Have you ever played the "What if?" game with yourself? You know, it's when you run different scenarios through your mind and try to figure out what the result would be if things were different. Usually, we play this game (or put ourselves through this torture, as the case may be) when looking backward to the past. We are particularly prone to do this when looking back on something negative such as a personal failure or tragedy. We wonder things like, "What if I had gotten there 5 minutes later?" or "What if I had gotten that text message sooner?" It's natural to do this, although I don't know that it is particularly healthy.
Lately, I have been playing the "What if?" game in the other direction. I have been trying to figure out what the results would be in the future if things were different now. Specifically, I have been pondering my Christian walk and my relationship to God and those around me. As I have been growing in grace over the last months and years, I find myself wondering how our homes, our churches, our communities, our nation, and our world would be different if Christians thought differently and acted differently. I am not claiming to know all of the problems and/or solutions of modern Christianity. I am just wondering..."What if?" Several ideas have come to mind. Many of them are based on specific passages of scripture. Some of them are just my own conjecture and theory. All of them, at the very least, are interesting to think about and ponder...
So, I am going to do my best John Lennon impression and ask you to imagine. Imagine what it would be like. Imagine how our lives might be different. Imagine how our impact on the world might increase. Imagine how much more glory and honor God might receive. (It's easy if you try.)
What if...
We were truly convinced that God Himself is the highest and greatest good to which mankind can aspire?
We lived on a daily basis in full recognition of and appreciation for the finished work of Christ in our lives?
We viewed every person around us (friend or foe, believer or not) as a soul created by God in His image and infused with value and worth?
We allowed our brothers and sisters in Christ the freedom to be themselves in their walk with Christ?
We reached the conclusion that there are relatively few things in the scope of Christianity for which it is worth separating from other Christians?
We stopped trying to produce spiritual fruit (in ourselves or in others) through external, artificial means and started allowing Christ to live His life out through us?
We stopped viewing our nation as a battlefield to be conquered through political activism and radical separatism and started viewing it as a mission field to be lived in and exposed to the power of God's love in the Gospel?
We began to believe that every perfect gift is from God and that, for a Christian, there is no such thing as sacred or secular?
We stopped trying to define our spirituality in terms of all that we do or don't do?
We related to others the way God relates to us?
We all were honest with ourselves and others about how dark our hearts really are?
We truly understood that God views each Christian through the lens of Christ and that His love and acceptance for us are completely independent of our actions?
We came to accept that grace really is as good as it sounds?
What if?
Can you imagine?
I am not sure if many could live with ourselves. wearing such honesty can be to vulnerable for some.
ReplyDeleteIt is amazing how when we come to Christ we come broken and empty of self. When we "live" for Christ we are so full of self, when to truly live for Christ is to be filled with Him living broken and emtied of self. What if externalism was abolished in our churches?
Thanks for your thoughts about has me thinking.