Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Random Thoughts About the Church

I've recently finished a book that confirmed so many of my own thoughts on the church.  It's entitled, Shrink: Faithful Ministry in a Church-Growth Culture by Tim Suttle.   I'll list some of the main ideas the book has reestablished in my heart.  

The church is not called to grow nor to shrink but to be the church.  I heard this line from a professor nearly 20 years ago, and it has stayed with me.  Granted, I always haven't embraced this approach.  I'll admit it: I've been driven by fear to embrace a plan promising church growth.  Nonetheless, I've frequently come back to this central thought.  It has kept me grounded.  

Making growth your goal can be toxic.  Churches committed to nickels and noses can easily fail to be the church.  Sometimes, churches need to slow down and be thoughtful.  Focussing on nickels and noses might make this impossible.  Also, what we are called to embrace as Christians might not result in numerical growth; it might even be detrimental to numerical growth (John 6:66).  I outlined a book several years ago for the fun of it.  The title is an attempt to be funny:  "Your Church isn't Growing?  Blame Jesus."  The point is, Jesus is the hope of the world, but he is also a crucified savior, rejected by those who prefer business as usual.  The Kingdom of God creates both friends and enemies.  Growth should be a concern, yes.  However, I'm not convinced it's a good goal in and of itself.   Being faithful to Jesus' mission is a healthier goal.  

Success-driven churches can easily lose a relational focus.  In the church we have too many agendas that knock us off course.  Jesus says in John 15:8, "In this my father is glorified, that you bear fruit and become my disciples."  The fruit to which Jesus calls us in John 15 is living a life of love.  What if the church stayed committed to this one simple agenda--living in God's love and sharing God's love.  Perhaps fewer people would leave churches; and churches would be much stronger.  You see, the church first and foremost is not about getting my needs met, nor is church about money, carpet or chairs.  Fundamentally, church is about relationships and loving each other the way Jesus loved us.  What if everyone simply wanted to grow in the sacrificial love of Jesus. Nothing else.  What would the church look like?

Pragmatism is an idol in the church.  I resent any seminar or conversation that begins with some story or guarantee on how this new plan will work.  Don't get me wrong, I am interested in whether or not things work.  However, I first want to know is this plan good.  Does it reflect God and his dream for the world?  Is it right and true to Jesus?  Once I've heard the theological rationale, then I'm interested in how one might move forward with this new idea.  We should never embrace something just because it works.  Think about how far that logic will take you.  There are lots of things that will work, but they might not reflect the God we worship.  

Simply put, the church is called to witness to the liberating light and love of Jesus that has come and is coming in his kingdom.  The results are in God's hands.  Some churches will grow, others won't.  Much of it depends upon your soil.  Bottomline, let's learn to be faithful to Christ.  We don't have to win, we just have to be witnesses to the great story that Israel's crucified messiah is the Lord of history.   

Peace.   



Thursday, April 16, 2015

The Cross: How to Be Human

I believe the cross reveals, among many other things, what it means to be human.  The cross is not merely some sort of bridge that enables us to have life after death.  It also reveals a distinct way of life affirmed by God.

Remember, the resurrection of Jesus does not cancel the cross but confirms it.  The resurrected Jesus is the crucified savior.  What remains visible on the resurrected Jesus are the scars from ignoble death (Luke 24).  Even at the end of time, we worship the lamb, "looking as if it had been slain" (Rev. 5, NIV).  This slaughtered lamb is the one who controls history; he is the one who can open the scrolls.  The cross is central to who God is, and how he wants us to live as humans.

For example, the cross teaches us that to be human is to repent of sins.  Jesus not only suffered and died for our sins, he resisted sin his entire life, faithfully loving to the very end.  He waged a war against all that is evil while being perfectly faithful to God.  His life serves as a powerful example of our need for forgiveness.  When we look to the cross, we are confronted with the ugliness of our sins--look at what we are capable of.  At the same time, when we look at the cross, we see our need for forgiveness.  Very few things are more dangerous than the belief that we are blameless.  The cross helps us see our need and gives us the freedom, because we are loved and forgiven, to repent.

But there's more:  The cross also reveals that to be human is to pour out our lives for others.  Jesus is the human one, the leader of a new race (Rom. 5).  He shows how to live. The cross is the climax of his sacrificial way of life.  And of course, we too are called to take up our cross in sacrificial ways of living.  To be human then is not to live in constant competition with others, trying to outmaneuver or dominate, but to serve and give.  The human maturity we celebrate is not about autonomy nor about achieving great things at the expense of others.  Rather we celebrate a human maturity characterized by interdependence, agape love, service and compassion.

There is more, but two is enough for now.  The cross calls us to repent from the ways of the world that  reject Jesus.  Part of what this means is that we are called to reject our desire to dominate and control others.  Instead we are called to serve.

The cross reveals what it means to be human.

Peace.    
 

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

The Cross and the Trinity

As I continue to think about the cross, I've been reminded again that the cross reveals the very nature of God's love.  The cross is not an aberration in the life of God.  Rather the cross reveals the heart of God.

In the cross we see God's self-emptying, vulnerable love.  As Paul states, God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself.  God comes in Jesus and gives his life as a ransom for many.  The world and it's selfish agenda rejects Jesus and puts him to death (1 Corinthians 1).  The Spirit raises Jesus from the dead (Romans 1.1-4).

Yet, there is even more depth.  God gives all things to Jesus.  Jesus in turn gives his life as a living sacrifice to God, praying not my will but yours be done.  He loves to the very end, serving others. (John 13)

A similar movement is found in 1 Corinthians 15.24-28.  Jesus is proclaimed as Lord, God has put all things under his authority.  Yet, Jesus gives all things back to God so that God might all in all.

What we see then is a mutuality in the very heart of God.  God and Jesus giving and receiving, and the Spirit holding all together as the bond of love (Heb. 9.14).

To me the cross makes all of this plain.  Christ is emptying himself, knowing that the Father has given him all things through the Spirit who rests on Jesus throughout the gospels and then raises him from the dead.

What this means is that our love, should be characterized by a similar mutuality.  Our virtue should entail a giving and receiving, a vulnerability and a self-donation.

In other words, we are not made to be autonomous moral heroes who stand above the crowd.  Rather we're called to be servants, who give without trying to control, win or profit.

Peace.