It saddens me that some of the most head-shaking things that happen within the "church" in America today happen at Baptist Churches. On one hand you have the screeching hate/conspiracy theories coming out of Westboro Baptist in Topeka, Kansas whose website is primarily dedicated to the things they're currently yelling about, and with them you can place Steven Anderson's Faithful Word Baptist Church in Tempe, Arizona, who at least puts forth a normal website, but a quick Youtube search will find plenty of videos of his favorite targets for yelling. Contrasting those in the us vs. the world camp, are those who have embraced the power that this world offers, going so far as to carve out time during Sunday's worship service to bring in a TV political celebrity to advocate for a new movie and of course promote the latest book from the famous pastor who himself regularly goes on the TV show of the famous guest. Scratch my back, I'll scratch yours.
Pastor Jeffress interviews Sean Hannity during the worship service
First Baptist Church of Dallas, with Dr. Robert Jeffress as pastor of the mega-church, interviewed Fox News host Sean Hannity this past Sunday for fourteen minutes, at the end of which pastor Jeffress encouraged his audience to go see the movie that Hannity was there to promote. Hannity received a standing ovation from the congregation (or is audience the right word here?). This wouldn't be the first time that I've warned about the danger of how readily Pastor Jeffress is mixing politics with the Church, (blog post: Assassination, Pastor Jeffress, and Romans 13) as he has made quite a name for himself since the start of the 2016 election cycle, appearing on TV thousands of times and becoming a regular contributor to Fox News.
At one point Hannity said, "I don't like liberals", which earned laughter and applause from the audience, then said, "I'm in the right church" as Jeffress laughingly said, "Hannity country right here".
At the end, as Jeffress indicated that his producers were telling him to wrap it up, Hannity joked, "We haven't even talked about Trump yet", leading Pastor Jeffress to chuckle and respond, "That's another sermon".
Perhaps this doesn't seem wrong to you, maybe you applaud the melding together of Fox News and First Baptist Church of Dallas, if so you probably won't be swayed by the mountain of historical evidence that shows the danger to the Church of getting in bed with political power, money, and fame.
At what point is the attention turned from the worship of God and the edification of his people onto the things of man, the pursuit of wealth and power? If this isn't too far, how far can it possibly go, during a worship service, before you think it is a problem? Will it be too far when they have commercial breaks during the service??
At what point does a pastor stop being a shepherd and start becoming a celebrity? Is it not a problem when a pastor hocks products and helps people make money instead of leading people in worship of Jesus? Whatever came before or after this point in the service, these 15 minutes were not in service to the Gospel.
If only Jesus had a book to sell, or was running for office...
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