Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Radical Christianity

And calling the crowd to him with his disciples, he said to them, "If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel’s will save it." (Mark 8:34-35, English Standard Version)

With these words, Jesus sets Himself against everything we as American Christians hold near and dear. In a time where bigger is better and numbers mean everything, Jesus is calling us to something radically different. A careful reading of the Christian Bible reveals that whenever the crowds grew too large around Jesus, He would make a radical statement that would cause people to leave. Whether it was the above quote, or Jesus speaking about His followers having to eat His flesh and drink His blood, Jesus always did the opposite of what church growth experts tell us is important to being successful in today's culture.

Might I suggest rather than listening to the so-called experts, that Christians actually listen to their Master. I am currently reading through David Platt's book Radical again in preparation for the week of church camp I co-direct. I have to say it is perhaps one of the most challenging books I have ever read. Not because of the academic level of writing (trust me, I've had to read many more difficult books for Master and Doctoral work), but because of the subject matter.

Platt argues that American Christians are not living up to the standards set forth by Jesus. He challenges his readers to consider how we have adjusted the gospel message to fit our preferences. He then shows what Jesus actually meant about being His disciple, and encourages you to believe and to obey.

Now this post is not so much a book review (I do encourage you to go and read the book), as it is a reflection on the impact it has had on me. As I stated, this book has been one of the most challenging books for me because of its subject matter. Pause for a moment and consider the opening quote. When was the last time we truly denied ourselves anything? As Americans, the majority of us have plenty of food, clothing, shelter, love, etc. As a nation, we are the richest of the world; most of the world's population lives on less than $2/day. We have tremendous freedoms not known by many; which we daily take for granted. I could continue, but I believe you understand my point. We are a blessed people and therefore are far removed from the words of Jesus.

Not only do we not deny ourselves of our wants, but we do not understand what Jesus means when He tells us to take up our cross. Understand this...it DOES NOT mean to bear a particular burden! Remember what the cross was in Jesus' day; a form of public execution. To put it into our context, it would be like Jesus telling us to take up our electrocution chair, our gas chamber, our lethal injection, our noose. We have made the cross pretty; we have formed it out of brass and put it on the Lord's Table, we have put it atop steeples, we make beautiful jewelry and wear the cross around our neck. We have removed the blood, the splinters, the roughness, the shame and we have loss the shock of Jesus' words.

Read the gospel accounts closely and you will see that Jesus was actually the most radical person that humanity has known. He removed social barriers, He disrupted the standing religious establishment, He confounded the political structure. American Christians have removed all of this and made Him the image of meekness and peace found in our flannel graphs. Please do not misunderstand me, Jesus is the Prince of Peace, He does not break a bruised reed (to paraphrase the Old Testament). But what we must remember is that Jesus comforts the disturbed and disturbs the comfortable.

I have to agree with Platt that American Christians have taken the rough edges off of Jesus and have made Him into our liking. A word of warning though, to make Jesus anything other than who He truly is, is to make an idol in our own image; and that will bring grave consequences. Jesus calls us to radical abandonment of ourselves and this world. He bids us to come and die to self, to this world, to the desires of this world. The question we have to answer is this, "Is Jesus Worth it?".

I would love to say that I have left everything for Jesus, that I have denied myself and have taken up my cross, and have not looked back. I would love to say that, but to say it now would be a lie. There still is a struggle, in fact a daily struggle to live as Jesus would have me to live. I can say this with all sincerity...JESUS IS WORTH IT! The American dream offers safety, security, and success; all of which can be taken away, all of which will fade away. Jesus offers us something much better, for it will not fade, it cannot be taken away. He offers His safety, security, and satisfaction through His sovereignty, love, and presence.

Is Jesus worth giving up the American dream? Is He worth denying yourself, taking up your cross, and following? Only you can answer that for yourself. I have had enough of nominal Christianity, I am ready to see a multitude of radical Christians go all out for Jesus. I am ready to see the American Church be more than a social club that meets weekly because it is expected to. I am ready to see this world turned upside down again because Christians actually believe and obey what Jesus said for us to do. Because in reality, radical Christianity is really just biblical Christianity.

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