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MISSION TO OZ Reaching Postmoderns Without Losing Your Way Mark Tabb Moody, 2004, 153 pp.
ISBN 0802442935 |
Tabb is a pastor in Indiana who has written for,
Leadership, Discipleship Journal, Christian Parenting Today, and www.pastors.com. If the postmodern landscape looks like Oz to you, this book
will provide a roadmap. “Everything around us has changed. The new world swallowed our old world,
leaving us dazed, confused, isolated—and most of us want to find a way home.”
(19) “Whether we like it or not, we’re now ambassadors of Christ to this
world.” (21) “Authenticity is the key
to effectiveness in Oz.” (21) Postmodernism is a unique way of comprehending
reality. It is “a world without a
center.” “Cultures are based on underlying ethics and morals which are
connected to a center like spokes to a hub.
In the Western world the hub has been God, truth, reason, government
and science. In the view of
postmoderns, all have failed as a true center, a final answer, to give
meaning to all of life. Oz believes everything has been tried and nothing
works. Having given up on THE meaning
of life, they hope to find some meaning for their own lives. “The result looks a lot like anarchy—at
least moral and ethical anarchy.” (28) Like missionaries to a foreign country, missionaries to Oz
have to train their minds to understand the culture. “Rather than choose one concept of right and wrong or one
standard, all worldviews are welcome.”
“When it comes to what is normal or abnormal, people want both/’and,
not either/or. We’re open to every
possibility.” “Openness…is the great
insight of our time. The true believer
is the real danger.” (33, quoting Allan Bloom) They reject the notion that one concept of truth is
adequate to explain everything.
(33) “An ‘absolute truth’
which supersedes all other truth cannot be found.” “The modern world ended when people stopped looking for a
single answer to the meaning of life.”
People are now open to an ever-expanding variety of small
explanations.” “Everyone is free to
choose his own path.” “Truth is a
very personal matter.” “And they
apply this approach to everything.”
(34) “We are alone in the universe. No higher power is out there….
Today, people realize their need for a belief in God more than ever
before.” “They want God…but the don’t
want traditional religion. They don’t
want to have to choose between being a Christian or a Buddhist. Instead they choose both.” (34-34)
“In Oz, every issue comes down to my own personal choice.”
(36) “Of course, in the end, trying to choose everything ends up being a
choice for nothing.” “Deep down,
people in this land are convinced that nothing is real, nothing is true, and
nothing matters. Even still, they
embrace everything, behaving as though their personal preferences of truth
validate themselves.” (37-38) “…no one really knows what is real. It’s not just that people cannot tell the
difference between fantasy and reality.
Many do not want to know the difference. There’s both an element of deception and self-delusion where
what is real is steadily replaced by what postmodern philosophers call hyper-reality.”
(42) “In a media-saturated world, we
lose the ability to discern what is real and what isn’t.” (42) Blurring of reality and fantasy cause people to become
skeptical and suspicious of almost everything. Are news reports biased?
Did man really walk on the moon? In this kind of world, hyper-reality can create a world of
happiness. “As the copies of reality
become their own reality, the real world begins to look less and less real.”
(44-5) “They say that all language is merely a grid placed upon
reality in an attempt to reduce it down to an understandable size. To them, all words are little more than
meaningless noise to which we have assigned artificial meaning.” (46) “No one in Oz asks what is true. What is real is the question.” “They long for something permanent, something genuine,
something that looks even better once the wrapping has been stripped away.”
(46) “People in Oz want to experience all that life can be—to
immerse themselves in it and feel a rush of adrenaline and a pounding
heartbeat.” (50) “In the postmodern world, the greatest commodity is
experience.” “We’ve moved from an
emphasis on information to immersion in the thing itself. Everything has to be hands-on, high-touch,
high-participation.” (53) “The
longing for experience is simply a priority, and it permeates every aspect of
life.” (55) “With nothing to anchor a life upon, people are left
wandering around in the dark, searching for something, anything, that will
make them feel alive.” “Deep down
inside every human being, regardless of the age in which he lives, there is a
longing to make sense of life and make it count beyond our earthly
existence.” (56) “People aren’t looking for information about God. They want to experience God, Himself. Information leaves them bored, uninterested. Experience, especially the ultimate
experience any human being can ever have, leaves them breathless. And that’s exactly what we have to offer.”
(57) “When it comes to talk about Jesus and the Bible and
believing in God, our persuasion is very modern.” We think that when all the facts are known, believing in Jesus
makes sense. It’s the only reasonable
choice. “No one in Oz thinks like
this. When people don’t believe in
the existence of absolute truth, then our appeals to logic and reason won’t
make any sense.” “And in the
postmodern world, most people’s brains are wired for pictures, not
information.” “No one understands
what we’re trying to say because they can’t see it.” (61) “People in the postmodern world think in terms of images,
and they communicate using stories.”
“But tell them stories of real people in the real world, and you have
their undivided attention.” (63) “God
chose to write the Bible as a story.”
Jesus told stories. The Bible
already speaks the language of Oz with its story, mystery, and images. Our greatest need is to learn to speak it
as well.” (65) Most Christians are afraid to try to engage postmoderns
with the gospel. And we don’t
understand what we have to offer. Yet
the postmodern world hungers for the very thing God offers through the
gospel. (72-76) He is the one thing we can offer that they can’t live
without. “Those who would follow
Jesus don’t just have to be willing to die for Him. They surrender their entire lives—their hopes, their dreams,
their plans, their possessions, their talents, everything that makes them who
they are—to the One who says, ‘Follow Me.’” (79) This extreme faith is the
message to Oz. (80) Most people do not understand who Jesus is. He was a subversive, a revolutionary, a
radical. He called for a life of
complete surrender and total commitment.
Before I call others to Him, I have to follow Him this way! (82) Why does anything exist rather than nothing? This and other great philosophical
questions leave the residents of Oz uncomfortable. Their view of the world doesn’t explain it. “Deep down they long for something
real—they long for meaning and purpose in life. Yet their worldview tells them that there is no meaning. There is no purpose.” (90) The Bible story
gives the answer, real insight into why we are what we are. (92) Most see Christianity as a religion of don’ts and this is
a barrier to Oz. But the gospel
offers three things the world can’t give: value, purpose, and freedom. “In short, a relationship with Christ
would provide them with an identity and sense of worth that they’ve never
known before.” (97) They aren’t looking for the meaning of life but for
meaning and purpose in life.
The gospel message says, “You matter; you have value and God has a
purpose for you.” (100) “Jesus came to set us free to embrace our identity
and value as a part of God’s family.”
“Within our freedom in Christ is the liberty to fully express the
image of God in us through every means possible.” (101) “Making disciples in the postmodern world cannot be
reduced to a program.” (107) “The
primary method…is by becoming painfully authentic. We have to be real before our words will mean a thing. Even then the message of our life must be
much louder than the words coming out of our mouths.” (110) “At its most basic level, being real means living a moral
life, …but this barely scratches the surface.” Small compromises, shading the truth, complacency, narcissism,
anything that exhibits an unbelieving worldview discredits us. “To be a Christian means loving the Lord
more than anything else in the world.”
“Being real means taking these words seriously and putting them into
practice.” (111) This includes a passion for His Word. “Bible-believing churches are filled with
people who don’t read the Bible.” “As
biblical illiteracy grows, people who claim to be born-again believers become
more and more indistinguishable from the world in the way they think and
act.” (112) “If we are ever going to impact Oz, we must be
different.” (113) “We need to carry on genuine conversations with the people
we hope to reach.” “Honest, authentic
conversations about God and Christ are difficult, messy, and risky.”
(113) “The canned approach [which
puts off their questions] implies that we have something to fear from an
honest interchange of ideas.” (114) “People today are more open to talking about spiritual
matters than any time I can remember, but no one wants to listen to a lecture
from a ‘God expert.’” (114) “Oz is filled with people who aren’t easy to love.”
“Putting the love of Christ into action is ‘an attempt to move over and sit
in the other person’s place and see how his problems look to him.’ It looks at people as individuals, not
projects, recognizing their great value as bearers of the image of God.”
(120) “Every day God brings unlovable people across our
paths. If we listen closely we can
hear Him whisper, ‘Let me love him through you.’” (121) Our best argument is a loving, loyal Christian
community. Postmoderns are often
converted to the group before they are converted to Christ. (122) We are not to be of this world, but we have to get
in it. “We cannot hide from our
culture and change it at the same time.” (129) Popular culture expresses many
ideas and questions about God and sin and the Bible. Dialogue with unbelievers can be a point
of common ground that will allow us to share the gospel. (131) “Living as a missionary to Oz means more than living a
good Christian life in view of our unbelieving friends and neighbors. It demands that we extend Christ’s
lordship over every part of our lives, letting our talents and abilities
actively display the power of the living God.” (135) Appendix A provides a list of recommended books on
postmodernism Appendix B offers suggestions on how to watch for the way
media portrays biblical themes. |