We don’t need more doctrinal precision and
biblical knowledge, more conferences and programs. We don’t need more
cookie-cutter youth groups copied from the megachurch down the street. We don’t
want to hear another worship song with the same beat, the same tempo, the same
words, and the same three chords as every other worship song.
Christianity suffers from the pandemic disease of
just copying each other in what we do, what we say, and how we look. As the
world struggles with the ethical dilemmas of whether or not we should allow
clones, Christianity should just be shrugging our shoulders; We’ve been making
clones for hundreds of years, from the way our buildings look to the way our
people look. Sure, there are “cooler” versions out there, but they still gather
at the same old places at the same old times to do the same old things for the
same old purposes. When are we going to break out of the mold and do
something that shocks, surprises, and amazes?
Let me back up and start from the beginning. The
very beginning.
In the
Beginning
Christianity must be creative because first and
foremost, we follow a creative God. The very first act of God recorded in
Scripture is creation. An eye-popping, universe-exploding, noisy,
colorful, cacophony of creative power unleashed into darkness and
chaos.
One of
the things that characterize little children is creativity. They do not think
about what they can and cannot do. They do not tally the forces arrayed against
them. They simply imagine another world, a place where people never die, where
nobody goes hungry, and the lion literally lays down with the lamb. In their
creative world, dreams become reality.
But when we see darkness and chaos all around us,
all we can think of doing is gathering together in our huddled masses, circling
the wagons, and praying for the soon return of the Lord Jesus Christ who will
ride in on His white stallion with thunder in his footsteps
and lightning in his fist, and cast down all our foes, restore peace
and justice, and finally set all things right. Then He will rule and reign and
wipe away every tear.
Doesn’t that sound great? Of course it does. But
I sometimes Jesus is watching all this, shaking His head and saying, “What do
they think I left them there for?”
And we cry out, “But what can we do? There are so
few of us against the gathering storm! We are weak; they are strong! We are
few; they are many!” Hmm, that sounds an awful lot like some cries I’ve heard
out of Scripture in various places. I’ll let you find them on your own.
Jesus, I think, tells us the beginning place. The
way to find the solution is not with refortifying our defenses, preaching
longer, or singing louder. When chaos and darkness descend upon us, the first
step toward light and order is creativity. This is what Jesus meant when He
said that we cannot enter the Kingdom of Heaven unless we become like little
children.
Like a Child
Does imagination make the dreams become reality?
Of course not. It’s naive to think so. But this does not mean we should not
creatively imagine. Without creative imagination, we will continue to tackle
age-old problems with dreary and decaying solutions: “Bomb them!” “Tax that!”
“Hoard this!” “Sell those!” “Gather the wagons! Get out the guns!”
There has to be a better way. A way of light and
love, peace and unity, healing and service. A way of flexibility and freedom,
wonder and imagination.
What
is that way? Honestly, I don’t know. But we’ll never find it, until and unless
we begin with creativity.
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