OK, now that I have your attention, I’m not talking about showing skin on the food line of the local homeless feeding ministry. One meaning for the word “sexy” is “generally attractive or interesting, appealing” according to www.Merriam-Webster.com.. So, I’m saying that serving rather than talking is what the world sees is attractive about Christianity. The world generally rejects the message of Christ because they feel that Christians are condemning and critical of others while ignoring their own lovelessness toward gays and people of other religions. However, when the world sees Christians acting loving, they give new credence to the gospel message.
And, right here is where we run into a problem: Too easily churches develop sitters, not servers. If all we do is come to the weekend service, week after week, soaking up what is in some cases gourmet preaching, we may be infected with a disease called “spectatorism.” One author says, Spectatorism generally creates flabby, weak, spoon-fed believers who have grown old, but not up, in the Lord.
Yes, sometimes the best way to serve people is to tell them the Good News that Jesus can make a difference in their lives. The good news that God accepts us and forgives us changes the lives of Khmer Rouge Murderers, of Indian low castes, of empty hearted communists in East Asian countries, and drunken fathers who are drinking up all their children’s food money in order to find peace. Sometimes the good news is the best way you can meet someone’s needs, because the Good News does change lives as well as eternity.
But, the Matthew version of the Great Commission tells us to teach people to Keep the commands. That feels more like action than talking. Keep has a custodial flavor—We are given "custody" of the message that Jesus is good news, and Jesus in us is how He intends to touch the world. Our Message that Jesus is in us presumes that we will Serve with it. The only way Jesus can touch the world, heal the world, feed the world, show compassion on the world is through His body. We are His body, His instrument to touch a hurting and hopeless world. We are the only good news that many will ever see.
Serving is being the good news, being Jesus to a pain filled and broken world. The Bible includes serving in how we SHARE the good news: Peter tells us in his first letter to use whatever gift we have received to serve others (I Peter 4:10). Twice in Titus 3 and in Eph. 2:10, Paul says that God brought us into His forever family so we would be devoted to doing good. In Galatians 2:10, Paul says that there was only one thing that the Apostles asked him to do when he went to the Gentiles: to continue to remember the poor. Peter tells us to 1 Pet. 2:12 Live such good lives among the pagans that, though they accuse you of doing wrong, they may see your good deeds and glorify God
To often the pain of life shouts louder than our words and people can’t hear the good news until they see the good news. But, when they see the good news working in us, changing us, unleashing us from being anchored to our houses and toys, and connecting us to the hurting, hopeless, and disheartened in practical love in action, they find that Christians are attractive. Former atheist and now Christian author, Lee Strobel, says, “when we put our love into tangible action as Jesus modeled…this can open up the hardest of hearts otherwise impervious to the message of Christ.”
Saturday, October 10, 2009
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