Monday, September 28, 2020

A Sweet Reduction and Moonlight Graham

In cooking, reduction is the process of thickening and intensifying the flavors in a liquid by simmering or boiling. You reduce excess moisture and the flavors that remain are more powerful and appealing. This seems an appropriate analogy for what the Church is experiencing in these protracted times of pandemic restriction.

Like turning a knob on the stove, the COVID-19 pandemic has moved the heat under the Church from a simmer to a boil. In the U.S. the Church has been undergoing what I've often called the New Reformation for nearly thirty years now. Perhaps, even longer. One could argue that this New Reformation started in the 1960's, another time of historic unrest in our country. So, for about fifty years now the Western church has been in a constant state of flux. Christian denominations have been splitting and merging and splitting again. The rise of non-denominational churches either wary of or outright opposed to denominational superstructures, have siphoned off people from "mainline" churches. Still, one measure of the church, weekly participation, has continued to steadily decline until today when just seventeen percent of the U.S. population attends church on any given Sunday.

This post isn't about denominational dissolution or the decline in church attendance. It's always my hope through this blog to admit where the Church has missed the point and highlight where opportunities lie for a better future. I believe we are standing at another historically meaningful inflection point. As a variety of state leaders dictate whether churches can gather and what they must do if allowed to gather, the favored status of the Christian Church in America hangs precariously in the balance. The entirely hypothetical questions we used to kick around thirty years ago, like, "Would you still be a Christian if it was outlawed in America?" are feeling less and less hypothetical. I don't think I'm the only one who can see a path, a very short path, to a day when genuinely oppressive government restrictions are levied on Christian churches. This is such an exciting time to be a Christian in the United States.

Yes! Exciting! Finally, after years of frustration over the banality of worship that was more infotainment than Biblical exploration and meaningful apologetics, the Christian Church is being boiled down to its essence. What do we believe? Why do we believe what we believe? What is the solid foundation of Biblical understanding upon which our beliefs are based? Those who are ill-prepared to answer these questions will, as the temperature rises, evaporate like extraneous liquid. This is not an indictment of those individuals who are unable to articulate their faith. It is not a condemnation of those who are Biblically illiterate. Responsibility for he evaporation of the Christian Church from American life and culture rests squarely on the shoulders of a church that has been too long complacent with its place in the culture. Even as most favored status was evaporating over the last three decades, the alarm was not sufficiently raised to reclaim Biblical teaching and broad general knowledge of the foundational truths of the faith amongst all who called themselves Christians. Replaced by feel good messages of hope and goodwill, bullet-pointed lists of how to succeed as a leader like Jesus did, six steps to a happy marriage, or twelve steps to lasting sobriety, to name some of countless examples of shallow, misguided teaching, the deep connection to the faithful of millennia past was lost. Our understanding of the eternal nature of God and the infinitesimal brevity of our own existence became skewed. In an attempt to be culturally relevant to a culture that's been around a fraction of the time the people of Israel spent in Egyptian captivity, churches gleefully tossed out thousands of years worth of Biblical interpretation.

So comes this time of reduction. Though smaller in size...a remnant, you might say...the essence of the Church will remain even as the Western church collapses in on itself like a dying star. God's Word will never pass away even as those who don't read, study, or grasp His Word, do. The body of believers may decrease here even as it increases in places all over the world. We who follow Jesus must fix our eyes forward, not looking back to "better days" but recognizing there is no going back. It seems more clear to me than ever before that in 2020 the Church has crossed a line and can't ever go back. It is only forward from here.

I'm reminded of a scene from the movie "Field of Dreams" where Burt Lancaster, in his final film role, played Moonlight Graham. He gets the chance to magically go back in time and play professional baseball with his heroes on a mysterious baseball field in Iowa. When a little girl is choking on a hot dog Moonlight, who spent most of his true professional career as a doctor, must decide to cross the field's foul line knowing that he'll never go back to baseball again. With little hesitation young Moonlight steps over the line and transforms into the aged "Doc" Graham and saves the little girl's life. 

Church can't be church like we've always done it. It's time to leave the games we've been playing behind and take on the more serious work of tending to those whose lives hang in the balance. Perhaps, once sufficiently reduced, the true power of the Church will make an impact like it hasn't made in a very long time. So, turn up the heat and let's get to the sweet reduction!

Monday, June 08, 2020

Words to a Young Pastor

My pastor, in his thirties, posted an appeal to Baby Boomers on Facebook. This post is in response to his request. You can read his post here before my response begins...

Baby Boomers, we need your voice right now.

Of course, my parents are Boomers, but growing up and working in church I also have a lot of Boomer friends. I love y’all and so thankful for you. And we really (really) need your voice right now. Many of us look up to you in a very literal sense, so whatever you’re saying (or not saying) right now...we look up to that. In that sense your voice is really powerful.

I was talking to a friend last night who’d just gotten back from a protest. He said, “it was weird because everyone there was our age and younger, like thousands of people...” I’ve noticed the same thing on my social media feeds but just assumed it was algorithm feedback loops.

I know that you grew up through much of the Civil Rights era and experienced racism from many angles, more explicitly than this generation. So you know that the black/brown kids you went to school with have kids that are my age. They grew up hearing awful stories of racism, being taught how to act in front of police out of fear, having to be taught about racism at a way earlier age b/c kids called them names at school, etc. I’m not making this up, these are just my friends stories.

If you think about it, my generation is just one generation down from the Civil Rights movement. So even if seems like we’ve moved on and things are way better than when you were a kid (in many ways they are), we still have a really long way to go.

I definitely don’t want to tell anyone what to do or suggest I know what’s best. I just want to encourage all my Boomer friends that it’s safe and important to speak out against racism, and you guys are still our leaders in many ways.

Love y’all 

Millennials, I can't speak for all Boomers any more than my friend Nick can speak for all Millennials. But, I know his heart and I hear his frustration in asking us to speak out against racism. As for me, I'm going to politely decline and speak out on a much more pervasive, much more destructive force that has been visiting death on people since the beginning of time.

Sin.

Sin is the stain visited on humanity through the willful disobedience of Eve and Adam in the Garden of Eden according to the Biblical account in Genesis...if you believe the Bible, and I do. As I said in my most recent post, sin is selfishness. The lie Satan told is that we can be like God deciding right and wrong. Once we assumed the driver's seat and kicked God to the curb, we made ourselves the arbiters of truth and the whole world went to hell. It wasn't long before Cain determined Abel was a threat to his position, favor, or something and decided death was the punishment. Since then human beings have been deciding the value of other human beings and meting out judgement based on all sorts of things. Like, gender, race, religion, skin color, hair color, height, deformity, income level, and...well, let's face it, anything that might distinguish one human being from another.

While it is an indication of our incredibly short lifespan as humans that we see the current dust-up over race as significant, it is just one of a million ways sin has inflicted pain on humanity through the millennia. With sin came death. Some die of old age, some die because they are in the wrong place at the wrong time, some die of disease, some die at the hands of others. Those that die at the hands of others, die because they are black, or Jewish, or Christian, or female, or educated, or disabled, or unborn, or wealthy, or... The list of why people kill people is endless. Sometimes it's accidental or, at least, unintended. Sometimes it's systemic and government sanctioned and culturally accepted.

As the Body of Christ, the Church has been established by God to be his loving presence in a broken world. In the moment the Church was formed the spiritual battle was joined. Paul wrote in his letter to the believers in Ephesus, "For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places." 

Protesting against racism is like protesting against a cancer victim's hair loss. It's not the hair loss that's killing them, it's the cancer. It's not the racism that's the problem, it's sin in the world. It's human beings who believe the lie that they get to decide right and wrong, good and evil, who lives, and who dies. Or, simply have reckless disregard for others because they always put themselves first.

As long as the church is persuaded to rail against the effects of sin and not address sin, itself, it is expending a lot of energy with little hope of making a difference. And, if we've learned anything over time, addressing sin by gathering masses of people to carry signs and shout slogans has absolutely no impact whatsoever. Sin is the broken condition of every human soul and every human being needs to meet Jesus in a close and personal way. That happens through close, human contact with a follower of Jesus. 

I have seen firsthand how faith in Jesus eliminates tribal, racial, ethnic and class divides. I've spoken to a roomful of African students representing twelve different countries and a variety of tribal groups with a history of killing one another. Jesus united them. I've seen "untouchables" in Nepal sitting side by side with members of the highest caste worshiping Jesus. I've watched mostly white suburban Christian kids spend weeks in impoverished black and Native American communities being the love of Jesus and being loved in return. Being present in the lives of those in need is less dramatic but more effective than marching in the streets with a clever slogan on a piece of cardboard, in my opinion.

I think it's telling that Jesus never organized a rally to change the rules of the Roman government or the Jewish leadership with whom he had obvious disagreements. He never insisted they stop ostracizing lepers or treating Samaritans with prejudicial disdain. No, he healed lepers and spoke with Samaritans. He did point out, through parables and in other ways, the foolishness of the "righteous" in the face of true righteousness. In the same way, I would argue that it wasn't the peaceful protest marches of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the civil rights champions that ultimately turned the federal government in their direction. Yes, their voices were influential in shaping policy, but the cultural shift came when Americans saw peaceful protesters attacked by dogs, knocked to the ground by water cannons, and beaten by police officers. Seeing evil done to others has an impact and stirs hearts to action. Clever marketers know this. It's why they put images of starving children in front of people to solicit donations. We know people are starving, but when we see them it's harder to not help. People knew blacks were discriminated against back then. But when they saw the brutality of it all on the nightly news, there was no other option but to act. And over time racist laws were eliminated. 

George Floyd was mistreated by a police officer but not because that was police policy, as it was in the south in the '50's and '60's. That's obvious when you see how swiftly the officer was fired then arrested then charged with homicide. In the 1960's not a single police officer was even reprimanded for their treatment of protesters because it was sanctioned police activity. The difference between the protests back then and the ones today is that there are no governmental policies condoning or promoting racism. What the protesters are now asking for is that the government or some outside force be applied to change individual attitudes toward race. In essence, dictate a solution to individual sinful behavior as defined by other people. By that I mean those who get the ear of government, determine what's right or wrong then leverage the government to dictate specific, personal behavior based on their perception of the issues seems dangerous at best.

Racism as policy has been effectively dealt with in our country. Protections are afforded people of all races. That doesn't mean black people aren't disproportionately targeted by law enforcement. Statistically and anecdotally, they are. Much the way women are disproportionately victims of sexual harassment and assault. Legal protections don't change hearts. Protests don't change hearts. Darkness in the hearts of people is a sin issue. Jesus is the only solution to sin issues. Sinful people have been victimizing other people, as I said, since time began. There is nothing we can do to take away the sin of the world. But the sin of the world has been taken away by Jesus. So, there are things we can do that don't require protesting.

Bring the healing love and presence of Jesus to the world by bringing it to each person in need God puts in your path. Do so without regard for race, gender, color or creed. Make a difference for one person in the way you talk to them, trust them, love them. Do it because you are the hands and feet of Jesus in a broken and dying world. Marching in a big crowd is dramatic and makes for good television, but change comes one person at a time, one day at a time, one heart at a time, as Jesus followers show up and go where God sends them. When this current upset passes, and it most certainly will, the quiet work of faithful followers of Jesus will continue to revolutionize the world. It has done so ever since Jesus first told his disciples to, "Go, therefore, and teach all nations. Baptizing them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." Whether your presence blesses a black life or softens the heart of an angry police officer so he no longer abuses others from his position of authority, bringing Jesus' love to people is the only way to make a true and lasting difference.

Call out sin and all the effects of sin on humanity. Be the loving presence of Jesus to the hurting, helpless and hopeless. Go after the root of sin and the branch of racism will wither and fall. Trim the branch and another will grow in its place. It seems to me the church has slowly retreated from attacking the root of sin and engaging in the deeper spiritual warfare to which we are called. Instead we are content to prune a few branches now and again assuring that racism and all the branches of the poison tree remain strong and healthy.

So, I won't be out protesting racism. I'll be working to uproot the sin in my life and encouraging others to do the same. Whatever form it takes.

Monday, June 01, 2020

My City is Burning

  
Copyright IndyStar.com
copyright IndyStar.com
 
I live in Indianapolis, Indiana these days. Over the past weekend peaceful protests here, as across the United States, were co-opted by those bent on violence and destruction. Stores were looted, cars burned, and, here in Indy, two people shot and killed. This is terrible news that has many Christian leaders wringing their hands about race relations and how we overcome white privilege and join our black brothers and sisters in the struggle. This seems an overwrought response to a very familiar condition. And I'm not talking about racism.
    My wife and I live in a black neighborhood about 40 blocks north of the center of Indianapolis. I suppose that could be seen as the equivalent of saying, "I have black friends", but I share that to say our neighborhood is not riled up. So far as I know, none of our neighbors have joined in the protest. Yesterday my next door neighbor referred to the "crazy people" who caused the 8 p.m. citywide curfew. Yes, there are some...many, perhaps...in the black community who are very upset about the treatment of blacks by police. Rightly so. I haven't heard any commentators, any pastors, any reasonable human beings saying what happened to George Floyd was right. The actions by those police officers have been universally condemned. However, the incident keeps the conversation about how people of color are treated in our culture top of mind, where it should be. I'm a huge fan of people talking about how to be better to one another, regardless of race, and then doing something about it.

I'm a follower of Jesus. That's what we do. 

    Pray, encourage, strive, advocate, and engage in being better personally and corporately. I believe it can be counterproductive at times like this to beat ourselves up over not being good enough. There will always be opportunities to improve. In Christian speak that's called sanctification. It is daily walking out the process of getting closer to being the person God created you to be. It's something every Christian who takes their relationship with Jesus seriously is eager to be doing. Well, eager may be an overstatement as sanctification is very tough work. But, let's face it, sin is a huge impediment to overcome. Sin is, at it's core, selfishness and selfishness is, in its very nature, a reckless disregard for others. I wholeheartedly embrace calls for better care and concern for others. Linking arms, praying together, speaking with one voice for justice, peace, fairness, equal treatment under the law, and all the things that make the lives of others better, these are all good things. Necessary things. 
    I can't endure, champion, or celebrate sin...in any form. Whether that's a police officer kneeling on a man's neck for eight minutes or looters stacking televisions on a cart and hauling them away before burning a Target to the ground. Deliberately harming others from a place of power or under cover of mob violence are both equally sinful. That is, coming from a place of our human brokenness. As a wise Christian man once taught me, "Hurting people hurt people". The brokenness of sin is a deep, elemental hurt inflicted on the souls of every human being on the planet. Out of this brokenness comes all manner of evil and wickedness. Slander, murder, abuse, slavery, cheating, lying, theft, vulgarity, and the list is seemingly endless.
    It seems disingenuous to me when Christian leaders beat their breasts and cry out in shock at the way people are treated in this world. We, of all people, understand the root cause of all pain in this world. Sin. Sin is the brokenness of humanity present from conception. Sin is selfishness and selfishness always, always wreaks havoc on the world. Power in the hands of selfish people is domination. Money in the hands of selfish people is wantonness. Position in the hands of selfish people is tyranny. The selfish expression of victimhood is looting, burning and destroying. Whether powerful or put upon, when selfishness is your foundation, destruction is the ultimate end. The destruction of others and yourself. Because this is my understanding, I am never shocked or distraught by the brutality that human beings visit on other human beings. This is the condition of the world in which we live. 
    We cannot become numb to man's inhumanity to man and we dare not be overcome by it. No, instead we stand ever more firmly convinced of the truth that sin is real, its effects are malignant, its influence is pervasive, and only through the work of Jesus Christ are we able to escape its grasp. Apart from him we can do nothing but succumb to the siren song of selfishness dragging us down into utter destruction. 
    My city is burning. This is a temporary situation highlighting the permanent condition of a sinful world. Followers of Jesus will rally, joining others in cleaning up and rebuilding. Conversations about justice, fairness, equality, peace, and brotherhood will continue apace. Sin will daily raise its ugly head in places all over the world. People will suffer. People will die. The long, slow march to becoming better will have its victories and its setbacks. And so it goes. This is not apathy on my part, it is what I consider a realistic worldview informed by my Christian faith. As the writer of Ecclesiastes wrote, 

"What has been will be again,
    what has been done will be done again;
    there is nothing new under the sun." - Ecclesiastes 1:9

    Let's not be surprised by what has happened. As it has happened before, so it will happen again. Instead, let us live out our God given purpose to be his hands and feet, his voice, his expression of selfless love in a world wounded by selfishness.