celebrating, Americans may soon be
mourning its downfall.
That's the conclusion of researcher George Barna and historian David Barton in their book U-Turn: Restoring America to the Strength of Its Roots.
These authors say the United States is entering its
own version of the Dark Ages and that any civilization that's gone where
America's headed now has gone to ruin.
"The founders gave us an amazing foundation," Barna
told CBN News. "And for us to trample on it and say 'we're going to
build a new one' is folly."
Biblical Roots
The authors point out those early Americans were shaped by the Bible and a Judeo-Christian worldview.
"They believed everybody should read through the
Bible cover-to-cover once a year," Barton stated. "That's what we did in
school in those times. That's what we did in spiritual life. That's
what political leaders did. Not today. We can't even get Christians to
read that word."
Today only 30 percent of Christians read the Bible and less than 10 percent have read it from cover-to-cover. And it shows.
"Only 9 percent of born-again Christians have a
biblical worldview," Barna said. "Only 51 percent of pastors have a
biblical worldview."
Faith is losing its foothold in the land.
"The proportion of unchurched people has risen from
28 percent to 48 percent in six years," Barna shared. "The fastest
growing faith group in America is atheists and agnostics."
'Your Life Doesn't Belong to You'
It's making for a complete change in values from what was seen 240 years ago. Then, service to others ruled the day.
"Your order of responsibilities was God, country,
and family." Barton explained. "That's part of the biblical thinking
they had."
"[That's] why the founding fathers were told and
specifically taught in school -- we have their textbooks -- if someone
comes to you and says 'we need you to run for public office,' you're not
allowed to say 'no,'" he said. "Because, as they point out, your life
doesn't belong to you."
Today, it's all about "me."
"Now we're just worried about comfort and experiences and entertainment and security," Barna suggested.
That's led to a get-it-all, have-it-all, do-it-all mentality that can pile up the kind of debt capable of killing a country.
A Nation of Debtors
"The average American family: they're looking
usually at a mortgage debt of about $130,000," Barton told CBN News.
"They're usually looking at credit card debt of about $21,000, they're
looking at car debt of about $23,000, a college loan debt of about
$24,000, and so we're so far in debt that we tolerate it in others."
Like our federal government.
"Where we are right now, it will take 107 years of
the full production of the American economy to pay off the debt we have
right now," Barton said.
"We are at a point now where 60 percent of Americans
receive more from the government than what they put in," he added. "You
can't sustain that."
"We averaged spending $61,000 per poor family last
year. You now find that those who are on welfare make more than teachers
make in 11 states. And those on welfare now make more than secretaries
do in 39 states. We can't sustain that," he reiterated.
Compare that to the attitude Thomas Jefferson expressed to young America.
Quoting the author of the Declaration of
Independence, Barton said, "We can live in debt and extravagance, but
we'll be in slavery -- or we can be free, but we have to use frugality."
What Destroys a Nation
"George Washington said 'avoid occasions of
expense.' You want out of debt? Just quit spending. And so the founding
fathers were very, very, very clear that what would destroy a nation is
debt," Barton concluded.
So where does that indicate America's headed?
"Into the ash heap of history," Rev. Sam Rohrer, president of the American Pastors Network, suggested.
Rohrer doesn't want that to happen. He said he's desperate for another outcome.
"God's judgment on America and His hand of judgment,
which is very obviously here, will put us down on our knees until we
look up," Rohrer said. "When a civilization or a culture begins to
recognize that truth has not changed and God is truth and then goes
there, then the nation can be made whole."
Rohrer's doing what he can to make that happen. One
effort was to invite Barna and Barton to come speak to several hundred
church leaders at a recent conference of the Pennsylvania Pastors
Network in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
'We Are the Problem'
"This is a hope that in revival, God's people -- who
hold the key -- will in obedience say, 'We are the problem. We have
walked away from You and the culture has followed us, not the other way
around,'" Rohrer explained.
Christians may doubt they're a part of the problem,
but Barna and Barton found in their research over and over again that
church people -- just as much as their government, just as much as
secular people -- are guilty of the same kind of ruinous behaviors that
are taking the nation down.
"In a country where between 78 to 80 percent say
they're Christian, only 34 percent say they believe in absolute moral
truth," Barton said.
Barna regularly asks Christians and non-Christians
about 70 moral categories -- and these days he's finding no substantive
statistical difference between Christians and non-Christians when it
comes to most moral issues.
"You can't find a difference in behavior between Christians and non-Christians anymore, and that's not good," Barton warned.
Keys to America's Early Success
Barna had a suggestion for Christians: "Stop
pointing the finger and look at ourselves and say, 'Are we really the
Church that Christ died on the cross for?"
He pointed out a key reason for the success of early America.
"If you try to understand what made America great,
it was a dynamic partnership between church, family, and government," he
explained.
Today, many doubt whether religious believers should even get involved in politics or guiding government.
But Barton pointed out, "The entire Bible's loaded
up with God's ministers getting right in the face of civil leaders and
saying, 'That's wicked policy.'"
And he said ministers were deeply involved for much
of the nation's history in the actual making of law, suggesting what
legislatures' priorities should be at the start of a new term and what
the Bible had to say about proposed laws.
"Back in the founding era, one of the traditional
sermons they had was called an Election Sermon," Barton said. "And it
went on for 170 years. And it was very common for state legislatures to
open up by having a minister come and speak to the entire state
government."
Sheer Arrogance
Many today recoil at the idea of church leaders having so much input in secular government and reject it.
But Barna suggested, "For us to say, 'We're going to
do it our way for now,' and think that we're not only going to survive
but thrive is just sheer arrogance."
Barna said today's Americans believe they're smarter
than the founders, maybe because of education and technology. But the
founders had that biblical foundation.
"They didn't have all the things that we think are
necessary to have a sophisticated society," he said. "But the key isn't
sophistication. It's wisdom; it's discernment; it's love; it's grace."
It may be true that many today believe they're wiser
than the people who formed America. And yet those founders were so wise
they created the greatest nation on the earth, while today's generation
is well on its way to losing it.
Source: CBN News