I don’t think our culture cares much about what the Church thinks. Should this surprise us? No. That it doesn’t surprise us, however, doesn’t let those of us in God’s Church off the hook. Actually, the ghosting of the Church by the culture is a good thing, not pleasant, particularly, but good. Why? Because it drives the Church further into the embrace of God’s amazing grace, and opens up the Church to the Holy Spirit’s energizing and creating imagination.
Within God’s embrace we are set free to dream and explore so as to give the Holy Spirit of God a community not limited to its own creativity but let loose to allow “God to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine…” (Ephesians 3:20). Here we are empowered to make our home in Jesus and from Him, to bear the fruit of God’s remarkable and life-changing love (see John 15:5).
Actually, I’m pretty sure the culture doesn’t need what the Church thinks, as if there is one way the Church thinks. What our culture needs is a Savior, a Guide, a Teacher, a Leader, a Shepherd; and we have one. He is the One whom the Church should be sharing. He is the One who says to a weary people, to all of us, “Come to Me…and I will give you rest” (Matthew. 11:28). He is the One who came not “to condemn world, but to save the world” (John 3:17).
In a ghosting, disenfranchising, canceling culture, we all have a Guardian-Sentinel who calls us to Himself and brings within us the very life of God’s sacrificial self-giving love. He is our “Maker, Defender, Redeemer, and Friend.” He is the One who came that we “may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10).
Jesus doesn’t ghost us or cancel us or disenfranchise us. Rather, He opens up to us the very arms of God and says to all of us, “Come to me…Welcome home…Live…You are loved…You are embraced…You matter….”
I identify with Brennan Manning who wrote, “My deepest awareness of myself is that I am deeply loved by Jesus Christ and I have done nothing to earn it or deserve it.”
Sounds like a great reality to me.
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