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Convinced Is Not Converted

Wednesday, December 28th, 2011

Previous Post – Christ (child) the Lord

I have an odd intolerance for certain foods.  I’m not allergic to them, but I’ve also discovered that it more than mere pickiness.  Unfortunately, the foods I am intolerant of are the ones that I most need to be eating for health and nutrition.  While I am working on overcoming this problem, it never fails that someone learns of my eating habits and begins to lovingly lecture me on the necessity of eat better than I do.  I nod patiently as I hear for the umpteenth time the basics of nutrition we all learned in grade school.  Recently, when someone began this lecture, I quickly interrupted them and said: “Oh, I agree!  I’m convinced, just not converted“.

This off-hand turn of phrase has stuck with me ever since.  Let’s briefly look at the terms in question here:

Convinced: To be moved to believe, through logic, argument or evidence, that something is true.

Many Christians, especially in West, have come to faith through being convinced- that is, we have been moved to believe differently about something through a compelling argument, presentation or even relationship.  This ushers us into active relationship with God as we make a choice to identify as His follower.  Growing up, this is what I was taught about what it meant to be converted.  While there is overlap, I think that we have confused being convinced with being converted.

Converted: To be changed from one form, substance or state, to another.

Without question being convince is a significant part of the conversion experience (at least for many).  That being said, we can see by the definition that conversion is far more than simply being convinced- it encompasses and surpassed it.  To be converted is to be transformed- to be changed from one thing to another.  It is holistic and all-encompassing.  The emphasis of rationalism in Western Christianity, while bringing us many gifts, has all too often led us understand belief as primarily (and at times exclusively) as cognitive.  Yes, it demanded change in us, but it was as though we believe that the transformation would occur because of the changed understanding.  In other words, the primary means of conversion was the change of ideas.

True conversion does not occur because of us.  Yes, we participate through our will.  Yes, our minds- that is our understanding and ideas- should be changed as well.  But the source of that change is not the result of anything in us, but instead it is the work of the Holy Spirit.  Further, if Jesus is to be believed, then how we live out this transformation is more important than what we think about it.  The changed mind is a product of the transformed heart, made possible through Christ.  The fruit of that transformation must be made manifest in how we live.

Don’t settle for a changed mind.  Jesus is not someone who had some ideas He wanted us to be convinced by.  Rather, He invited (and invites) us into Himself to experience true and whole transformation to become, together, His Body for His kingdom and His glory.

(To explore what I believe it means to live the fullness of what Christ calls us into, see “The Cost of Community: Jesus, St. Francis & Life in the Kingdom”)

Tags: conversion, Jesus, Missional
Posted in Evangelism, Gospel, Missional | 7 Comments »

Christ (Child) the Lord

Saturday, December 24th, 2011

Previous Post – Imagination

Being a new parent makes one thing immediately clear: You’re life is not your own.  Everything in your life is reorientated to accommodate the needs of the new, largely helpless, child you are charged to care for.  One cannot simply carry on with life as usual.  Instead, what is demanded is a full time commitment to the responsibilities of this new relationship.

It should not be too quickly overlooked that Jesus chose to enter into humanity as just such a helpless child.  What is further significant is that Jesus was Lord in that humble state.  His Lordship was not something He grew into, but something fully part of His identity, even in the manger.  This is no coincidence, but rather a fundamental statement about the nature of the kind of Lord He was and what kind of kingdom He was inaugurating.

When Mary and Joseph began to tend to the immediate needs of baby Jesus, it was most certainly they did as the expected obligation that their relationship to Him demanded.  Yet I think we can also assume that, above all, they were motivated by love.  They served and cared for Him because they loved Him.  Their duty to Him, while defined by a formal role and relationship, was fueled by something far greater than duty: affectionate and passionate love.

In the same way, Jesus calls us to submit to His Lordship.  His role and relationship over us is clear and unquestionable, yet we follow Him- not primarily as duty- because we love Him.  King Jesus rules a kingdom fueled by the affectionate and passionate love of a bond far deeper than political, religious or even familial allegiance.

Christ is born!
Rejoice!

Tags: Christmas
Posted in Advent, Missional | 6 Comments »

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