Erwin W. Lutzer, pastor emeritus of The Moody Church, stepped into the political arena with his 2022 book No Reason To Hide: Standing for Christ in a Collapsing Culture. He writes to reclaim the Church to stand for righteousness and not surrender to a world on the broad path to destruction, to borrow from Matthew 7:13-14. He reminded me of Paul writing to the churches in his New Testament letters. It’s a book Christians need “for such a time as this.”
Lutzer filters the culture through the lens of the Bible and not the other way around. His call for Christians living in America’s crazy, confusing, chaotic culture is not to be complicit nor complacent. He encouraged us to stand and be ready to fight this on-going spiritual battle. Lutzer’s well-researched guide has end notes for readers to dive deeper during and after reading this book. I’ve already requested one book he referred to often: Kingdom Race Theology by Dr. Tony Evans. Others I’ve added to my reading list include Carl R. Trueman’s The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self; Rod Dreher’s Live Not By Lies: A Manual for Christian Dissidents; and fictional works by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Aldous Huxley, and George Orwell.
Reading that list, you can probably guess the topics Lutzer covered, but I’ll include a few more. Marxism/Cultural Marxism; Critical Theory (Critical Race Theory, Gender and Queer Theory); social justice; and systemic racism are discussed as well as redefined words like “woke” and “white supremacy.” U.S. race relations have taken many steps backwards since the Civil Rights movement. We have become comfortable in our worship of the self. People want to believe fantasies over truth, ignoring and discounting objective truth and natural law.
Lutzer’s sermon style and anchoring stories helped frame the discussion. Pastor H.B. Charles, Jr., opened the book with the first story he named, “Don’t Stoop At Standing Time,” which he preached on here. You can read the full story of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego in Daniel 3 here, but I will give a synopsis for you. King Nebuchadnezzar made a ginormous image of himself in gold. He demanded that every individual and Nation bow down in worship when they heard the music playing. Whoever did not bow down would be thrown into a burning, fiery furnace (v. 6). Nebuchadnezzar had appointed the three Jewish men, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, over the affairs of Babylon. The Chaldeans saw they would not bow down before the golden image and ran to the king to rat them out. The Jewish men were given a second chance to bow in worship, (v.15) but they said in v. 16-18,
“O Nebuchadnezzar, we have no need to answer you in this matter. If this be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and He will deliver us out of your hand, O king. But if not, be it known to you, O king, that we will not serve your gods or worship the golden image that you have set up.”
They were taken by guards and thrown into the furnace with a blaze so hot the guards died putting them in there (v. 22). Nebuchadnezzar saw they didn’t burn; in fact, he saw them walking around with a fourth person who he said “looked like the son of the gods” (preincarnate Jesus Christ).
Nebuchadnezzar had the men taken out of the furnace. They showed no signs that the fire had touched them. They didn’t even smell like a campfire. Nebuchadnezzar recognized and praised God. The message from that sermon: the church today should not stoop at standing time. Don’t let the evil one silence you. The Gospel message must advance.
Lutzer adds Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s story in The Gulag Archipelago to illustrate how Christians need to respond. In this story, a deputy speaks in glowing terms about Stalin in front of a large group of people. The audience applauds in fear and not in agreement. Solzhenitsyn says this went on for at least 10 minutes when one paper factory director stopped and sat down. As soon as the one man stopped clapping, the rest stopped clapping as well. That evening the paper factory director was arrested and sentenced to 10 years. He learned to never be the first one to stop clapping.
Like an investigative journalist, Lutzer answered well the “5 Ws + how” questions that need to be answered to explain how our culture has eroded over time. On the surface, language wars have taken over, but also destructive ideologies are marching through all the institutions, Lutzer said. The end goal is to destroy our Nation’s foundations, especially its Judeo-Christian foundations. The Cultural Marxists among us want to place people in groups and remove individual differences. The more we fight each other, the less we’ll be united. Division and chaos are seen as good things. Evil masquerades as good. Lutzer took me back to literary criticism class where I learned about long dead white guys, Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud, who are gaining new followers. No one will own anything. The state will own everything. But we’ll be happy about it…until we disagree with the State and are sent off to a labor camp. It won’t end well.
People think they can “build back better” on their own without God’s help. History is repeating itself, but the warnings aren’t heeded.
The radical Left wants people to affirm lies, overrule facts, and ignore the voice of reason and common sense. They accuse people of intolerance, Lutzer said, but what they really want is dominance. Huxley’s Brave New World written in 1931 and Orwell’s 1984 in 1949 were both satires written after a World War took place. These dystopian novels appear as a warning and a prophecy of what can happen in a country ruled by socialism. Cancel culture, like the thought police, want to limit what words are use and what words people are no longer allowed to say. Call it being woke or political correctness, the goal is to get people to censor themselves and police their thoughts.
We’re already a very litigious nation, Lutzer said. We’ve seen stories in the news where Christians are sued for not wanting to compromise their beliefs. Some have been arrested recently for praying outside an abortion clinic or for passing out fliers. Others are doxed when they disagree with people.
“That’s how collective demonization works: no discussion, no debate regarding whether a person’s views are right or wrong, no opportunity to defend one’s self. You are summarily destroyed; your livelihood, your reputation, and your future are often left in ruins. No civility; you’re just made a victim of targeted destruction” (38).
But the enemy is not the corrupt culture; the enemy is Satan. He wants to undermine the authority of the Bible and sabotage the advance of the gospel of Jesus Christ. It’s the same spiritual battle, different day. Jesus said His followers would be hated, reviled, even put to death. (Matthew 24:9-10) The church in the past has thrived in adversity though, Lutzer said. After Christ’s resurrection and ascendance to Heaven, the young Church thrived despite opposition, including threats of arrest or death. Some Christians became martyrs. The Gospel message gained traction and spread like a wildfire.
Lutzer shares promises from Scripture, a hero or heroine to consider, and an action step for Christians to join the spiritual battle. The stories of heroes at the end of each chapter are especially encouraging after reading about so many troubling things about the U.S. Solzhenitsyn is Lutzer’s second chapter hero for what happened after his 8-year stint as a political prisoner. He had been sent to the gulag labor camp with the goal that he’d be brainwashed into becoming an obedient communist. But instead, he left a Christian who would later reveal the horrors of communist rule, Lutzer said. In the prison hospital, Solzhenitsyn heard the Gospel message from a doctor who later would be clubbed to death. The doctor had no idea the outcome of his witness. I like the verse Lutzer used because it fits his message of standing firm and sharing the Gospel,
“Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain.” 1 Corinthians 15:58.
We as Christians need to unite as one body. We need to study God’s word and stay ready like the good soldier of Christ Jesus in 2 Timothy 2. In so doing, we will become heroes of faith in the lives of those walking in darkness. The mission is still to advance the Gospel, Lutzer challenges, and the motivation is still to share our testimony about how Jesus saved us and all He has accomplished on our behalf.
I read each chapter twice to digest Lutzer’s discussion. And then I searched online. He covers some of the material from No Reason To Hide online in Moody Church Media’s 5 Minutes with Erwin Lutzer in 13 messages on YouTube.
No Reason To Hide is a book of hope, Lutzer said. If you’re a Christian, you won’t be too surprised that we’ll face opposition, censorship, arrest or litigation. We have the same assignment: share the Gospel of Jesus Christ in a world that has increasingly bowed the knee to the evil one. That is our motivation. Read and study God’s word, the Bible, and filter the culture through Scriptures. That will arm us to not let those who have filtered Scriptures through the culture to persuade you to believe lies about yourself and others. Dr. Evans said it best in his review of Lutzer’s book:
“Read this book to be challenged and convicted, and above all, better understand why it is a joyful privilege to represent Christ despite growing opposition,” Dr. Evans said. “After all, as the title of the book tells us, we have no reason to hide.”