Thursday, January 30, 2014

Saved to Serve, Not Saved to Sit

Usually I fall asleep to the random ramblings I have going on in my mind, but not tonight. I simply cannot fall asleep and my rambling turned into me preaching to myself. So I thought I would write it down and maybe then I could sleep.

The pastor at the church I interned at in college had this saying; he would often say “we are saved to serve, not saved to sit.” This is so very true. I have seen churches, and groups who were once thriving shrink and some of them completely fall apart. As I began to wonder how this happened, I continually went back to Kent’s (the pastor from my church) words.
There was a time, and there are still some who think this way, where many Christians believed that the purpose of being a Christian was to get to heaven. That is the goal, heaven. This mentality feeds the sitting many Christians are doing. I have often heard the phrase “I am not of this world” and “I am waiting to go ‘home’” with this attitude there is no drive to change the world. If being a Christian is all about getting to heaven then we have no need to concern ourselves with helping the poor, and social justice, because in the end we are saved, this world will pass and everything will be peachy king jelly bean. We have taught, and been taught, to be saved and then sit. Many churches then filled up with sitting Christians, and maybe someone would walk by and we would share the gospel and tell them how to get to heaven, and some would sit and join the waiting party. While there were others who saw/see the social injustices, they see the poor, starving, addicts and are serving them and when a sitting Christian tells them about God they do not want to join in the sitting because the sitting is not helping the hurting.
So if being a Christian is not about getting in to heaven then what is it about? I believe it is about working with God to bring Christ’s kingdom here, now. Every time we say the Lord’s Prayer we pray “your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” This is a prayer of action, not only for God to act but that we as followers will act to. If we are wanting Christ’s kingdom to be here on earth as it is in heaven this means that the Church, that Christians must help the poor, feed the hungry, live life with the addicts and allow God to bring healing through our obedience and action, this means that we must stand against social injustice, this means that we were saved to serve not saved to sit. When those who are not Christians see the Church active, serving, and living what they preach then they are more open to hearing what we have to say.

Church is not about glitz and glamor. It is not a place where we go on Sunday because that is what we are supposed to do. Church is not about us being entertained. It is about the body coming together to worship the creator. It is about living life together. I do not know, or want to even think about, what this world will look like if those who claim to be followers of Jesus continue to sit in their Sunday pews and not serve. Jesus didn’t sit and wait, neither did the disciples, the apostles, and for those of us who stem theologically from Luther, John Wesley, Phineas Breese, and Anna Hanscome did not sit around, they served. They were active and they changed the world. So what are you going to do? You who claim to be a follower of the living God? Will you continue being a Saturday sinner and a Sunday saint? Will you sit and wait to be taken to heaven, or will you live into what it means to be a follower of Christ? Will you get up and serve, living in step with the Holy Spirit striving to bring The Kingdom here on earth now as it is in heaven?

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Toto We're Not in Kansas Anymore

Toto we’re not in Kansas anymore.
This week marked the beginning of winter term at the community college that I am finishing up some gen ed. Courses at. Tonight was my first night in biology 102. Now I have not taken a science class (unless you count a week long birds of prey class) since my Jr. year of high school. And I have not taken biology since my sophomore year. It has been since the first semester of my sophomore year that I took the type of biology that talks about cells (instead of animal dissection and all the fun easier stuff). Needless to say it has been a while since I have been in this kind of environment.
It is not simply the type of class that made me take a step back and realize I’m not in “Kansas” or more realistically Nampa anymore. It became clear to me from the beginning of class that my instructor is most likely not a Christian, or at least not one who believes in intelligent design. As we were talking about animal cells and plant cells and how they work and the small intricacies of how it all functions I could not help but think “God, you are magnificent. How could anyone believe that this all happened by chance, or evolution. Everything has to be just so…so perfect. I don’t get it.” And I truly do not understand how one can use science to disprove God, the more I look at the universe, people, and now biology, I become more convinced of Gods existence.
I could get a sense of my instructor’s position because she kept referring to the evolutionary process, and not simply with micro evolution, but everything having evolved from something. I do not know quite how to word it in the manner of which her tone and body language would match. It was her tone and body language which gave away, or suggested her beliefs of how everything came into being. In the moment that I realized this I began to genuinely appreciate the University I went to, and Christian scientists. I now feel more blessed than ever to have learned, not just bible and theology at a private university, but also history, English, phycology, and all of those other general education requirements, because our theology and beliefs do impact everything we do and how we learn.

I believe that science and God can, and do, co-exist that science does not (and cannot) prove or disprove God, but simply that it is a window into how God has created and how magnificent, beautiful, and mind blowing God is. We can learn more about God by learning more about his creation through science, and I look forward to being able to do this, even while disagreeing on some things with my instructor…which I am use to.