Archives For A Jesus Way

The answer is: No.

We don’t need the Church.

Not if it’s  a religious institution that relies on politics and armies to enforce it’s rule.  Not if it’s full of legalistic hypocrites.  Not if  it’s a Civil Rights group too focused on societal ills to address personal morality.

If that’s the church, count me out.

But here’s the thing: despite my American individualistic upbringing and anti-institution punk rockness, I can’t get away from the reality that I can’t do this on my own.

However, in reading the words of Jesus, and the responses of those who knew him best, I can’t avoid two interpersonal truths.

1.  Being like Jesus is only seen in how I treat other people.  Jesus said that we should (a) love God, and (b) love people.  In other words, the best, clearest way to love God is to love people.  Therefore, in trying to follow a Jesus way, I’m going to have pour my life into others.

2.  Pouring yourself into others tears down interpersonal boundaries. When Jesus’ s friends and followers gathered together on Pentecost, crazy things started happening.  Through the power of the Holy Spirit, linguistic barriers were suddenly erased.  Then they started sharing all their stuff.  Then they started eating with people of different races and classes.  For the people that knew him best, following Jesus meant opening your home, your possessions and your daily life to others.

I have experienced community like this a few times in my life.  There have been people that opened their homes to me.  People that I spent time with every day of the week, whether or not I was fun to be around.  Meals eaten in the homes of families from another race. People who, unbidden, have given me cash so I could pay a bill.

There is no good reason to do this, to care about someone outside your clan, or give away your hard earned cash.  But it’s what Jesus did.

What I do know is I can’t do it on my own.  If this is what Church is, count me in.

Is there any good reason for the Church to still be around?

Churches have been responsible for everything from the crusades to slavery to bombing abortion clinics and spreading hatred toward homosexuals.  It’s starting to catch up with them.

In the 60s and 70s, the idea of being “spiritual, but not religious” began to find traction in the U.S.  Take Karma from the Hindus, mix it with pagan pantheism, and add a loving God loosely based on the monotheistic religions.  Mix it all up, privately affirm it so it makes you feel good. Keep it to yourself.

This isn’t really that different from the growing number (some say in the 80% range) of people in their 20s and 30s who no longer go to church, may even believe in God and think Jesus died for them, but see no need to be a part of a church.  Ask them why, they’ll make some blanket statement about “Church is full of hypocrites,” or “I don’t believe in organized religion.”

Which isn’t really different from the Christian who shows up for Church on Sunday, and spends the week quiet about their faith and joining in the godless revelry of their peers.

The growing trend is toward disorganized religion-private assertions of individual belief, having little to no affect on one’s life or community. This is for good reason, because Churches often are legalistic, full of hypocrites and make no difference in the world.

So do we still need Church? These posts, after all, are encouraging a Jesus way of life.  How does a religious institution fit?

Jesus greatest enemies were the legalists, who had created a system of laws and rigidly enforced them on people.  More recently, we’ve seen Christianity be boiled down to a list of thing that Christians don’t do: Don’t cuss, Don’t Dance, Don’t Gamble, Don’t hang out with people that have a different skin tone, Don’t have sex outside of marriage.  The list of things you do do is shorter and seldom explained: read your Bible everyday, pray before meals, go to church on Sunday morning, evening and Wednesday night.

One of my silly little college rebellions was against praying at meals.  I wasn’t a legalist, I had a relationship with God, so could pray whenever I wanted.  A funny thing happened: soon, I wasn’t praying at all.

Pharisees and legalistic Christians were doing something very natural, yet very dangerous: taking our human need for rhythm and ritual, and turning it into a man made religion, that has no need for God’s grace and intervention.

Until we created electricity, mankind had lived a rhythm of life determined by the sun.  We woke up with the sun, and went to sleep with the sun.  The seasons shaped our year, with hard work during the spring and summer, celebrations during fall harvest.  Rhythm has always defined what it means to be human, from beating of our hearts, to the ways we divide our year.

In a world with lights, television and refrigerators, rhythm has become a hindrance to a no limits lifestyle.

How do we create a rhythm of life, that encourages Christlikeness, without falling into the traps of legalism? Daniel was known for his prayer schedule.  Jesus and his early followers celebrating Passover and Pentecost.  When the early church was thrust by Constantine into the mainstream, they created traditions such as Lent to teach new converts the value of sacrifice.  The Benedictine Rule of Life was developed as a guide to bring together the various aspect of one’s life into a unified, Christlike whole.

My week is shaped by things like logging into Facebook, my work schedule, or when the next episode of The Office airs.  What could be more counter-cultural than allowing practices like prayer, Bible reading, time spent with community, fasting, meditation, and practicing mercy to shape how we organize our lives?

Many, in a reaction to legalism, have sought to be spiritual without being religious. This creates a vacuum filled by things of this world.  Perhaps a better goal would be to learn how to be HUMAN without being WORLDLY, which we’ll discuss in the days to come.

What are the rhythms of your life?  How have you overcome your human need for religion?

Knowing that God has called you to be an underdog is a release to everything except your imagination.

Our new task is to imagine a Jesus way of life, true to who he is, yet meaningful in our context.  We now ask ourselves, what about our culture’s way of life is valuable, godly and should be affirmed?  What must be abandoned altogether?

The modern mindset would have us do this by breaking the world into categories.  It asks questions like “What is Christian music/family values/politics/personal finances/sexuality/entertainment?”  These are good questions which we may address later.

This categorization divorces relevant issues from the way in which we encounter them in life. No one says “from 8am-2pm on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday I will listen to the radio.”  Instead, they listen to the radio as a part of their rhythm of life.  They listen in the car, or while they cook and clean.  The tactic has been to tell people to listen to the Christian radio station.    Rather than imagining what Jesus would do with a TV or computer, we put porn filters on our computers and try to find family friendly movies.

What if we asked questions like: “Why do I like porn so much?” or “Why do I turn the TV on the second I get home?”  We need to move from avoiding behaviors to addressing the way of life we have bought into: our daily, weekly and yearly rhythms, and the nature of our relationships. Which we’ll dive into soon.

A Jesus Way: Underdog, to the Rescue!

Chris —  February 26, 2010

Knowing what we know about the water we swim in, we have to get our minds around a series of unpopular facts:

1.  We do not live in a Christian nation.  We never have.  In fact, a good argument could be made that the idea of a Christian Nation is idolatrous, and counter to Jesus teachings about the Kingdom.

2.  This means we have no rights.  Culture  teaches us that we have a bill of rights and human rights.  Jesus teaches us that we will be persecuted.  He calls this “blessed.”

3.  Jesus does not promise us life, liberty or the pursuit of happiness. He pursued his Father, lost his liberty and sacrificed his life.  American Dreams that anyone can and should gain financial success cannot be found in the Sermon on the Mount or any of Jesus other teachings.

4.  Having no rights, means you have no right to force your ideals on others. When you resort to using coercion or politics to make others behave, you have given up on God’s power to change people and the Church’s role as witnesses to another kingdom.

5.  With no rights, no coercion, no politics, and no ambition for riches, you will be banished to the margins.

As followers of Jesus Way, along with God’s people since the time of Abraham, are Underdogs.  We are scrawny, poor, and hopelessly outnumbered.  Strangers in a strange land.  We have no home field advantage.

We fight with weapons that are not of this world.  We count our victories in lives changed and communities shifted.  We will not see victory in this world.

This is where the adventure of following Jesus begins.