christ the king savannah

Christianity in a Secular World

I don’t know anything about France, but this article seems like it accurately describes our cultural moment:

”In Café Flores where Sartre and Camus discussed the absurdity of life, people scan their phones safely cocooned from such disturbing ideas. Trains, lifts, even waiting at traffic lights are all opportunities to rehearse our secular liturgy: look down, pull out, flip open, here and now, here and now.”

And what we at CTK hope to be:

"Christians carrying within them the reign of heaven will need to let their weirdness shine; their time-consuming religious habits, their inconvenient commitment and love of others, their solidly unspectacular contentedness, and their embrace of weakness that allows the power and grace of their servant Lord to glow. The front line of secularism is here, but the resistance has begun."

Upside Down Kingdom

upsidedownkingdom.jpg

Upside Down Kingdom

“Paradox is a truth standing on its head to get attention.” -GK Chesterton

My 4 year-old son had all the power, standing in the middle aisle of the church 2 minutes before our service was supposed to start. “Where do you want to sit while you wait for mommy to come back?” He dithered. Equivocated. Listed four totally impossible options. The anxiety rises within me. What to do? Scream? Cajole? Beg? Everybody is watching now, the people to whom I’m getting ready to talk about God. I wish there was a simple answer. There wasn’t. That’s life.

When Jesus sits down to give the sermon on the mount, he says all sorts of paradoxical, counter-intuitive things. Like “happy are those who mourn” and “love your enemies.” And we look at him like he is upside down. Just give it to me straight, Jesus. Just tell me what to do. Give me an instruction, a principle, that I can take away and apply in every situation so that I never have to experience any tension or uncertainty or chaos. Give me something to stabilize me, to take away the anxiety of life, so that I can know, so that I can be sure, so that I can be right. And when he doesn’t? We lose interest. On to something more promising, the next thing, the next answer, the big show, the people who are necessarily like us in age, race, class, so that they don’t introduce any tension or uncertainty into our neatly packaged way of being in the world.

So maybe part of the reason Jesus looks upside down to us is because we are standing on our heads. We want principles, but he gives us paradox, not because he is being difficult, but because he knows that the desire for a principle is a desire to do life, to be human, without the presence of God. And he knows that that is impossible, that humans cannot flourish without him. So he says things that seem upside down, to help turn us right-side up; to force his people to carry, not his principles, but his presence, into the world. Knowing that ultimately those paradoxes find their resolution, their culmination, in the person of the God who once sat on a mountain, but now sits on a throne.

”Upside Down Kingdom” artwork painted by Hampton Watts.


Sermon on the Mount: Blessed are the Meek

As we work our way through the beatitudes this week we arrive at Matthew 5:5, “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.” But what is meekness and how do we live it out honestly? Consider it in light of the two beatitudes before it: “Blessed are the poor in spirit” and “Blessed are those who mourn.” It will also need to be considered in Christ who was meekest of all.