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loving the unlovely
Loving the Unlovely
I see the kids coming into our nice, middle class church
sporting their green hair and dressed in an array of red, black, plaid
and striped clothes. I hear some of their music ダ"loud, punkish,
raw and energized. Not just good old rock nダT roll, but something
with a hard edge to it. Some of the lyrics are horrible.
But someダン some are singingダ"yes, even shoutingダ"praises to God.
Some of the words carry an urgency, a passionate, driven call to spread
the Word, share the Love, bring people to repentance to God.
Granted, the lyrics are not always intelligible to the adult ear, but
the kids get it.
I also see the worried, even embarrassed looks on some of the parentsダT
faces. Are nice Christian kids supposed to look like that?
Sound like that? They kind of change the landscape of our
churchダ"add a look that stands out a bit. Is that OK?
Recently a young, loud Christian band played at our cafAc/coffee
shop. To our dismay, a group of young punker looking kids showed
up, complete with spiked hair of various hues, chain belts and
attitudes. One or two of the kids got a little rowdy afterwards
and roughed up the place a bit. Mind you, this coffee shop was a
new addition to our ministry ダ" a shiny, new place for the local body to
hang out. And these kids had messed it up. So, we stopped
the music. No more of that! And you know what? A lot
of those kids never came to our church again.
Am I defending their misbehavior? No! But I do think we
missed a great opportunity to share the Gospel and draw these kids
in. I saw it clearly during our recent Festival of Hope in
Ireland. We brought Kanten Russell with us, a wild and talented
professional skateboarder who loves the Lord. When he showed up
jumping over everything imaginable (including me) on his skateboard,
the young people flocked to see him. They came, many of them
looking scruffy, lost, with a healthy dose of skepticismダ"first to see
Kanten, then later to the Festival where they heard the Gospel. Over
300 of them gave their lives to the Lord. One young man, with
NIRVANA emblazoned across his T-shirt, clutched a new skateboard and
said, ダoI just gave my heart to Jesusダンif it wasnダTt for the Festival of
Hope I would still not be believing. My faith in Jesus is strong
nowダンyouダTre giving hope to children, giving them Jesus. HeダTs the
Man!ダ_
It was exciting, wonderful, and awesome to see the Lord work! We
embraced these kids, loved them, gave them the Word and brought them
into the body of Christ. I was reminded of the early days of
Calvary Chapel. Chuck Smith listened one day as members of his
congregation complained about barefoot and often unwashed hippie kids
coming into their nice church with its new, green carpet. His
response? ダoTear out the green carpet!ダ_
In the movie, The Godfather, when the mafia families were ready to go
to war they said, ダoItダTs time to go to the mattresses.ダ_
Well, I think itダTs time for us to go to war ダ" except, unlike the mafia,
this is a spiritual war against the evil that seeks to destroy our
kids. Our call to battle just might be, ダoItダTs time to tear out
the green carpet.ダ_
ThereダTs a new generation to reach. We have a successful, thriving
church that God has blessed, but letダTs not ever become the church that
Jesus rebuked in the book of Revelation: ダoI know your
works, your laborダンyou have persevered and have patience and have
labored for My NameダTs Sake. Nevertheless, I have this against
you, that you have left your first loveダ_ (Revelation 2).
Our first love should be Jesus. When He is first in our lives,
then our love for others pours out of our lives like living water, and
we become more like the church Paul described in Romans 12:
ダoBe kindly affectionate to one another with brotherly love, in honor
giving preference to one another; not lagging in diligence, fervent in
spirit, serving the Lord; rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation,
continuing steadfastly in prayer; distributing to the needs of the
saints, given to hospitality. Bless those who persecute you; bless and
do not curse. Rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who
weep. Be of the same mind toward one another. Do not set your mind on
high things, but associate with the humble. Do not be wise in your own
opinion.ダ_
A church like that canダTt help but reach people of all kindsダ"especially
the next generation. Our faith is encouraged and strengthened as
we stretch beyond our comfort zones and learn to look beyond exterior
appearances. Behind every long-haired, tie-dyed clad hippie who
wandered into a Jesus movement church in the early 70s, was a lost soul
needing the truth. Inside every street smart, black clad youth
who dares to enter a place of worship today, lays a heart that needs to
know love, truth and life.
What I loved is that Chuck Smith didnダTt have to try to be like them ダ"
he remained his middle-aged, solid self. But he loved those kids,
accepted them and taught the Word to them in language and music they
understood. We have a great legacy. How can we do any less
today?
Ray Bentley