THE CHURCH IN THIS CITY

        

          Chapter 5                        COSTLY YET FREE

        

             It’s easy enough for us to put our arms around each other and sing,

         “We Are One In The Spirit,” or to sit in our fellowships and pretend that

         we have unity with the saints around the world. But when we begin spend-

         ing time with each other, as we are bound to do if we’re going to get on

         with the job of spreading the gospel, when we start having some real

         contact with saints in other parts of town, and when we begin to bring

         our homes into the dimension of the kingdom of God, we quickly discover

         that unity with brothers and sisters is much easier to sing about and

         talk about than it is to live.

        

         The Price

        

             How can you live in unity with a professing believer who’s forever

         trying to push you around? How can you work in unity with a brother who

         always tries to make you carry the heavy end while he carries the light

         end? How can you have unity with this superspiritual sister who is

         constantly giving you that pained look as if she just took another x—ray

         of your soul, and found cancer? How can you have unity with a brother

         who always manages to get a headache at the last minute? Or this sister

         who endlessly complains? Or this brother who is mercilessly critical?

         Or that “walking Bible,” who has all the answers? Or Calamity Jane who

         wants to send you on an ambulance run every third day? When you have to

         live at close quarters with brothers and sisters in the Body of Christ,

         it isn’t exactly Paradise. To live in harmony with brothers and sisters

         is a very costly thing, as our Lord makes clear in the following passage:

        

                      A dispute also arose among them, which of them

                      was to be regarded as the greatest. And he said

                      to them, “The kings of the Gentiles exercise

                      lordship over them, and those in authority over

                      them are called benefactors. But not so with you;

                      rather let the greatest among you become as the

                      youngest, and the leader as one who serves. For

                      which is the greater, one who sits at table, or

                      one who serves? Is it not the one who sits at

                      table? But I am among you as one who serves.....

        

                      Simon, Simon, behold, Satan demanded to have you,

                      (plural), that he might sift you like wheat, but

                      I have prayed for you, (singular), that your

                      faith may not fail; and when you have turned

                      again, strengthen your brethren.”

        

             Those men around Jesus weren’t as subtle as we are. We would never

         think of coming out in the open and having a dispute about which of us      

         is the greatest. We just spend ninety percent of our waking hours trying

         to prove which of us is the greatest. Our disharmony, strife, cynicism,

         and suspicion of others, our ingratitude and our sullen moods are all

         evidence of how much of this is going on in our hearts. The advice our

         Lord gave these men is just as urgently needed by us. To live in unity

         with brothers and sisters near and far is going to cost us three things

         ---three things which presumably went down with us into the waters of our

         baptism and should never have surfaced again, but which are in glaring

         evidence every day of our lives.

 

             To live in harmony with brothers and sisters is going to cost us

         our ego.

        

                      The kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over

                      them; and those in authority over them are

                      called benefactors. But not so with you; rather

                      let the greatest among you become as the youngest

                      and the leader as one who serves.

        

             Instead of gunning for the top of the pile, or striving to stay

         on top, (if that’s where we think we are), we now settle joyfully for

         the bottom. If I’m on the bottom of the pile and walk up to someone

         after fellowship and say, “Hello, my name is Fred,” and get the Sphinx

         response...”Who do you think you are?” how can I be crushed? I’m

         already at the bottom. If I’ve really chosen the lowest room and offer

         five people rides homes, and they’re all going out for coffee with

         others, my joy in the Lord is still truly unshaken. If nobody appre-

         ciates my testimony or notices my accomplishments, I’m still together

         because, praise God, Jesus is with me down here in the lowest room.

        

             If we are not willing to pay the price of really losing our ego

         day-in-and-day-out, if we’re afraid to be the youngest, the littlest,

         the lowest in the actual knocks and wounds of living, then we really

         aren’t serious about living in harmony with one another in Jesus Christ.

        

             To live in unity with brothers and sisters is going to cost us

         our convenience.

        

                      For which is the greater, one who sits at table

                      or one who serves? Is it not the one who sits

                      at table? But I am among you as one who serves.

        

             And one who serves never has anything at his own convenience. He’s

         always on call. His plans are always being interrupted. He can be

         roused in the middle of the night; torn away from the dinner table. His

         shoes have just been kicked off in preparation for a rest when the phone

         rings and he has to get into his shoes and go. Of course, Jesus calls

         the shots. He tells us when to put on our shoes. He makes clear which

         of five simultaneous calls we are to respond to. And he tells us when

         to sit still and rest even if ten people are paging us. But when he

         calls we cannot say, “Not tonight, Lord, I’m too tired.” “Not this week,

         Lord, I have a cold.”

        

             The Christian who somehow manages never to go out of his way nor

         to allow any disruptions in his plans is hardly likely to taste unity

         in the Body or harmony in his home. In our fellowships there is often

         an unspoken desire to keep things shallow, so that we won’t have to be 

         inconvenienced; to stay a certain distance from those people with

         problems: getting involved with them will be just too disrupting.

         But convenience is for Gentile kings and middle class vegetables.

         Serving the Lord with gladness in the Body means learning to live a

         life of interruption, learning to constantly be going out of your way—

         with no one keeping track of all our heroic self—denial or appreciating

         our service but the Lord himself. It means spending time doing things

         for brothers and sisters who never even say thanks, and still to go on

         rejoicing.

        

             To live in unity with brothers and sisters is going to cost us

         our heart.

        

                      “Simon, Simon, behold, Satan demanded to have

                      (all of) you that he might sift you like wheat,

                      but I have prayed for you, Simon, that your

                      faith may not fail; and when you are turned

                      again, strengthen your brethren.”

        

             We do not strengthen our brothers and sisters by merely quoting

         scriptures and giving them hug. It takes a heart that goes out of

         itself and really starts to care. A heart that weeps, prays, pleads,

         encourages. A heart that remembers when every one else forgets. Jesus

         put his heart into praying for Peter. And Peter is to put his heart

         into strengthening his brethren. And we are to put our hearts into

         doing the same. How can our hearts be open to God and closed to each

         other? How can our hearts be open to Jesus, yet cool to brothers in

         Germantown or Hamtramck?

        

             Why are we afraid to put our hearts into caring for our brothers?

         Are we afraid our heart might get broken? What about our Master’s

         broken heart? If we insist on hanging on to our little hearts and

         protecting them from all bumps and scratches we shall never taste unity

         in the Body.     

   

           A Price Already Paid

        

             Unity in the Body is going to be costly, so costly that not one

         of us could live this life if it depended on us. Praise God that the

         power to pay the price and walk this blessed road is imparted to us as

         a gift from the Lord. Notice that the entire passage we’ve been look-

         ing at in Luke 22, with its high demands, revolves around the         

         sustaining presence of Jesus.

        

                      “I am among you as one who serves...I appoint

                      you a kingdom... I have prayed for you that your

                      faith may not fail...”

        

             This changes everything. For it means that costly as the life of

         unity may be, it comes to us free.

        

                      “I am the way. I enable you to do these difficult

                      things. Come and get under the yoke with me and

                      I will teach you from within your own heart. Just

                      as surely as I am your salvation, just as surely

                      as I am your life, I am also your unity with

                      brothers and sisters. Let go of your ego and take

                      hold of me. Let go of your compulsive need for

                      convenience, and take hold of me. Let your heart

                      move out upon the stormy waters and rely on me,

                      and I will make you one with each other.”

        

             Unity in the Body of Christ comes by the same hand that made us

         part of the Body in the first place. We cannot bring it about. Only

         Jesus can bring it about—--and he will. Just as surely as we partake

         of the one loaf of his body and drink of the one cup which is his

         blood, Jesus himself will give us each the power to be as the youngest,

         to live as one who serves. He will enable us to put our hearts into

         strengthening our brothers and sisters, so that we can get on with the

         work God has given us to do.