lifeasmission

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  • Christian Escapism

    July 19th, 2008 · 3 Comments · church, consumerism, discipleship, money, pictures, suburban

    Disclaimer:  This post is not (really) about cars.

    On the heels of that last post, I thought I would throw this out there and say how glad I am that most of the folks in my life seem to be those who are really trying to press into the full implications of what following Jesus means and looks like right here and now.  They are not, for the most part, Christian Escapists – those whose value for Christ primarily has to do with their get-out-of-hell-free card.  They want to live out lives of discipleship for the sake of their neighbors and the world.

    Anyway, that being said… I caught this in a parking lot the other day, read it, kept walking, and went back to take a picture once my internal annoyance-o-meter reached its peak.

    This bumper sticker perfectly illustrates the degree to which a subtle neo-gnosticism has seeped into how we understand the Christian faith.  The idea of gnosticism is simple: eternity has nothing to do with here and now.  Therefore, for example, I can “have my treasure in heaven,” and live however the heck I want.

    I am reminded of my friend Wess’ post, “How Do We Look for the Theology of a Church?“  One of his suggestions was to check out the cars in the parking lot on Sunday morning.  Now, this may not be a perfect gauge (and Wess doesn’t suggest that it is), but in terms of a non-gnosticized version of the Christian faith, it is a valid point.  That point being, if we understand the good news of God’s Kingdom as something we get to participate in and live out for the sake of the world here and now, then guess what, it will envelop every aspect of our lives, including (perhaps especially including) the economic dimension.

    The gospel aims to get a grip on not just our hearts, but our whole lives.  Imagine the visible impact of church communities which aimed to live well below their means because of their rejection of consumerism and materialism, or, even better, because they so badly wanted to experience the blessing of sharing and giving – of living lives unencumbered by extravagance and luxury.  That seems like a way of being the church that is more worthy of a crucified and risen Messiah.

    Related posts:

    1. Narrative Preaching for Christian Formation
    2. Do You Have To Go To Church Every Sunday To Be A Christian?
    3. Christian Politics and the False Dichotomy of Sacred and Secular
    4. A Bit More on Hospitality: Welcoming the Stranger
    5. Missional Church and the Future of Theological Education: Follow Up

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    3 Comments so far ↓

    • Clay

      Thanks for the thoughts J.R.  I long to be part of a community or church that does this and helps each other reject consumerism and materialism and find out what living without those effects is really like.  I can’t imagine how nice and freeing that would be.

    • JR Rozko

      Freeing – good word.  May we all be willing to embrace God’s vision of lives made truly free.

    • Lisa

      loved the Christian Escapism “get out hell free” phrase/idea.  Great post!

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