| The
new Wal-Mart Supercenter just opened up in my town, and man,
what a sight!
It’s a mammoth structure of utilitarian architecture that houses
everything from a grocery to a garden center, along with every
dry good you can imagine from fashion wear to office supplies.
And people just flock there because it’s one-stop shopping,
famous low prices, and a quick “get in and get out” affair.
It is an
amazing achievement in the history of American consumerism.
Oh, and don’t forget
about the official Smiley Face mascot greeting you on every
sign. It just makes you feel all warm and fuzzy inside as you
spend your money to save money.
The only problem is
that the former Wal-Mart building in town is now vacant
since the retail giant moved its local operation to the new
Supercenter facility. Hard to believe that twenty years ago this
smaller Wal-Mart store was the shining Camelot on the hill for local
shoppers. Now it’s just a castle ruin, an empty shell of
its former glory as the company moves on to bigger and better
things. Alas, a sign of the times, I’m
afraid.
Prior to the beginning
of this Sam Walton invasion, our town had a few Mom-and-Pop
retail stores downtown, but they’re gone now, too. The first
Wal-Mart that landed here soon priced those little shops right
out of the market and made it too easy for the faithful customers of
our local enterprises to be slowly seduced by
the discount convenience of the new store in town. Hometown
loyalty and one-on-one service be damned! Pretty soon, those slow-paced, family-run stores with creaky wood floors and
clanging brass cash registers had to close their doors for good.
Nobody valued their unassuming brand of commerce anymore.
So why
do I bring all this up? Because it seems to me that many
Christians today have been infected with the same corrupting
consumerism that has given rise to the Wal-Mart Supercenter.
Their lives are no longer content with the eloquent simplicity
of Jesus Christ and His Word, but now clamor for a wide variety
of new and improved Christianized products to over-indulge their
so-called faith. The congregations have moved out of the austere
model of the small-town church, where unadorned worship to God
rang forth, and have instead built for themselves Christian
Supercenters in which to sell their worldly goods and services
in the name of Christ.
You see striking
evidence of this Wal-Mart mentality in postmodern Christianity
every time you step into your local Christian bookstore and have
to walk past shelf after shelf of shiny religious trinkets and
trite bestsellers before you get to that little section of plain
black Bibles in the far back corner. You see it every time you
watch millions of professed Christians assemble in their
multi-million dollar sanctuaries to hear feel-good sermons by
Smiley Face mascots who offer heaven and happiness at a discount
price.
Of course, it
didn’t use to be
like this. There was a time, believe it or not, when we survived
just fine without the trappings of modern consumerism in our
life. Long before the first Wal-Mart was built in my
mostly-rural area, the presence of any kind of retail store was
a rarity. All people really
had back then was the Sears catalog. It sat there, prized like
the family Bible, on the kitchen counter. Every member of the
family had gone through that tome over and over again,
memorizing the products that they dreamed of having one day. Yet
they had no money for such luxuries and if they did, it was only
due to careful hoarding of every stray penny they could scrape
up. Sometimes they had to wait three years before saving enough
money to buy that fancy hand-cranked clothes wringer so Mom didn’t
have to wear out her arms twisting the clothes dry, unaided by
modern technology.
Of course, when times
got really bad, even the Sears catalog brought no comfort,
except to supply a need for toilet paper in the outhouse.
Back then, we had a Great Depression caused by the blind self-indulgence of the
Jazz age; and rural people in this area (through no fault of
their own) were especially hit hard by it. These
poor country folks didn’t have
convenience stores, they only had each other. Families made just
about everything they owned, and if they couldn’t make it,
they had a good neighbor who could. It was a time when farming
was so bad that it was more profitable to use their corn crop to
burn in their stove for heat than to sell it for a lousy few
cents per bushel. So the local families knitted themselves together and
looked out for one another. It was a hard time, sometimes a
desperate time. But with lots of faith, love, and patience, they
got through it together as a community. There was no such thing
as fast food outlets, shopping malls, or Wal-Mart Supercenters
to bring swift temporal relief to their plight. It was a
bare-boned existence that divided the wheat from the chaff, and
forced humble folks to focus on the simple things in life
that really mattered and to rejoice in them.
So you see, there was a time when
Christians in this country were content with being lowly, meek,
and poor in spirit. They served humbly in small congregations, read
their Bibles faithfully, and prayerfully focused on the glory of
Christ alone as they witnessed and brought aid to others. Over
time, however, we became more prosperous and self-satisfied, and
just like the Jazz Age, we began to borrow on a spiritual
capital that we no longer possessed in order to gratify our ever-increasing
desire for the things of this world. Soon, many churches became
bastions of consumerism and began emulating themselves after the
business world, until they finally transformed themselves into a
kind of Wal-Mart Christianity.
The problem is, this
over-indulgence in the churches will one day takes its toll and
collapse like the stock market in 1929 because it is built on a
foundation other than Christ alone. And when that inevitable day
arrives in which we are stripped of our fleshy provisions and
thrust into a great spiritual Depression, how will
this rabid Christian consumerism provide for our needs and how much of
it will quickly be engulfed by the fires of God’s testing?
In the end, it’s hay and stubble, my
friends. All this Wal-Mart Christianity is just hay and stubble. |