It is a trending comment among Christians:
Nonbelievers are going to act like nonbelievers.
As a caution against judgmental attitudes, this is helpful. It is also a good reminder that our goal is not to force superficial behavior but to influence spiritual transformation. As one theologian put it, we should not be concerned about a hole in the wall when the entire building is going up in flames!
I am wondering, though, if we are using this statement more and more as an excuse for passivity. Could we be defending our reluctance to be “salt” in our communities? We might hear comments such as these:
Laws can’t change the human heart, so don’t get involved.
You can’t legislate morality, so don’t speak up.
If you aren’t teaching the plan of salvation, then your priorities are messed up.
Physical Laws and Spiritual Laws
Perhaps we have forgotten that Scriptural directives are not rules that God made up so that Christians could demonstrate their loyalty to Him and develop character. Jesus noted that the rain falls on both the just and the unjust.¹ Because we are physical beings, the laws of matter and energy affect each one of us, whether we are believers or not. And because we are spiritual beings, each of us is also subject to spiritual and moral laws, whether we are believers or not.
After all, as Warren Smith and John Stonestreet point out, “God does not inhabit our world. We inhabit His world.”²
Speaking Truth in Love
When others can benefit, we want to share relevant spiritual principles, just as we naturally would share physical ones. It is not pointless. It is kindness.
In Chuck Colson’s words, we are not imposing our beliefs; we are proposing a better way.³
If it is loving to warn our friends that the hot stove will burn them, then it is also loving to warn them that pornography will do the same. If we should tell teenagers that smoking cigarettes increases the risk of lung cancer, then shouldn’t we also tell them that cohabiting before marriage increases the risk of divorce?
If we want to understand the physical laws of gravity so that we can gain from its force without being injured, then we will want to understand the moral laws of sexual behavior for the same reason. If we can recognize that severing an arm or a leg is a loss, then we can also acknowledge that severing a father or a mother from a child is a loss.
Creating Platforms for the Gospel
We show compassion when we share these “common graces.” And even more importantly, we create effective bridges for sharing “saving grace.”
Jesus took the time to wash the feet of Judas, although that did not cleanse his soul.
Jesus healed people of physical disease, although that did not give them eternal life. Many of His acts of mercy were temporal blessings. However, each kindness was motivated by love, designed to point to God and to create desire for Him.
By actively engaging in our culture, we can share God’s common grace with gentleness and generosity, seeking always to pave the way for the saving grace of Jesus Christ.
Blessings to you,
Tami
¹Matthew 5:45
²Restoring all Things: God’s Audacious Plan to Change the World Through Everyday People. Baker. 2015. page 21.
³http://www.breakpoint.org/component/blog/entry/12/27228
*last photo by FreeBibleImages.org
Great post, great message. Thank you for sharing Tami. God bless!
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Thank you for reading and for your encouragement. Many blessings to you!
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Tami,
I loved this! I recently heard a pastor speak on engaging culture. He says in order to properly engage culture, the first thing that we have to know is who we are in Christ. He told a story about having a rare opportunity to visit a king in Africa and one of the rules was that he could not look directly at the king. He was required to look straight ahead. The interpreter asked the pastor how he would like to greet the king and the pastor said, “Tell him that I am an ambassador for the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords, Jesus Christ.” The interpreter looked at him like he had lost his mind, but the pastor insisted that he tell the king. When the interpreter shared his greeting, the king jumped up from his throne, advanced towards the pastor and said, “Will you pray for me, in the name of Jesus?” When we engage culture from our right position (ambassadors for Christ), culture will respond!
Love you!
Wilanne
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Thank you for sharing this, Wilanne. What a great point! We can share with confidence and boldness. We have been given wonderful truth to share with others, who need this truth as desperately as we do. … Love you, too, dear friend!
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Reblogged this on Praying for the millennials.
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Thank you, Lillian. Blessings to you!
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