A thematically
pertinent and a well articulated article entitled, “F-Bombs and Bikinis: What
It Really Means to Be a “Christian,”” emphasized the conflict between spiritual
pride and grace.1 However, this article missed emphasizing something
of equal value.
While God’s
grace is a fascinating subject to comprehend; the antagonist of grace - spiritual
pride - inflicts a greater damage upon Christianity than F-bombs and bikinis.
Holiness (of
a Christian) is an entailment of God’s grace. Holiness cannot be diluted or
compromised. But before we get to the aspect of holiness that has been
compromised, either intentionally or unintentionally, here’s the article:
“Christian subcultures
are an entertaining phenomenon. Multiple brands of Christianity claim the same
Lord and read the same Bible, and yet they promote a set of values sometimes as
different as apples and orangutans.
I once heard a story
about a Christian woman from the East Coast who confronted a West Coast
youth-pastor, who allowed “mixed bathing” at youth events. “I can’t believe any
so-called Christian leader would allow boys and girls to swim together!” She
expressed her concern, all the while puffing on a cigarette. The youth pastor couldn’t
help but smile, speechless at the irony.
I attended a conservative
Brethren church when I lived in Scotland. Some of the women wore head coverings
and none of them spoke in church. When I had our Irish pastor and his wife over
for dinner, I asked them what he would like to drink. “Beer please,” the
preacher said. “And for you, madam?” “I’ll take a glass of Chardonnay, thank
you.” Were they liberal or conservative? I guess it depends on which subculture
you come from.
When you try to cut out
Christians with a religious cookie cutter, you not only tarnish diversity, but
you trample on grace. It’s one thing for Christian subcultures to cultivate
unique values. But it becomes destructive when those values are chiseled on
Sinaitic tablets for all to obey.
It’s even worse when
Christians expect instant holiness from recent converts—holiness, that is, in
areas where we think we’ve nailed it.
It’s a shame that some
believers have scoffed at some of Shia Labeouf’s recent comments about
converting to Christianity, pointing fingers at the fact that he still uses bad
language weeks after becoming a Christian. It’s worth noting that some are
speculating that Labeouf’s conversion may have actually been more of a rather
dramatic example of method acting than a true conversion but, regardless, many
Christians chose to focus on his language instead of his heart. God only knows
the true believers from the false. But to judge a man’s faith because there’s a
residue of potty mouth?
Bad language may take
years to weed out. Even more difficult to extract is the pride that drives
judgmental Christians to mock the Spirit’s work in a man seeking his Creator.
That sin could take decades to discover. Grace means that we are all works in
progress, and God shaves off our rough edges in His timing. Just look at the
thugs God works with in the Bible.
I know we’re programmed
to see the 12 apostles as saints with halos and contemplative faces. But
actually, they were criminals. These guys were more like prisoners than
pastors, and few of them would have been let inside our churches today.
Take Peter, for instance.
Peter walked with Jesus for three years, witnessing miracle after miracle,
sermon after sermon. Still, on the night before Jesus’ death, a servant girl
asked Peter if he knew Jesus. “I do not know the man!” Peter responded. And he
even evoked a curse on himself to prove he wasn’t lying (Matthew 26:74).
Can you imagine if your
pastor did that? “Good morning, church. I just want to say that I don’t even
know who Jesus is!” We have a hard time forgiving pastors who commit adultery.
I don’t think we’d know how to handle a pastor who had a public bout with
doubt.
Then there’s James and
John, whom Jesus nicknames “sons of thunder.” Apparently, they never made it
through an anger management seminar. On one occasion, these two hotheads wanted
to nuke an entire village because they wouldn’t let them spend the night (Luke
9:51-56). The whole village—women and children. Luckily, Jesus stepped in to
prevent the destruction. These two holy apostles would have been better fit as
bouncers outside an expensive casino in Vegas owned by a mobster, than
preachers of the gospel of love.
My favorite pair is Simon
the “Zealot” and Matthew the tax-collector. How did those two thugs get along?
Matthew’s vocation was
nothing less than political and religious treason. Tax-collectors were Jewish
agents of Rome, who mediated pagan oppression through taking money from
innocent people. Imagine if you found out that your childhood friend was making
a living off funneling money to ISIS. Would you use him to plant a church?
Apparently, Jesus did.
Tax-collectors were more
than extortionists. They were known for living excessively immoral lives and
hanging out with all the wrong people. Religious Jews, in fact, believed that
tax-collectors were past the point of repentance. Matthew didn’t have a moral
bone in his body. But of course, after becoming a Christian, he immediately
stopped sinning and never used bad language ever again.
Yeah right.
Simon, as a “Zealot,”
probably grew up on the other side of the tracks. The “Zealots” were named such
not because they were prayer warriors. They were just warriors—Jewish
jihadists. The “Zealots” were known for killing their Roman oppressors or other
Jews who were sell-outs. They were aggressive, violent and they did anything
but love their enemies. Had Simon met Matthew on the streets, there’s a good
chance one of them would have been found lying in chalk.
To build His Kingdom,
Jesus handpicks what could be compared to the leader of the Black Panther party
and the grand wizard of the KKK. I doubt anyone closed their eyes at that first
prayer meeting.
You cannot sanitize
grace. You can’t stuff it into a blue blazer and make it wear khakis. Grace is
messy, offensive and it sometimes misses church. To expect God to pump
prefabricated plastic moral people out of a religious factory is to neuter
grace and chain it inside a gated community. If God’s scandalous relationship
with the 12 thugs means anything, then we should expect a variegated spectrum
of righteousness and be patient—or repentant—when such sanctification doesn’t
meet out expectations. God meets us in our mess and pushes holiness out the
other side.
Not anti-mixed-bathing
holiness. But the real stuff. The holiness that serves the poor, prays without
ceasing, redeems the arts, loves enemies, elevates community above corporate
success, and preaches the life-giving Gospel of a crucified and risen Lamb in
season and out.”2
There’s
more to holiness. Holiness is transformation; we are being transformed into HIS
likeness from one degree of glory to another (2 Corinthians 3: 18, RSV).
The
fundamental transformation in every Christian should enable them to recognize their
own wretchedness (cf. Romans 7: 15-24). Unless
the Christian recognizes his own wretchedness, he would not be gracious to his
fellow Christian.
A Christian
who recognizes himself as the worst of all sinners (cf. 1 Timothy 1: 15) will be
gracious to his Christian neighbor. He will graciously offer the “F-bombing
Christian” the much needed guidance to grow spiritually without condoning or
condemning his sin.
The fact that
Christ worked with “thugs,” does not offer us immunity to continue being a
thug. There was transformation in the life of all the disciples – from unbelief
to belief and from bad to good.
In fact,
Peter emphasized the need to not curse or swear, “…Whoever would love life and
see good days must keep their tongue from evil and their lips from deceitful
speech.” (1 Peter 3:10, NIV). James, the brother and disciple of Christ, reflected the same thought, “…but no human being can tame the tongue—a restless
evil, full of deadly poison. With it we bless the Lord and Father, and with it
we curse men, who are made in the likeness of God. From the same mouth come
blessing and cursing. My brethren, this ought not to be so.” (James 3: 8-10,
RSV).
Therefore,
just as the disciples of the Lord transformed and grew in their spirituality because
of their love for the Lord Jesus Christ, we should grow and be transformed into
Christ’s likeness. May we also help each other to grow spiritually by not condemning
each other’s sins; may we be gracious Christians.
Endnotes:
1http://faithit.com/f-bombs-and-bikinis-what-it-really-means-to-be-a-christian/,
last accessed on 9th March 2017.
2Ibid.
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