What if the basic rules of mathematics were suddenly changed? What if you woke up tomorrow and 2 plus 2 inexplicably equaled, say 5.75? How about having the furniture moved around in your house, without your warning? Permanently, and nailed to the floor. Or the ceiling, take your pick.
This is a bit of the way I am feeling after reading about half way through Dallas Willards latest book, "The Great Omission".
What if everything we have learned is maybe only half right. Part way there. What if we really can be different people? What if the abundant life (not money, not status, but a full and overflowing life) that Jesus spoke of is possible? What if?
It seems some of the basic things of faith that I have felt comfortable with for the past 20 or so years are not as important as I thought they were. I think that I may have been pursuing, well, not much of anything. To quote Willard, I am struggling with.. "The Great Disparity – the hope for life expressed in Jesus versus the actual day-to-day behavior, inner life, and social presence of most people who profess adherence to Him."
And what is the Great Omission? Its something the church (in America, to be sure) has not been doing well at all - the lack of making true disciples, apprentices, of Christ.
We have just been consumers, just like the culture around us. To again Quote Dallas:
“The will to obey is the engine that pulls the train of spirituality in Christ. But spirituality in many Christian circles has simply become another dimension of Christian consumerism. We have generated a body of people who consume Christian services and think that that is Christian faith. Consumption of Christian services replaces obedience to Christ. And spirituality is one more thing to consume.”
I have to go rearrange my furniture.
I have to go rearrange my furniture.
1 comment:
Good post Steve.
As a parent of two girls and possibly more in the future, it is very important for me, to teach them that life isn't about our wants, needs and desires. It's about us serving our Lord and giving back what He has so graciously given us. To serve our families, our church and our neighbor and helping those who are less fortunate then us.
I pray that God works in the heart of Christians everywhere that it isn't about what the church can do for us, it's about what we can do for the church.
Y.B.I.C,
Dave
Post a Comment