We live our lives with the idea that our joy and peace requires something happening that changes the world out there. We tell ourselves that we will be joyful once we get that promotion; once our 401K hits a certain threshold; once we retire. But then invariably we reach these goals and these external things happen and we still have not found joy and peace.
Israel was the same way in the ancient world. Israel knew that it was a people set apart through its covenant with God. Israel expected that God would change the nature of the world "out there" to bring joy and peace to Israel. Israel expected joy and peace when it had a king; once it had a temple; once it was a sovereign nation. But these things happened and Israel was still not at peace.
Jesus told Israel, and us, that everything we need to experience joy and peace is already right here. The Kingdom of God, Jesus tells us, is already in our midst. It was in Israel's midst when Jesus proclaimed the Kingdom of God. It was in Israel's midst in the days of Abraham. The Kingdom of God has always been present with us, in us, and among us. That means that God is already here, and this is already God's world. All we have to do is recognize it and see it. Once we do, we will see that we already have everything that we need to have peace and joy here and now.
"Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. I myself will be with you every day until the end of this present age." -Matthew 28:19-20
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Sunday, February 12, 2012
An Unexpected Image of Discipleship
Paul tells the ancient Church in Corinth that discipleship is like running a marathon. This is an unexpected image of discipleship, but one that is useful for the contemporary Church, and I think particularly for the United Methodist Church. There are several important things that we can take from Paul's image. First, the notion that there is an objective winning and losing, of right and wrong, correct and false when it comes to discipleship. In a marathon, there is literally one winner, and the runners can objectively rank themselves from first to last. In discipleship, there are different paths that we take to become holy, but holiness is holiness. We are either sanctified or we are not. We are either living as God's people or we are not.
The correlation of discipleship with being an elite athlete also reminds us of the demands of discipleship. Too often our discipleship is put on the figurative back burner and given less priority than our employment, our finances, our extracurricular activities; pretty much everything. This is all, of course, unstated and implicit--we would never admit this to ourselves or to others. Imagine a marathon runner trying to win a marathon without giving his or her training the highest priority and being constantly preoccupied with training and preparation. Discipleship has to be like that.
Perhaps the most important point of Paul's text, however, is to remember that God has a definition of winning that is different than the world's definition of winning. What it means to win in God's eyes is to be holy. Winning in the world's eyes is defined in terms of status, physical appearance, financial resources, and vocation. God wants us to be holy. This is what it means to win in God's eyes. If we are holy, we win. If we are not, we lose.
As always, we look to Jesus as our model for what it means to win in God's eyes. Like an elite athlete focused upon the prize of winning a race, Jesus lived life focused upon fulfilling God's will. In the eyes of the world, he lost. In God's eyes, he won.
The correlation of discipleship with being an elite athlete also reminds us of the demands of discipleship. Too often our discipleship is put on the figurative back burner and given less priority than our employment, our finances, our extracurricular activities; pretty much everything. This is all, of course, unstated and implicit--we would never admit this to ourselves or to others. Imagine a marathon runner trying to win a marathon without giving his or her training the highest priority and being constantly preoccupied with training and preparation. Discipleship has to be like that.
Perhaps the most important point of Paul's text, however, is to remember that God has a definition of winning that is different than the world's definition of winning. What it means to win in God's eyes is to be holy. Winning in the world's eyes is defined in terms of status, physical appearance, financial resources, and vocation. God wants us to be holy. This is what it means to win in God's eyes. If we are holy, we win. If we are not, we lose.
As always, we look to Jesus as our model for what it means to win in God's eyes. Like an elite athlete focused upon the prize of winning a race, Jesus lived life focused upon fulfilling God's will. In the eyes of the world, he lost. In God's eyes, he won.
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