Culture Making with GodSýnishorn
So far we have journeyed from Eden’s garden via Babel’s tower to Abraham’s family tent. The time has come to climb Calvary’s hill, crowning Jerusalem, the city of peace. Let’s hear the crux of this gospel heralded from on high: ‘The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!’ (Mark 1:15).
Christ is the Bible’s climax, crystallizing the story of saving culture. On our own, we’ve reached a dead end. How do we build a life together when we’re addicted to our own success and seething when someone gets in the way? How can we break this cycle of violence and blame, instead of absorbing hate in love? Where Israel failed to live up to its identity, forgetting justice and mercy, the Creator graciously stepped in, fulfilling their call as the hero they needed but never expected. Through parabolic wisdom and servant leadership – lifted up to bear the curse of law-breaking for us – Jesus resurrects humanity, embodying kingdom culture in His very being.
This is restoring work: leading the lost to freedom and bringing the dead to life. In announcing the judgment of God and yet nailing our failure to the cross, covering the repentant rebel by extending forgiveness in place of condemnation, Jesus uniquely saves us as image-bearers. And yet, in so doing, we are conscripted into ‘the salvation imperative’, becoming a sign of shalom pointing to the renewal of all creation. By taking on flesh, God sets up a pattern for us to follow. In the same way, the Father sent the Son, He sends us. We’re each called to love from the mountain of crucifixion. To sacrifice selfish agendas for the sake of reforming a broken world: ‘Go and be a messenger of the gospel!’
In a time where people clamber for power, a Saviour who takes up His cross is truly good news!
How, then, is God calling us to restore life on our frontlines? Who are the poor and prisoners, the blind and oppressed, needing freedom? Where might laying down our rights in forgiveness effectively disarm evil, breathing resurrection life into excruciating relationships with our neighbors? What might it look like in our workplaces to love like Jesus and point people to Him? This may not seem especially heroic in your daily grind, but it’s how salvation subversively progresses in the already-but-not-yet of God’s peaceable kingdom. For this is the gospel at work in Christ – a story to live and share day by day.
Ritningin
About this Plan
When we see ourselves within the whole biblical story, where Jesus is Lord of all, everything changes. We’re invited to join in God’s labor, the gospel working its way out on our local turf.
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