Okay, I’ll
confess, it was a little too hard to not tease friends who are Bear fans last week.
Even the sportscaster on WBBM joked, “The
Chicago Bears
won...the coin toss” after last Sunday night’s 55 to 14 shellacking by the
Packers. Of course, it could be worse. At least the Bears are 3 and 6. You
could be a Tampa Bay fan at 1 and 8. Even the Detroit
Lions are more popular than the Bears right now, though both cities are very familiar
with mediocre teams. And while I’m a lifelong Atlanta Falcons fan, with a 3-6
record, a Falcons’ jersey isn’t on my Christmas list.
Americans
love winners and so does the Church. We’re attracted to the successful, trendy,
hip and cool. It’s hard not to be. After all, it’s the message we’re weaned on –
winners win, losers just lose.
While the media’s
caricature of Christians being oddballs really bothers me, I have to admit that
there’s some truth to it. Have you ever noticed that churches seem to attract
more than their fair share of odd people and odd pastors, too? So have you ever
wished that Christianity could be cooler, have a better image, and perhaps even
wondered why it wasn’t and didn’t?
Why aren’t
churches seen as exciting, happening places where normal people would want to
be seen hanging out? Why is it so much easier to post on Facebook that we’re at
the gym or some swanky restaurant? How often do you see someone post that they’re
at church? Ever notice it’s easier to post a selfie with a beer in your hand
than a Bible? Why is that? Most of us are more comfortable videoing our bad
karaoke (is there such a thing as good karaoke?) rather than singing in church?
Many of us sing so softly in church that unless you’re within our personal
space, you can’t even hear us. Maybe it’s whisper praise instead of a joyful
noise?
Even when we
talk about our faith, it’s usually with a “getting” focus rather than a
“losing” one. Much of our Christian talk revolves around “gaining.” God gave me
this…He gave me that. Much of our Christian life is focused on what we’ve
received: freedom, hope, peace, a future, etc.
Don’t get me
wrong. All of those are worth being excited about, yet the Christian life is
also about giving up things. It has a Cross as well as a crown. That’s the part
most of us are a lot slower to talk about. Yet, as we read the Gospels, we
quickly discover Jesus talked much more about losing than winning. He calls us
to “lose our life.” If you call
yourself a Christ-follower, you must be prepared to call yourself a loser. The Cross
means losing. The Cross isn’t only about gaining a new life in Christ, it’s
also about losing your life to find it. Every believer has things that we had
to lose in order to follow Christ. We lose our past, complete with our sin and
guilt. Oftentimes, though that also includes friends, family members, memories,
even a spouse. We lose our security, as Christ draws us into unfamiliar
territory and calls us to walk by faith. The talkative, assertive person must
lose and learn to be quiet and listen. The quiet, shy person must lose and
speak up even when it’s tough. We all lose our “rights.” We’re to submit to one
another (Ephesians 5:21). A Christian wife must lose what the world calls her
“right” when she submits to her husband. A Christian husband must lose himself,
his desires and agendas, when he yields to the Lord and leads his family. He’s
to love his wife sacrificially. The motivated, driven person loses when God
says “wait…be still.” The pensive, cautious person loses when God says, “Go
now. Act.”
The Gospels
make it clear that Jesus was never concerned about His image. He never felt the
need to associate with the cool people or do cool things. He was completely free
of such worries and had a very different set of criteria for what was worthy of
admiration. He wasn’t interested in or impressed by human posturing,
presentation, play-acting or power-plays. He was more interested in humility,
integrity, kindness, compassion, contrite hearts and merciful attitudes.
Let’s be
honest. All of us are to some extent misfits and oddballs deep down. Some of us
are just better at covering it up than others.
Jesus had great
compassion for those who were looked down on by society for being uncool, weird
or odd; those who didn’t fit in. He didn’t exclude them and won’t tolerate our
exclusion of them. His Church is to be open for the least, the unlovely, the social
outcast and outsider. If we can’t accept them, we’ve failed His mission. And we
need to be reminded of this because it’s tempting to try to sweep embarrassing
people under the carpet and out of sight. We must not forget that we’re all
image-bearers, even those who seem a bit odd.
Jesus doesn’t
just want symbolism or mere conformity to social conventions and norms. His
ways and will are far bigger and better – and much more freeing – than that. For
that very reason, those we see as embarrassing can sometimes be far freer and far
more likely to take risks to do things God asks, regardless of whether they
might be humiliating. The biblical prophets, John the Baptist, even some of
Jesus’ disciples, all had some traits which probably didn’t make them great guests
at most dinner parties. To be frank, they were a bit weird, even a bit
ridiculous. But they were chosen by God and He was pleased to work through
them.
Of course, I
still cringe when I see a nut job preaching on a street corner. Personally, I
don’t think it’s the best way to share Christ. Yet, I need to remind myself
that God chooses the weak things of this world to shame the strong; the foolish
things to shame the wise. God’s foolishness is greater than human wisdom. Even Jesus
wasn’t cool in any worldly sense. This world still thinks of Him as a loser and
His followers as losers, too.
I’m not
saying that Christians can’t be cool or that Jesus loves you more if you’re a
weirdo. We don’t need to deliberately make church embarrassing or uncool, any
more than we need to deliberately go out seeking to suffer. What I am saying though
is that Jesus is for losers. If we want to walk the way of Christ, we need to get
used to that and we’d better make sure our churches aren’t too cool or uppity to
include weirdoes, saddoes, oddballs and the socially awkward.
Ted Turner,
was right, “Christianity is a religion
for losers.” Being a Christian follower is a call to be a loser. That’s
because our Lord was the biggest loser of all. He sacrificed His life for each
of us who were losers, that we might be losers in Him and gain everything. Yet,
being a Christian carries much more shame than being a Bear’s fan. In January
the football season is over and they can start talking about “next year.” For
the believer, it’s a lifetime calling. The world won’t know the score and that
Jesus wins until the end of the age. Until then, from a lost world’s
perspective, we’re on the losing team.
No comments:
Post a Comment