Friday, September 19, 2008

can we agree?

If you were to take a room full of 100 Christians and ask them about their theological tenets you would more than likely have a group with rather a wide theological spectrum of beliefs, practices, doctrines, backgrounds, and convictions. Before long you would be able to develop a rather extensive list of disputable matters among these Christians and if you shared the list with its creators, you'd more than likely end up with relatively blistering arguments and rising tensions. This of course would not be a pretty sight to watch.

Moreover, if you took a room of 100 people, 50 Christians and 50 non-Christians, and asked similar questions, you might as well put a bunch of hungry monkeys in a room with only one banana. The vibe in the atmosphere would certainly not be pleasant.

I think we as humans can correctly state that we can become rather uncomfortable around those of which we do not agree with. Be it theology, politics, ethics, personal practice, etc. we, the human race, throughout history have naturally tended to gravitate toward those in which we are in alignment with.

Ever since I can remember I have always struggled to love and befriend those of which I find disagreement with. More recently within the last few years, as my theological and political beliefs have shifted quite profoundly, as a Bible college student I have found myself becoming more and more uncomfortable with those of which I disagree in areas such as theology, politics, and personal practices. In some cases it has even gotten to the point where I don't feel like I can completely be myself in some ways unless I am with people of whom I agree with. This is sad, but true. As in other cases, it has become a rather shameful practice of mine to subconsciously stereotype individuals of whom I disagree with into a completely separate group of people. For example, when disagreements arise, I have essentially said to myself "you think (blank) about this, you must be one of them" Fill in the blanks with whatever labels you wish (liberal, conservative, Calvinist, Arminian, etc) and voila, you have my rather vial thought process. I have conceived a rather dangerous “me vs. them” mentality. This is a personal aspect of which I do not envy, and I have spent many restless nights fighting with myself over my desire to be a truly loving person.

On a wider scale I have always asked the question of how we as evangelical Christians can engage those within our postmodern culture who share different beliefs. I have noticed that we seem to get so hung up on the other’s "wrong" beliefs that we never get past arguing, wasting precious time bickering with one another.

It wasn't until recently that I truly began to understand engagement with culture can look like. I was listening to a sermon MP3 and the pastor mentioned this…
We could spend our time asking questions about rather mundane issues of theology, politics, morality, etc.

But what if we asked different kinds of questions?
Can we as opponents agree, as different as we are, that Christ's body was broken and blood poured for the healing of the world? Can we agree on that? What would it be like if the next time we were in a shouting match with a fellow Christian we said
"Can we agree that Christ's body was broken and his blood poured out for the healing of the world? Can we agree on that?"

Imagine what it would be like if the we engaged someone who was not a Christian, who didn't want anything to do with God, Jesus, The Bible, or Church? What if we asked, "do you agree that the world needs healing? I believe Jesus' body was broken and blood was shed for the healing of this world. Can we agree that the world needs healing? Can we agree on that?"

Also, can we agree on our need for the grace and peace of Christ? Can we agree on that? The interesting thing about our opponents is that we both agree that we both need the grace and peace of Jesus Christ. We a connection we didn’t know we had. Our boundaries would soon look much different and we wouldn't want to throw bombs at each other if we realized our mutual need for the grace and peace of Christ.

What it would be like if this was how we viewed things?
How would our world change?
How would our faith as followers of Christ be changed?

grace and peace,
jeremy