My friend Michael Duduit, who writes regularly on preaching and is editor of Preaching magazine, talks about this latest protest movement that started in Wall Street and has since "occupied" a couple of dozen city parks across the nation. He says there's a better solution than protesting the amount of money somebody else makes or how little attention is given to the average citizen. Michael says "Here's a better bet: Occupy Worship. Meet the One who alone can satisfy your needs and breach the chasm caused by sin, and the best news is you don't even have to go to New York or any other city to Occupy Worship—you can demonstrate anywhere!"
I like the way Michael thinks. He reminds us that even if all the money earned by all the investment bankers and all the highly-paid executives of all the companies that are the target of these protests was spread around to the poor, it still wouldn't be enough. (Not to mention, most of the poor in the US have a thousand times more than the true poor overseas.) Why not? Because humanly, we never have enough. Even those highly-paid executives feel their lives would be better if they just made, say, 10% more. The solution, Michael rightly says, is to worship.
Now, by worship, Michael and I don't mean to turn on your favorite Christian song or hymn, sing along loudly, and pray. Closing our eyes and praying doesn't make our problems go away (it doesn't work for Tim Tebow in the backfield either). No, we're talking a deep, focused, sincere, whole-hearted, whole-life surrender to the One who owns eternity and has already accepted you, dear reader, as his beloved child. As we've been studying lately in the Beatitudes, a life "in Christ" means we have full access to the blessings of living in the love and acceptance of the Father through the Spirit (John 17:20-23, Col. 1:24-27, etc). "Christ is in you" says Paul, and he's not talking some metaphysical claptrap or fuzzy idea, but a spiritual reality.
Life -- real, authentic life -- is lived out in that reality, minute by minute. Not just "what would Jesus do?" but "Jesus, what are you doing and what would you have me do?" Offering ourselves as a living sacrifice (Romans 12:1) is what Paul calls "truly the way to worship him." Focusing on whole-life worship helps us understand that the momentary troubles of this life really are momentary. We don't ignore them, we work on them with the passion that Jesus had cleaning out the moneychangers (the honest and the dishonest together) from the Temple, in John 2:13-17, and the love he had when he healed the sick and provided bread for thousands.
Want something to occupy in protest of this world's sickness? Occupy, and be occupied by, Jesus-in-you, with everything you've got, and watch what happens! (And come back and tell me!)
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