Sunday, April 10, 2005

To Tell The Old, Old Story

... and there arose another generation after them who did not know theLORD, nor yet the work which He had done for Israel.Judges 2:10b

A lady I used to work with, Darla, lost her father the Thursday beforeEaster of 2004. I talked with another coworker, Sarah, about it the next day. Sarah is a 25 year old, unchurched woman with the postmodern outlook one would expect from such a person. She said, "Can you imagine? Easter is probably going to be ruined forever for Darla because of this."I reminded her that Darla is a Christian, so in the years to come, the proximity of her father's death to Easter will probably be a comfort to her.

Sarah, who thinks of Easter as the bunny & chocolate holiday, had no idea why, so of course I explained it to her. I discovered along the way that she had no idea Christians claim that Jesus rose bodily from the dead (she assumed he went to heaven "the regular way,"), that the Sanhedrin couldn't find the body so they claimed the disciples stole it ("so it's like a mystery!" she said), and she was confused as to how Bible characters related to each other. She asked where Moses was while all this "Passion stuff" was going on, and about where Adam, Eve, and Noah came in.

To those of us raised in a church environment, this kind ofBiblical illiteracy seems stunning, but Sarah is in many ways representative of millions of people from emerging generations.They've grown up in a world that has lost its sense of Story -- the Grand Story, the Story of God and man. Their parents and grandparents rejected the idea that life has meaning (throwing out "plot") and that the meaning is determined by our Creator(throwing out the Storyteller).

Now, if they have any positive thoughts on the Bible at all, it is of an anthology of disjointed episodes without a larger context, a collection of "points to ponder", or a self-help manual ("Three easy steps to a whole-new-you") broken down into verse form for quick reference. But the Grand Story framework is gone, and with it, the ability to show them how their individual story intersects with God's Story, filling their previously plotless narratives with meaning. And little wonder that they don't want a Savior when they don't understand why they would need to be saved, or what they're being saved from.

As Christians, let's tell our Story every chance we get. Let's earn the right to tell it by the honesty of our lives, and when they ask, let's give it to them. Our lives are each a subplot in the universal story, and the journey of each Christian mirrors the Biblical story from Fall to redemption to mission, and, at last, to victory.Do many from emerging generations lack a sense of self-worth? Do they question "what's the point of it all?" Do they feel as if life has no purpose or meaning, that they have no special mission? Yes. Do they, and all humans, crave purpose, meaning, and a sense of mission? Yes again. And they can find it all in the old, old story....

"I love to tell the story, for some have never heard
The message of salvation from God's own Holy Word."

5 Comments:

At Mon Apr 11, 02:37:00 PM PDT, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Once again, thank you, Bobby. Like Cheryl, I, too, was unfamilar with The Story for some time. I honestly thought 'Jesus Christ' was a curse word, not the great 'Hero-Lover,' as John Eldridge calls Him. This was a very convicting entry. Sometimes I forget what a journey it's been. Thanks again. Emily.

 
At Mon Apr 11, 07:58:00 PM PDT, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks for sharing Bdog... You would be proud of me, (the one who hates to read). I have almost completed The Pupose Driven Life. I have 5 chapters left. Twana gave it to me to read. I've been reading one chapter a day. They say that is how they want you to read it so it sinks in. I have really enjoyed it. It's amazing that God had a purpose for me before I was even born. I have so many blessings that he has provided, including such good friends as you and the rest of the night riders. God is good. God is ALWAYS good. Seizure later...

 
At Tue Apr 12, 11:01:00 AM PDT, Blogger Bobby said...

Yeah, thinking about His purpose and His plan, and about the part that he invites us to play, is so inspiring.
This year I'm on a Bible reading plan that puts all the books and verses of the Bible in chronological order, and arranges them into daily readings, so you really get a sense of the larger story. Daniel Montgomery recommended it to me, and I'm really enjoying it.

 
At Tue Apr 12, 05:30:00 PM PDT, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I understand Sojourn has done this in groups (separated into men's and women's) in the past. I think it sounds really interesting and challenging. Are there groups like this still going? Do you all know of any plans to do this again? e.

 
At Thu Apr 14, 05:10:00 AM PDT, Blogger Bobby said...

I'm not doing it as part of a group, although my coworker Daniel Wainwright (who also goes to Sojourn) is doing it.
Daniel M. said that a group of them did it last year. He mentioned that they're doing another yearly scripture reading thing this year, and invited me to take part in that, but this chronological one sounded too interesting to pass up.

 

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