Dangerous Christians

We take great strides to prevent danger. We lock our doors, look both ways, and remain aware of our surroundings. Wet think that we will recognize that which threatens our safety and that we can act against it. However, those who make a career out of protection know that it’s the harm that you don’t anticipate that is the most concerning. It’s the threat that you do not see that is often your undoing.

In Christian circles, we too are on the lookout out for that which might do damage to our faith. However, as Jim Elliot reminds us, perhaps it’s the threat that we aren’t even aware of that we need to be most watchful of. As Elliot states:

We are so utterly ordinary, so commonplace, while we profess to know a Power the Twentieth Century does not reckon with. But we are “harmless,” and therefore unharmed. We are spiritual pacifists, non-militants, conscientious objectors in this battle-to-the-death with principalities and powers in high places. Meekness must be had for contact with men, but brass, outspoken boldness is required to take part in the comradeship of the Cross. We are “sideliners”—coaching and criticizing the real wrestlers while content to sit by and leave the enemies of God unchallenged. The world cannot hate us, we are too much like its own. Oh that God would make us dangerous! (qtd. by Elisabeth Elliot in Shadow of the Almighty: The Life and Testimony of Jim Elliot.)

In other words, it’s the temptation to be safe that is often the greatest threat. We want to remain neutral – to not cause offense, while forgetting that our salvation rests on the scandal of grace. The Good News is promised to be “a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles” (1 Corinthians 1:23), yet we try to make our message palatable and end up making it phony. We want to be a part of the crowd, rather than set apart from it.

Yet, this is not what God has called us to. As Elliot rightly reminds us, when we are harmless – when we preach a God that does not call for a radical eradication of our former self in place of a radical commitment to the one true Christ – we are also impotent. We don’t have an impact because we aren’t even participating in the fight.

My dad used to always say that if Satan wasn’t attacking you it meant one of two things. You better “check your six” because he was coming after you, or, he had decided that you weren’t worth the effort. If you weren’t worth the effort, then you weren’t doing much for Christ’s kingdom – which mean you weren’t a very “dangerous” Christian.

As Elliot exclaims “Oh that God would make us dangerous!”

 

Now it’s your turn…How are you “dangerous” for Christ?

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Casted Crowns

There are words and phrases that we say in the Christian life that we have learned but may have never pondered. They become part of our vocabulary even though we may not fully understand their meaning. We’ve become used to them, and so we repeat them, almost without thinking.

Recently, I realized that “casting crowns” was one such phrase for me.

There’s a band with the name.

We sing about it.

We may even know Bible verses that talk about it.

But for me, my understanding of it was rather elementary.

In my mind, casting crowns at Jesus’ feet was synonymous with laying down our treasures and our trophies. We give Him the good things that we have because He has given us things that are so much better. And while this is certainly true, there is a difference between trophies, treasures and crowns. Trophies are earned, treasures are discovered, but crowns are granted. In other words,  my trophies and treasures are mine because I’ve something that I did, but crowns – they’re granted because of who someone is. It’s not something that’s earned – it’s a right that’s bestowed.

But maybe my lack of distinction between the three was more a reflection of my propensities rather than my intellect. After all, somehow it seems easier to give back to Christ the good things that I’ve accumulated, as if somehow I’m validating my worth in my Savior’s perspective (never mind the fact that all these good things are but filthy rags to Him.) But my crown? The very rights I have – to make my own decisions, do my own thing, and be who I want to be – that’s a much harder proposition.

Yet, hard as it may be, it’s still the proper thing to do, as Scripture makes clear. Christ Himself said that a follower of Him must “deny himself and take up his cross and follow me”  (Matthew 16:24).  As we all know, denying ourselves is no easy thing, especially when we have the “right” to do what we want. But Jesus doesn’t want just the good things that we do on His behalf – He wants our very selves.  Which means we stop being the ruler of our own lives, and we let Him be.

In other words, by laying down our crowns, we make sure that He’s the only One who’s wearing one. And that’s how it should be.

 

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