The Politically Incorrect Jesus
Living Boldly in a Culture of Unbelief
by Joe Battaglia
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Feb 01 2015 | Archive Date Apr 01 2015
Broadstreet Publishing Group LLC | Broadstreet Publishing Group, LLC
Description
Jesus. He is admired and ridiculed, embraced and rejected. If you want to provoke controversy and emotional discussion, just mention His name.
Jesus was inclusive when He welcomed all the weary and burdened to come to Him and experience the love of His Father. But He was not open-minded when it came to the truth. He stated that He was the truth. And this flies in the face of current politically correct thought.
In Politically Incorrect Jesus, Joe Battaglia exposes the intellectual dishonesty of political correctness and presents Jesus as the model for embracing a counter-cultural faith, which empowers us to be salt and light. Be bold and stand firm in your faith when the culture demands you stand down.
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9781424549818 |
PRICE | $14.99 (USD) |
Average rating from 7 members
Featured Reviews
Joe Battaglia, a veteran of media and culture, has a few things to say about culture and the culture wars. As he writes in The Politically Incorrect Jesus: Living Boldly in a Culture of Unbelief, he doesn't have a lot of patience with political correctness, which he defines as "the 'chic' moral ideology of the day advocated and fleshed out in the public square by self-appointed gatekeepers of public opinion to the point where that definition becomes 'fashionable.'" In 24 short chapters, Battaglia challenges Christians to be salt and light (and fertilizer) in a culture that demands conformity, a version of tolerance, and a rejection of biblical Christian standards.
Lest you lump Battaglia in with "culture warriors" as maligned and caricatured in the media, he makes it clear that he does not "believe the government could actually become the savior of the American society." He never wants to "raise the flag higher than the cross." Culture warriors need to "leave Jesus out of it," so that their political agenda doesn't distract from Jesus' mission.
Nevertheless, cultural and theologically conservative Christians will find common ground with Battaglia. He bemoans the coarseness of the media, which celebrates voyeurism and has removed a sense of shame. He questions "tolerance" that refuses to acknowledge the obvious. For example, after 9-11, law enforcement been criticized for paying more attention to the American Islamic community. But he asks, based on what we know about who has committed acts of terrorism, "Where else are you going to look first?"
Huge problems arise when PC culture would "have everyone believe that moral absolutes do not exist . . . which is absurd. . . . Not only does it promulgate intellectual dishonesty, it asks us to disregard the internal moral compass built into each of us by the Creator." In spite of our efforts, "we cannot answer the great questions of life by looking inside ourselves. We cannot find within us that which can only be found outside of us." The result is violence, societal unrest, broken families, social isolation, and on and on.
Battaglia wants Christians to be known for what they stand for, not what they stand against. He offers plenty of food for though in The Politically Incorrect Jesus. Although not heavy on prescriptive norms, he instead leaves the reader with a framework for thinking about engaging culture. "Living boldly" as a believer begins with recognizing the ways in which culture today tends unnecessarily to silence voices of faith. As Christ-followers, "Jesus expects [Christians] to actually believe everything He said and be His representative here on earth." Yes, that is often a non-PC way to live. But Jesus set the standard for bucking the PC culture of his day. In following him, Christians should do the same.
Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the complimentary electronic review copy!
Warning: You will need your highlighter while reading this book of political wisdom. What has happened in the American political arena is we now have them vs. us mentality. It is actually politically driven to pit the masses against each other. It keeps their agendas alive and unfortunately we Christians have taken the bait. The most important thing we can do is find the common ground and keep it.
One example is abortion. Those for pro-choice do not agree to killing babies and would like to avoid having abortions and that is the common ground we must build on. In fighting the culture war, leave Jesus out of it. And leave His words out of it too. Otherwise, those who might really see Jesus in you will get confused about the gospel when you raise the flag or any cause higher than the cross. (Kindle 234).
Another tactic is on the Political Correct is the redefinition of the American Language. In doing so, they breed hypocrisy and fear. With the new redefinition, also came no disagreements and no coming to the table. However, what has happened with no disagreements and discourse we are becoming a closed society. Totalitarianism is born and a disparity between classes of people widens.
The political kingdom vs Christ’s kingdom insight is perceptive and helps the reader to see the danger of a political driven kingdom and the hope of Christ kingdom. Reminding us of absolute truth and the strength we as citizens of the kingdom of God can rest on.
A very well written and engaging study on how politically incorrect Jesus was and continues to be.
A special thank you to Broadstreet Publishing Group, LLC and NetGalley for the opportunity.
Readers who liked this book also liked:
Lynette Eason; Lynn H. Blackburn; Natalie Walters
Christian, Novellas & Short Stories, Romance