(This post
is in response to a video by Jeff Bethke called, “Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus” Click HERE for the link if you haven’t seen
it. Approximately 21 million have viewed it
over the last 6 months. It is a rapidly growing sentiment, which has been
driving many subtly off course in the pursuit of their redeemer.)
“The truth shall set you free.” The words of Christ to those who
believe in Him to understand what it is to be his disciple. These days the
truth seems harder and harder to find. It comes in carefully calculated
packages. It comes in strategically marketed offerings. The truth has been
couched in relativity, seasoned with perspective and punctuated with opinion. We’ve come to a place
where semantic liberation has replaced the truth that sets us free.
The Church in America is facing a high degree of this type of semantic
confusion. It has a multiple of emerging ideas where nuances become the main
mission and personal appeals where emotion conquers theology. It has become a place where so
many confusing messages traverse across the landscape of understanding, that the
found become lost in a battle of relevant rhetoric for the soul. Sooner or
later in this environment, more people end up following their idea of God
rather than God as He truly is.
Following
one’s own ideas of God rather than his ideas of Himself, like in the Jeff
Bethke video, isn’t a newfound truth about following the Savior over the
mechanisms of religious activity. It isn’t about the distinctions of the work
of God's hand over that of man's. It isn’t a modern interpretation of the John
8, “If you hold to my teaching, you
are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set
you free.” – It is a foundation for misdirection where
people reject religion for the spiritual, a pseudo-gnostic awakening of self,
and the anti-religion called "we're not religious, we just follow_________
."
These circles
of the Christian sub-culture are filled with people who can't admit their
Christians without an asterisk. Rather than shed biblical light into the
misconceived persona of who God is, there is more effort spent in the
redefining of self from the world-perceived stereotypes of what being a Christian
is all about. It makes for a people, who talk more about who they are in and of
themselves, than the Christ which lives within them leading with action rather
than explanation.
Unfortunately,
there are a large number of people in this world who have been hurt by Church,
or alienated by a Christian, or offended by an action perpetrated in the name
of God. It has created a mass of people who use sin and brokenness as a
connective element rather than the hope that lives in them through their salvation.
A culture of
enlightened perspectives becomes the path of the believer in these circles. An
echo of the secret society obsession in American culture, the response
regularly has been to subjectively redefine who God is and emphasize specific
elements of his ministry as a priory. This solution creates a format for
following Him which isolates and encapsulates. It holds to a more acceptable
Jesus who calls people to a transformed experience of life, more often than a
transformed life.
Whatever
one’s experience is in Christendom past, there is hardly a case built in the
bible for a Christ which stood against the existence of the religion of the
Jews. In Matthew 5 we hear Him say, “Do not
think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to
abolish them but to fulfill them.” The true level of continuity lies in
Pharisees who did not want Jesus as He was, but wanted the temporal conquering,
societal validating messiah who connected to their efforts of righteousness.
The pharisaical animosity to the true Messiah is encapsulated in Him not being
the Christ they conceived, coming they way they wanted, and preaching the news
that they saw as “good.”
The result is
the same in the culture of today: A partially biblical, partially relevant
crusader for social justice, purpose and contentment has become the embodiment
of the non-religious Jesus. He offers place where obedience is condoned but not
required, judgment is withheld during “the journey” of the follower and the
true embrace of the new life is born out of the personal desire to be close to
God, rather than his desire to draw us closer to Himself and his desires. It lives on the back
theological astuteness, but wants to casually embrace it, so no one gets
uncomfortable.
Sadly, it is very popular. It embraces a variety
of temporal constructs without eternal consequences and eternal connection
without ongoing obedience. In a societal melting pot of redactionists,
revolutionaries, realists, relevants, and rhetoric; the new path to a more
vibrant connection is marketed, hyped and turned into a conference to “unpack “
the reinvented well-spring of hope.
While tired of the public persona of
religion in the world & this is an appealing effort at taking faith and
spirituality out of religious hands. This is the widening of the gate,
dismissing substance for the addictive appeal what we may be missing out on. But
God didn’t set up his Kingdom on a book of secrets; He didn’t hide the
essentials of understanding so we would have to blindly follow his impersonal
truth.
This derailment
of humanity hasn’t changed since the garden. The Serpent's message that says, “Experience
this and be like God. Have your eyes opened to the truth. Once you understand,
vibrance will replace monotony and understanding will provide peace,” carries no more truth today than it did in Eden. The effort to replace what God
intended to fill our lives with, through our own abilities is alive and well in
the 21st century. The Deceiver is still standing quietly over
shoulders whispering, “Are you sure? That’s not as important as this is. You
can figure it out for yourself. You can find a new way; a better way…”
We must be
bold enough to not stand behind the asterisk of isolation. Christ is not at the
mercy of our conception or in need of our ability to dress Him up for mass
appeal. In a place where emerging constructs of identity and belonging are
tools used to manipulate allegiance or drive emotional appeal; every Christian
must be cautious and conscious of the implications of their participation.
When we stand
before the Almighty, no asterisk will accompany us in the justification of our
belonging to Him. We will not be embraced as those who ascended to the higher
concepts and inner circle of the Kingdom. We will not be given a blank to fill
out whom we follow. We will be seen as crucified with Christ or burdened by our
sacrifices. We will be presented with Christ in us, the hope of glory, or
isolated in Adam, clothed in humanity. Let us be in Him, let us be one of his
people; and we will know the freedom of the truth. The truth of who He is and
what He desires, rather than who we are and what our desires want Him to be.
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