I'm going to take a break from the current series to continue the celebrity death match I began with my original post.
This post was inspired by two things:
a thread from The Reach, (primarily comment #75, by Jody Bilyeu) and a book called "This Little Church Went to Market," by Gary Gilley.
When a member of our species is passionate about anything, he or she tends to want to turn it into some sort of battle. It's not good enough to be crazy about what I like, I also have to try my best to defy whatever is the opposite.
But to say "Love trumps Law," (as Jody Bilyeu did) or to claim like Gary Gilley that God designed Christianity to be a Thinking Faith, not a Feeling Faith, is like arguing about who's going to win the Super Bowl, the Cubs or the Canucks.
Granted, I don't accuse Jody of hating the Law, or denying its importance. But the battle between love and law only exists in people's heads.
And contrary to Jody's perception, even Jesus never actually broke the law. If Jesus' love was stronger than His law, all He had to do was say in a big voice so the whole world could hear "YOU'RE ALL FORGIVEN!" But what did He really do? He spent His ministry helping people understand what the law really means, before dying for all of us to
fulfill the law. A sacrifice was required, and His great love and His perfect righteousness were the only powers strong enough to give us grace
within the confines of His law. The fact is, it doesn't make any sense to pit Jesus' law against His love, because neither can be broken by the other.
What does that mean for us? It means that grace is not cheap, and showing God's love for people doesn't consist of standing in the midst of sin and shouting "I'm OK, You're OK!" Never once in scripture does God instruct us to ignore sin, either in ourselves or in others. There are plenty of times He expects us to mind our own business, but we are also called at times to rebuke and reproof. These times must be chosen carefully, however, and must be done with the utmost love. The lifestyle of leaving others' sin between themselves and God, yet lovingly holding them accountable when it's appropriate is a perfect example of Law and Love in concert.
In other words, if your obedience to the Law and to Love is turning into a boxing match, then you're failing at one or both.
Now to Round 3: "Head vs. Heart."
I don't recommend the book, "This Little Church Went to Market." Gary Gilley is a pastor that obviously has an ax to grind, and apparently believes that the church was okey-dokey 100 years ago, before the entertainment industry's hostile takeover.
It is true that the Church has digressed from a thinking institution to a feeling instutution. I won't go into all this, it would take 20 pages. (Even though it only took Gilley 115.) But I think most of us could look around and see that this is generally true.
And as the giant pendulum ceaselessly swings from one irrelevant extreme to the other, there are plenty of those who believe that a return to the glorious intellectualism of yore would take care of the now rampant experientialism. To keep a long story short: It is true that emotion does not lead us a true relationship with God. But neither does the intellect.
100 & 200 years ago the Church was competing with, and is a product of, a worldly paradigm, just as it is today. The 1700s and 1800s was the Age of Reason. Naturally then, the Church would try to be the Church of Reason. Were a lot of thoughtful commentaries written? Sure. Were a lot of great Thinker's Hymns composed? You bet. Did people understand the Bible better and have a firmer grasp on Christian apologetics? Probably. Are these all things we should strive for today? Absolutely.
But did all these things actually result in real faith, in surrendered lives? No. I am so bold because I believe firmly that it is that third component of our selves, apart from head and heart, that brings us to the cross: our Will. Each of us must willingly empty ourselves of all our IQ and EQ in order to be filled with the realness of God. Then he invariably proceeds to use our heads and our hearts for his glory.
And once again, to find that the great thoughts of the Faith and the great experiences of the Faith are colliding in battle, is to discover that we are failing at one or both.
Labels: bible, blogs, doctrine, spirituality