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Pierre

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Being a Christian – believing in Christ

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What is a Christian?

When I asked this questions to a few people around me, I got a variety of answers. Non-Christians generally associated  it with “someone who goes to church”, or the escapatory “someone who self-defines as a Christian” whereas that answer never featured amongst Christians.

Be-Lieve

I expected answers from Christians to revolve around beliefs and creeds. A few did (“a christian is just somebody who believes that Jesus came, died and rose again”), but most talked about enjoying a relationship with Christ (either in such terms, or in terms of following Jesus).

This is good, as I think undue focus is put on beliefs, creeds and even doctrinal statements. Being a Christian is a matter of identity, and that identity is pervasive beyond the simple level of belief. For that reason, mission must go further than trying to convince people of the truth of our beliefs. In fact, belief is a very small part of it.

How would you answer to the question “Oh, so you’re a Christian? What does that mean?”

The issue is, there’s little teaching available on Christian identity. It is hard to explain what it means – to unpack what lies behind “being in a relationship with Christ”. Analogies with human relationships are very limited; I’d even argue that rather than trying to understand our relationship with God from our human relationships, we should try and model our human relationships on the one we share with Him.

Being a Christian, to me, means feeling and welcoming the presence of Christ in our everyday life; and letting Him inform our decisions. It means deferring to someone we know is a higher authority.
This can mean naturally turning to prayer and feeling at peace that our life is in God’s hands.
The Bible, and the creeds, whichever they are, help us know more about who God is. But our beliefs are in no way the only things defining us as Christians.

Still.

A few years back, I went through a very rough ride which left me completely shattered. So much so that I wanted to be alone. That very presence of Christ which I was feeling, I no longer welcomed. I still believed about the factual reliability of the Bible’s claims; I still believed that salvation was mine; I still believed that God could help us all. But I didn’t welcome it. I wanted some time off.
This was probably the time of my life where I felt most miserable. But I still self-defined as a Christian, just one who wanted to be left alone. I knew, in my mind, that God’s presence was within reach, but stopped feeling it.

Have you ever wanted some time off God?

Would you say that in those days I was a Christian?

How do you lead?

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We are all, in some shape or other, leaders: there are always people who look up to us, in the same way that there are people we look up to.

The question is, how do we lead?

Leadership: Weak or Strong?

Here’s what I call weak leadership: making mistakes. Being imperfect. Admitting to not knowing everything and not trying to cover up our mistakes. In doing so, I believe we are making it easier for others to identify with us.

Here’s what I call strong leadership: having a sound, immovable basis for what we are teaching. “Looking” good, as much as possible, or striving to do so. In short, leading by example.

Both have their strengths, both have their risks.

In being a weak leader, there is a risk of growing comfortable with our own shortcomings and making those we lead comfortable with theirs too. It is just too easy to justify our failures with the excuse of “deliberately being more approachable”. There is also a risk of glorifying sin. As Phil Drysdale recently tweeted, “when you call yourself a sinner you are not being humble. You are being full of pride.”

In being a strong leader, there is a risk of growing distant, of being the “perfect person who won’t understand”. There is a risk of discouraging people from taking on leadership responsibilities, because “they’re not good enough”. More importantly, though, we are not perfect. In striving to “look” good, there is the risk of starting to lead a double life. Of becoming two-tongued and of reserving certain behaviour to leadership mode.

Are you a weak leader or a strong leader? Which one would you rather be? Are there other benefits to choosing one over the other?

I want to be a weak leader, because I believe this is the most fertile ground for encouraging new vocations, and because quite frankly, I don’t feel up to the task and responsibilities linked with strong leadership.

Good and bad

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Big principles. Friendship, love, forgiveness, peace lie at the heart of the Christian life.

 Image credits: Incompetech and Nac, reused under CC license

So we strive to live our lives according to those principles; and share this message with others. We sometimes feel at a loss when their worth does not seem to impress on other people. Or when suffering abounds within relationships.

In those cases, we should remember three things:

  • that, in the end, God will make all things work together for our good
  • that we should not judge lest we be judged in turn
  • that our understanding is, and will always be limited, and that there is a time for everything.

Dismissing the “bad things” – war, hate – as not ordained, or coming from the Enemy, is a way to not let them inform who we are, even when they can be part of God’s plans.

Should we also refrain from shouting out against social and societal issues on such a basis?

When we take on the role of prophets, do we do so out of our own understanding of what is “right”, or are we inspired to do so?

What is “right” is not a knowledge. It is when what we do comes from our hearts and is done out of love and compassion, in prayer, that we are doing what is right.

Praying at all times?

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Image by davedhetre reused under CC license

The story of Jesus calming the storm can be read on many levels: at the most basic, it is a display of Jesus’s authority over the storm. On a different level, we can draw parallels with prayer. Looking closer, we notice that Jesus rebukes his disciples when they wake him.

Puzzlement follows. Why should he rebuke his disciples when all they do is give over the matters to him? When they place their trust in him?

There are two elements:

  1. They turn to Jesus when they are most afraid. Only as a last resort, almost reluctantly.
  2. They actually are afraid. This is where we must keep in mind that it is Jesus who suggested the trip.

Praying at all times is important. It is a privilege, and the way to know the peace that comes from God. This should be done in thanksgiving, and in complete confidence that God will see us through.

But in this story, the disciples had to wake up Jesus, because they feared – feared that the plan he had set would not come through. In doing so, they did not recognise that Jesus had authority over all.

When the going gets tough, we sometimes feel like we must pray – “pray until something happens”. Should we do so, or should we simply trust God has heard our prayers?

Still, there is another lesson to be drawn from this story. Jesus woke up. Even when we wake up God for no serious reason, he calms us and the storm.