Thursday, April 18, 2019

The Offense of Christianity

“How can people say God is love but the same God sends people to hell, how is that a loving God?” rang the words said to me over the brim of a coffee cup.  There was a desire to want to understand God’s love, to understand faith and even a conversation of spirituality. However differently "spirituality" was defined between us.    

I have a mind that constantly over thinks, over analyzes and never stops.  I know that I get too far in my head but in these types of moments my mind empties………all my thoughts run to the corners of my mind and close their eyes while silently begging my brain not to pick on them.  Empty.  What do you say in these moments?  I know my own beliefs and tend to tread lightly with conversations at the risk of not offending someone.

As I sat there fiddling with my small knock-off gold ring on my right hand and an empty mind; I hear myself saying, “You're saying it backwards.”  

“How is that backwards?” was the half amused response, “How do you justify a loving God sending people to hell in your faith?”

By this time, I can feel my own thoughts peaking around the corners wondering what I’m going to say next, because they sure weren’t going to help.

I gear up to change the conversation when out of my mouth comes, “God doesn’t send people to hell; He SAVES us from hell.  Everyone is already separated from God and going there.”

I hate this conversation. Hell.  So nasty and gross.  So offensive. Can’t we go back to talking about Friends reruns?

There are moments, like my coffee conversation, where my mind goes blank and I don’t want to offend someone or make them uncomfortable with conversations of sin, or the fallen state of our world.  Moments when I lock up my own testimony of what God has done in my life and what I have been saved from in order not to offend.  No one wants to offend. 

Christianity is offensive.  Christianity has always been offensive.  Christianity speaks of a world that was made perfectly.  It speaks of relationships between mankind and God that were perfect at one time.....and ruined by sin.  It speaks of how we are now separated from God because of our own sin and makes us recognize the depravity in ourselves. The gospel points out our own sin and short-fallings in God’s Law.  There is nothing that we can do ourselves to fix this.  The human condition at its core is offensive.  Sure, good things can be done even by us sinners, but no one could be completely perfect or holy enough to be in God’s presence with sin.  Even “good people” could never be this perfect.

As uncomfortable as these coffee moments can be when I don’t want to talk about sin and hell; the reality is that we are not left in these places.  The gospel tells of a restored relationship with God through Jesus.  Through the cross where Jesus said the words, “It is finished.”  Sometimes, my sinful side wants to still believe there is something I can do, that it’s not finished, that “Andrea” can do something.  Thank God this is not the case and that it does not rest on me.

The gospel tells me Christ has completed what I could never do by being perfect and paying the price for my sin.  That we are saved through grace.  That our relationship with God is restored through Christ’s finished work.  That God sees us through Christ now.  The gospel tells me of grace that is so undeserved.

I would rather be comfortable and not have these conversations.  But these are the most important conversations.  I live my life with this believe and worldview, yet sometimes lock it up because I worry about offending.  I forget how offensive we are in our human nature and how loving this good news of salvation actually is.

This news of God who loved His people so much that he paid a price we could not.  News that Jesus paid the price to save us sinners....the outcasts of society, the oppressed.

I think back to this coffee conversation during this week leading up to Easter.  I think on my uncomfortableness and wanting non-confrontational conversations.  I love talking theology, God, worldviews when everyone is on the same page!  It’s one of my favorite things to do and comes up in most coffee conversations.  Can’t someone else have the difficult ones?  Maybe the people in my life who seem to always know what to say just at the right time?

C.S. Lewis once said, “Christianity, if false, is of no importance, and if true, of infinite importance. The only thing it cannot be is moderately important.”

Sometimes I treat my belief as moderately important at the risk of not offending someone else.  Yet it can’t be moderately important or just a lifestyle choice.  If it is false…. then what a waste of time and life; but if true, then it is eternally important and the most important thing.

I don’t think of a loving God sending people to hell because I rest in Christ’s finished work and think of a loving God saving people from hell.  I rest in knowing who I am because of who God says I am.  I rest in knowing I am saved from sin and myself.  I rest in Christ’s completion and not my own knowledge where thoughts abandon me.  I wish I did think of hell more, because then I would remember the urgency.

1 Corinthians 15:16-19 -16 For if the dead are not raised, not even Christ has been raised. 17 And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. 18 Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. 19 If in Christ we have hope[b] in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied.

Pitied.  If Christianity is only for this life and a lifestyle choice then what a waste of a life.  We are to be pitied as we should have focused on this life and all the things that make THIS life paradise. 

If Christ had remained in the grave and was not raised, then our faith is worthless and we are still in sin that has not been covered by Christ.

But Christ didn’t remain in the grave.  Instead death was conquered and a way provided to be in a restored relationship with God.

This Easter I celebrate Christ’s resurrection and the covering of sin.  I celebrate healing and redemption.  I celebrate restoration.  I celebrate salvation.  I celebrate a God who saves.

I celebrate healing and restoration from my own offensive state.

Isaiah 53:5 But he was wounded for our transgressions;  he was crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with his stripes we are healed.







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