“Anyone who is to find Christ must first
find the church. How could anyone know where Christ is and what faith is in Him
unless he knew where His believers are?” Martin Luther
In the animated
movie, Ice Age, when saber-tooth
tigers attack a tribe of nomads, a mother and her baby attempt to outrun the
man-eating beasts but they’re cornered at a raging waterfall. The little boy is
discovered by a wooly mammoth named Manfred, a sloth name Sid, and a
saber-tooth tiger named Diego. These three unlikely companions unite on a
common mission to return the baby to his father. As the trio treks through a
mountainous terrain of ice and snow carrying the baby, at one point the mammoth,
sloth, and tiger realize they’re on an erupting volcano. The heat of the lava
melts the glacier bridges atop the ice fields, separating Diego from the
others. Isolated on a quickly melting island of ice, Diego jumps to reach the
others, but falls short. Dangling from the edge of the ice field, his grip
falters, and he falls. Manfred, unwilling to let Diego perish, leaps into a
chasm after him and tosses the tiger upwards to safety. Diego, realizing the
danger involved in the rescue, is moved by Manfred's compassion, courage, and
sacrifice.
“Why did you do
that?” he asks. “You could have died trying to save me.” Humbly, the mammoth
responds, “That's what you do when you’re part of a herd. You look after each
other.” Amazed at the convergence of circumstances that has brought these three
together, Sid finally muses aloud. “I don't know about you guys, but we are one
strange herd.”
One strange herd! That’s a pretty
accurate description of a healthy local church. It is, or at least it should
be, a description of us. A mix of individuals with different personalities, backgrounds,
ideas and perspectives sometimes, who might never hang out together— except for
the one thing that we have in common: we have been rescued from sin and death!
We have the same Savior. We’re regenerate and we love Jesus. In one way or
another, we’ve been transformed by the power of the Holy Spirt and God’s amazing
love and mercy. And because of that, we hang out together. But even more than
that, as the film illustrates in a cute way, as a “herd” of Christ followers,
we look after each other—even if we might look a little strange at times.
When our church,
when any local church is what it should be, it becomes a place where our old
nature and our old instincts begin to die. We begin thinking completely
different about ourselves and the other believers around us. People who we
might never have associated with before, or people who we never would have
thought we’d speak to, must less befriend, suddenly become our brothers and
sisters. And we find ourselves wanting to bring in more and more of those who
might not belong anywhere else—we find a place for them. Our herd, our community,
becomes a place of love, grace and service; a place where people experience the
transforming power of Jesus at work in their lives.
Something we don’t
understand, even in a church family, is that we have very limited power and
influence, as long as we function as individuals. The power of the Spirit flows
and is so much more potent when we’re a community. There’s unity in the Godhead
(Father, Son and Spirit) and God has designed us, as a redeemed people, to have
that same unity.
The very first thing
that Satan did was divide the first couple. He attacked and continually attacks
the local church to cause that same division. It was not Peter or Paul that God
used to turn that 1st century world upside down, it was the church –
a community of committed believers. God’s plan hasn’t changed. Jesus loves the
Church. Jesus died for the Church. It’s in the Church that His greatest power
is displayed and that is first seen locally.
The greatest
unity most of us know today is that of a marriage or a family. Yet, God wants
so much more for us. That’s why during the next five weeks we’re going to take a
break from our series on Luke’s Gospel and focus on unity and community in the
Grace Church family, Me to We: The Relationship Series.
Spiritual community is our focus for 2015 because if we don’t first love one
another, how will we ever share Christ’s love with a lost world.
And I need to warn
you. This will stretch you. It’s going make us uncomfortable. We like the status
quo. But Jesus didn’t die so we could play “church” and have our souls
periodically warmed. He calls us to come and die. If we will commit to obeying
Scripture and submitting to the Spirit, God can do a great work both in us and
through us that will count for eternity.
Part of the power
of local church community begins so basically. We must first know one another. For
example, we’re commanded to pray for each other. I’m sure God knows who we’re
talking about when we pray for that tall guy who drives the Chevy BUT God wants
so much more for us. How can we pray for
one another? How can we love each other? How can we encourage each other? When
we don’t really even know each other?
To be what God
wants us to be is going to demand that we crucify ourselves. It’s going to mean
that we die to our own agendas, schedules, desires and plans. It means that we must
spend time with one another. It means that we have to be willing to be
stretched. It means that we must see that person in the seat in front of us as
Jesus does.
For many, it’s
going to mean joining a Sunday Morning Live class or small group. It’s going to
mean that we don’t rush in at the last minute and then rush out on the last
“Amen.” It’s going to mean having a meal with people where we hardly know their
name. It’s going to mean stepping out of our comfort zones and stretching,
actually spending time with people who aren’t just like us. Because Jesus
didn’t die for clones. He loves and died for one strange herd! It’s His will that we love that same strange herd! But how can you obey and love people that you don’t even
know?
Can you imagine
having someone tell you, “I love you but I can’t stand your kids”? Jesus loves
the Church, so much that He died for it. We’re to love His Church too. It
starts here. Because if we don’t love the Church, we really don’t love Jesus.
It’s His Body, His Bride. If you love Him, you have to love His Church. Over
the next few weeks we want to grow in our love for His Church and begin moving
by His grace from Me to We. Yes, it will stretch us, yet it will be so fulfilling
because we’re obeying, doing His will and then, because we are, experiencing
His blessing!
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