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Monday Jeremiah 29 v 4 – 7 Our reading today describes how God wanted the people of Israel to conduct themselves in the pagan city and culture where they found themselves living. Over the next few days we will consider how to live in the world that is. In the history of Israel covered by the Bible, there were periods during which the Israelites lived as believers in a pluralistic, pagan environment among people with vastly different worldviews. For example, when they reached Canaan, they failed to drive out the idol-worshiping people and, instead, settled in among them. Also, when Nebuchadnezzar defeated Jerusalem, he carried most of the Israelites off to live in the city and environs of Babylon. In both situations, believers did not live in a believing culture, where the government, the arts, and the cultural institutions were committed to the Lord and his Word and will. They lived in an environment where the dominant culture was pagan and the dominant worldview dissimilar to their own. There are many ways Christians can relate to and live in an unbelieving, dominant culture. Timothy Keller has collected and formulated some “attitudes” which Christians very often adopt when relating to the environment in which they live. Read them as they appear over the next few daysand contemplate them. (Pleasenote that the “attitudes” discussed are not perfectly distinct categories.) Attitude 1 — Assimilating the City Christians simply give in and adopt the pagan culture’s values and worldview. The goal is to blend in and lose any distinct identity. Judges gives us many examples of this. By the time of Samson (Judges 14 – 16), the Israelites were so accommodated to Philistine culture that they were within a generation of losing all distinct identity. Attitude 2 — Reflecting the City Christians keep some aspects of Christian faith and practice, but they adopt the more fundamental values and worldviews of the dominant culture. Faith is for Sunday services and does not shape the way they actually live. Their lifestyle is fundamentally no different from those around them. Thus they are just a subset of the dominant culture. The story of Micah and his mother in Judges 17 – 18 is a great example. Challenge Point: Read Judges 14 – 18 and spot the two attitudes mentioned above in these stories.