Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Commodifying the Gospel

I have had the chance, lately, to discuss with family and friends my frustration with how the Gospel is presented in many parts of the Western world. I am afraid that we have imposed a Western mindset upon the Gospel and, in doing so, have distorted the Good News of Jesus Christ to be nothing more than a self-serving farce - a fiction we tell ourselves to keep God at a distance and our own idolatry intact.

We in the Western Church have allowed the Gospel to become something that can be bartered and sold in the marketplace. I am not talking about the multitude of Bible translations sold in bookstores nor the profusion of Christian literature and music that looks and sounds exactly like their secular counterparts. I am talking about how the Gospel is used as a liscence for immorality and how the definition of the word "grace" has changed from "God giving you something you don't deserve" to "God doesn't give a damn what you do because Jesus has already died for you so everything is fair game." My friends and family in the Lutheran church call this "cheap grace."

Somehow we have come to believe that salvation is our just reward if we make the proper payments. I feel like the Gospel could be sold on an infomercial... "Salvation can be yours when you face the King on judgment day! All it takes is an hour a week for the rest of your life and Jesus will come to your defence. If you would like this in writing all it costs is three easy payments of $19.95 mailed to..."

Where is the sacrifice that Jesus talked about? What about "taking up your cross" to follow Jesus? That doesn't sound particularly fun or enjoyable. It certainly doesn't sound like you get to do whatever it is that you want. It sounds like you get to do the things that Jesus did. Things like loving your enemies, living a righteous life before God, proclaiming the Good News of the Kingdom and bringing God's Kingdom to earth. Salvation always costs us everything, every day. This is the only way forward in God's Kingdom, to count everything you have, everything you have done, everything you are, as loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus. That we think an hour a week of worship is all that Christ requires of us is utter nonsense. That we think the God no longer has moral standards shows how far we have fallen. That we think we can turn God into a salvation ATM by our doctrines and dogmas shows that we are prideful and arrogant fools.

Let me be clear - I am not for religiosity. Doing more "stuff" isn't going to get God to like you or make you any more worthy of salvation (God alreadys delights in you and salvation wouldn't be a gift if you could earn it). But I am all for whole-hearted devotion to the God-man Jesus. I am all for radically reordering your life so that Jesus is primary focus. I am all for abandoning the old wine skin of Modern Western Christendom Christianity and finding out what the Holy Spirit has in store for the Church today. I am all for partnering with Jesus to bring His Kingdom into reality.

I think God is sending out a WAKE UP call to the Church. I pray that we all have ears to hear it.

1 comment:

  1. Ben,

    Thank you for your post, I can tell how passionate you are about this. I agree with you that Western culture has turned the biblical Jealous God into a sort of hippie Jesus. I've been thinking all week why your sermon last Sunday affected me the way it did and I believe I've discovered the reason. I know I'm not doing all that I can do in my life for Jesus, but in a culture that seems to be going in the opposite direction it is hard to always make the right choices. I feel that in so many ways I am not enough. Pretty enough, smart enough, fun enough, and now I have to add spiritual enough to it? My relief is that I know God will always love me, even when I fail, because us humans cannot possibly live up to the ideal that God had for us.
    What bothers me is your talk of heaven and how it is not equal for all. I want to believe that even though I feel I am not good enough in many respects, God will still love me and accept me into his kingdom because I love him and believe, and do what I can at this time to praise and worship him.
    Thank you for your insights, and getting me to think about these things.

    love,
    Caitlin Margaret

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