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How to Know If You Are A Functional Atheist

How do you know if you’re “on mission?”

What? What does that mean?

Having just finished the book Mission-Drift by Peter Greer & Chris Horst, this question has been on my mind for Impact 360 Institute as an organization. It has also raised the question of what being “on mission” means for our students and alumni.

In their chapter entitled “Functional Atheism,” Greer and Horst explain how well intended Christian organizations have a tendency to go soft on their Christian commitment in order to become increasingly palatable to a broader swath of constituents, including donors. Some donors may like the humanitarian efforts of a Christian nonprofit but feel squeamish about the organization’s faith commitment. The temptation is to cave on Christian commitment in order to please the donor so that he will feel ok about writing that generous check. If this is indeed how things play out, the organization is likely operating under “functional atheism,” which means that the outward behavior of the organization is God-less, i.e., there is no observable behavior that would identify the organization as distinctively Christian, even though internally there is (supposedly) a faith commitment. I’ve known of organizations where this kind of duplicitous behavior is standard operating procedure.

The book forced me to ask this question: in what ways, and in what areas of my life might I be functionally atheist? I think of myself as someone who stands unashamedly for the Christian faith and sees all of life through the lens of God’s sovereignty. However, at an unconscious level, in what ways could I be unwittingly sacrificing my faith commitment on the altar of pleasing others—of success? Put another way, to what extent is the idol of success keeping me from being on mission?

Maybe you’re like me in this sense. You see yourself as having a strong faith and even have observable ways of living it out regularly. How would you know if you’re experiencing a kind of personal mission drift, spiritually speaking?

In what ways are you living as a functional atheist without even realizing it?

Psalm 139:23-24 says “Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts! And see if there be any grievous way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting!”

The psalmist understood that God was the only one who could accurately discern what was driving him and what his deepest motivations were. He understood that without God’s help, he would live a bifurcated, duplicitous life in ways he didn’t even realize. He knew he would always be on mission, no matter what his tasks were, if God was constantly searching and knowing his heart. If he attempted to lock God out, he would quickly fall “off mission.”

Here are some questions to ask yourself:

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