I noticed that John Piper asked if the Church can grow when it has a bad name. He quoted the book of Acts “everywhere this sect is spoken against.” (28:22) For those who don’t know, Acts recounts the story of Christianity’s explosion after the death, and resurrection of Christ.
I thought this was an overly simplistic description, à la twitter; and perhaps a dangerous justification for the Western Church as it currently stands. The first century church was a group of the powerless doing powerful things. They loved the outcasts. They healed the sick. They got right in with the poor, inviting them into their homes, and selling what they had to help those who had nothing. They were despised because they associated with the despised. We are despised because we are despicable.
I remember watching the lead singer of Pedro the Lion talking about the modern church, and saying how people have this illusion that we are living in the book of acts. I would agree in as much as I’m sick of people taking statements like “they numbered around 5000” in Jerusalem and using this as a justification for a church that barely functions as a place of learning, let alone of place of community. Every time we use scripture to justify ourselves, instead of having it convict us, we are in a dangerous position.
We have to become powerless, making ourselves as nothing, and become despised because of our living out Christ’s difficult call before we can claim the context of Acts 28:22. Otherwise we are hopelessly out of context, yet again.
For an example of people who are living it out please watch Shane Claibourne and Oscar Muriu on the Day Four video at the Urbana website.
David Bazan / Pedro the Lion can always make you think… I think I will dust off some of there tunes tomorrow. As for being hopelessly out of context… welcome to my context…
Yeah, the church in Acts didn’t have factions in it that were trying to “take back for God” a country that had nuclear weapons. But still, saying that the reason they were despised was “because they associated with the despised” is also just as simplistic. But then I don’t imagine that you wrote that without any qualifications, or that you thought it was the controlling contour of the Acts narrative.
Hi Jon, one of the cool things about how you and Jen chose to live in the neighbourhood you did. It is those sorts of decisions and living in those kinds of areas that will lead to transformation. I thought it was a modern book of acts kind of decision.
Hi Tyler, Thanks for the comments, and helping me realize that I’ve also done some oversimplification. What I just wanted to get at is that we are not living in the book of acts, we are in a completely different context so applying how people viewed the church in the first century to how they view it now needs some strong qualifications.
Liam, I think I understand where you are coming from, but, I also find myself in a place of tension where I know that in some ways the church of acts does have much to tell us and the tension I feel is related to my lack of reliance on a powerful God through whom he empowers us to do kingdom work through a powerful Holy Spirit. Where I get caught up is my reliance on me to do Kingdom things.
You are true that our choice around our house and our community is / has been trans formative (most of it has been related to how our families live together). May we have eyes to see how we are being called by a powerful God to dream and live Kingdom dreams…
Ps. Oscar is an amazing speaker, his talk in 2006 still resonates with me… http://www.urbana.org/u2006.mediaplayer.pop.cfm?gotosession=3&clip=132
Thanks Jon, I’d love to hear about the intentional choice to live in community is playing out. It was tough during my one year living with a bunch of dudes in Antigonish, but there was a ton of good stuff that came out of it.
I’m also with you in the whole, “I’ve got this” thing. I have a tendency to try and fight through everything, temptation, school, and creativity by myself, and yet I’m most effective when I give it over. I’m still working on dreaming beyond myself when it comes to the Kingdom.
I’ll check out that talk once I’m out of my current assignment predicament.