April 2, 2006

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Ho-Hum
Revelation
2:1-5
John Steinbeck, winner of the Nobel Prize, decided to travel around the
country he loved in order to explore and enjoy it more deeply. He was also planning on writing about his experiences in a
book, but he was surprised that very few people encouraged him to go.
Some even said that it was too late in life for him to do something like
that. Steinbeck responded to those
who wanted him to take life easy: “I had seen so many begin to pack their
lives in cotton wool, smother their impulses, hood their passions and gradually
retire from their manhood into a kind of spiritual and physical semi-invalidism.
In this they were even encouraged by their wives and relatives, and
it’s such a sweet trap.” Steinbeck
didn’t listen to those who wanted him to forget his adventure.
He ended up driving across the country and wrote his famous book Travels
with Charlie: In Search of America. Just
before he left on his trip, a well known and highly respected political
reporter, who was excited about what
Steinbeck was going to do, told him, “If anywhere in your travels you come on
a man with guts, mark the place. I
want to go see him. I haven’t
seen anything but cowardice and expediency.
This used to be a nation of giants.
Where have they gone? You
can’t defend a nation with a board of directors.
That takes men. Where are
they?”
There is a taming of the human spirit that has taken place in our land.
We have become lulled to sleep in a land of plenty.
We have been caressed by the culture, and we like it.
Many Christians are so complacent about their faith that they do not even
practice the basic elements such as Bible study, prayer, witnessing, acts of
mercy, etc., because they are so busy with the other things of life.
The world around us has softened us to the place that we are just like
the rest of the world. Other things have crowded our lives and demanded our time.
Something other than God is now in control of our lives, and we are
complacent spiritually. The adventure has gone out of our relationship with God.
We have settled for something less than what we thought we would — and
it’s such a sweet trap. The television and internet have hypnotized us and told us
that we can live in virtual reality rather than reality itself .
We take the path of least resistance and settle into spiritual apathy
that says, “Why bother,” or “I’ll take care of that later.”
Being ho-hum spiritually leads to being ho-hum about life.
It is a loss of values.
So what can we do? We are
bored in the middle of a land of affluence.
What has happened to sink us
in this swamp of complacency? I
would suggest first that: We value
security over significance. We
play it safe. We want to be secure. We
move away from things that threaten or disrupt our security and cause change.
We choose the familiar, even if it is destructive in our lives, because
at least we know how to deal with it. It
is threatening to do the things that will actually give our lives meaning and
significance, so we move away from them. John
Steinbeck said: “We spend all our time searching for security — and then we
hate it when we get it.” The
problem is that we look in the mirror and see what we have become.
There is no better story to illustrate this than the Israelites when they
were slaves in Egypt. They knew
they hated slavery — it’s no fun being beaten and worked to death. They cried out to God in their misery, but they saw no way
out and only saw themselves as slaves. But
Moses appeared on the scene, announcing that they were, in fact, the people of
God, and that God was going to deliver them and make them into a great nation.
This was something that they could not imagine, and what made it worse
was that when Moses went to Pharaoh and told him to release God’s people, he
only made their work harder. Moses
tried to tell the people that the Lord loved them and was determined to free
them, but the Bible says, “Moses reported this to the Israelites, but they did
not listen to him because of their discouragement and cruel bondage” (Exodus
6:9).
Later, when they crossed the Red Sea and were free from their terrible
and dehumanizing burden of slavery, they became afraid of their freedom.
The Bible reports: “The rabble with them began to crave other food, and
again the Israelites started wailing and said, ‘If only we had meat to eat!
We remember the fish we ate in Egypt at no cost — also the cucumbers,
melons, leeks, onions and garlic’” (Numbers 11:4-5).
At no cost? How soon they
forgot that they paid for their food with grinding labor. The cost of the food was their freedom.
And then, when they were about to finally enter the Promise Land, we are
surprised to read: “That night all the people of the community raised their
voices and wept aloud. All the
Israelites grumbled against Moses and Aaron, and the whole assembly said to
them, ‘If only we had died in Egypt! . . .Wouldn’t it be better for us to go
back to Egypt?’ And they said to
each other, ‘We should choose a leader and go back to Egypt’” (Numbers
14:1-4). Imagine it!
Slavery looked better than freedom because they valued security over
significance. They preferred being
slaves over the frightening aspect of being free and the responsibilities that
involved. They would rather be
insignificant than be insecure. And
because of this, they settled into apathy and complacency about the
possibilities in their future. They
did not want to do what it took to be the people of God.
They lost their courage, and because of it, they lost their meaning and
direction.
We are not unlike the Israelites. We
are enslaved to the things of this world: materialism, pleasure, comforts, ease,
safety. We are slaves to our stuff,
our schedules and our selfishness. We
don’t want to have to stand out or be different.
We want to blend in with everyone else.
We don’t like change. We
are afraid to be free. We know life
could have more meaning, but we play it safe and settle for security.
I was so impressed by the story in the news of Abdul Rahman, the man who
was on trial in Afghanistan because he converted to Christianity from Islam.
(I wrote about his in the latest Messenger.) The leading Muslim clergy were calling for the death
sentence. It would have been very
easy for Rahman to choose security. He
had a wife and two children. He
could have forgotten the whole thing and blended into his culture.
The prosecutor, Abdul Wasi, said he had offered to drop the charges if
Rahman would change his religion back to Islam, but he refused.
He said, “They want to sentence me to death, and I accept it.”
He was ready to die for his faith. His
love for Christ would not allow him to settle for being safe.
He said he was ready to die, because as he said, “Somebody, a long time
ago, did it for all of us.” Amazing!
Pray for the many other Afghan Christians, and many like them, who did
not make the news, but are also suffering for their faith and in great danger.
They are ready to die for their faith, and we are afraid to mention ours.
We would rather be slaves of fear than have the significance of a
faithful witness.
The second thing I would suggest that keeps us locked in apathy is: We
value what is easy over what takes effort.
We may never know who the greatest athletes were, because the ones with
the greatest natural talent may have been the ones who never put forth the
effort to be all that they could be. We
may never know who the greatest minds were, since it was lesser minds who made
the great discoveries and wrote the greatest books, because they were willing to
work hard and do what was necessary to achieve.
We may never know the people who could have made the greatest
contributions to the kingdom of God, because it was lesser souls who were
willing to do what was necessary to grow spiritually, do the work and sacrifice
in order to make a difference.
But effort is not what is valued in our society.
I see the ads for the diets where you can eat all you want and lose
weight. I see the ad for the
exercise machine that tells me I can use it just 15 minutes a day and not only
get in shape, but look as ripped as the models.
Or better yet, someone has just come out with the “One Minute
Workout” video. I heard an
advertisement from a financial advisor this week that said he would show me how
to “spend my way to wealth.” Now
that’s a plan I’m interested in — I could eat my way to health, spend my
way to wealth, and sleep my way into shape — if only it was that easy.
The easy way is not always the best way, in fact it usually turns out to
be the worst way. Real life takes
effort, and real people know that.
I have always loved the prayer of Amy Carmichael:
From prayer that
asks that I may be
Sheltered from winds that beat on Thee,
From fearing when I should aspire,
From faltering when I should climb higher
From silken self, O Captain, free
Thy soldier who would follow Thee.
From subtle love of softening things,
From easy choices, weakenings,
(Not thus are spirits fortified,
Not this way went the Crucified)
From all that dims Thy Calvary
O Lamb of God, deliver me.
Give me the love that leads the way,
The faith that nothing can dismay
The hope no disappointments tire,
The passion that will burn like fire;
Let me not sink to be a clod;
Make me Thy fuel, Flame of God.
If I had to choose, I would rather burn out than rust out.
I would rather die trying than never try at all.
I don’t want to be like the church at Laodicea to whom Jesus said,
“So, because you are lukewarm — neither hot nor cold — I am about to spit
you out of my mouth” (Revelation 3:16). I
don’t want to sink to be a clod, I want to be fuel for the flame of God.
The third thing I would suggest that keeps us sinking into complacency
is: We value the material over the
spiritual. It is difficult to
live in a materialistic world like we do. At
no other time in history has so much been available to a people. In times past, a feast was something unusual; today we feast
at every meal. We eat better and
have more available to us than the kings of days gone by. When we go to buy something, we can not only get what we
want, but in the color, style, size and quantity we want. It is easy to love the material world and forget the
spiritual world. We buy things for
an emotional pick-me-up. We use
things to make us feel important. We
place our status and security in things. But
Jesus warned: “No one can serve two masters.
Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to
the one and despise the other. You
cannot serve both God and Money” (Matthew 6:24).
Jim Elliot was a missionary who lost his life trying to reach the unknown
tribes of Ecuador. He was a man of
unusual spiritual insight and passion. He
once wrote: “Oh, the fullness, pleasure, sheer excitement of knowing God on
Earth! I care not if I never raise
my voice again for him, if only I may love him, please him.
Perhaps in mercy he shall give me a host of children that I may lead them
through the vast star fields to explore his delicacies whose finger ends set
them to burning. But if not, if only I may see him, touch his garments, smile
into his eyes — ah then, not stars nor children shall matter, only himself.”
When our minds are on the
stuff of this world, spiritual complacency sets in.
It was Jim Elliot who said: “He is no fool who gives what he cannot
keep to gain what he cannot lose.” The
apostle Paul talked of the people of his day saying, “Brothers, I could not
address you as spiritual but as worldly — mere infants in Christ.
I gave you milk, not solid food, for you were not yet ready for it.
Indeed, you are still not ready” (1 Corinthians 3:1-2).
Spiritual infancy is caused by being absorbed in the material world.
Worldliness causes spiritual dullness, staleness and complacency.
A fourth attitude that contributes to the problem of complacency in our
lives is: We value mediocrity over
excellence. We give our
spiritual lives a hit and a lick and think that will do — if we do anything at
all. We settle for what is good enough and never reach what is
best. We do not strive for
excellence.
In our Scripture reading this morning, the apostle John talks to the
Ephesian church. He lists their
positive attributes: they do not tolerate wickedness; they have survived
persecution, and endured hardships. But
there is something subtle that is missing — they have lost their first love.
They had settled for doing the right thing, but they had not continued to
fervently love the right person. They
were doing okay, but they had lost the excitement of the faith and their
original love for their Lord. They
had gotten into the rut of only doing what was necessary and overlooked the most
important aspect of what it meant to be the people of God.
Ravi Zacharias tells this story: “I remember well in the early days of
my Christian faith talking to a Hindu. He
was questioning the strident claims of the followers of Christ as being
something supernatural. He
absolutely insisted ‘conversion was nothing more than a decision to lead a
more ethical life and that in most cases it was not any different to those
claims of other “ethical” religions.’
So far, his argument was not anything new.
But then he said something that I have never forgotten, and often reflect
upon: ‘If this conversion is truly supernatural, why is it not more evident in
the lives of so many Christians that I know?’
His question is a troublesome one. After
all, no Buddhist claims a supernatural life but frequently lives a more
consistent one. The same
pertains to many of other faiths. Yet,
how often the so-called Christian, even while proclaiming some of the loftiest
truths one could ever express, lives a life bereft of that beauty and
character.”
We can choose the ho-hum existence of someone who is playing it safe,
loving the material world and wanting what is comfortable and easy.
We can live mediocre lives, or we can make a commitment to excellence, to
do what is difficult, search for significance and live on a spiritual plane that
overcomes the sleep of apathy. But
be careful, you might wake up.
Rodney
J. Buchanan
April 2,
2006
Mulberry
St. UMC
Mount Vernon, OH
www.MulberryUMC.org
Rod.Buchanan@MulberryUMC.org