Saturday, November 22, 2014

Preferred Seating at the Lord's Table

The news has been filled this past week with controversies related to issues like immigration and racial tension in America. Political pundits passionately endorsed or railed against President Obama's new policy impacting undocumented residents in the United States. The whole country seems to be holding its collective breath in anticipation of the grand jury decision on the circumstances related to the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson.

Why is there so much debate and tension on these issues in our modern society? It seems that with all of the modern technology and information that we have, we should be able to get along better with one another. The problem is, though, that we still live in a present evil age. Jesus ushered in the kingdom of God, but our human existence is still infiltrated with sin and brokenness. As society advances, we can still hold hatred in our hearts. We still develop moral codes based on our own interpretations of how human beings should interact with one another. Often those moral codes end up separating people into "us" and "them." We tend to view people as "outsiders" and "insiders."

Life doesn't have to be lived that way, though. The kingdom of God is at hand. It is here. We have hope thanks to Jesus Christ. That is the transformational message of the gospel of Jesus Christ. We can be reconciled to God, and we can be reconciled to one another. There does not need to be an "us" and a "them." There is just "we" thanks to the scandalous amounts of grace that God is readily willing to give us. We can enjoy redeemed, joyful relationships with one another. There is no rich or poor, slave or free, black or white, liberal or conservative, or anything else in the kingdom of God.

Street Psalms authors Kris Rocke and Scott Dewey point out that, "When Jesus gives preferred seating to the hungry at the Jesus meal he isn't relegating the well fed to the cheap seats. He invites them to exactly the same seats - which as it happens, the rich find most difficult to accept. There is only one kind of seating at the Lord's table - preferred seating. Judas sits next to John. Friends sit next to enemies. We simply can't make sense of this when using the moral operating system of this world. It doesn't compute, which is why Jesus insists that we are being given a whole new operating system by the one who authors and perfects it." - Meals From Below

That's it. God is for all of us, regardless of the social norms that we might depend on to separate ourselves from one another. We all have preferred seating at the Lord's table because of what Jesus Christ did for us. As a pastor, this gives me hope. We all have hope, even when there is tension in our society. Christians should be leading the way in our society when it comes to issues like immigration or racial tension. We have the hope of Christ in us. I lead a multi-ethnic church and I live in a a primarily African-American neighborhood because I believe so strongly in the transformational power of the gospel of Jesus Christ. I write and speak about controversial topics because I believe that human beings can do better than our own flawed societal constructs. God's love wins out every time. 

Monday, November 10, 2014

A Party on the Margins

In Luke 14:12-24, Jesus tells a parable about a great banquet. Speaking to a group of powerful religious leaders, Jesus explains to them that they should not invite their powerful and rich friends to their party. Instead, "when you give a feast, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed, because they cannot repay you. For you will be repaid at the resurrection of the just." 

The concept of extending generosity and friendship to people on the margins of a city was a revolutionary concept to the original audience that Jesus was speaking with, and the concept remains revolutionary to modern Americans. The American Dream narrative that we live in encourages us to become as wealthy and influential as we can in the short lives that we lead. In our ambition to get to the top, we often have to step on people to get there. We distance ourselves from people living on the margins of society in order to advance ourselves. People did it back in Jesus' day, and people still do it today. It happens because we live in a present evil age, an age that is defined by sin and corruption even though Jesus ushered in the Kingdom of God. We could choose life by living in God's Story, but instead we choose death by finding our identity in the sinful desires of our own flesh, idolatry in the world, and temptations from our enemy.

The Kingdom of God looks like a big party with people living on the margins of our cities, small towns, and rural areas. If modern, influential American Christians really took Jesus' challenge seriously, we would abandon the emptiness of the upwardly mobile lifestyle and join the party with the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. It's there that we will receive our blessings from the Lord, and those blessings will surely be eternal blessings that will remain forever. We find joy in life by giving away power and resources to the people who need it the most. 

Personally, I feel closest to God when I'm spending time with homeless friends in East Liberty or vulnerable youth in Homewood. These are people with whom the Holy Spirit has given me a passion to build relationships. I still have a lot of hardness in my heart, and I miss out on opportunities all the time, but I am making progress and God is transforming my heart to care for people in need. What about you? Who are the people on the margins where you live? Is God calling you to throw a party?