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Monday, November 30, 2009

What If Jesus Meant All That Stuff?

November 18, 2009, 9:05 AM

What If Jesus Meant All That Stuff?

This radical Christian's ministry for the poor, The Simple Way, has gotten him in some trouble with his fellow Evangelicals. We asked him to address those who don't believe.

By Shane Claiborne

[more from this author]

Shane Claiborne

The Simple Way

To all my nonbelieving, sort-of-believing, and used-to-be-believing friends: I feel like I should begin with a confession. I am sorry that so often the biggest obstacle to God has been Christians. Christians who have had so much to say with our mouths and so little to show with our lives. I am sorry that so often we have forgotten the Christ of our Christianity.

Forgive us. Forgive us for the embarrassing things we have done in the name of God.

The other night I headed into downtown Philly for a stroll with some friends from out of town. We walked down to Penn's Landing along the river, where there are street performers, artists, musicians. We passed a great magician who did some pretty sweet tricks like pour change out of his iPhone, and then there was a preacher. He wasn't quite as captivating as the magician. He stood on a box, yelling into a microphone, and beside him was a coffin with a fake dead body inside. He talked about how we are all going to die and go to hell if we don't know Jesus.

Some folks snickered. Some told him to shut the hell up. A couple of teenagers tried to steal the dead body in the coffin. All I could do was think to myself, I want to jump up on a box beside him and yell at the top of my lungs, "God is not a monster." Maybe next time I will.

The more I have read the Bible and studied the life of Jesus, the more I have become convinced that Christianity spreads best not through force but through fascination. But over the past few decades our Christianity, at least here in the United States, has become less and less fascinating. We have given the atheists less and less to disbelieve. And the sort of Christianity many of us have seen on TV and heard on the radio looks less and less like Jesus.

At one point Gandhi was asked if he was a Christian, and he said, essentially, "I sure love Jesus, but the Christians seem so unlike their Christ." A recent study showed that the top three perceptions of Christians in the U. S. among young non-Christians are that Christians are 1) antigay, 2) judgmental, and 3) hypocritical. So what we have here is a bit of an image crisis, and much of that reputation is well deserved. That's the ugly stuff. And that's why I begin by saying that I'm sorry.

Now for the good news.

I want to invite you to consider that maybe the televangelists and street preachers are wrong — and that God really is love. Maybe the fruits of the Spirit really are beautiful things like peace, patience, kindness, joy, love, goodness, and not the ugly things that have come to characterize religion, or politics, for that matter. (If there is anything I have learned from liberals and conservatives, it's that you can have great answers and still be mean... and that just as important as being right is being nice.)

The Bible that I read says that God did not send Jesus to condemn the world but to save it... it was because "God so loved the world." That is the God I know, and I long for others to know. I did not choose to devote my life to Jesus because I was scared to death of hell or because I wanted crowns in heaven... but because he is good. For those of you who are on a sincere spiritual journey, I hope that you do not reject Christ because of Christians. We have always been a messed-up bunch, and somehow God has survived the embarrassing things we do in His name. At the core of our "Gospel" is the message that Jesus came "not [for] the healthy... but the sick." And if you choose Jesus, may it not be simply because of a fear of hell or hope for mansions in heaven.

Don't get me wrong, I still believe in the afterlife, but too often all the church has done is promise the world that there is life after death and use it as a ticket to ignore the hells around us. I am convinced that the Christian Gospel has as much to do with this life as the next, and that the message of that Gospel is not just about going up when we die but about bringing God's Kingdom down. It was Jesus who taught us to pray that God's will be done "on earth as it is in heaven." On earth.

One of Jesus' most scandalous stories is the story of the Good Samaritan. As sentimental as we may have made it, the original story was about a man who gets beat up and left on the side of the road. A priest passes by. A Levite, the quintessential religious guy, also passes by on the other side (perhaps late for a meeting at church). And then comes the Samaritan... you can almost imagine a snicker in the Jewish crowd. Jews did not talk to Samaritans, or even walk through Samaria. But the Samaritan stops and takes care of the guy in the ditch and is lifted up as the hero of the story. I'm sure some of the listeners were ticked. According to the religious elite, Samaritans did not keep the right rules, and they did not have sound doctrine... but Jesus shows that true faith has to work itself out in a way that is Good News to the most bruised and broken person lying in the ditch.

It is so simple, but the pious forget this lesson constantly. God may indeed be evident in a priest, but God is just as likely to be at work through a Samaritan or a prostitute. In fact the Scripture is brimful of God using folks like a lying prostitute named Rahab, an adulterous king named David... at one point God even speaks to a guy named Balaam through his donkey. Some say God spoke to Balaam through his ass and has been speaking through asses ever since. So if God should choose to use us, then we should be grateful but not think too highly of ourselves. And if upon meeting someone we think God could never use, we should think again.

After all, Jesus says to the religious elite who looked down on everybody else: "The tax collectors and prostitutes are entering the Kingdom ahead of you." And we wonder what got him killed?

I have a friend in the UK who talks about "dirty theology" — that we have a God who is always using dirt to bring life and healing and redemption, a God who shows up in the most unlikely and scandalous ways. After all, the whole story begins with God reaching down from heaven, picking up some dirt, and breathing life into it. At one point, Jesus takes some mud, spits in it, and wipes it on a blind man's eyes to heal him. (The priests and producers of anointing oil were not happy that day.)

In fact, the entire story of Jesus is about a God who did not just want to stay "out there" but who moves into the neighborhood, a neighborhood where folks said, "Nothing good could come." It is this Jesus who was accused of being a glutton and drunkard and rabble-rouser for hanging out with all of society's rejects, and who died on the imperial cross of Rome reserved for bandits and failed messiahs. This is why the triumph over the cross was a triumph over everything ugly we do to ourselves and to others. It is the final promise that love wins.

It is this Jesus who was born in a stank manger in the middle of a genocide. That is the God that we are just as likely to find in the streets as in the sanctuary, who can redeem revolutionaries and tax collectors, the oppressed and the oppressors... a God who is saving some of us from the ghettos of poverty, and some of us from the ghettos of wealth.

In closing, to those who have closed the door on religion — I was recently asked by a non-Christian friend if I thought he was going to hell. I said, "I hope not. It will be hard to enjoy heaven without you." If those of us who believe in God do not believe God's grace is big enough to save the whole world... well, we should at least pray that it is.

Your brother,

Shane

In Zohrab's Pain, God Shouts 2

In Zohrab's Pain, God Shouts
by Hicham Chehab
After this I looked and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and in front of the Lamb. They were wearing white robes and were holding palm branches in their hands. (Revelations 7: 9)
Zohrab's story with Salam Arabic Fellowship started with acts of unconditional love.
Zohrab IMG
A year ago, an Iranian friend asked me to drive Zohrab, a throat cancer patient with no means of transportation, to his chemotherapy appointments. It was a big problem which needed a lot of commitment and coordination with volunteers, because it was 4 days a week, come rain or shine.
Zohrab, a taciturn slim man in his fifties would ride the 55-mile drive with me with tight lips. I often tried to pray for him or talk to him in order to share the love of Jesus Christ, but his bluish, ashy face was often stolid. Riding next to me, breathing through a hole in his throat, I often thought that he was impervious to the Gospel, and that he was there only for the ride. He always gazed with melancholy into the distance ahead of us, with a look of certain death in his pale face.
But the Word of God is mighty and sharper than a double-edged sword. As C.S. Lewis says: "God whispers in our pleasures, but shouts in our pain." A year passed, and both Zohrab's spiritual and physical health started to get better. Zohrab started to call me every Friday around 5 pm in order to make sure that somebody was going to give him a ride to the Saturday Salam Arabic worship meeting.
Zohrab never missed a Bible study or worship, and he started to show positive change in his behavior. Zohrab started to spend his mornings in reading the Bible. Even though Zohrab was unemployed and had no money, he insisted to donate money to Salam's activities. His money was like the Widow's Mite.
On the last Wednesday of Lent, Zohrab asked me if he could be baptized. That evening following the Lenten Service of Peace Lutheran, Salam's host congregation, Zohrab became God's own in baptism.

I received the following email from a member of Peace congregation's ministry staff who attended the baptism:
"It was a very special event! His baptism was encouraging and inspiring.... It gave me great joy to see the Holy Spirit growing in him, and it gave me a better picture of the "whole church". (Not just the white, suburban, English speaking Sunday crowd that I'm used too.) It will be a beautiful thing to get to heaven and to see the great diversity of Christians and the unity that we have in him. It will be a truly amazing thing to praise God in heaven--side by side with people of every nationality, and language, from every generation!"
Amen!

Hicham Chehab

In Zohrab's Pain, God Shouts


He Still Moves Stones- Max Lucado

Zohrab IMG
It is true that Baptism is a sacrament that only God knows its full blessings.

Zohrab is Baptized
Zohrab, a throat cancer survivor, who came as a refugee from Iran, was called to baptism the last Wednesday of Lent. Zohrab went home with joy after thanking me a thousand times.
Zohrab is Healed
But God wanted to reveal Himself personally to Zohrab. As soon as Zohrab went to bed and fell asleep, Jesus appeared to him in a dream, wearing white robes. Jesus asked Zohrab: " Zohrab! What ails you?" "My neck," replied Zohrab, "It is still stiff from surgery. I cannot turn my head to the left and to the right without pain. Also, I cannot raise my head upwards comfortably." "Jesus grabbed my head with his hands," Zohrab added with tears in his eyes, "and turned it to the right, to the left, and upwards." "I woke up healed from pain." Zohrab said with great joy.

For to be baptized in the name of God is to be baptized not by men, but by God Himself. Therefore, although it is performed by human hands, it is nevertheless truly God's own work. From this fact every one may himself readily infer that it is a far higher work than any work performed by a man or a saint. For what work greater than the work of God can we do? - Martin Luther's Large Catechism
"Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever."- Hebrews 13: 8

Salam Arabic Fellowship