In his
book, Quietly Courageous, Gil Rendle calls out the great temptation of
this age that continues to trap us in fruitless conflict: nostalgia. We are in love with who we were in that
aberrant time that still skews the baseline of our expectations and hopes, the
1950’s. Government, society,
neighborhood enforced a communal uniformity that drove people in the doors of
our congregations ready to serve on committees, commit to the common mission
and ministry we had already articulated, and happily become “one of us.”
That
world is gone—and as Rendle points out, it is not the fault of the Progressive
who has forsaken the Gospel or the Conservative who has twisted Christ’s love
into fear/hate. The scale and scope of
the tsunami of change that is coming at us is many orders of magnitude greater
than whatever divides us, and has nothing to do with the quarrels that have
defined us for too long.
We silently crossed into a new
world this year that will define us as a culture for decades to come: the
average American now spends more time on her/his phone than watching TV. The “smart phone” is systematically
disassembling family life, and every form of communal life in our culture. There is no more “us” to be a part of—and
most people now are distrustful of any “us” that is suggested. We have transformed community into another
consumer item by turning it into a “do it yourself” proposition, fostering an
understanding of communal relationships as another personal comfort, rather
than as a challenge/check to our own personalized reality. In our obsession to
avoid pain and discomfort, we seem to be perfecting a way of life that has
little or nothing to do with other people.
We shop alone; we recreate alone, online with chat buddies; we talk
politics and religion alone with people who think like us; we even love alone.
Malls
and ballparks are dying as fast as churches—the reason they are dying has
little to do with what goes on inside.
It has to do with the fact that they are uncontrolled space—one has no
control over who one meets, one cannot simply cut off interactions that are
painful or uncomfortable. Uncontrolled space in this culture is
increasingly seen as dangerous space.
The
wave that is hitting us doesn’t care whether we are Progressive or Evangelical,
Republican or Democrat, rich or poor, black or white, prophetic or
pastoral. We are all together part of a
truly countercultural movement: come together, and love your crooked neighbor
with your crooked heart.
The
most important value of Christians must become our unity—our togetherness. We need one another! Bigger barns won’t guarantee our
survival. Neither will uniformity of theology,
culture, race, politics, or socio-economic status. Christians are being pushed back into the one
thing that should have defined us all along: Love.
When we
submitted our report in 2010, now lost in the internet’s back forty acres of terabytes,
the Moderator’s Special Committee on the Definition of Marriage and Civil
Unions saw this as our true challenge.
Ten years ago this summer, I wrote this:
In his book, Life Together, Dietrich Bonhoeffer states:
We belong to one another only through and in Jesus
Christ. What does this mean? It means, first, that a Christian needs
others because of Jesus Christ. It
means, second, that a Christian comes to others only through Jesus Christ. It means, third, that in Jesus Christ we have
been chosen from eternity, accepted in time, and united for eternity.
We all come to
Christ as sinners, as strangers, whether we are in worship the week we are
born, or come to know Christ in our youth or old age. But once in Christ, we are inextricably
linked to one another—not by affinity, comfort, or culture, but first and
foremost because we belong to Christ. It
is Christ who sets a place for us at the table; it is Christ alone who calls.
With
Christ’s call comes the forming of Christ’s mind in each believer. In Christ,
no matter who we are, what condition we are, we come to understand our
essential humanity, which Christ redeems from the shadows of sin. Christ alone knows us—it is through the mind
of Christ alone that we truly come to know others.
Christ
is the center of our life individually and of our life together. From the moment we are called forth from
nothing and formed in the womb, through the moment in time when we hear and,
Lazarus-like, rise from sin and follow, to the moment when we are united with
Christ in a death like His and a resurrection like His, Christ is calling
us. We are not our own. We have been bought with a price.
It is
time for us in the Presbyterian Church (USA) to pick up our cross together and
follow God into the land that God will show us by reclaiming the essential good
of uncontrolled space created by Christ, where we do not all agree on all
things, where we are not from the same cultures and the same schools. We must start to live into the complicated
blessing of each other, embracing the pain that comes with the stranger, the
one who does not agree or think as we think, because it is Christ Who sends
them to us. We must learn to love one
another as Christ has loved us.
There
are other ways to buy and sell clothing and electronics than the mall. Professional sports can survive and even
thrive on media revenue. There is no
other way to learn to be fully human than to learn to love and live in
community with other people in spaces we cannot control. As this tidal wave of change sweeps away our
power and privilege, we must find a way to not succumb to the fear that
metastasizes as each shrunken soul recoils from the work of loving. We must find ways to reorganize our common
life around the essential task of loving Christ and each other in space Christ
alone controls.
What would happen if our presbytery
meetings were organized around strengthening and encouraging congregations and
pastors in this work? What would happen
if the people around our cities, around our presbyteries, around our
congregations could look at us and say, “see how they love one another!” This tide of change will forever alter the
geography of our culture. Blame and
fault-finding will do nothing to change that fact. We must put out into the deep, trust in
Christ, learn to truly hold on to one another, and live out as best we can the
Gospel we preach.
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