Shadowlands and Songs of LightQuick note for fans of C. S. Lewis and/or U2 before the article begins:

When life’s sorrows bring us into shadowlands, we need the joy of Christ to restore our strength. We tap into this joy by nurturing a deeper longing for God. Shadowlands and Songs of Light: An Epic Journey into Joy and Healing takes you on a quest for joy and a life-changing longing for God.

Written by a C. S. Lewis expert and a skilled composer, the book explores 18 beloved C. S. Lewis classics, from Narnia to Mere Christianity, and 13 spiritual principles behind the art of songwriting, as seen in 13 studio albums by U2–all to answer one question: how do we experience deeper joy in our relationship with Christ during times of sorrow and trial?

Shadowlands is available to pre-order at Amazon or ChristianBooks.com. If you pre-order a copy, the author will personally email you with a thank-you note and a copy of his upcoming e-book devotional “Devotions with Tolkien,” which uses J. R. R. Tolkien’s epic “The Lord of the Rings” and Scripture. (This is all on the honor system: simply pre-order Shadowlands, and then send an email to shadowlands2016 (at) gmail (dot) com letting the author (Kevin Ott) know you’ve ordered it, and he will contact you.)

Text LIGHT to 54900 to get a preview of Shadowlands and Songs of Light.

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Note: Timothy Keller presented powerful arguments in his sermon “Exclusivity: How can there be just one true religion?” — which you can listen to at his podcast. This article comes directly from his sermon; I took careful notes of his arguments from the latter half of his sermon and presented them here (with a few of my own brief comments). These sermon notes initially appeared in my review of the film “Woodlawn” to explain the theological position behind the film. There is much more in the sermon, including a stunning refutation of the claim that all religions are equally valid paths to God and the idea that Christians should always keep their faith private and out of the public square. The full sermon podcast is worth hearing. My article summarizes his points about why Christianity is different than all other religions.

There are three truth claims in Christianity that are totally unique — claims, in other words, that no other religion makes. The unique features of these three claims are what makes miraculous reconciliation possible in divided communities — i.e. sudden inexplicable racial reconciliation like the kind that occurred at Woodlawn High School in the ’70s (which inspired the recent film “Woodlawn”).

(To be clear, it will become obvious as you read this that not every Christian who claims to be a follower of Christ applies the actual principles of the Gospel to their lives. Even Jesus saw that this would happen when He predicted that there would be wolves among His sheep. The Western Christian church in America is often as unaware of these principles as anyone else. My prayer is that the church experiences a massive Great Awakening, rediscovers these truths of the Gospel, and applies them in an effective way that is full of integrity and commitment.)

Tim Keller - 3 Ways That Christianity Is Different Than All Other Religions - Rocking God's HouseFirst, I’ll quickly summarize these three unique features of Christianity — as summed up in 1 John 4 — and then explain why they work the way they do when people sincerely believe in Christ and allow these principles to inform their lives:

1. The Origin of Salvation. 1 John 4:1-10 states that Jesus came into the world — not just that He was born. It implies that Jesus existed before His birth — that He was God, in other words; that Jesus pre-existed in what a physicist might call an extra-dimensional space independent from time and external to the universe itself. Jesus Himself claimed to be God come into the flesh in John 10 and in many other places in the four Gospels. Orthodox Christianity — i.e. the way it was in its original form — therefore claims that its founder is God who has come into the world as a human being to be with us and bear our weaknesses — “God with us,” as the title Emmanuel means, is one of Jesus’ names. No other religion makes that claim about its founder.

2. The Purpose of Salvation. 1 John 4 says He has come “in the flesh.” Why put it that way? Because that’s another way that Christianity is totally unique. Other religions say that the purpose of salvation is to liberate you — i.e. permanently separate you — from the flesh, from the material world and the body. (For example, many Eastern religions say that the physical world is an illusion, and our goal is to escape the illusion.) But Christianity says something very different. At the birth of Jesus, God, who came into our world as a human, received a body. And when Jesus rose from the dead, He still had a body. He ate food. He let people touch His wounds. He wasn’t a “ghost.”

This tells us something. God isn’t getting rid of this world. He’s redeeming it. Yes, eventually He will permanently remove death, evil, etc. but the material elements that He has made will go on. Christian salvation, in other words, finds hope not in escaping this world but in transforming it and bringing God Himself — and even all of Heaven as we see in Revelation — into this world. It’s why Jesus, in Matthew 5, tells us to pray “let Your kingdom come…on earth as it is in Heaven.” No other religion defines the purpose of salvation that way — that not only has God Himself taken on flesh to dwell among us, but He intends to heal the material world of all imperfections in the future. The fact that God wrote Himself into the story, so to speak, and became one of us, shows how deeply He loves His Creation.

However, a popular Western idea of Heaven is that souls escape their bodies and float eternally in a sort of disembodied ether of light.

But that’s not what the Bible says.

In Revelation we see the New Jerusalem — the New Heaven and the New Earth — coming down into the physical world. We’re not going up to Heaven. Heaven is coming down to us to redeem Creation once and for all.

And for that reason we work to improve the material world around us (without worshiping it as an idol) until the final redemption comes. We don’t dismiss it and say, “Oh, well, it’s all going into the trash anyways when every spirit escapes into the ether of Heaven.”

3. The Method of Salvation. In all other religions, they say if you want to be “saved” you must PERFORM the truth and do enough good works to earn your way into God’s favor and love, and thus also into Heaven. That’s not what the Gospel says at all. Verse 10 in 1 John 4 says that God loved us first before we ever made a decision to love Him.

In other words, Jesus, in His earthly ministry, was not a teacher who came to give us a new to-do list for us to accomplish in order to earn our way to God and Heaven. He wasn’t one philosopher among many giving us a new self-help book that we can use to make ourselves better (i.e. emphasis all on our own efforts to earn our way to salvation). That’s not the Gospel at all. Jesus is the Savior who came to pay, once and for all, our entire moral debt load before God by giving Himself up as the “Lamb of God,” the ultimate sacrificial atonement. As Keller said, Jesus “dies the death we should have died and lives the life we should have lived,” and then He confers all of that perfect righteousness and debt forgiveness on all of us imperfect sinners as a gift of radical grace; and He does it at the outset, at the beginning of our relationship with Him the moment we accept Him. He doesn’t wait until we’ve earned enough points. He dispenses it at the start.

Those are three things that are unique about Biblical Christianity.

So what?

Some might suggest that all the doctrine doesn’t matter as long as we stick to verse seven in 1 John 4 and its command to love one another. All we need is love, right? That’s what The Beatles said.

But the love that the Bible is talking about is a radical love — an unstoppable, counterintuitive, supernatural, unconditional, transform-an-entire-school-in-one-day kind of love that loves your enemies and forgives everyone who tries to destroy and
insult you. We cannot gain access to such quick, deep, supernatural healing in our hearts — the kind we saw in “Woodlawn” — or love others with this radical kind of love without understanding and whole-heartedly believing and committing ourselves to these three unique truths.

If you’re saying, “Give me a break, of course you can,” well, here are three reasons that explain why only these unique truths of Christianity transform us in this way:

A. The Gospel humbles you before those who don’t agree you.

Let’s remember what the definition of “religion” is. Religion, in its purest, most technical definition, simply refers to any process that finds a set of answers to the big questions: why are we here? What is the purpose of my life? What is the most valuable thing that I could be doing with my limited time on earth? The list of big questions goes on.

Works-based religion — where it’s all about keeping score and knowing who’s good and bad and building up a resume of virtues until you have enough credit in your account to earn God’s favor — always leads to a sense of superiority among those who practice it. It has to; that is the only logical conclusion of works-based religion.

However, even secularism leads to the same arrogant superiority as works-based religion. All the little precepts of what makes you “cool” or all the trendy, moral/social justice checklists of secular culture — i.e. what makes you an acceptable, good person in the eyes of secular society — add up to just another works-based religion, but without all the ceremonial trappings of churches and religious terminology.

(And in his sermon Timothy Keller mentions how secular culture in parts of New York City can be extremely harsh and critical in the way they judge and assess each other based on the clothes they wear, the cars they drive, the money they make, the career they have, or the causes they promote. It provides a classic example of secular culture being just as stringent in its “moral code” as a stuffy, moralistic, works-based religion.)

The Gospel of Christ as presented in the New Testament — i.e. grace-based religion — is the only set of exclusive beliefs (and everyone has a set of exclusive beliefs) that leads the person to expect that others can and will be better than you morally. The whole point of the Gospel is that all of us have “fallen short of the glory of God” on the same fundamental level, so none of us — no matter what external moral behavior we have — can claim any better position than someone else. In fact, we see that God can and often takes those who are total moral failures in the eyes of works-based religious people and transforms them into the mightiest of saints by the supernatural power of His grace.

In other words, a heart and mind that have fully grasped and digested the Gospel will never look down on anybody no matter who they are — whether they’re secular, religious, conservative, liberal, sinner, saint. The Gospel strips away all of our little titles that we cling to and replaces them all with one single title and identity: SAVED BY GRACE.

Every other system of thought — whether works-based religion or the many secular modes of works-based systems — leads you to believe that you’ll be better than the people who don’t believe the things that you believe.

But the Gospel says to us, “I know you’re tempted to look at that other person and think, ‘wow, are they a mess,’ but if not for grace you could have been much worse than them.”

It transforms our identity and self-perception. You begin to see every attribute as grace, not as a mark of superiority.

B. The Resurrection — and the expectation of a New Heaven and New Earth.

The belief in the Resurrection — because of its direct proof that the Creator values the material world and plans to redeem it — compels us to make the world around us better, serve those who disagree with us, and love our enemies. Why? Because that’s exactly what the founder of religion did. We have no other choice if we sincerely want to be a follower of Christ and not just pay Him lip-service. And this leads to the final point.

C. Jesus as God.

ANOTHER OBJECTION FROM SKEPTIC: Someone can easily say to a Christian that their belief that Jesus is God will automatically lead the Christian to a sense superiority. They’ll make the case that a Christian will always say: “Oh, you go to another religion do you? Well, your founder is just a human being, and my founder is God.” Surely that’s going to lead to self-righteousness, right?

It absolutely did not, historically.

In the Greco-Roman world, the pagans were tolerant in a way similar that our postmodern culture is. And then here comes Christianity declaring JESUS ALONE IS GOD. Yet the early church produced the most inclusive, peaceful community in history up until that time. Nobody had ever seen anything like it. The Greeks and Romans didn’t mix rich and poor. The early Christians did. The Jews at that time didn’t mix races. The Christians did.

Here is the real question that we should be asking: why would such an exclusive belief that Jesus is God lead to the most inclusive, peace-loving, humble community that the world had seen up to that point?

Here’s the answer. This is where Timothy Keller really hits the mark: If Jesus isn’t just a great guy, but He is God incarnate, then in Jesus Christ ultimate reality has become visible.

And when ultimate reality becomes visible, you know what He is?

You see a man on the Cross loving people who don’t love Him. For a Christian, ultimate reality is a man on a Cross using His dying breaths to pray for His enemies and forgive those who hated and opposed Him. And when the early Christian took THAT into the core of their being, how could they be cruel or hurtful to anyone?

They couldn’t.

The Cross — which was ultimate reality in their minds — compelled them to love others with a radical love that the world had never seen before. And if you take the full weight of the Gospel into the heart of your life — if you truly make the Cross your ultimate reality because you sincerely believe that Jesus is God in the flesh — you will love others with a shocking, enduring, radical love that the world around you has never seen before.

Everyone has a set of exclusive beliefs. The right question is not, “Who has exclusive beliefs and who doesn’t?” Although that topic isn’t fully explored here, the idea that tolerant people don’t have exclusive beliefs is a myth. Everyone, even those who claim that there is no absolute truth (a statement, by the way, that must assume the authority of absolute truth to even make its claim) has a set of exclusive beliefs.

The right question to ask is this: which set of exclusive beliefs will transform you into the most loving, reconciling person?

If you take moralistic, works-based religion into the center of your life — and sadly many Christians have in America — then you will feel superior to the secularists and to other Christians who don’t appear to be as “put together” as you do.

If you take secularism into the center of your life then you will feel superior to all religious people.

But if you take the Gospel into the center of your life, you will be humbled before people who don’t believe what you believe, you’ll seek to serve the people who disagree with you, and you’ll know that a man who loves people who didn’t love Him is ultimate reality — what your entire life is built on.

Jesus as ultimate reality is the most logical choice if you want a loving, peace-filled community.

That’s the theological foundation beneath the message of films such as “Woodlawn,” and that is the beating heart of the Gospel.