One of the things that really get me is how we (as in Christians in general but in the Salvation Army in particular) seem to live out practical agnosticism.

It crops up everywhere, in class we are taking about sermon prep and how to get inspiration for sermons. I just assume that God is our first and most important source but as it turns out, I am being told that if God tells us what to preach on and how to preach on it we need to test it by getting a second opinion from a scholarly book.

When I read The Shack last week I chuckled when I read the following quote:”Jeez Mack, if you think God is going to be up there, why all the supplies? Mack smiled rather sadly. I just thought I’d cover my bases, you know be prepared for whatever happens.”1

Is that not how we all act, we say we believe that God will show up and then we act as if he won’t. Wolfgang Simson tell a story about a church in Africa that had a special prayer service to pray for rain (there had been a massive drought in the area and peoples lives depended on the rain coming) On the day the whole congregation showed up, but no one brought an umbrella. The Pastor sent them back home saying when you are ready to believe that God will send rain come back. Next day they all showed up with umbrellas, that night it rained.

John Eldredge, author of Wild at heart and the late Brent Curtis pick up on this in the sacred romance.

This is, in fact, how many professing Christians end up living: as practical agnostics. Perhaps God will come through, perhaps he won’t, so I’ll be hanged if I’ll live as though he had to come through. I’ll hedge my bets and if he does show up, so much the better. The simple word for this is godlessness. Like a lover who’s been wronged, we guard our heart against future disappointment.2

We are afraid to trust God because we feel we have been let down in the past. And somehow deep down many of us are not sure we really believe that God is good and that he loves us. The shack really picks up on this (A great read that I cannot recommend enough) and deals with our deep fear of trusting God. Somehow I think these are the real issues we need to deal with first in our own lives but then we need to bring our congregations to a place where they are not only trusting God to to his bit but actually expecting and depending on him to show up.

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  1. Young, William P, The Shack – Where Tragedy Meets Eternity. Audiobook (Newbury Park: Windblown Media, 2007) Disc 2, Track 6 []
  2. Brent Curtis & John Eldredge, The Sacred Romance: Drawing closer to the Heart of God (Nashville: Thomas nelson, 1997) p. 69 []
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ArtursBaltacis

“we guard our heart against future disappointment”… that is like wall for real faith!
Tnx Patric for reminding. If we look carefully on that, than we see how big part of our life is this “being safe” rule.

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