Sunday, May 4, 2008

I'm not gonna write you a love song

Have you ever felt like you were under the thumb of someone or something? Life is full of prescriptive mandates and you play the game according to the set rules or...what? You become a rebel?

Can faith be prescriptive? Follow this set of principles, stroll down the "Romans Road", pray a prayer and Bam!, you are saved. For as long as I've been a Christian I have struggled understanding certain tenets, especially the logistics of salvation. It may have a lot to do with my denominational mut status. I was raised in a Lutheran church, attended a Baptist college, went to church with Vineyard and AG friends, and have a whole side of my family claiming to be Catholic. Needless to say the messages about "being saved" have swirled about my brain in a confusing picture that looks like a finger painted Picasso. And interesting to note, the first mention of salvation wasn't until my first year of Baptist college. What??? What the heck is going on? I have gone to church my whole life? What are you telling me? The concepts, terminology, logistics surrounding salvation frustrate me. I often feel like it becomes divisive. If you believe this theology, proceed to camp A. If you believe in this theology, please proceed to camp B. If you do not believe in either, please proceed to hell...in a handbasket. I'm not saying that theology is not necessary, but it seems to aid in our grouping and distinguishing of individuals' salvation based on what denomination they ascribe to instead of the state of their heart.

Also, once you are counted among the "saved", your responsibility is to "save" more. I'm sure there are many people in my life that stood by me excitedly awaiting the day where I would come to a relational faith with Jesus Christ, but thankfully no one pushed, forced, or coerced me to pray a prayer before I knew what I was doing. I wish I could call those friends that I thought were a little loopy for being baptized in what looked like a hot tub when we were juniors in high school and say, "Guys, I get it now". Those friends loved me. They didn't try to change me and most of all they never tried to prescribe a certain journey of faith I needed to be on. God was pursuing me. The Holy Spirit was working and my faith was growing and developing.

This brings me back to my experience in Africa. As part of the medical clinics, patients were invited to receive counseling. For a weary heart and body I'm sure this sounded like a much needed respite from the harshness of their reality. I was expecting an opportunity to show compassion, share tears, embrace a broken soul facing a life with HIV, but instead I was shocked to discover the mandate of salvation. I felt myself becoming physically ill when a patient was hounded about her lack of relationship with Jesus and her desperate need for Him. Never mind that you came in here to talk about how scared you are to tell your family you have just been diagnosed with HIV. Never mind that you are scared to die. Never mind that you want a compassionate face and someone to accept you the way you are. You need to change. You need to have a relationship with Jesus before we will speak to you. Let me start by talking about sin and (y)our need for a Savior...

Really? We are going to talk to her about how she is a sinner? Right here? Right now? I could feel the uneasiness in my stomach begin to creep it's way up my esophagus. I've never gotten physically ill before, but everything in my body was screaming NO!!!!!!!! JUST LOVE HER!!!! You can listen and love her and tell about this amazing man named Jesus that gives you hope, but don't make her pray a prayer. Don't prescribe her faith like a pill to swallow. Let her be herself and love her just the way she is. I pray that after we left she was able to speak with someone she trusts about the grace, love, hope, and redemption found in this man Jesus and not just the freedom from sin.

I attended a class about missions in which a man once told a missionary, "Your message of Jesus comes to us already planted in a clay pot decorated the way you like it. We love the message of Jesus, but we had to break the pot and replant it in our own." We can't tell others how to know and love Jesus. We can only show and tell of Jesus' love for them. Let's leave the prescriptions for the doctors.

I walked out of the counseling and couldn't return for the rest of the week in Africa. I couldn't write the love song they asked me to write. I couldn't add to the number of "saved" that week, but it doesn't bother me because I know God is pursuing the hearts of all He created and He is drawing them unto Himself in His time.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Amen sister...I'm glad to see you're writing again.

J.E.Brown said...

I just wrote you the greatest comment...and it was gay and erased it.

But I was saying that I am SHOCKED at how amazing you are. I mean, you make me realize that as a writer I am missing out on alot of the light hearted things that there are to write about out there. I write alot about heavy-life-heart things, and that is good...but wow, you really have a way of talking about things much more candidly.

I decided that when I come to Minnesota, one thing that I want to do is sit at a coffee shop with you and we can write together!!

jek said...

Hi Dana,
I stumbled across your blog through Jeremy's.

I have to say that you're singing my song (and I don't mean that to be cheesy). As someone who works day in and day out in short term missions, I experience the "American savior" mentality all the time (and I would be lying if I didn't admit that I am also at fault on this one). This post and your previous one hit the note for me. A little over a month ago I had the privilege of sitting down with someone and experiencing being able to share Christ's love in the midst of the messyness of sin, mistakes, learning, hope and the supernatural power of the Holy Spirit. It was a beautiful day! It makes me sad that you were not able to experience that with the people of Malawi at that tim. And I think you are abosolutely right...Jesus taught that we come as we are and he restores us.

Thank you for your honest and candid thoughts. The world needs more souls like you.

-Jenny Kemper