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- RECOMMENDED FOR SERIOUS CHRISTIANS ONLY!
- by Tom Sine
-
- . So now it's our turn in the footlights. What does it mean to follow this
- visionary Jesus today? What will happen if we accept Jesus into our hearts
- and accept His vision of the present and coming kingdom into our lives?
- . For one thing, our understanding of what it means to be a disciple is
- likely to be radically altered.
- . A surprising large number of American Christians have succombed to a
- compartmentalized discipleship and a privitized piety. We have compartments
- in our lives for work, family, recreation, leisure time, vacations, and
- shopping. And, of course, we have one little compartment for church,
- discipleship, and spiritual life. But in all honesty, the so-called "secular"
- compartments tend to dominate our lives, and we Christians are virtually
- indistinguishable from our non-Christian neighbors.
- . Those of us who have narrowed God's redemptive activity to that of
- rescuing our disembodied souls have particularly tended to trivialize what it
- means to be a disciple and minimize the scope of what God is doing in our
- world.
- . You see, in the popular understanding of what it means to be a Christian,
- Christ comes in and tranforms our hearts--the spiritual compartment of our
- lives. And, of course, He heals our psychological hang-ups and even gives us
- a little hand with our dispositions and relationships. But our fundamental
- life direction and life values are set by the visions and values of our
- secular American culture.
- . For example, what is our life direction before we become Christian?
- Upward mobility! What is our life direction after we become Christians?
- Upward mobility--except God is there to help us become more successful in our
- high-altitude scrambling!
- . And what were our values before we became Christians? Materialism,
- individualism, and looking out for number one! What were our values after we
- became Christians? Exactly the same. In fact, we have found an amazing array
- of ways to sanctify and rationalize our greed, autonomy, and self-interest by
- embracing the gospel of success and prosperity. (Ben Franklin, inventer of
- the success gospel, once wrote, "Reason is a wonderful thing because one can
- always find a reason for whatever it is that one wants to do.")
- . In fact, dissappointingly large number of Christian books, broadcasts, and
- sermons seem to encourage this limited view of discipleship by accepting the
- visions of American culture as an unquestioned given. By default we allow the
- secular culture to set the agenda for all the "non-spiritual" compartments of
- our lives. And then we try to work our faith in around the edges of already
- overcrowded lives. You can be sure that in the first century the disciples of
- Jesus Christ weren't doing Roman culture nine-to-five with church on Sundays!
- They understood that following Christ is a whole-life proposition that
- transforms life direction, values--everything.
- . Whatever commands our time, energy, and resources commands us. And if we
- are honest, we will admit that our lives really aren't that different from
- those our secular counterparts. I suspect that one of the reasons we are so
- ineffective in evangelism is that we are so much like the people around us
- that we have very little to which we can call them. We hang around church
- buildings a little more. We abstain from a few things. But we simply aren't
- that different. We don't even do hedonism as well as the folks around
- us...but we keep on trying.
- . As a result of this unfortunate accomodation, Christianity is reduced to
- little more than a spiritual crutch to help us through the minefields of the
- upwardly mobile life. God is there to help us get our promotions, our house
- in the subarbs, and our bills paid. Somehow God has become a co-conspirator
- in our agendas instead of our becomeing a co-conspirator in His. Something is
- seriously amiss.
- . Listen again to the invitation of the Master: "Anyone who wishes to be a
- follower of mine must leave self behind; he must take up his cross, and come
- with me. Whoever cares for his own safety is lost; but if a man will let
- himself be lost for my sake and for the Gospel, that man is safe. What does a
- man gain by winning the whole world at the cost of his true self?" (Mark
- 8:34-36 NEB)
- . Tragically, in contemporary Christianity we keep finding ways to soften
- Jesus' radical teaching and ignore His compassionate vision. As a
- consequence, His vision has very little impact on either our lives or God's
- world. But thankfully, Christ never gives up. He keeps urging us to set
- aside our lesser agendas and seek His kingdom first.
- . The Scripture makes it pretty clear that this business of following Jesus
- is a whole life propositon. Listen to Paul's challenge to the Roman
- Christians: "Therefore I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer
- you bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God--which is your
- spiritual worship. Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world,
- but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to
- test and apporve what God's will is--His good, pleasing and perfect will."
- (Rom. 12:1-2, NIV).
- . Urging us to give our "bodies to Christ" is simply another way of
- challenging us to give ourselves totally to God, inviting Christ to renew our
- minds and transform our values.
- . Therefore, if we want to discover our role in the drama of God, we won't
- find it simply by making church on Sundays on compartment in our upwardly
- mobile scramble. Christ reminds us not to worry about our lives by asking,
- "'What shall we eat?' or 'What shall we drink?' or 'What shall we wear?' For
- pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you
- need them. But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these
- things will be given to you as well" (Matt. 6:33, NIV).
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