Monday, May 19, 2014

Aftertaste: The Narrow Way

This past week I preached on Matthew 7:13-14.  We heard the call to obedience and to choose the narrow path which leads to life, recognizing the need for God's grace along the way, to spend time with Jesus by reading Scripture and in prayer, and to encourage one another to hold tightly to the faith.  However, I left out one essential piece: how is the path actually walked?

The path is walked through our everyday life choices.  The things we do day in and day out are those things which our paths in life are made up of.  It's not really about an "epic" story as we might imagine it (like Lord of the Rings) nor is it about mighty "victories" that we have, although some may have epic stories and mighty victories.  For the most part however, the narrow path is walked as we might normally suspect: one step at a time. Each step is a choice, an action, done in a normal and seemingly ordinary day that leads towards everlasting life.

This is hard to imagine and even tougher to enact.  This thought has paralyzed me at times, rendering me almost unable to make a choice because I feel so much weight is placed upon the choice that is bothering me right now: "Should I go with the salad that points towards a sustainable lifestyle and stewardship of nature or eat the cheeseburger which probably points to a lack of sustainability in lifestyle and lack of stewardship by eating higher upon the food chain? WHAT WOULD JESUS EAT?" my mind screams. 

It's not about being paranoid, or being scared of our choices.  But it does mean that we purposefully think about the actions we take and the choices we will choose.  Working out beforehand, "what is a sustainable way of eating?" or "how should I interact with my boss who is a bit on the angry side?" can free us to act like Christ in the moment.  That is why theology and reflection is so important: our everyday lives and actions become shaped by what we think and believe.

Finally, it comes back to God's grace and transformation. I am convinced that our efforts to "perform" by meeting the "standards" doesn't go far enough - it is done out of passion and desire but eventually leads to burnout. Instead, time in God's presence leads to transformation because of God's character which leads to right behavior because of a transformed inner being. This is what leads to the narrow way and to life - time with God. That time with God will be difficult however; it means dying to self and rising into Christ's new life for us, more us than we ever we before (as C.S. Lewis puts it).

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