12.12.08
What is the biggest threat to the Christian Church?
I wrote this post on July 1, 2007, and found it unpublished tonight. I thought I’d publish it.
While I sit home from work today, wondering when I’m going to start my throw-up spat as both of my kids have all night, I wanted to write about a speech from Chuck Colson that has a lot of people upset. Here is an article about the speech. He pointed to three enemies of the evangelical faith. Included in them were Islamic terrorists, Atheists, and the Emergent Church.
Many are upset that Colson would list emergents with terroists. Here’s the thing. Atheists are not the enemy of Christianity. They are part of our mission as Christians. Islamic terrorists make themselves our enemy, but they are also ones we are called to love. I do think, however, that the true threat does come from within the church. Paul says in 2 Timothy that the church would get rid of truth-teaching leaders and surround themselves with teachers who’s message is pleasing to their ears. This is very clearly happening in the church, and not just by these “emergents”. I don’t think the target of this should be emergents broadly. Here’s what I’ve seen in many of them that is admirable, including MC, who everyone seems to think I hate. They are very concerned about the way we live in culture, being socially active, and caring for the oppressed. I think that most conservative Christians have failed in this arena, and could learn a lot from watching the example of these. Colson attacks those who go to coffee shops and hang out with Atheists and lost people. Hello, what’s wrong with that? Here’s the only problem I have with it. If it isn’t intentional and leading toward a goal of reaching them for Christ and learning more of how to reach their types, then it’s vain. In Matthew 5, Christ taught about salt and light. This topic has been a great discussion piece for myself this week. Many try to bring light into the world and shine it in people’s eyes. All this does is push people away. However, others bring salt with no light. We rub ourselves into society, but we bring nothing that reveals truth, and the sin in others’ lives. We need both to reach others and display God’s glory.
I think the biggest threat to Christianity comes from within. Many times, the deceit is not intentional. You also cannot just target one group and call them the enemy. I realize some will read this and say I’m flip-flopping from my “Don’t Be Fooled” post. I’m not. My intention was never to make someone an enemy but to raise awareness, and encourage others to filter what they bring in.
In many ways I think the biggest threat to the church is the church itself. I think guys like Mike Clawson and others are doing a lot of things right. They are engaging with the culture and with the ones most of us shy away from. This is exactly what we are instructed to do(Matthew 5). Here’s the thing: The late Dave Thomas is starting his new restaurant, “Wendy’s”. He tells his people he wants the best burgers and food for his cusomers. They in turn go and buy a huge quantity of SPAM and sell it instead. This is what the Christian church, whether Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Bible, Commmunity, Fellowship, has done to God’s Word. The instructions given to us in His word are the best Black Angus beef you can find. He gives it to us and tells us to go and give this Black Angus beef to the whole world. We eat the Black Angus beef and then give the world SPAM. We want them to live righteous and come to Christ, but we tell them how horrible they are, sit on our butts, and wonder why they don’t darken the doors of our churches.
The Almighty Paver
I’ve had the opportunity recently to reconnect with old friends. Some are from years ago when I was young, and some are from not so long ago. In talking with some, exchanging emails with others, and just observing as well I’ve been blessed to be shown God’s hand in so many of their lives. He has shown me his control and his providence.
I’ve begun to see his plan revealed bit by bit. The masterful story he is telling undoubtedly has he, himself, at the center.
I recently sat and talked for a bit with a woman about this very topic. As we each shared our stories, through tears and laughter, God showed up in a new and fresh way in each story. I remember how hard it was as a 13-year old boy who had just started to feel acceptance in my circle of friends to be uprooted and taken away from all of them. I remember swearing that I would not stay gone. Ypsilanti, MI was my home. I was bitter towards God for forcing me to leave. Later, after graduating high school, I would be bitter again for God withholding blessings I thought I deserved. Mistake after mistake would land me a single guy with uncontrollable debt and no place to really call home. Through a roller coaster ride over several years, I would experience let down after let down in every area of my life. Things I poured my heart into just didn’t become what I’d hoped.
About 2 years ago (give or take some months) I felt a feeling I had longed for my whole life. It was the feeling of unmerited comfort. When my wife lost our third child early in her pregnancy I felt helpless. I had no idea how to comfort her or encourage her. All I could do was tell her that no matter our feelings we had to be OK with what was happening. Through a card from a woman I didn’t know God broke me. He reached out and squeezed me to his chest and wouldn’t let go. As I sat in my car weeping uncontrollably, I realized this was what I had longed for — the feeling of comfort.
My gratitude would soon fade, and my greed would take over. It wasn’t until God took my one security and smashed it that I would be forced to trust him once again. When I lost my job, I was “OK”, but that soon changed. Rejection came more than I was ready for. Well-intentioned people triggered hurt that I didn’t expect. Our marriage broke or flourished on every word spoken to each other. Then, the answer came.
I looked at the friends from long ago and realized that had I stayed, with the direction my life was headed, I would have been one of the biggest obstacles to God reaching my friends. God shows me his hand in many of their lives now. He took the obstacle out so he could draw them to him.
I then ran into an old friend from just a couple of years ago. Through a 2-minute conversation I knew he was hurting. We talked that night for over an hour. And, once again, God hit me over the head. As I addressed the issue of sin in his life I got to the point I needed to and God spoke to me. This friend was dealing with a struggle we all struggle with at times. He wanted to feel the presence of God in his life and wasn’t. I told him he was wrong. I told him that a father who loves his son disciplines him. He didn’t want God’s presence. What he wanted was God’s comfort. But the sin he was refusing to deal with was bringing God’s discipline. See, God was there. He was just there in a way my friend didn’t want. After talking to him I looked at myself and started to wonder if maybe God was showing me the same thing. I had told my friend that the pain and frustration he was dealing with would fade and be replaced by God’s comfort if he made a decision to go after God with everything. I reminded him of the prodigal. His father saw him off in the distance and ran to him. That is what God was waiting for me to do.
So, let’s get back to sharing the stories with the woman. Through the entire conversation one phrase of hers kept ringing in my ears. I had mentioned how the roads certain people in our lives have taken were long hard roads, and she said, “It’s hard to watch them go down that road. But, you have to remember that God built that road for them.” When we’re struggling to see God I the people around us who just can’t seem to get it, they just can’t seem to get over that hump to find God’s peace, we question, “Why not, God? Why don’t they get it?” We have to remember that God built the road they are on for a purpose.
When the end of the road comes to them, and God is not at the end of that road, and there is no more hope, we have to remember. When they become as our enemy, and we experience more hurt at their hand than we can bear, we have to remember. We have to bring ourselves to rest in the comfort of God’s sovereign plan. We must rest in the comfort that God built that road, and where that road ends up is up to him.
