The job of a prophet is to speak the word of God. Here it is:
Love the Lord your God with all of your being.
Stop worshiping Baal.
Stop squandering what I [God] have giving you.
Love your freakin’ neighbor.
The list goes on, but these Truths are
not just ancient wordplay, nor are they recent revelations. These are
(badly paraphrased) words of God spoken through the prophets. The
prophets were not always revered (or even tolerated) by the people, but
they laid down the law on behalf of God. Let me tell you a couple of
things:
We live in a world which has forgotten
what it is like to invite God to dwell with us. We go to church once a
week, perhaps, but we don’t know how to live out our faith anymore.
Mostly this comes about because our church leaders no longer model
faithful living. Pastors want to have a nice car, house, pension, etc.
so how in the hell can pastors expect others to drop their nets and
follow them when they still have their net grasped in their hand? We
forget what it is to be inspired and instead fill our pulpits with
mediocrity.
Laity in the church must claim their
ministry. Our laity must go out doing the work of the poor at the
danger of losing life and limb. We want to insulate ourselves from harm
or death and our churches worry about lawsuits. The truth is that our
ministry into the world can not be without risk. The early Christians
risked death by meeting together. When was the last time you risked
death by going to church? We must be fully committed to embodying our
faith.
God is calling us to an authentic
faith. God wants us to drop our selfish ambition and greed to follow
the life of Christ. That can not be accomplished once a week nor is it
accomplished in church council or slick advertising. Our churches need
to grow, but not in numbers. Our churches (and their pastors) much
first grow in spirit and commitment. Let our churches speak loudly and
with relevance to a broken world. Let us proclaim the truth, even when
it is hard to hear.
Our churches must begin to model
stewardship. Forget these ridiculous buildings and projection systems
and fancy coffee/bookshops in our churches. Let start with basic
Biblical literacy and interpretation and if we can learn to do that -
let’s take our resources and begin to change the world (not our
foyers). What??? You think that it takes a nice looking building and
fancy equipment to have lots of people? Our churches don’t need a lot
of uncommitted people, we need to model a committed faith that uses
resources to change lives not to build a bigger freakin’ budget.
Our churches must strive to help our
communities and the people in them to be transformed physically,
emotionally and spiritually. We might pretend to do mission in a
sterile and safe way with part of our ‘budget’, but that just isn’t good
enough for God. God said it best of all “Love the Lord your God...and
your neighbor as yourself”. God didn’t say just love your neighbor with
the scraps that are leftover. God said to love your neighbor AS YOU
LOVE YOURSELF. This isn’t easy, but if we begin to live more simply we
can also begin to simply provide for those around us.
It is time for change. Let’s not take baby steps. Let’s not downplay the significance of our sin. Let’s not molest the Bible until it makes us feel justified in our lifestyle. Instead - Let’s start a spiritual transformation in the church.
Try it. I don’t want to have to pull out my sword and get all “Old Testament” on you. (see Exodus 32)
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