- RSS FeedSubscribe
- « Previous Post"The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment" Blog Tour (Day 2)
- Next Post »A La Carte (1/9)
"Culture Shift" by Dr. Albert Mohler
- 01/08/08
- 4
The most surprising thing about Culture Shift is that it is Dr. Albert Mohler's first book. Though he has been a contributor to edited volumes and though he is a very prolific writer, this book represents his first solo effort. Published by Multnomah and set to his store shelves on January 15, Culture Shift is a book that engages current issues with Scripture's timeless truths. It teaches Christians how they should think about such issues. Dr. Mohler is one of the church's foremost cultural commentators and is well-qualified to write such a book. Through his blog, through his radio program and through his media appearances, he has proven that he can combine theological acumen with spiritual discernment as he addresses the issues that affect the church in our culture.
In the first four chapters, Mohler lays some important groundwork. He first addresses Christian faith and politics by using the case St. Augustine made in The City of God. Humanity, he says, is confronted by two cities--the City of God and the City of Man. While the City of God is eternal, the City of Man is only fleeting and temporal. However, it's passing nature does not mean that the city is entirely unimportant. Christians are called to responsibility in both cities. "Even as we know that our ultimate citizenship is in heaven, and even as we set our sights on the glory of the City of God, we must work for good, justice, and righteousness in the City of Man." As we seek to live between these two cities, Christians tend to swing between extremes, sometimes giving undue attention to one or sometimes looking too singularly to the other. This book seeks to help Christians understand how they can live in this tension. Having addressed the importance of engaging the City of Man, Mohler moves two three secular arguments, three secular myths and then five theses related to Christian morality and public law.
Having laid the groundwork, he turns to particular areas where Christian truth can speak to cultural issues. He looks at a Christian challenge to the culture of offendedness, the Supreme Court's rulings on religion, terrorism, torture and public schooling. He looks to the God gene, American immaturity, abortion, natural disasters and other contemporary issues. In each case he addresses these topics by looking to the Bible's timeless truths to show how God informs and directs our engagement with the culture. In each case he handles the issue with grace but also with truth. Those who are familiar with Mohler's blog will be familiar with the way he sets about engaging with issues and will even recognize many of these essays as most of them began their lives in one form or another at his blog.
In his introduction to the book Dr. Mohler writes "We must first understand our culture and its challenges because we are to be faithful followers of Christ and faithful witnesses to the gospel. We are called to faithfulness, and faithfulness requires that we be ready to think as Christians when confronted with the crucial issues of the day. This is all rooted in our love of God." An understanding of culture, then, is an evangelistic necessity if we are going to impact this culture with the good news of the gospel. The essays in this book will help equip Christians to understand the culture in which we find ourselves so that we can reach into it and engage with it for the glory of God. Dr. Mohler's first book is an excellent one and I pray it is only the first of many.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (4)
I hope readers will also take a closer look at Augustine’s City of God. Many talk about these two cities, taking them to indicate a sacred-secular or duality or maybe a supernatural-natural split. Maybe I’m all screwed up, but that seems precisely what Augustine was NOT thinking.
(1) For instance, the two cities originated from the holy vs. the fallen angels, so that both cities were supernatural (1958, 3.11.1). (2) The two cities also resulted from “men who live according to the spirit” vs. “men who live according to the flesh,” so both cities were earthly (3.14.1; cf. 4.15.1-5). (3) Augustine also contrasted these cities as the “vessels of mercy” vs. the “vessels of wrath” (4.15.6).
In any case, the two cities appear to represent the ethical break between righteousness and unrighteousness, not a sacred-secular duality.
Check it out for yourself.
Augustine, A. (1958/early fifth century). The city of God. (V. J. Bourke, Ed.). New York: Image Books.
Tim Challies I know, but who is Al Mohler?
“Your kingdom come Your will be done, On earth as it is in heaven. ” I think it goes beyond engaging two cities with moderation (vs. extreme); it is a matter of being an instrument for one to invade the other and transform it.
“We must first understand our culture and its challenges because we are to be faithful followers of Christ and faithful witnesses to the gospel.” I agree that we must understand our culture, however, we must first understand our God. I believe many people are not faithful witnesses because they do not understand our God, not because they do not understand our culture. Many Christians expose themselves to the teachings of Christ by reading His word far less than they are exposed to the culture around them.
There’s something a little odd about many culture and Christianity musings. When my next door neighbor (a good healthy heathen) goes to see a movie he or she sees no reason to justify it. When I go to see the same movie, however, I’m learning about my culture so that I can better communicate the Gospel. I act as if I’m an alien to and an observer of my own culture. Could it be that in trying to learn about my culture I don’t really see the movie? Does Dr. Mohler address this?