THE
CHURCH IN THIS CITY
Chapter 8 COMING TOGETHER WHERE
IT COUNTS
Every so often friends are shocked by the news that a husband and
wife who were regarded by everyone as the ideal couple are throwing in
the towel. Why should these two beautiful people who were always so
devoted to each other be getting a divorce? What none of the friends
suspected was that this man and woman were having it rough for years.
Countless times they sat down and talked about their
problem and pro-
mised each other that they were going to do everything in their power
to make it work. And they tried. They took a vacation in Florida,
which they could ill afford. Later, they started entertaining friends
a great deal. As finances improved they joined a ski club. They
bought a boat.
And always they seemed to be so in love, so devoted to each other.
But when their friends went home and they were alone, there was nothing
to talk about, They had nothing to share but their common hell. So the
resentment in each heart continued to build. The distance between them
grew, until they were a universe apart while they lived in the same
house and ate at the same table.
You ask how this could happen to two people who were once in love.
When they saw their marriage starting to totter, why didn’t they try to
save it? Did they not come together again and again in a genuine effort
to be one? Yes, they came together on their trip to Florida. They came
together in beautiful harmony when they had to put on the show of a
successful marriage for their friends. They skied together and boated
together. They tried terribly hard at making love, but they never came
together where it counts.
They never came together at the meal table, for instance with
their children, blessings from God, at their sides. No opening of the
heart. No listening. No thoughtfulness. Or when the children were
asleep and they were alone, they never learned to talk or to listen or
even to share the silence of a peaceful room. When a crisis hit the
family, they never learned to stand and face it with arms around each
other. Instead they let the crisis divide them, each blaming the other
for the money problems, the loss of the job, the mess their child got
into.
If a man and woman are going to make it in a marriage, they have
to learn to come into unity with each other in the places that really
count. Not up on the surface for their friends to see, but down deep.
Not just with their bodies, but with their wills, their hearts. If
they learn to have unity where it counts, the rest of the marriage will
take care of itself.
In exactly the same way brothers and sisters in the Body of Christ
have a tendency to put a great effort into achieving superficial unity.
We try to stage it, to engineer it. We know that unity is lacking
both in our local assemblies and across the city. So, like the couple
who think a Florida vacation is going to heal their marriage, we try
naive cures. Coffee hours. More entertaining. Recreation. “Maybe
if we get to know each other better.....” To bring the city together
we start holding meetings for all the leaders around town, working
perhaps toward a city-wide campaign. “Maybe if we bring in a well-
known evangelist and fill Convention Hall for two weeks, the church
in our city will start coming together.” We can try all kinds of
things to bring the Body into unity and in the end we find ourselves
like that couple, farther apart than ever.
We have to learn to come together where it counts. There are
three places where brothers and sisters in Jesus Christ need to come
together, If we will draw near to each other in these three places,
we will soon have heaven-sent unity in our assemblies and across our
town.
We need to come together before the throne of God. The
first
thing we’re conscious of when we come into the presence of the living
God is not ourselves, nor our differences, nor our similarities, but
God himself. We see our heavenly Father. We see his love. We see
the Lamb seated at his right hand. We see the blood, the seven torches
burning before the throne, glory. Seeing these things, what can we do
but worship? We lose ourselves in the worship of the true and living
God. And as we praise him, the Spirit of God lifts us out of ourselves
and brings us together in the mind of Christ. When Mary, carrying the
Christ in her body, and Elizabeth, carrying John the Baptist came
together, they worshipped! When the disciples met the resurrected
Lord on the appointed mountain, they worshipped!
When they were released they went to their
friends and reported what the chief priests
and the elders had said to
them. And when
they heard it, they lifted their voices together
to God and said, “Sovereign Lord, who
didst make the heaven and the earth and the
sea
and everything in them, who by the mouth
of our father, David, thy servant, didst say
by the Holy Spirit, ‘Why did the Gentiles rage
and the peoples imagine vain things?”’
Worship was the normal atmosphere of the apostolic community. And
surely if we want to come before the throne together, God will help us
find our way. And the trivial things that have absorbed our minds will
vanish as we stand in awe before glory that never fades.
We need to come together where the walls between us still
stand.
Why is that wall still standing? Can I honestly say that it’s all the
fault of the man or woman on the other side of the wall?
“He put up the wall, man, and he’s going to have to take it
down!”
When is the last time I went to that wall and called the name of the
person on the other side? When is the last time I wrote that person
a letter? Or held out my hand? If I’m so sure that I am not the
slightest bit at fault, what’s the harm in going to that wall and
making
some attempt at reconciliation? And if I know that I am wrong, why am
I not admitting it and doing what I can to make it right? God is not
nearly so interested in declaring who’s right and who’s wrong as he
is
in seeing the wall come down. The main thing is to get rid of the wall.
This will never happen so long as we go on pretending that it isn’t
there and carry on our lives as far from the wall as possible. God help
us to admit where the walls are. To repent before him, and go make it
right in whatever way he shows us. A handshake. A word of concern.
A letter. A plea for forgiveness. Sometimes it will take two or three
“knock-down-and-drag-out” air-clearing conversations.
“Lord, how often shall my brother sin against
me and I forgive him? As many as seven times?”
Jesus said to him, “I do not say to you seven
times, but seventy times seven.”
Every time we tear down a wall, the Spirit of God rushes in with life.
Will anyone dispute that there is a wall between black and white
believers in our city? Are we relieved of the responsibility for that
wall by hanging with our own kind as if it doesn’t exist? Or the wall
between the charismatics and the non-charismatics? Or the wall between
the Catholic and Protestant followers of’ Jesus? Or the wall between
Jew and Gentile, suburban and urban, young and old? There will never
be unity in the Body in this city until we come together at these walls
and by God’s grace, tear them down, painful and humiliating as this may
be to us.
We need to come together out in the harvest. Unity
meetings with
other believers in the Hilton may be pleasant, but in the long run they
are about as useless as they are painless. When will we see the day
when brothers and sisters from all sides of our city start
fishing to-
gether in the main shopping districts or on the waterfront, or on skid
row. How quickly our narrow minds will crack open to God’s light when
we all start combing the streets and lanes and highways and hedges
together. When sisters in a particular neighborhood start pitching in
together to minister to women who need transportation to the hospital
to visit a sick child, or a ride to the welfare office, or somebody to
talk to when they’re coming off a drunk, or some groceries to put in
their empty refrigerator, more happens to bring healing to the Body than
in a dozen meetings. If we have to miss a few Bible studies to take
care of these things, then we have to miss. If we spend all our time
going to Bible studies and no time ministering to others there will be
no life in us and no unity in the Body.
There is a place in the harvest for every single one of us. God
will show us where it is, And when we get out there we will always
find saints we never knew before. We will see God’s hand at work in
them too and we will have to praise him.
When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for
them, because they were harassed and helpless,
like sheep without a shepherd. Then he said
to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful,
but the laborers are few; pray therefore
the
Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into
his harvest.”
And we can be sure that the laborers God sends will be one. They
will not be competing. They won’t be at each other’s throats. Their
very unity will be a sign to the world of the reality of our Christ.
May God help us to come together where it counts. Saved by the
death of his Son, washed in the blood of the Lamb, may we come together
before God’s throne and worship. May we come together where the walls
still stand and tear them down. And may we stick like a brother to
every disciple of Jesus we meet out there in the harvest, no
matter
where he comes from.
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