Thursday, August 30, 2018

Missional Politics: What Tree Would You Be?

As Political Season kicks into its biennial peak, I'm going to re-post a series from 2016, with a few incidental edits.

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Barbara Walters once famously asked Katherine Hepburn, "What kind of tree are you?"

Take a look, if you would, at the picture accompanying this blog post, and consider the same question: What kind of tree are you?

Admit it. You're also asking yourself, what does this have to do with missional politics? That depends upon your answer about the tree.

I took this picture out the window of the building where my office is. Every Autumn this tree turns a brilliant red before any of the other trees have even begun to notice the days are getting shorter. As I wrote when I posted the picture on my Facebook timeline, "There's always that one tree that just has to be a show off and be the first with the fall fashions."

Maybe that's how you see yourself when you look at the picture. You're the kind of person who is a bit ahead of your time. You're an "early adopter" of new technology. You're a dedicated consumer of news and information, from both traditional and new media, so you often know what's trending and what's coming up next in culture and in politics.

Or maybe you may see yourself as the tree that dares to be different, standing up tall for what it believes. Whether it's religion or politics, you're not afraid to speak your mind and be seen as the different one.

Or perhaps the tree makes you think of how you're on fire for Jesus. You're always eager to represent Jesus' point of views about religion, culture, or politics, .

Actually, none of those metaphorical descriptions fit this picture.

This tree turns earlier than the neighboring trees every fall because it's not healthy.

I'm no tree expert, but I suspect there's something wrong with the roots, or with the soil around the roots. This tiny forest is wedged between a large industrial park and a four-lane divided highway in the middle of a mid-sized city. No telling what's in the ground and in the little creek that trickles next to the road bed.

I know that's why it turns early every year because the tree next to it used to be the one that was always early with its changes. As you can probably tell, it's now dead. Really most sincerely dead.

Which is where missional politics comes into the picture.

My definition of missional is that the Christian's priority should ALWAYS be to bring glory to God and to be planting seeds aimed at drawing others toward God. Whether you're having a cup of coffee with someone, watching a game with the guys, or discussing politics, you stay focused on God's mission.

I use the term "missional politics" to describe an approach that is driven by a strong commitment to pursue God's mission first, with politics kept subservient to that mission. Theology drives the mission and the mission drives everything else, including politics.

Over the past couple of decades I've watched the rapid growth of the Christian community losing perspective in regard to politics. The political tail is too often wagging the gospel dog. I see Christians - from national church leaders to personal friends - becoming so obsessed with their political point of view that whenever the subject du jour is politics, basic Christian virtues are forgotten.

Truth is spun, kindness is overwhelmed by insult, and peacemaking loses out to polarization.

I've spent a lot of time talking to people, researching, and just plain thinking hard to understand what is at the root of Christians taking an un-Christian approach to politics.

As it turns out, the root is exactly where the problem is.

Starting in the 1980's with the advent of cable news networks and talk radio, there has been an information glut in America. Easy access to the internet has multiplied that flood of input exponentially.

With that flood has come competition, and the best way to compete for the eyes and ears of the information consumers is by emphasizing the extreme and the radical, the loud and eye-popping.

Alongside that radicalization has grown an increasing compartmentalization of news sources.  If your ears are tickled by salacious celebrity gossip, there are channels and sites and apps for that. If your antennae are attuned to conservative ideas, or liberal ideas, or libertarian ideas, or alternative paranoid alarmist ideas, there's a whole constellation of sources to feed your preconceptions.

As a result, here we are in 2018 with more information at our fingertips than we ever dreamed possible, but most of us are choosing to limit our consumption to nibbling at only a few select dishes on the smorgasbord.

Like a tree being feed an uneven diet of toxic nutrition, the average Christian's powers of discernment are being slowly poisoned. We're consuming so much of a limited range of information, we can no longer recognize the validity or existence of alternative ideas.

Like the beautiful red tree in the picture, we're proud to be the oddball in the crowd, the one who is getting the good info and possesses all the right opinions about every topic.

Worst of all, with constant feedback from our favored sources, continually reinforcing our confidence in the rightness of our views and our cause, we begin to listen to those voices more than we listen to that other voice inside us. The Holy Spirit voice. The one that keeps trying to pull us back to the Bible, back to our purpose as Christians, back to the fruit of the Spirit and humility and mission.
Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with the wicked or stand in the way that sinners take or sit in the company of mockers, but whose delight is in the law of the Lord, and who meditates on his law day and night. That person is like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit in season and whose leaf does not wither— whatever they do prospers. Not so the wicked! They are like chaff that the wind blows away. (Psalm 1:1-4)
It's a radical idea, I know. It's a radical approach to politics, one that isn't always easy to stick with. I have plenty of personal opinions about politics and issues and politicians. But I work hard to keep from being a pundit, someone who always has to comment or tweet or blog about the latest news and my hot take on the proper political perspective.

It's losing perspective that has been the problem. People are more interested in being right than in being righteous.

The word "radical" comes from radix, the Latin term for "roots." Radical righteousness and truly radical politics comes from having the right roots.

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Psalm 119:80 Shameless

May I wholeheartedly follow your decrees,that I may not be put to shame.

Psalm 119:80
Not all shame is the same.

False shame comes from how people have treated you, the things they've said to you. It's a self-loathing that is taught in the most unkind of ways.

Brenda sat on the back row of the prison chapel, turning pages on her Bible, one after another. I sat next to her and asked what she was doing.

"A bad thing happened to me today," she explained, "and I'm trying to find what it was I did wrong that made God punish me."

Like many people, her image of God the Father was mixed up with her experiences with her own father. He had obviously trained her to feel shame for every small error, real or imagined, by harshly punishing her..

Others in the prison found themselves caught between the extreme expectations their family placed on them and peer pressure toward a life that promised a dangerous kind of freedom. False shame can also comes from failing to live up to a misguided idea of who you think you should be.

True shame comes from the failure to be the person God intends you to be. You know you've fallen short. You've sinned against His best intentions for you.

To deal with shame, first identify whether your shame is false or true. Set aside the false shame and focus instead on the true shame. It will be there, i promise you, hidden beneath all the other things you've been ashamed of.

Then wholeheartedly set about rebuilding your life around God's best way of living. Use II Corinthians 7:8-11 as your guideline. Godly sorrow - godly shame - leads to repentance and results in intentional actions that will reconstruct your life piece by piece, back to being the person God created you to be.

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Psalm 119:79 Magnetic Faith

May those who fear you turn to me,
those who understand your statutes
Psalm 119:79

Do people who fear God turn to me? Do those who understand His statutes understand me?

Magnetic faith comes from developing a heart after God's own heart.

David took advantage of his early life as a common shepherd to put down deep roots of faith. Instead of wishing he was somewhere else, doing something more exciting, he learned the value of working hard to care for God's creatures. Instead of succumbing to the rebellion of boredom, he spent those long, quiet hours in prayer and meditation, attuning his heart to God's. He learned to be driven by faith in the slow times, and to practice quick, unquestioning obedience in the dangerous times.

Lord, make me to lie down in your green pastures and teach me to be content to spend time aligning my heart with yours. 

David's years in the green pastures taught him patience. Even though the prophet Samuel had anointed him as the future king of Israel, David was content to continue watching over his flock of sheep. And then he patiently waited for God to win the battles against King Saul.

Father, teach me to wait. Give me eyes to see the opportunities you put in front of me, a willing heart to say yes, and the patience to wait for your divine appointments

By the time David faced Goliath, he had trained himself fir quick, unquestioning obedience. While others were frightened and hid from the giant, David immediately assumed his God was greater than any enemy. When Saul tried to load him down with the usual weapons and armor of warfare, David instead chose the unconventional approach of trusting in God's power alone.

Dear God, may I put my trust solely in you. Everyone advises me to put my trust in a financial nest egg, political leaders, and conventional wisdom. But I know your people will turn to me because they see my unconventional life of faith.

David was far from a perfect king. He succumbed to the hubris of his status, a penchant for using violence to maintain power, and the same debasing lusts as any common man. And yet he continually returned to his roots, crying out to God for forgiveness and guidance. That humility before God was a magnet to others who shared his reliance on the Lord.

Lord, may people see in me a genuine humility that relies not on my own greatness but on your great grace. 


Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Psalm 119:78 Knee-Jerk

May the arrogant be put to shame for wronging me without cause;
but I will meditate on your precepts
.

Psalm 119:78
At first glance this verse reads like a modern American tweet. Twitter is full of shaming, blaming, finger-pointing, and self-righteous truth-spinning.





But look again at David's "tweet".

Yes, he's boldly stating what he sees as the truth about the people who have wronged him without cause. In that first half of the verse he:
  • Describes them as arrogant. Based on what we know of David's enemies, he likely has good reason to describe them that way.
  • Suggests they should be ashamed of their actions
  • Claims he did nothing to provoke their wrongful treatment of him
Notice, though, what he does not do:
  • He does not take it upon himself to shame them. He makes the one bold, supportable, statement, and leaves it at that. There's no name-calling, no mud-slinging.
  • He does not take action against the wrong-doers
  • He does not presume to use their arrogance and wrong-doing as an excuse to behave the same toward them
David's refusal to take advantage of King Saul when he was most vulnerable shows David's refusal to model his behavior on that of his enemies.

Instead David takes his queue not from the behavior of the people around him but from precepts of God. 

The best response to the arrogance and wrong-doing of others is to avoid becoming like them. Respond instead the way God would. 

This is hard to do when we're constantly surrounded by the arrogance of the world. Developing a different heart requires training, studying the precepts of God so often and so deeply that they become the default guide for our knee-jerk reactions, even in the most stressful of times. Meditate on the Word, not on the world.


Tuesday, August 7, 2018

Psalm 119:77 Delight

Let your compassion come to me that I may live,
for your law is my delight


  Psalm 119:77
As a fine, upstanding, card-carrying Christian, I refer to God's Word as the final authority on everything having to do with life and godliness.

But can you say, with  David, that God's law is your delight?

There's a difference.

I've come across several Christians who are dedicated to God's law, obsessed with God's law, and analysts of God's law. But many of them don't seem to delight in it.

To understand what David means by delighting in the Law, we need to go back to the beginning of the Psalms, where first uses that word.
How blessed is the person,
  who does not take the advice of the wicked,
  who does not stand on the path with sinners,
  and who does not sit in the seat of mockers.
But he delights in the Lord’s instruction,
  and meditates in his instruction day and night.
He will be like a tree planted by streams of water,
  yielding its fruit in its season,
  and whose leaf does not wither.

Psalm 1:1-3
If you say you believe in the authority of the Word in areas of theology, but in your daily life you tend to follow along with the advice of the predominant culture, your delight might not be in God's law.

If you've rationalized, minimized, and sidelined the scriptures in order to make you or your church appear more tolerant of cultural norms, you might be delighting is something other than the Law of the Lord.

If you're so zealous in your opposition to "alternate lifestyles" that you lead with judgment rather than love in your interactions with people, you might be delighting in something other than the law of love.

If your political leanings are causing you to speak and act in ways that are more in tune with the modern American bipolar political climate than with the Fruit of the Spirit, you might be delighting in something other than the Lord's instructions.

If your social media posts are filled with memes and videos and comments that mock the people and things you oppose, you might be delighting in something other than the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

If you make use of the Bible like it's a cudgel, laying waste to anyone who disagrees with your opinions - whether they be non-believers or believers - you might be delighting in your own brilliance rather than in God's law.

If you've allowed the Lord's instructions to plant their roots so deeply in your heart that your go-to response to everything is to bear fruit, then you are probably delighting in the Law of the Lord.