Into the Fire

Passionate thoughts about the world of writing and the Power of God

 

                Ireland-8

 

 

Monday morning. The church finished with its big deal. The concert. The play. The excerpts from Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ. The shock value or the gentle call. The sin forcing the crucifixion or the risen forgiveness of the Resurrection. The performance. Done.

Back to normal on the next day? The beauty and depravity contained in each day should never warrant "normalcy" in the church. The celebration of the Risen Christ takes place on one day each year just as His birth is acknowledged on one day each year. Both events are assaulted and peppered with secular holidays attempting to match the importance of the One who was born and who died and rose. 

Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and forever. Sin reigns just as intense. Forgiveness remains just as accessible.

Rising from the dead, while worth celebrating, is not the biggest miracle. After all, Jesus raised a little girl, Lazarus, and how many others from their deaths. Elijah raised the only son of a distraught woman. It happened. Not often or common, but it happened. Even today there are stories of people of faith praying for a corpse and watching their prayers propel a soul back to life.

These miracles should be documented, recorded, and read to fellow Christians around the world. These things which bring pause to almost anyone, these things which cannot be explained away with scientific conjecture – these are things that should be occurring in the church today. Celebrated. Looked forward to with hope, faith, devotion to prayer, and humble receptions of God's amazing grace.

But a large portion of the church sleeps. Stands on formula and predictability and man's scheduling and structure struggling to interpet a far more freeing order of God's preference for His people to listen to the Holy Spirit and be led by Him. Instead the church shushes the Spirit of Truth, insisting their way is best for this culture or this day and age or the expectancies of today's churchgoers. Indulging "the traditions of men".

"Easter" is past, but the Resurrection is always present in the Christian's eye. We know that Jesus rose with healing for our sin stained hearts if only we embrace the sacrifice He made for us. For everyone. We're just as filthy as the rest of mankind, but that crucifixion of our sins and the shedding of that holy Blood made us new because we believed in God's love. Not man's definition of love. God Is Love. Embodied. Defined. He decides what true love is, and we can never attain its perfection in our corrupted flesh or presume to understand its eternal riches, but Jesus showed us what it looks like. The Holy Spirit helps us understand our failings and works with us to step into His greater love and live beyond this physical realm both now and forevermore. To hear Him. In the church and out of the church.

So I ask you: why don't we?

God, I honor you. I'm desperate for your Spirit's leading. Help me to walk in the fullness of what you desire for me. Jesus, thank you for being the friend I need at all times. For your constant love. Show me your ways. In the Name of Jesus, Amen.

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4 responses to “The day after . . .”

  1. dayle Avatar

    In an overarching sense, I probably disagree with you on this. However, if we touched upon examples, that might change.
    While it it true that we should live everyday with the full appreciation of Christ’s redemptional sacrifice and God’s grace, it is in man’s nature that the everday eventually becomes mundane and the annual instills glorification.
    For those who only go to church on Easter and Christmas, I continue to be mystified by this practice. This idea that “well, it’s christmas, guess I’ll do my duty and punch in at church to keep in good standing.” really baffles me. This is self-delusion on a grand scale. And it’s not the idea that you have to go to church every sunday. I personally went several years without going to church. But the idea that once or twice sort of meets the minimum requirements so I’ll do that is misguided.

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  2. Nicole Avatar

    Dayle, I understand completely about how man cannot sustain the “euphoria” and “amazement” of the supernatural and miraculous. However, it is better to encourage the fullest reaches of the gospel than to ignore or subdue it.
    I wonder whether or not in some cases the church has become the self-help manual for people who no longer want to attend to meet God there. To further their personal and individual knowledge of who Jesus can truly be in their lives. To raise their awareness of the person of the Holy Spirit, to learn of His individual and corporate instruction(s).
    And to cater to those who only attend twice a year, for the church to work itself into a frenzy to “perform” for those who do arrive in hopes of convincing them that what they basically snub for most of the year will entice them to embrace salvation and commit to the growth that ensues . . . I can’t help but think that sometimes they miss the message. Jesus saves. Not man. The Holy Spirit draws. The guts of the message is acknowledging there’s nothing man can do to save another’s soul. It really is a decision each individual must make. Man is only one of God’s instruments in the process, but every Sunday is sacred in making His majesty clear.

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  3. dayle Avatar

    How many times have I heard someone discuss church in terms of “what they get out of it”. The self-help thing is out of control. Joel Olsteen is the result of american what’s in it for me culture.
    What you get out of it should be a by-product of what you put into it, not the driving force.
    There are many who don’t love God, they love what they’ve been told God can give them if they just do blank, blank, and blank.

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  4. Nicole Avatar

    Touche. And the church that caters to that . . . well, I think the seven churches in Revelation about cover it.

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