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02

Apr

Imagine…it isn’t hard to do

Say the word imagine and in many people’s minds a song starts playing.  It is John Lennon’s song, Imagine.  A part of the lyrics go like this:

Imagine there’s no countries
It isn’t hard to do

Say what you will about his philosophy or theology, Lennon had a goal in mind when he wrote:

I hope someday you’ll join us
And the world will be as one

Lennon, for whatever reason and motivation, desired to see the world united.  A place without prejudice, discrimination, and hate.  Michael Jackson and other popular artists sang about the world being a better place to live—when the world must come together as one

Recently a young man in our neighborhood took several people hostage at a bank.  Rather than robbing the bank, he expressed through a pained heart that he simply wanted a loving family, a hug from his father.  What he was saying is he wanted unity in his home…a family where there was a common love for one another and a purpose to life; not only as a family but as individuals too. 

As followers of Christ, we should be aware that unity characterized by love, patience and grace is precisely what Christ prayed for for his followers (John 17:11, 20-23).  Jesus praying to his Father said (17:23):

I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me.

Jesus had a very specific reason for praying that his followers be unified.  Unity was not an end in itself in this verse but a means to show the world that God sent his son, Jesus, and that God loves his people even as he loves his own son. 

When a local church is not unified, it keeps the world from seeing Jesus!  A world that doesn’t see Jesus, and hear from a church that God loves them and gave his son for them, will be left to only imagine a world where peace, patience and grace exists.    So many local churches do not experience unity and therefore can’t show off the love that God has for the world.  Is it any wonder why so many people crave unity and love?  Why so many songs are written about peace and unity?  Why so many people hunger for a place to belong that is accepting, gracious, kind and loving? 

Imagine a church that pursues unity in truth and in grace with everything it can muster (Ephesians 4:3, 13).  Imagine the life-changing, yes world-changing effect such a church could have!  Imagine the joy you would experience if you were not only part of such a church, but you actually played a major role in bringing and maintaining its unity. By God’s grace pursue unity in your church by being a Christ follower characterized by grace, truth, peace and patience. 

Imagine…it isn’t hard to do.  Practice…that’s another story.

07

Aug

On Practically Reflecting God in Life

One of the most startling sentences in the Bible is “Therefore be imitators of God, as dearly beloved children” (Ephesians 5:1; http://esv.to/Ep5.1).  The apostle Paul doesn’t mince words when he calls Christ followers to mimic God.  Paul doesn’t say this is for really mature believers. He didn’t say do it only if you really feel led to do it.  Paul puts it in command form, because it is the essence of the Christian experience.  Difficult but possible, and not only possible but commanded!

For the apostle Paul, commanding this of the Christians in Ephesus (and surrounding areas) was not something new.  In the very first chapter of the Bible (Genesis 1), we are told that the original couple were made in the image of God.  Whatever the image of God means, it certainly included expressing the character of God in life.  Such character reflection requires one keep in mind the object to be mirrored, which our original “parents” clearly did not do.  But we shouldn’t be too hard on them for we would have done the same.  I say that because we often fail to do it as his children today.

A couple of observations that are key to obeying this command.  First, notice that the sentence didn’t end with the requirement to mimic God.  Tied up with the command is the crucial reminder of who we are as Christ followers: we are God’s children.  We come from God and we belong to God; we are his creation and his treasure—children.  As God’s creation, made in his image, we have the moral qualities to reflect him much as I reflect my earthly father in so many ways.  Yet we are God’s treasure (just read Ephesians 1; http://esv.to/Ep1.3-23), his special possession.  And we are that by his grace through Christ.  In other words, we are motivated to mimic God, not because he is the judge that will zap us if we don’t, but because he is our kind and compassionate heavenly Father who has lavished us with grace.  We ought to be motivated by God’s grace and love for us.  Our motivation is key to the imitation of God.  To mimic God for any other reason than his extreme love for us is to fall into a legalism that outwardly does but inwardly is not.

Second, the apostle Paul doesn’t leave us in the dark about which he is specifically calling us to imitate.  The command is couched between two “as” statements.  Let’s take a look (http://esv.to/Eph4.32-5.2).

Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.
Therefore be imitators of God, as dearly beloved children.
And walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us, a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.

The two “as” statements give us the imitation characteristics.  If we are to imitate God then the following must be true of us:

be kind to one another

tenderhearted

forgiving one another

walk in love

Again we are not left without example nor motivation.  Our character is to reflect God and Christ not some earthly person we admire (though there are fine examples out there of these qualities).  Nor is our life to reflect the present cultural version of these qualities.  Nor ought we take our cue from contemporary music and thought.  We imitate God and Christ.  They have practically and tangibly shown us the way.  We who have placed our confidence in Christ alone have experienced God’s kindness and tender heart and forgiveness.  We have experienced Christ’s love and are reminded of it whenever we look at the cross. 

Our heavenly Father and his son and our savior provide the motivation as well.  They pursued us with these qualities when we were running the opposite direction with disdain in our hearts for the very things for which we longed.  We tend to crave the things that hurt us and run from the things we need (yet really crave).  But we ought to be motivated by what God has done for us in Christ—motivated by grace and love—in all of our relationships. 

The apostle gives us a command to obey which comes from hearts motivated by God’s example of love and grace in Christ.  If we are to imitate God, we have to practically reflect these four qualities in our daily spheres of influence and relationships. 

Go imitate God!