The Risks God Takes
Why a little church history is a dangerous—and necessary—thing.
Carolyn Arends
…The story of Christianity ultimately leaves me shocked at the risks God takes with humans. Even the greatest lights in church history were dishearteningly imperfect. For all his heroism, Luther attacked the Jewish faith so polemically the Nazis later misappropriated his writings for their anti-Semitic cause. Reformer Ulrich Zwingli advocated justification by faith and concern for the poor, but he also endorsed the executions of two of his brightest disciples because they became Anabaptists. Simons was an inspired Anabaptist leader, but he overzealously excommunicated many who did not live up to his pious standards.
Yet God did great things through these flawed people, much as he did with Abraham, Isaac, Peter, and Paul. As long as there is a human element in his church, it will be prone to corruption. But as long as his Spirit moves, there will be reform and renewal.
When our kids are ready, we will give them context for their religious heritage. For now, they do not understand that the church they file into on Sunday mornings is a place as dangerous as it is holy. But if God is willing to keep taking a chance on it, so are we.
[Read it all here]
You can see how dangerous it is for us not to read the Bible or to understand “a little church history” ourselves. Our projection and idea of God could never match the real one revealed in human history. We can never appreciate how gracious He really is, unless we have a deeper and fully understanding of how we are, both individually and corporately, as human beings.
Filed by edmund at 2.53 pm under Faith |
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