Thursday, August 26, 2010

Lights


Love everyone… This includes people who think differently than you, difficult people, and those who have hurt you.
Feed the hungry and give water to the thirsty.
Visit the prisoner.
Provide for the widow
Care for the orphan.
Invite in the stranger and immigrant.
Be hospitable.
Clothe the naked.
Care for the sick.
Stand up for the marginalized and defenseless ones.
Be humble.  Treat others as better than yourself.
Speak carefully.
Be slow to anger.
Don’t show favoritism towards the rich, famous, or powerful.
Don’t love money and don't be a slave to it.  Be wise and generous with your finances.
Practice justice.
Give mercy.
Shelter the homeless.
Don’t envy.
Don’t be selfish.
Make peace whenever possible.
Be gentle, kind, and caring.
Don’t be arrogant and boastful.
Be patient.
Use your gifts to help others.
Be self-controlled.
Don’t be hypocrites.
Speak the truth but don’t be a jerk about it.
Be trustworthy.  People should believe what you say.
Don’t talk bad about others.  Gossip and slander are destructive.
Do good deeds.  Even when it’s hard.  Even when others don’t.
Be respectable.  Live so you have a good reputation with others.
Do what is right, even if you suffer for it.
Don’t drink, eat, party, or anything else to excess.
Be clear-minded and alert.
Serve others even when it means sacrificing your own comfort, especially if it means sacrifice.
Treat those older than you with respect and those younger as brothers and sisters.
If someone has screwed up in life, restore them gently.
Don’t listen to liars, idiots, or those who stir up trouble.
Respect and obey the government so.  Even the ones you didn’t vote for.
Don’t fight with one another and don’t be quarrelsome and divisive.
Don’t sleep around, treat your body and others with respect.
Be a good example.
Take care of your own family, whether you like them or not.
Live with joy and contentment even in tough times.
Be generous and willing to share.
Respect your parents and treat your kids well.
Treat your spouse well.
Forgive those who have hurt you.  Quickly.
Don’t take what doesn’t belong to you.
Be honest in your business dealings.
Don’t be a slave to pleasure and entertainment.
Study God’s word and teach them to others.
Don’t put up with false teaching.
Pray.

It’s not about gimmicky services.  It’s not about ‘relevant’ music.  It’s not about being seeker sensitive.  It’s not about bigger and better props.  It’s not about rock star preachers and self-help messages.  It’s not about growth at any price.  It’s not about hooks to get them in the door so we can spring the trap on them.  It’s not even about us versus them. 
We shouldn’t have to paint up the gospel like a $20 hooker in order to try to attract people.  P.T. Barnum showmanship and used-car-salesman trickery have no place in the body of Christ.  If you believe that ostentatious glitter and flashy extravaganzas are what is required to for people to come to belief, then that suggests to me that you don’t believe that the gospel is enough yourself.
Neither should we be the obnoxious and arrogant evangelists who beat people with a twisted gospel or try to trick them into hearing it with cartoon tracts and baited questions.  Protest signs, angry words, and megaphones have no place here either.
It’s about a radically gentle, life-changing love that affects us enough to become living evidence to others.  It’s about individual, personal change and the struggle of daily turning towards God and His way, as evidenced in the list above.  It’s about walking together through good times and hard times.  It’s about turning away from the world of self-aggrandizement, self-enrichment, and selfish pleasure.  That was the message at the beginning and that is the only relevant message in a world of distraction and dissipation that we live in today.
If our lives actually reflected change, people might actually see our deeds and realize the truth of God’s message.  It’s almost as if that’s in the Bible (Matthew 5:16, 1Peter 2:12)
The message of the cross is offensive only because it acknowledges the evil in all of us, even those who think they are good people.  And,it offers grace to everyone, even those we don’t like or we don’t feel deserve it.  If we offend people with the gospel for any other reason, we are not being faithful to the message. 
Read the above list* again.  This is what a follower of Jesus looks like.  I think that the rest of the world would have much less problems with ‘Christians’ if more of us looked like this.
Do your deeds reflect God’s message? 
Do your actions demonstrate your faith?
Does your life show that you believe in something that matters?  Does your growth and discipleship demonstrate a way that might help others?  Do your actions exhibit a faith that is a light to others?
If your friends, coworkers, family, and neighbors didn’t know you went to church services, would they still know you were a follower of Jesus?
Perhaps it is time for each individual in the church and the church as a whole to take Peter’s advice in 1Peter 3:3-4.
3Your beauty should not come from outward adornment, such as braided hair and the wearing of gold jewelry and fine clothes. 4Instead, it should be that of your inner self, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of great worth in God's sight.

Let us become lights to this world through our quiet but active devotion to our God and to the people around us.  Let each of us be like a simple, single candle burning in the darkness instead of trying to be garish neon facades like the Las Vegas strip.

* this list is a compilation of exhortations and admonitions taken from the Gospels and Epistles of the New Testament.


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