Going to church is easy. Right? It doesn’t make you a
Christian. I know when I was in junior high and high school church was a place
for me to hang out with my friends. But that didn’t make me a Christian.
To give you a little back-story, I grew up in the church. My
parents were Christians and going to church every weekend was normal. When I
was in kindergarten I gave my life to Christ. In fact, I gave my life to Jesus
every day at recess for at least a week. I just wanted to make sure that I was
going to heaven. Not going to hell was very important to 5 or 6 year old me.
And while I don’t question the validity of my commitment at the time, 5 or 6 is
a young age to take such a huge step and make a life commitment.
So life happens. We get older and our teenage years have us
wanting to fit in and be cool and have lots of friends. I was not cool and
didn’t have lots of friends. But I had some core friends who I would get into
trouble with. But I still went to church. I loved church. I was home schooled,
so church and youth group were the times when I got to see my friends and hang
out with people. Sunday morning service, Sunday night bible study, and even
Wednesday night youth group; I lived for church. I was more faithful about
going to church than my parents were at the time in my life.
My problem was I lived for church and not for God. Like I
said, church and youth group were a time for me to hang out with my friends.
Bible study wasn’t always a time I got to hang out with my friends but there
were pretty girls at bible study and it was a time for me to show off my debate
skills. I knew the bible and I knew how I could use it to argue points brought
up in bible study.
I had grown up in church. I knew what to say and how to look
to act right. I would volunteer to pray over meals or for service. When it was
time to worship, I would raise my hands and sing loudly. I was good at doing
church.
The problem with being able to do church really well is I
wasn’t doing a good job at following God. I wasn’t always very nice to my
friends. I would use people, as it would benefit me. In being the bible study
debate champion, I would say some hurtful things. And honestly, I wasn’t very
happy. I was an over-weight, dorky, home schooled kid. I was into punk rock and
heavy metal and just didn’t really fit in with my friends or the people I went
to church with. I felt like an outcast.
The turning point came when I was 16. I was at a conference
with my youth group, a couple months before heading out on a mission trip.
Let me preface my next statement. People say all the time
that God told them this or they heard from God that. And I don’t discredit or
disbelieve any of that as being true. And so when I say God spoke to me, there
are only 2 moments in my life where without a shadow of a doubt, God spoke to
me. It was a little more than an impression. It wasn’t an audible voice but it
was without a doubt God speaking to me. And this is the first instance.
We were sitting in this conference and the worship band was
playing the last night. I don’t remember anything else about this conference or
even this session except that during worship I heard God say to me “Are you
going to be real with me or keep faking? Because if you’re going to keep faking
you might as well quit all together.”
In Blue Like Jazz, Donald Miller tells a story of when he
decided to stop believing in God. Miller said, every night he would go on a
walk and tell God all the reasons why he couldn’t believe in him anymore. And
one night he heard God say, “If you don’t believe in my, how come you keep
talking to me.”*
*Note: I'm not entirely sure why I included this little piece in my message. I'm sure there was a point but I didn't really tie it to anything.
I knew at that moment that I had been giving God lip service
and not actually following him. I
cried. I apologized for all the people I had wronged but more importantly, I
had to ask God’s forgiveness for being such a bad representation of who God is.
I don’t think the weight of my half-hearted commitment sunk in until I was on
the mission trip. I was having a conversation with one of my best friends at
the time and he said, “Bryan, you’ve always been someone I looked up in church.
You gave me the courage to raise my hands in worship and pray and be outspoken
about my faith. I want to thank you for being a great example of what it means
to follow God.”
Guys, I was crushed. It broke my heart. I had had such a
huge impact in someone’s life, who I didn’t know was paying that much attention
or looking up to me as leader, and I was faking it!!! It killed me. Think about
how much greater an impact I could’ve had if I wasn’t so busy trying to act
cool or get my way but instead just actually served God.
In Matthew 23 verse 25-27 it says:
“Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you
hypocrites! You clean the outside of the cup and dish, but inside they are full
of greed and self-indulgence. Blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup
and dish, and then the outside also will be clean. Woe to you, teachers of the
law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You are like whitewashed tombs, which look
beautiful on the outside but on the inside are full of the bones of the dead
and everything unclean.”
I love coffee. I
drink coffee and tea a couple times a day. Have you ever poured your coffee or
milk or soda into a cup with checking the inside of the cup? This happens to me
more often then it should. I will wake up, stumble to the coffee pot, grab a
cup and pour my coffee. And I drink. Every once in a while I will get to the
bottom of my cup and as I am drinking the last sips of my coffee I see the bottom
of the coffee cup… And it’s filthy. All sorts of brown caked on awfulness.
Whatever it is, I don’t want to have just drank it. But it’s too late that
point right? I thought my cup was clean but it was just filthy on the inside.
That’s what Jesus is saying here! He’s saying make sure the inside is clean.
Jesus had a problem with the Pharisees doing church and Jesus had a problem
with me doing church. God doesn’t want us to go to church and look like we
belong at church and do all the right things and spout the right words. God
wants our hearts and our love and affection and time and talents.
And it doesn’t matter what’ve done or what we might
be doing. Romans 5:8 says that God loves us so much that even though we are
sinners and even though we were not or are not following God, He still sent his
Son, Jesus Christ to die for us. That’s great news. Because I didn’t need to
get right first and I’m not able to do enough that God will stop loving me and
go back in time and make Jesus not die me.
What I do know is God loves you. And at the core
of the bible, God just wants you to love him back. Life isn’t perfect when you
follow God. I still have rough days and disappointments. Life doesn’t always
seem to go the way I planned or dreamed. But I know God works all things for
the God of those who love him as they have been called according to his plans
and purposes. Life isn't perfect, but life following God has been worth it.
1 comment:
Good stuff Bryan, thanks for sharing it!
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