Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Reverend Shaw Moore

I had the privilege of going seeing my little brother in Douglas County High School's rendition of Footloose, The classic tale of a young man trying to make his way in a small town who faces off with a local reverend over dancing. In the latter half of the first act, Ren and Ariel finally find themselves alone. They begin to open up to one another and connect for the first time. While Ariel is describing a little more background on the town and why it is the way it is, she points out that her father, the reverend, wasn't always the way he is now. She said that he used to be a really good pastor. At this point my ears perked up. What do the writers of Footloose through the mouth of an 18 year old girl think that it takes to be a good pastor? She said, "He used to give people hope."

I thought a lot about this. Is that all it takes to be a good pastor? It hit me later on in the show that they were on to something. I think hope is all that we need and more than just being a good pastor, this is what it takes to being a good Christian. Hope is what Jesus came to bring. Hope is the message that we are charged with carrying. Hope is why we are here.

I am not sure that sin exists on its own. I like to think of it more like cold, which is scientifically defined as not being real, but rather the absence of heat. Essentially the world is comprised of heat and less-heat. I think sin is the absence of good. Good is from God and was created by God who we know to be good. This good creator breathed his good breath into creation and then even said that it is good. Sin came in and became a divergence from this good, but, oddly enough, was somehow very much a part of a good plan. If approach to sin is to try and attack and condemn it, I think our focus is wrong. The only way to get rid of cold is to warm it up, just as the only way to get rid of sin is to offer hope of a better way.

Let's try an example, a hot-button issue that is pervasive in our society: homosexuality. The most common approach taken by the Christian community is hatred. Sure we say that we are loving and that we want to care for them, but it is a love from a far that only exists in our heads. In actuality, we think that we have to conquer this thing. We think of it as a disease that must be eradicated from our society. If we step back for a moment, however, and remember our end goals, we can't help but ask, "is this really the best approach?"

How many people will renounce their sin because of protests?
How many people will want to step foot into churches that reject them?
How many people will come to know Christ, live a true and whole life, and live with him forever because Christians set anti-gay marriage legislation?

Our goal can never be to attack sin head on, because this makes the sinner feel the brunt of the attack. The only way is to show a better way, to offer hope. We can't say, "The way you are living is wrong," we must say, "Come, let me show you a better way." For just like our savior, we did not come to condemn the world, but to save it.

Don't condemn the prostitute, but give her hope of true love.
Don't reproach the addict, but offer hope of a life free from chains.
Don't hate the wicked, but give them hope of life more full and wonderful than they could ever earn.
Give hope today.

1 comment:

  1. This reminds me of something I heard on Jesus' first message according to Matthew. In 4:17, it says "From then on, he began preaching, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near."

    If we step back from the tendency to associate repentance with sin, and remember that "repent" simply means "to turn" then Jesus' message is not about sin and turning from it, but rather Jesus encourages us to see His kingdom, His way of life, and turn towards it.

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