I just bought a book called The Unsaved Christian: Reaching Cultural Christianity with the Gospel. I was reading the extensive excerpts available on Amazon and found it to be really thought provoking.The book defines a cultural Christian as someone who unknowingly professes faith on the basis of something other than the saving work of Jesus Christ -- someone who is religious, but not saved. The book gives several example categories such as Country Club Christians, Christmas and Easter Christians, God & Country Christians, Social Justice Christians, etc. and discusses how these groups mistake the true gospel and ways that evangelistic Christians can reach them. Check it out if you have a second.Being in or near the Bible belt as so many of you are, do you find you deal more with atheists, or this sort of person who thinks they are a Christian based on things other than Christ, but lack the fruit of salvation in their lives? Have you thought about the challenge of reaching this group with the gospel? I don't know that I had ever really thought about it deeply prior to seeing this book.Even where I live in northeastern Maryland, which feels generally like a very secular place, I'd say it's probably 70/30 or more in favor of the latter category. Moralistic deism and good person Christianity are much more common here than God & Country Christianity, but it feels like *most* people here profess faith.