
After reading my brother-in-law's blog
about getting caught up in the differences in life and faith I decided I wanted to weigh in as well, because it amazes me how so many people hear the good news of Christ but are still so affected by things as basic and laughable as labels.
Now don't get me wrong, I am just as petty as the next guy, but last I checked we serve a huge God, a God who is the same yesterday, today, and forever as Hebrews 13:8 puts it. A God that has called us to be one body with many members in Christ. So why is it that things as man-made as political affiliation, monetary gain, and the color of our skin get pushed into the Sanctuary? Why is it that we need to have a small group with people who think exactly like we do? Why is it that money separates believers from communing with each other? Why is social status a big deal even in the church?
The cross was one of the most humiliating ways to die, it was, "The most wretched of deaths. (Josephus)" It was such a horrible way to do that "The ancient philosopher Cicero asked that decent Roman citizens not even speak of the cross because it was too disgraceful of a subject for the ears of decent people. (Cicero,
Pro Rabirio 5.16)
The cross was a horrible horrible excruciatingly way to die, yet our massive God, creator of everything you see around us, the being who spoke Half Dome and El Capitan into existence, the being who knew grapes would wither into raisins, the being who filled the oceans and made everything work in a delicate balance, the being, went to the cross for all of us. That being, died one of the most painful and degrading deaths imaginable for us.
And we sometimes have the audacity to talk about churchgoers behind their backs, to stick our noses up at the people who are different than us. The cross was supposed to free us from our sin, our pride, our differences from each other and embrace one another as brothers and sisters united under the banner of Christ. Sadly, we dont always see that happening.