Between 1967 and 1972 the Vietnam War caused a deep unrest in the youth of America to come to the surface. Along with the three assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy in a five-year period (1963-1968), growing anti-war sentiment catapulted that restlessness into a movement that could not be contained. It broke out on the Berkeley campus through the Free Speech movement. Almost overnight, opposition to the war became the catalyst for speaking out against the infrastructure of Nixon America and the American culture.
At first it was not so clear that there was an underlying spiritual hunger in the youth of America. Their collective cry reverberated feelings that "We are not our parents," "We are not university trustees," "We are not American capitalists," and "We do not want to die in a senseless war." They had given up on the values of past generations and were willing to strike a new course, even though they did not know where it would lead. They saw established Christianity as having nothing and doing nothing about the problems they were concerned about. The last thing they wanted to do was to sit on a pew and hear another sermon that fueled the status quo of mainstream American life.
There was also a very strong reaction against the misuse of America's great wealth. The "60s was the height of the empire, a time when the government and the people had access to the most money ever available. But in the eyes of this generation, America's wealth was being squandered building a war machine and fattening the pockets of giant corporations while many lived beneath the poverty line in a near welfare state. Neither the politicians nor the preachers were doing anything to end the economic injustice this generation saw all around them. This environment was the hotbed of rebellion for that whole generation.
Love was the answer! LSD
was the way! A revolution
had begun! "Make love, not
war" was the philosophy
that caused the youth at
Berkeley and all across
the land to shed their parents" values,
their religion, and their
American dream. They cast
off restraint and followed
their own dreams. In their
search for a place to belong
they participated in "acid
tests," went to Merry Pranksters
events, "Human Be-Ins" in
Golden Gate Park, Whole
Earth Festivals, Grateful
Dead shows, and experiments
with communal living.
But it didn't take long for the dreams to shatter. The leadership of the Movement was a disaster, old-fashioned greed began to raise its ugly head, and the LSD didn't work. Drugs only eased the pain but didn't change the reality. John Lennon's song Imagine was only good ideas with no way to attain to them. Free love didn't last, so neither did relationships. A lot of young people were deeply damaged by this. They still wanted love. They wanted something radical. They wanted something real, not just a utopian ideal.
Even before the hippie movement crashed, the preachers were ready to cash in on it. They, too, showed up for the Free Speech Movement in Berkeley and took advantage of the opportunity to speak out on campus. They latched onto the same themes of the "60s and pointed the disillusioned hippies to Jesus. These preachers had long hair, wore beads and blue jeans. Through their dark shades and hip talk, they promised these searching young people that Jesus would give them love, he would solve their problems and he would heal the damage from the failed Movement of the radical hippies.
These brand new "Jesus
Freaks" heeded the call,
thinking they were being
led out of the camp of dead
religion that had no answers
and no life and into the
camp of Jesus where they
would find the love they
were looking for. This was
the real revolution... the
Jesus Revolution! They had
finally found a life of
love — a Jesus" love! It looked
so real and it felt so real
to them. After all, these
preachers were part of them,
or so it seemed. Gone was
the rigid structure of organized
religion they had known
growing up. They were not
meeting in church buildings
but on beaches and in parks.
They weren't singing stuffy
old hymns, but their
own music, with beautiful
melodies played on acoustic
guitars. Love, peace, and
harmony were possible and
they believed it couldn't
fail. They were getting
high on Jesus and didn't
need anything else. There
was a free-flowing stream
of good feelings, good vibes,
and praise to the Jesus
that made it happen. Yes!
This was real, and this
was going to last forever.
The Jesus People thought
they had truly escaped the
mainstream camp of dead
religion that Jesus said
you had to leave in order
to follow Him. However,
as time went on, the beach
ministries moved into buildings
and things began to shift
back toward what the Jesus
Freaks thought they had
left behind. Some old skeletons
began to raise their ugly
heads. More than a few fell
into sexual immorality,
and the age-old plague handed
down for generations in
Christendom — division.
History is a great teacher, if we will pay attention. Time and time again, the voice that has led disillusioned believers out of their dead churches has not had the authority to restore the church to the dynamic life of love it once had in the beginning. It has not had the power or the authority to call people outside the camp and into the place where Jesus is, because those making the call are entrenched inside the divided camp themselves. The Jesus Movement was no exception. This is the history and legacy of Christianity.
But the spirit of Christianity is a powerful drug. Even though it doesn't have the authority to call anyone out of the camp, it does seduce those in its ranks into accepting the old established norms of society and religion. Now that the Jesus Movement has proven to be just a more streamlined, contemporary expression of the divided and corrupt religious camp most thought they were leaving behind, it would be fair to ask old Jesus Freaks if they got hoodwinked into smoking the spiritual opium that sedates the masses.
Getting high on Jesus has, 30 years later, led the throngs of people "saved" in the Jesus Movement back into the status quo. In fact, the Jesus Movement has become the status quo for thousands in mainstream America. The spirit that used to burn people at the stake for disagreeing with the favored denomination now numbs its followers to the point that they don't even notice when others divide. Chuck Smith, the founder of Calvary Chapel, deals this drug regularly to his followers. He even says it right on his website: "The more spiritual a person becomes, the less denominational he is. We should realize that we're all part of the Body of Christ and that there aren't any real divisions in the Body. We're all one." Now that spirit isn't allowed to kill people who disagree, so it must be content to sedate them into staying inside the camp, becoming ever more comfortably conformed to the traditions and ways of the world around them. These drugged followers accept Billy Graham's kissing the ring of the Pope. They accept their pastors committing adultery without stepping down. They barely muster the strength to discipline priests who sexually abuse children. This is the ecumenical spirit that is taking over the world.
True sheep know they are trapped by this spirit in Christianity but they don't see a way out. Always, always, always the tendency is to believe it can't happen, that there can't be a witness of love demonstrated in hundreds of communities that are in true unity, at least not until Jesus comes back. If this is true, it means that the Holy Spirit is not great enough to bring about John 17:23, so another spirit leads Christians to just overlook their differences.
But Jesus prophesied that
a visible witness of the
kingdom will be raised up
in the last days to be a
light to the nations that
puts the evidence of God's
love before all the nations
— and then and only then
will
the end come. When this
happens, it will be a Jesus
movement that never ends,
that will not be given to
another people. When
God raises up true messengers
on the earth that are actually
sent by Him, they will have
the authority to call His
sheep out of the divided
camp of lifeless religion,
just as Abraham, Moses,
John the Baptist, and Jesus
Himself did. This is the
voice of the true Shepherd
that has authority to save
people from their sins and
from this wicked and perverse
society.
This voice is the one that
will give hope to old Jesus
Freaks if they still have
a nagging conscience about
what the Jesus Movement
has become. True sheep have
nagging dissent in their
heart – not rebellion, but
dissent — because they really
want to do God's will. True
sheep hear His voice and
they never quite get high
on the spirit that tells
them division in the church
doesn't matter. They know
they are lonely and that
they really don't have the
radical life Jesus called
His disciples to spend their
lives establishing.
Mt 21:43; Heb 13:13
Jn 12:26
Dan 2:44
Acts 2:37-42
Mt 24:13-14
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