Unfortunately, for many people, their view of the church has shaped how they view Jesus. Because the church talks about Jesus, they equate the two as one. The problem with this, is that this is not at all who Jesus is, in fact he spoke out strongly against some of the very same actions that we just mentioned. He referred to people who acted this way as hypocritical, only concerned with the outside or what people could see. Jesus came to shatter many of these stereotypes of religion. You see Jesus was concerned with motives, with what people couldn't see, with the heart of people. He did not come to minister to perfect people, but rather as a perfect God, he came to minister to "sick" people who desperately need his love. Bono said it this way, "The fact that the Scriptures are brim full of hustlers, murderers, cowards, adulterers, and mercenaries used to shock me. Now it is a great source of comfort."
This should be something that all of us can find great comfort in. God's expectation of us, come as you are, experience my love, my forgiveness and expect something great. This is what the church should be all about. Will you help us change what people have come to expect?
"Unfortunately, for many people, their view of the church has shaped how they view Jesus. Because the church talks about Jesus, they equate the two as one."
ReplyDeleteThis is so true! Tonight's meeting was great. The drama about the blind man made that segment of Scripture come alive, as did the preaching about who Jesus is.
Got to thinking about that story of the blind man in John 9. That was actually a kind of parable played out in real life: Jesus was illustrating what real blindness is, the blindness He exposed in His enemies, who wouldn't/couldn't recognize who He was and what He had done.
ReplyDeleteDave was right: there is so much going on in that story than a man receiving sight. As significant as that is, the real story was the "blindness that would not see" in Jesus' enemies.