Monday, October 6, 2014

Lessons from Athens



(If you did not read my post “Father of all Humankind- witnessing to pagans” (February, 2014), I recommend you read it first.)

Two or three generations ago most people in Europe and North America still knew the Bible, and they had a fair idea about God.  Today this is no longer the case.  Through secularization, spiritualization, and immigration most people there don’t really know what the Bible teaches, and they don’t really know or understand the Gospel.  That is one side of the problem; it also seems that most Christians do not know and understand how ‘our neighbors’ actually think.  For instance, many people think that Christian faith is not grounded in truth.  They contrast it with science.  Science is seen as (purely) rational and grounded in truth, while religion is wishful thinking and fantasy.  Others associate Christianity with bad ‘church experiences’, where members were not allowed to think for themselves or forced to follow a certain behavior code, which seemed to foster hypocrisy. 
To understand how we should present the Gospel to people who don’t know (about) God, we must focus on two passages in the Bible.  In Acts 14: 8 – 18, Paul addresses pagans in Lystra; in Acts 17: 16 – 34 he lectures at the Areopagus at Athens.  These are unique passages, as they reveal Paul’s approach to people who don’t know (about) the One True God.  Jews and Muslems (as well as Samaritans, in Jesus’ time) are not called ‘pagans’, as they already accept that there is only one God, who is creator, provider, and judge.  Therefore, we should use a different approach when witnessing to them.
At Lystra, Paul tries to convince the local population not to worship them as (if they were) gods.  ‘We are only humans!  We are messengers of the One True God, and He has given us the power to do miracles.  We are bringing you Good News today!  We are telling you about the Living God, the Creator.  He is the One who has given you many blessings.  Therefore, you must stop worshipping other gods and turn to worship only the One True God!’
At Athens, many people are interested in religion.  They are curious to find out what god Paul is advocating and wonder if he has anything to add to their ‘theology’.  So, when Paul is invited as guest lecturer, he boldly turns the tables: Although the Athenian scholars pretend to be experts in ‘theology’, they prove to be ignorant about the One True God.  This ‘god’ is in fact the Creator of all humanity; He provides for them, and He wants all people to seek and serve Him!  His audience must not think of Creator-God as some foreigners’ god, for they, too, are His offspring.  The Creator-God is their Father-God, who has already blessed them with many gifts!  Therefore, they owe it to Him to give Him their thanks and service!  Paul presents this as Good News, yet he also warns them that there will be serious consequences if they now continue to ignore the One True God.  When God’s Chosen One returns, He will judge all people!  He is the One, Who will restore God’s Kingdom, and his resurrection is the proof that this is so!
So, what lessons can we draw from Athens?
1.       Paul prepares his ministry by becoming acquainted with his audience.  He has toured their city, he has read their poets, and he understands their culture.  We, too, must seek to understand those who don’t know (about) God: What makes them ‘tick’?  What keeps them going?  What are their goals and aspirations, their dreams and fears?
2.       Paul brings the Gospel.  He reveals to them God’s rescue plan in Jesus Christ.  His message is first of all “good” news!
3.       Although he presents the Good News, yet he does not hesitate to mention the dark side: Those who persist in turning away from the True God and refuse to respond to his gracious gifts must face judgment!
4.       Paul does not read to them the Law of God, which was given to Israel.  Yet, he does emphasize the core of the law (essentially the first commandment): They must put God (and God alone) at the centre of their lives!  Seeking God must be their first priority, so that –when they come to know Him, they might walk with Him.
5.       Paul teaches them the basics: Creation, Covenant, Call to repentance, and the Coming judgement
a.        The Christian God is the Creator of all things and all people.  Obviously, He is far greater than any of us, yet He is close to us. 
b.       He has made us in His Image, and He has given us an abundance of good things.
c.        Therefore, we are all under obligation to seek Him, to return to Him, and to live for Him.
d.       We are urged to stop putting our hopes in other things and other gods. He is to be the centre of our lives!
e.       If we persist in ignoring Him and worshipping other things, in the end we will be judged.
6.       Paul faithfully and generously shares the Good News, regardless of the outcome. 
About fifteen years ago I got acquainted with a neighbor down the road.  We met a few times and talked about politics and the environment.  After a few visits, Victor ‘discovered’ that I was a Christian.  This came as a great surprise to him.  He had concluded (from our first talks) that I was an intelligent and knowledgeable person, which -in his view- was incompatible with being a Christian.  So, he wanted to find out what was wrong- either his earlier assessment of me or his assessment of Christianity.  After a few more visits, he shared some interesting conclusions:
·         At first your Christian views seemed primitive and bizarre, so I could not reconcile them with my conviction that you are a rational and knowledgeable person.  Now I see that you have a totally different, yet coherent way of viewing reality.  For someone who only hears a few things out of context, Christianity appears illogical and primitive, but I see that -once you have adopted this worldview- it makes totally sense!
·         I admire your drive and sense of purpose.  I don’t really know what I have pursued or accomplished in my life, but you seem to have a clear focus of your task in life.  Your relationship with Jesus seems to give you a power and conviction that I would love to have.
Is it useful to spend our precious time with atheists and agnostics, like my neighbor, Victor?  About a year before we went to China, he developed serious health problems.  In a matter of months he was no longer a proud man but totally dependent on the loving care of his wife; one time I had to help her to clean his bed because he had just soiled it.  It was during this time that I resumed regular visits, which he always loved.  I reasoned with him that -in the end- it is not our minds, which is God’s greatest gift to us, but it is love.  ‘In his younger years John Nash (A Beautiful Mind) was proud of his ability to reason, but when he began to struggle with his mind (in schizophrenia), he realized that the loving care of his wife was more precious than the power of his mind.’  At another visit I shared Jesus’ story of the prodigal son.  He must have known the story, but somehow -under these new circumstances- it sounded surprisingly different!  I remember vividly his radiant face after I had shared this story; I had never seen him like this before.  Victor had grown up a (Roman) Catholic, but he had refused to be called a ‘sinner’.  Now, he seemed so thankful that Father-God, from whom he had run since his youth, was opening his arms to welcome him home.  I cannot be sure that Victor was saved indeed, but when his wife and children commemorated his life at his deathbed, they invited me to join them- as Victor’s friend and pastor.  I shared with them how Victor had been a unique friend, who had taught me how to listen and had shown me how other people think.  And then, I prayed that God might forgive Victor’s former pride and resistance and take him home.  Later, his wife shared with me how she had been long been afraid that Victor would depart (as atheist) in agony.  Yet, now she was convinced that her husband had surrendered to God’s love at last, and that he was at peace when he departed.  
Most people (that we might share the Gospel with) will probably not care to know the truth or to understand the Gospel.  We cannot convince people to follow Christ just by solid apologetics or clever arguments.  Paul knew this too. He probably had not expected a thundering applause at the Areopagus.  The prodigal farmer (in Jesus’ parable) who sowed the seed knew that much of it would never germinate, survive, or produce a crop.  Yet, that was not his concern.  He did not count the cost: freely he had received, and freely he was sharing it!  He knew that God -at the time and place of his good choice- would produce a harvest.  We ought to do likewise!

Thursday, October 2, 2014

To love our neighbors



In a recent dialogue with a Brother, the question came up, “If one has God in the centre of his life, this would address the first part of the Great Commandment, but what about the other part; to love our neighbor as ourselves?”  First I was taken aback by the question as I had not thought about it, but then I realized that our love for the neighbor must flow from our love for God.  (Ref. to James 3: 9)
If God is at the centre of our lives (which none of us can do perfectly and consistently!), then we no longer put ourselves in the centre.  This may sound self-evident, yet it has radical consequences.  We are all programmed (by nature and by culture) to claim and defend our own personal worthiness.  Even humble people usually take pride in their humility!  As a teenager I was a perfectionist: I sought to please my parents, my teachers, and my God with doing all the right things.  This gave me a sense of moral superiority and pride.  I was not aware of this, but in being hard on myself (to “keep the law”), I also became critical of others, looking down on those who seemed to care less or had a slightly different law of acceptable behavior.  Consequently, in my criticism of others around me, I suspected they would be just as critical about me.  This made me very self-conscious, which made matters only worse.  My adolescent life became a roller coaster of pride and despair!  (Himmelhoch jauchzend; zum Toden betrübt!)  Only as God’s Spirit broke through could I apply the Gospel to my life.  Christ had fulfilled the law for me to set me free to follow Him!  There was no use for boasting now; neither was there any need for despair.  As Tim Keller puts it so well: The Good News of Christ is this: I am so more sinful (self-seeking) than I had ever wanted to admit, and yet I am more loved (in Jesus’ sacrifice) than I could ever have imagined.  When I hear bad things said about me now, my gut response may still be anger or disappointment.  Yet, by the Holy Spirit I can overcome such reactions.  If Christ defends me before the throne of God, why do I need to fight to defend myself?  Sure, I listen to and learn from others, but when there is criticism, it can no longer produce a crisis of self-worth as if my ultimate worth should depend on the beefs and bouquets of other people!
Ultimately, when Christ is in the centre, we are released from the pressure to compete with others.  By His Spirit we are empowered to take on the attitude of Jesus Christ, who did not cling to his status in Heaven but humbled himself to live with people like you and me.  (Philippians 2: 1 – 11)  He accepted the greatest abuse: He was rejected by God and humankind: despised, rejected, mocked, and eventually tortured and stripped of all his dignity in order to pay for our sins.  When I begin to grasp this amazing love, it must transform me and help me to consider others better than myself!  When we appreciate the Gospel, then there is no room for boasting or for pride, not within the Christian community and not towards our secular community!
For we may not hide away from the world around us!  In the Old Testament we find many purity laws that stress the need for separation.  Even in God’s work of creation we see him creating order by making separations: light from darkness, water from water, sea from dry land, creatures according to their kinds!  When God gave his laws to Israel, he reinforced the laws of separation.  Israel was supposed to be the Kingdom of God, drawing the nations to their Father-God.  Yet, when the Hebrews got too comfortable with Canaan, they readily abandoned their God to adopt all kinds of evil practices and other gods.  And still, God returned to keep his promises to Abraham and David. Those who had been called ‘Lo Ammi’ (Not-my-people) were now called (My-beloved-people), yet they were not to be the only ones: now Jew and Gentile are gathered together into the Kingdom of God. And, since the day of Pentecost the church is commissioned and empowered to go into all nations.  While we keep God in the centre of our lives and walk by his Word and Spirit, we are called to engage with the culture around us so that they may see and experience that there is a righteous yet loving God! 
Are we ashamed to share the Good News?  Are we actually afraid of “the big bad world” as if Christ had not overcome the world?  He has not given us a Spirit of timidity, but a Spirit of boldness to promote His Kingdom!  Are we actually afraid of unbelievers?  Perhaps it is our communal pride that brings us fear for those who don’t know God!  If we hope to share the Gospel (and this is what we are called to do!), we must first understand our neighbors’ gods.  What are they living for? What is their greatest joy?  When they learn to trust us, they may share with us their real worries and their fears, and it is then that we may be able to point out a better way: The Only Way! 
Did you ever wonder how our unbelieving neighbors look at us?  If being a Christian just means going to church a lot and not shopping on Sundays, what does this tell them about the Gospel?  During the sixties, the pop group Lobo sang about the “Jesus freaks” in town,
“I sneaked up close and watched them work.  I found that actually they laughed a lot and sang out loud.  The way they walked made them look kind’a proud: a little different from you, a little different from me: a lot like the man who walked through Galilee”. 
Do the people in our street see us first of all as people who walk and talk as Jesus’ did?  Do we give them a chance to come to know Jesus through knowing us? 
Or, are we indeed different?  Do they see only external differences (in what we do on Sundays, for instance)?  Do they see first of all our efforts to protect our privacy and safety, our possessions and our pride?  Or can they learn from us about sacrificial love?  Can they see the fruit of the Spirit in a real gentleness, kindness, patience, and forgiveness? If we pray, “Your Kingdom come”, we must first make Christ the King of our own lives, before we can hope to promote His Kingdom among our neighbors!  And if we refuse to respect our neighbors or listen to their concerns to understand their lives, how can we hope to point them to the Gospel?
I remember one time, helping our children roll a big snowball through the yard so that they could build a snow fort.  And I thought, “The kingdom of God is like a snowball!  If we sit still (like the ‘chosen frozen’!) and refuse to connect with the world around us, snow cannot stick to snow and the snowball cannot grow!”