Okay, let's have a show of hands. If you had to write a term paper, and you had access to both a laptop and a typewriter, who would choose the typewriter? Of course you would choose the computer. I remember the days of correcting fluid and carbon paper, of stuck keys, and old ribbon. Who would want put in all that work just to have one hard copy that was easily eaten by the dog?
Okay, I have a few friends that would stubbornly holdout for the typewriter, but that says more about their character, their desire to stand out just for the sake of standing out, their need for an excuse to fall back on when they don't complete their paper, their belief that suffering is an end in itself.
Where is the source of my strength? One of the reasons I follow Jesus is that he brings a computer to the table when life only offers a typewriter, but that does me little good if I just keep right on using the typewriter. Jesus brings more to the table regardless of how good my life may seem at the moment, but I must choose to pursue the strength he offers.
God's strength comes from three sources: Scripture, personal prayer and worship, and the Christian community. Scripture is the primary way that God's Spirit communicates with us, revealing his will, encouragement, and guidance. God shapes and molds us through personal prayer and worship. We get to recognize his voice and touch so he can guide us throughout the rest of our lives. And, surprisingly, it's through the gathered Christian community that God chooses to minister to us individually.
1 Corinthians 12 - 14 describes God's desire for dynamic communities whose members actively care for each other. Where we gather with gifts supplied by God to fulfill each need while others come with gifts for us. It is God's decision that he will supply most of our strength, growth, encouragement, and healing through each other. The God of love has decided that we will participate in his works of grace. In this way, we learn to love each other as we learn to love God. There was a day when we looked toward a place, the mountain of God, to see where our strength would come from. We still look to that same God, but now he no longer works from a distance. He works intimately through a combination of Scripture, prayer, and his community.
If we look anywhere else for our strength, then we have chosen the typewriter when God has provided us with a laptop. Of the three, I think the community is the one most neglected today, although all three are suffering as we choose politics, social engineering, culture wars, and peer pressure over God's guidance (I am speaking to Christians here). Among younger Christians we see the rise of nomadic Christianity, the idea that we can live our life apart from the church and still love God. This cuts them off from one of the main sources of strength.
I don't blame them too much, though. For many, church is an activity that is done once or twice a week. It is more a performance to be attended, a lecture to ingest, than it is an active time of interacting with each other. There should be times of teaching and community worship, but there should be more. A community shares in each other's lives, cares for each other, suffers through each other's mistakes and growing pains, shares each other's joys and suffering, doubts and insights. A community is dynamic.
If you are a follower of Jesus, community is not a suggestion but a command. Flee authoritarian, bitter, controlling communities, but don't give up on God's plan, on God's values. If you have been burned, then start with just a few trusted friends. If you go to church, then start with a few from within that group and begin to live the church. If not, then you better like carbon paper and correction fluid.
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