No need to mention the Rangers today.

I’m still stuck on the song I mentioned a few blogs ago, “The Motions” that Matthew West sings. It keeps me thinking about where I’ve been and where I hope to go and how different those two episodes of life might look.

I watched a video that struck me the other day too. A speaker was telling the audience that he thought we could see a better idea of what God intended the church to be at an AA meeting than in an institutional church setting. I don’t believe I disagree with him. You go to AA because a) a judge has ordered you to or b) you’ve got some problems you need to find a way to deal with. For those who go because of “b”, there are some really honest stories told, some tough thoughts/feelings/actions are opened up and healing can happen. That’s what church, the body of Christ, should be because that is what Christ is; the one I should be really honest with, the one I should bear all my ugliness, my hurts, my scars, my sins to and the one who will begin the healing.

I have grown up in churches where I have heard more complaining or gossip about what someone is doing than being aware of people going to help the hurting. I have heard people spend time asking what the one who went forward did or say “what a shame” or “they brought it on themselves” and other things of that nature but did not stop to offer prayers or help or a shoulder to cry on. I wish I could say it was someone else but I am just as guilty.

I don’t want the church to be more like AA; I want it to be incomparable to any organization we can imagine. I don’t want the church to be a place where brothers and sisters feel safe but a place where brothers and sisters and people dealing with every kind of sin Jesus so their healing can begin. I don’t want to be a part of a church that is going through the motions but a church that is the active body of Christ – one that certainly teaches truth, but even more, lives it, exudes it, a church that shows the irresistible nature of the Christ.

The challenge is that it doesn’t fall to the Elders or the ministers – it starts with me. What will I do today? How will I show Christ to people today? How will I let people know there is healing for their pain and suffering, that there is grace and peace and salvation in our Lord?