Cedarville Magazine, Spring 2013
10 | Cedarville Magazine by Bill Brown If, for example, the Dream consists only of the accumulation of riches, then everything in life has cash value — not only jobs, but relationships, experiences, and even spiritual beliefs. Chuck Palahniuk’s anti-hero, Tyler Durden in Fight Club , claims that the American Dream requires people to take jobs they don’t want so they can buy things they don’t need. Rather than empowering people with freedom and opportunity, Americans lose their personal identity in the tsunami of advertising and celebrity materialism. Durden laments, “We’ve all been raised on television to believe that one day we’d all be millionaires, movie gods, and rock stars. But we won’t. And we’re slowly learning that fact.” On the social side, the civil rights movement confronted the inequities in American society that deprived minorities of equal standing and opportunity. In his famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., recognized that prejudice and racism had warped society’s understanding of the American Dream. He wrote, “When these disinherited children of God sat down at lunch counters, they were really standing up for what is best in the American Dream and for the most sacred values in our Judeo-Christian heritage.” Sharing the Message While these and other distortions of the Dream are real, the prevailing focus question at the conference was: How should Christians live out their faith in a culture defined by the American Dream? A recent USA Today /Gallup poll sounded the alarm for a declining belief in the “American Dream.” Half of the respondents think it is unlikely that today’s youth will have a better life than their parents, and most Americans believe that our country’s best years are behind us. While this is a sobering snapshot of the current mood in America, the idea of the American Dream still pervades the social ethos of our country. The Dream has drawn — and continues to draw — millions from around the world to the freedom and opportunity that embody it. They come to live in a land where social mobility is not determined by circumstances of birth and class structure but by commitment, hard work, and talent. But the idea that every person has the freedom to achieve success and prosperity is not easily maintained in practical ways. Political and social tensions have dominated American society as leaders and citizens discuss, debate, and argue about the best ways to preserve the values embedded in the Dream. How involved should the government be? In what ways should it enforce social equality and economic opportunity for all citizens? These were some of the many issues explored at Cedarville’s most recent national program, American Dream Conference: Christian Perspectives on the Economy. The conference took place on October 25–26, 2012, and featured some of today’s most influential evangelical minds presenting Christ-centered perspectives on the economy, the government, and a biblical response to wealth. There were areas of wide disagreement — yes, even among an evangelical Christian group. But the points of agreement provided a stirring awareness that we are all on the same team serving Christ and bringing hope to a world in despair. This was a powerful reminder of the strategic value and effectiveness of Cedarville’s Critical Concern conferences. Living the Dream While the American Dream still provides hope for personal achievement and the public good, experience has shown there is a dark side. Without amoral and spiritual foundation, the AmericanDream becomes distorted by individual expectations or societal prejudices. and American Jesus
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