Last Thursday, I had a powerful, genuine, moving spiritual
experience, something I haven’t had for a long time. A small group of passionate people gathered together
and sang and spoke over the injustices happening around us, and we mourned and
raged at the lack of real, compassionate response. We celebrated a safe space for people of all
ethnicities, political beliefs, genders, and sexual-orientations. Hope was offered that the tragedies of this
life don’t have to continue. We mourned
that Freddie Gray would’ve turned 13 that day had he not been killed. We talked about mental health issues and
celebrated that people can find hope outside of their depression or bi-polar or
schizophrenia. And at the end of the night,
I and others like me left feeling like we could change the world. I felt on fire!
Do you know what is sad though? This experience didn’t happen at a
church. This wasn’t a Christian
event. In fact, a good majority of the people
present were probably atheist. It was a punk rock show. And I left feeling like maybe punk rock could
change the world because it was willing to stand up for something real, for
something right and to call its congregation to action; for some reason it
embodied Jesus’ ethics without even believing in Jesus.
The problem is, I’m not so sure that the church in America
is going to change the world because it does not have the courage to live like
Christ over and against the way that popular Christianity is choosing to live.
In Matthew chapter 7, Jesus tells a parable of two builders,
one who wisely chooses to build his house on a foundation that can withstand a
strong storm, and the other who chooses to build his house on a weak foundation
which will be destroyed by the wind and waves.
He uses this parable as the capstone of the entire Sermon on
the Mount to say that it is the wise person who hears these words and founds
his or her life on them by following them.
Anything else will lead to destruction.
The question we are left with is, do we follow or not? It’s really a simple question, but our
response carries immense repercussions.