“This World is Not My Home” was one of my favorite songs growing up. I sang it as part of a quartet that won first at the state convention in Illinois. (Relax, it was a Christian school competition, not exactly American Idol).
But was popular song theologically right? In some ways, yes. The world system, run by the “prince and power of the air” (Ephesians 2:2), is alien to the kingdom of God. You can’t love the world, John writes, and have the love of the Father in you (1 John 2:15-17). Yet, in other ways, this song is somewhat wrong. This earth is our home and it groans in anticipation of Christ’s full kingdom renewal (Romans 8:22).
It is this fully-formed view of eschatology that should inform the way we do cultural engagement now. This is part of the recent conversation I had with Mike Wittmer, Professor of Systematic Theology, Director of the Center for Christian Worldview at Grand Rapids Theological Seminary and author of Becoming Worldly Saints.
Published on August 11, 2015 11:50