Following
Christ does not remove us from the world. “He called the crowd with his
disciples, and said to them, ‘If any want to become my followers, let them deny
themselves and take up their cross and follow me.’” (Mark 8:34) In this
description, discipleship is not a picnic, sacrifice and suffering is involved.
Picking up your cross does not save you, the Good News is that Jesus picked up His
cross and saved us! In response to the grace and victory won for us on the cross,
Christians are called to pick up their cross and follow so we may point others
to the Cross of Christ. “...Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of
the world.” (John 1:29) Why do Christians, good people, even children suffer?
Jesus never said we would be removed from the world, in fact as the church, the
body of Christ he gives us to the world and we are the earthly means through
which the forgiving presence of Christ is present in the world. Followers of
Jesus Christ, no matter the age are not immune to tragedy whether it is a tornado,
cancer or violence. It is due to sin that we miss the mark and turn from God
and seek to put our faith and trust in
ourselves. We turn
our backs often from the promises we have in Christ through the Holy Cross and are seduced by the
finite and often false promises of our broken world. Many tragedies happen as a
result of us putting ourselves first, but certainly not all. For example,
whenever the market crashes and people suffer due to their own greed or
directly and indirectly from the greed of others. That is a result of
someone(s) putting themselves before God. Unfortunately innocent people suffer
as a result and that is an injustice that the Scriptures speak much about and
God seeks to make things right (read Mary’s Song of Praise in Luke 1:46-55). To
say that all tragedies happen as a result of humanity’s absence from God is too
simple. Generally speaking humanity’s absence from God (sin) is the reason for
many tragedies in the world. We break the first commandment, we essentially
break them all. So much of the heartache and tragedy in the world is due to our
inability to be faithful to our God. If we don’t keep God at the center then it
is easy to put our neighbor in harm’s way or literally kill him, or screw over
our neighbor (steal) or literally screw our neighbor’s spouse (adultery) etc...
However, many disciples have been martyred not because they were absent from
God, but because they proclaimed who God in Jesus Christ is, and a broken
humanity killed them, not God. A faithful person that dies from cancer didn’t
die due to a lack of faith. God is ever present with that person and their
family. God didn’t kill them, cancer did. A tornado takes the lives of many
which included children in Oklahoma. God didn’t kill them, a tornado did. “For
the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ
Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 6:23) We are all sinners, we all deserve to die and
will die (some sooner than others), but as Christians we believe that death
does not have the final say over us. I don’t know why absurd tragedies happen
in life, but I do know that Christ is with those who suffer. I know this
because we worship a God who chose to suffer by taking up the cross. The
church, the body of Christ is at the ground zero of every tragedy we see in
this broken world. Whether it is 9/11, a tornado, hurricane, school shooting,
tsunami, a hospital room, prison, shut in, food pantry, soup kitchen or
homeless shelter Christ is present through His church. In the wake of tragic
events I ask myself “why” as well and declare the tragedy to be absurd,
mourning the loss of human life. Then God calls us as his church to remind the
world that he is there in the midst of this darkness. “For I am convinced that
neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers nor things present, nor things
to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation,
will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
(Romans 8:38-39) The Good News is that ultimately tragedy doesn’t win Jesus
Christ does! As people who are marked with the cross of Christ forever, we are
a people of hope in a world in which suffering is a part of life.
Welcome!
I am a Lutheran Pastor offering reflections on what it means to be faithful in a changing world.
Showing posts with label faithful yet changing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faithful yet changing. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Same Good News in a Changing World.
St.
Paul in Galatians 1:6-7 writes, “I am astonished that you are so quickly
deserting the one who called you in the grace of Christ and are turning to a
different gospel – not that there is another gospel, but there are some who are
confusing you and want to pervert the gospel of Christ.”
Why
are we attracted to perversions of the gospel or messages that compete with the
good news of Jesus Christ? Maybe we want
to be gods, and deep down we resent the fact that we need a savior. This is why we are attracted to different
gospels, and messages that compete with the gospel in our world today because
we want to be our own savior.
Our
mission here at St. John Lutheran Windfall has always been to reach out to
others with the gospel. This doesn’t
mean that we have always done it perfectly or haven’t been distracted by other
things in effectively carrying out this mission. The body of Christ is both holy and sinful;
we are going to miss the mark from time to time. Though I believe that our gospel centered mission
and outreach is growing and will continue to grow. May we be centered in prayer that as we
continue to bloom and grow in Christ that our service inside and outside our
congregation will always have the Good News as the cornerstone of any ministry,
program, gathering or event that we offer.
I
say all of this because it seems that many in our society are scared because
things are changing. We see change in
many vocations, in education and in the church.
For example, the post office can’t function the way it always has
because of the change in how we communicate with one another. This doesn’t mean all the changes we are
experiencing are bad, many things will just be different and many are afraid
because we don’t know what all of this will look like in the end.
As
for the church in North America as part of the mainline protestant demographic
everyone is experiencing membership decline and fear what the future will
bring. This creates the perfect scenario
where we would be tempted by “other gospels” to survive and not be faithful to
the message that has served as the rock of the church for over two thousand
years and our congregation for 177.
Throughout the gospel we are told “Do not be afraid” and are in fact
comforted with Good News!
In
a changing world with empty promises, competing messages and false gospels may
we be faithful to the gospel, may our mission always be centered in the gospel,
may we not be distracted by fears of change or survival, but comforted in the
good news that Jesus Christ, who was crucified and whom God raised from the
dead, is Lord over all creation and let’s continue to share this Good News with
others and one another.
Labels:
faithful yet changing,
Galatians 1:6-7,
Good News,
Gospel,
Jesus Christ,
St. John Lutheran (Windfall),
St. Paul
Location:
Marion, OH 43302, USA
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Maundy Thursday
Jesus commands us to love one another. He gives us the gift of the community of believers we call the church. What does this command mean in a society that values individualism? What does this command mean when popular versions of Christianity seek to emphasize a personal relationship with Jesus, as opposed to a communal relationship with Jesus Christ?
The world knows Jesus through the love that exists in and through the community of believers known as the body of Christ, the church.
How do we faithfully live out this command of Christ in our society today? Particularly in a context that seeks to preserve and survive rather than give and be vulnerable enough to receive.
The world knows Jesus through the love that exists in and through the community of believers known as the body of Christ, the church.
How do we faithfully live out this command of Christ in our society today? Particularly in a context that seeks to preserve and survive rather than give and be vulnerable enough to receive.
Labels:
body of Christ,
Church,
faithful yet changing,
Holy Week,
Jesus,
Lutheran,
Maundy Thursday,
questions
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