Every human is created with a desperate,
insatiable, non-negotiable need to experience LIFE. (For the purpose of
clarity, I put “LIFE” in all caps to clarify a reference to the worth,
significance and security we’re to get from God, in contrast to merely biological
life). Though most aren’t aware of it, every human hungers to be loved
unconditionally. This means they are starving to experience profound worth,
significance and security. We feel fully alive to the extent that we have this;
desperate and empty to the extent that we don’t.
God created us with this craving for LIFE
as the means of inviting us into the dance of his own eternal triune love. And
the only way we experience this LIFE is by accepting this invitation,
submitting to Christ’s Lordship, and participating in this eternal dance. The
Kingdom of God is this eternal dance brought down to “earth as it is in
heaven.”
When we’re not getting LIFE from our
relationship with God, we inevitably try to get it from people and/or things in
our environment. We become addicted to idols, which are anything we use to
derive our ultimate worth, significance and security other than God.
In modern western culture, the most popular
idols are things like power, sex appeal, wealth, and accomplishments.
Historically, in most other cultures religion has been a primary idol (though
it continues to play a idolatrous role in some religious sub-cultures in the
West). Religious idolatry occurs whenever people try to find their worth,
significance and security in how they impress a god, others and/or themselves
with the rightness of their beliefs, rituals and/or behavior—in contrast to all
who are wrong about these things.
Life in the fallen world is a veritable
feeding frenzy on idols of one sort or the other. Like sharks fighting over raw meat thrown
overboard, empty people have to compete in this world for whatever morsel of
worth, significance and security they can get from their chosen form of
idolatry. This is why idolatrous living is always accompanied by anxiety,
strife and other “works of the flesh” (Gal. 5). (See last week’s post on how we
misunderstand “the flesh” or what is often translated as “the sinful nature” in
scriptures.)
It’s also why “the flesh” is the source of
all conflict and violence in the world. Whether we’re talking about celebrity
gossip, political fighting or wars between nations, the root of all hostility
is idolatry. People are desperately trying to get LIFE from things that are not
God.
Another reason “the flesh” always produces
anxiety is that, even when we are successful at feeling like we got the LIFE we
hunger for, we know its just a matter of time before we’ll hunger for it again.
Like vampires, we must always come back to suck more LIFE from someone or
something. We also know we may loose our source of LIFE at any moment. One
single unfortunate accident, and our power, sex appeal, wealth and
accomplishments may be gone. And even if this doesn’t happen, we all know, even
if we rarely acknowledge it, that aging and death will eventually steal our
source of LIFE from us.
And so it is that life in “the flesh” is
permeated with anxiety and emptiness. It’s total, diabolic, bondage!
Life in the Kingdom begins when we revolt
against this bondage and the Powers that fuel it and commit to getting LIFE
from Christ alone. As the Holy Spirit works in our heart, we begin to wake up
to the futility and folly of idolatrous living and begin to see that our core
need for worth, significance and security can be gotten from Christ alone.
To the extent that we dance in the Kingdom,
we are free from idolatry. We are free not because we have enough will power to
say “no” to the temptation to suck life off of our sex appeal, wealth,
accomplishments or religion, but simply because we don’t’ need them any more.
We’re getting our LIFE from Christ.
We may of course continue to enjoy, in
appropriate contexts, having sex appeal. We may be blessed with, and continue
to enjoy, a certain measure of wealth. We may continue to feel good about using
our talents to accomplish various things. And we may even continue to
appreciate aspects of a religion we’ve been taught to practice.
But to the extent that Christ is our LIFE,
we no longer need these things to feel fully alive. If and when we loose these
things, we certainly feel a sense of loss. But this loss will not fundamentally
change our core identity or our sense of being fully alive.
To the extent that we are free from idol
cravings, we are free from the “works of the flesh.” We no longer need to
compete in the foolish idolatrous feeding frenzy of the world. We no longer
need to compete to acquire or fight to protect our power, sex appeal, wealth,
accomplishments, or religion. We know that the one thing that matters, the LIFE
that is in Christ, can never be improved on with effort or lost by misfortune.
For this reason, the person who is being
caught up into the Kingdom is empowered to put off all strife, malice,
hostility and anxiety (Eph 4:29-31). So too, the person who is being caught up
into the Kingdom is empowered to live in love as Christ loved them and gave his
life for them (Eph. 5:1-2). Only when we’re free from needing LIFE from others
are we enabled to overflow with LIFE to others, ascribing worth to them
regardless of what they think about us or how they treat us. And because a
person who gets their LIFE wholly from Christ is free from all the idols that
subtly make us anxious and miserable, a Kingdom person is positioned to
experience a pervasive joy in their life that nothing in the world can give.
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