Culture Making with GodChikamu
Over the series, we’ve lamented our failed attempts at culture-making. By retelling the Bible’s story, this labyrinthine journey led us into Jerusalem, where Christ’s restoring work conquered Satan and saved us from sin. But don’t stop there! For with resurrection power, we’re baptized in the Holy Spirit and sent out on mission together as Jesus’ hands and feet, a portable temple refreshing the wastelands. No solo trek, this is the whole church taking the whole gospel to the whole world starting right where you stand.
The church is the story of embracing culture. Through the Spirit, God began the intensive therapy of healing the body and soul of every believer, with holy behavior and life-giving fruit flowing from a heart of love. In turn, disciples were sent together to bring healing to the world, becoming the beating center of a transformed society. When gathered, we remember who we’re called to be as Christ’s body. When scattered, we graciously move in God’s power to rebuild the ancient ruins (Isaiah 61:4), right where we live, learn, labor, shop, and play.
This is healing work: binding community back together. By inspiring the founding of hospitals and schools; catalyzing courage to protect the vulnerable; venturing capital to create jobs; being faith-full citizens; and empowering the reconstruction of communities once segregated, forging them into a diverse family – in all these ways and more, the Holy Spirit’s acts establish a model for humanity to follow. We’re each called to reconcile, starting with radical hospitality in our homes. To go from that upper room of waiting on the Helper, heading out as ambassadors to exhibit supernatural compassion in every endeavor, that all may be made well: ‘Go and minister grace and love!’
In a re-tribalized society where kindness is uncommon, a Spirit-filled community gifted to cross borders, heal rifts, and help friendship thrive in the fissures is truly good news!
How, then, is God calling us to foster wholeness in our everyday lives? Our consistent witness and integrity invite trust for adversaries to unite across dividing lines. So where is there a schism on your frontline? Which tongue do adversaries speak, and how might heaven have you translate ‘peace’? What might it look like to seek shalom with the angry neighbor over the fence, or the frustrated colleague in an adjacent cubicle, learning together how to get along? For this is the gospel at work in the church – a story to live and share day by day.
Zvinechekuita neHurongwa uhu
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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