Now for a (related) tangent. Should we be “thinking beyond salvation” when sharing God’s good news? How should we be “selling” Christianity? In my context, we (the church) seem to be selling salvation. Focusing on the classic “You have sinned and will face judgement when you die, but Jesus has died for you so if you believe in him God won’t be mad at you anymore and you will go to heaven when you die”. I have to be careful looking back on this line to make sure I am not making the position too farcical (I suspect I’ve failed). Now these statements are pretty much true, and sometimes they might even be the right thing to say. I recently saw a poster that embodies the idea of selling life salvation. It read something like “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ…and you shall be saved. Instant Life Insurance!” This disturbs me somehow; let me see if I can put this in more every day terms and highlight what concerns me.
Say you are a young man, pretty normal, a few years out of college. Your working a vanilla job, and some new girl just got hired a couple weeks ago and you were talking over lunch. During the conversation the topic of relationships come up and she starts to ask you if you are seeing anyone, etc., etc. You admit that you are single, and this person starts to speculate about why. “Maybe it is your temper”, or “yeah, I noticed you are late to things pretty often, sloppy, etc…” I suspect your hackles would rise, and you would write off what they said, and probably make an effort not to take lunch at the same time anymore. A person probably would not change themselves based upon such a conversation. Contrast this to a different scenario. Take the same young man, a few months later. Your life has suddenly got interesting because you have met the girl of your dreams. But, the more you get to know her, you begin to realize that she is just a step beyond you. Dang it, she is smarter, nicer, and better looking. She seems to spend more time thinking about other people than herself. You know she loves you better than you love her and that is confusing. The more you think about it, the more you want to be a better person just for her sake. You want to shed your bad habits, work on those character flaws and generally improve yourself.
So what is the difference? I think it is relationship. We don’t go to much effort to please strangers, we rarely care what random people think about us. “I will never see them again anyway”. But, it is vitally important to us that the people close to us think well of us. We want our family, our spouse, our closest friends to think well of us. It is a bitter twist to find out that someone you care about dislikes some part of you.
Surely this should play a part in how we tell people about Jesus. Telling people they need to shape up for God doesn’t carry much weight until people understand how much God loves them, and they start to love God themselves. When we “peddle” Jesus, surely the main point is not that when we die we go here or there. Is not the biggest news that the greatest lover the world has ever known loves me, even though he knows all the flaws in my past? And better yet, he loves me knowing how I am going to continue to mess up in the future? Isn’t salvation just the icing on the cake, not the substance?
Posted by haakon,
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