I had something of an epiphany the other day. I have debated
about sharing it because it is doubtless one of those “revelations” that many
readers will answer with a resounding, “Duh! Everybody knows that.” One of the
consequences of being a life-long Bible student is that some of the older
teachings get shed to make room for additional information. That’s brain
science. Or it is possible that I never heard this idea taught quite this way;
so here it is.
I am reading Simple
Church by Thom S. Rainer and Eric Geiger. The authors’ premise is that
churches can be more effective at making disciples with one simple process than
with multiple, complex competing programs. I recommend the book, but there is
one line of thought that I am really struck by. Rainer and Geiger bring up the
question Jesus poses to his disciples in Matthew 16: “Who do you say that I
am?” Jesus is pleased when Peter answers, ““You are the Christ, the Son of the
living God.” Then comes the idea that struck me anew; Jesus tells the disciples
that this proclamation will be the very foundation of His Church, “and the
gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”
Rainer and Geiger point out that gates are defensive
structures. The “gates of hell” are placed by
the enemy around Christ’s Church in order to thwart its growth. The enemy
uses his wiles to construct impediments that appear to confine the Church. Anyone
who has read C.S. Lewis’ Screwtape Letters is familiar with the concept. Yet Jesus
told the original disciples that the enemy’s efforts would be fruitless. Those
of us who are modern day disciples have the same promise, echoed by John,
“he who is in you is greater than he who is in the world.”
So if the Church is the victorious force with superior
strength, I have to wonder why we come across as such wimps when the enemy is
engaged. Perhaps we fear failure. Failure is assured if we sally forth in the
flesh instead of in the spirit as Paul counseled the Corinthians.
Failure is assured if we have the wrong motives as
James warned. Failure is assured if we twist the Scriptures to our own ends
as Peter
pointed out. Failure is assured if we hide the light under a basket. There are
many ways to fail.
There is one sure way to win: The Church must storm the
gates. Remember, Jesus promised the gates of hell will not prevail. What does
it mean to “storm the gates?” Sitting in church on Sunday, no matter how good
the church is, does not qualify. If the Allied troops had stayed safely aboard
their ships on June 6, 1944, Hitler would not have been defeated. If they had
simply listened to their leaders telling how big their guns were and how effective their strategies
were but never stormed the beaches, the enemy would not have been overcome.
Action is required to accomplish just about anything worthwhile. When Jesus
described how his disciples should act, he talked about taking up one’s cross daily. He did not recommend sitting
around in comfy circles singing songs about him.
Besides largely ignoring the call to action, the Church has
done something else that can be illustrated with the gate metaphor: the gate keeps
getting moved. To illustrate, when I was in high school, girls who would sleep
with a guy were considered tramps – bad girls. If the polling is to be
believed, an alarming number of today’s Christian
young people are sexually
active in high school. Satan has somehow tricked an entire generation into
thinking that promiscuity is not that bad. Instead of standing firm on a
Biblical principle when “free love” became fashionable in the 1960’s, the
Church seems to have moved the boundaries. The same thing can be said of
women’s fashion, popular entertainment and a host of other cultural markers.
To continue with the metaphor, the Church seems to have left
the light behind and wandered through the gates into enemy territory without
realizing they left the truth behind. I don’t mean to suggest that the Amish
are right to remain stuck in the 19th century, but face it: we are
fighting battles on ground that already belongs to the enemy. How much sex is
acceptable in a TV show or movie? How much cleavage is acceptable in a
Christian woman’s style? How bad is homosexual marriage as long as the couple
is monogamous?
I am beginning to think that the Church is in a similar
position to God’s people who were taken captive to Babylon. We haven’t lost our
Temple, but we have lost what it means to be
the temple. We haven’t transgressed God’s law by erecting idols, but we have
run after the “idols” of our culture. We are not an ethnic people taken captive
by a foreign ruler, but we are a chosen people captivated by the enemy of our
King.
The often quoted verse from Chronicles
spoken to ancient Israel may be appropriate for this generation: “If my people
[believers], which are called by my name [Jesus], shall humble themselves, and
pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from
heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land [church].” At that
point, the Church will be in a position to storm the gates of hell and win.
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