People often think that being Christian is about “being religious,” but
loving others in the way that Christ instructs us is about as far removed from
religion as anything could be. Religion, as I use the term, is a system of
beliefs and behaviors one embraces as a means of getting life—whether this be
feeling close to God, one with the universe, or righteous before others.
While all religions, including the Christian religion, contain much wisdom
and do much good in the world, they also can do much harm. The harm is not only
in the vast amounts of blood they have spilled advancing their causes and
defending the correctness of their positions. It is found in the fact that they
may systematically prevent people from experiencing the love and life of God as
a free gift flowing to and through them. So long as one is trying to achieve a
relationship with God, he or she cannot receive a relationship with God by
grace.
In this light, the religion of Christianity is the most tragic example of the
harm religion sometimes causes. It is in some ways the most fundamental denial
of the life and message Jesus came to bring. For the fallen idolatrous behavior
of the Christian religion is carried out in the name of the One who came to set
us free from the need for idolatrous behavior.
We who are the body of Christ need to repent, individually and collectively.
We need to ask forgiveness from God, and from the world, for being religious. We
have striven to be religious when we were called to be loving. We need to
confess that we have sinned in the gravest fashion by frequently loving our
vision of truth and ethics more than people, and even God himself.
To cite a few examples of our sins of religion, historically, and still
today, we have not outrageously loved heretics. To the contrary, the church has
often burned them alive. The white church has not outrageously loved blacks:
Large segments of the American white church defended slavery and continue to
support racist social structures. The white church has not outrageously loved
Native Americans: In the name of Jesus it helped steal their land and extinguish
their culture. The church as a whole has not outrageously loved Jews, Muslims,
and other religious groups: We have rather frequently spoken evil of them and
warred against them. And we have not outrageously loved large groups of targeted
sinners whom we defined as outside our perimeters: prostitutes, gays, drug
addicts, murderers, and others. Instead of standing in solidarity with these and
all other sinners, we have eaten from the forbidden tree and constructed our own
self-serving sin list to determine who’s “in” and who’s “out.” We have judged
these people for whom Christ died and, rather than serve him, have often gone
out of our way to make their lives miserable.
Our life is not found in our correct doctrine or in our piety, as important
as these are. To get life from these things is religion. Our life is rather
found in Jesus Christ, and in Jesus Christ alone. When we repent of our religion
and commit to seeing God, ourselves, and every person we encounter only as he or
she is revealed in Jesus Christ, and as we allow God’s Spirit to express this
truth through our outrageous sacrificial love, the world will come to
acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord, as Jesus himself promised.
—Adapted from Repenting of Religion, 225-228 Greg Boyd
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