For followers of Jesus Christ, serving those who are poor or
on the margins is not something we might choose to do because we have a
particular passion for it as individuals. It’s not something for us to do on
the side when we feel like “giving back.” It’s not something Paul lists
alongside personal charisms like the
gift of prophecy or of speaking in tongues, which some might possess but not
others.
Serving those who are poor and on the margins is synonymous with being a Christian. Actually,
if we don’t do it, it gets very cloudy what exactly we’re talking about when we
say we are Christian. In fact, we can light candles, and start a prayer group
at work, and sing songs at church, and read our Bibles at a coffee shops, and
join a small group, and wear crosses over our hearts, and teach kids about
Daniel in the lion’s den, and hang a cross stitch of the “Serenity Prayer” over
our beds, and make spiritual pilgrimages, and sit through (bleckk!) church
regional gatherings, and any number of other things that are conventionally
recognized as “Christian” and, as far as we know, still have not done a single thing that Jesus ever did.
That doesn’t mean that those are bad things to do. I can and
have done most of them (not so crazy about cross stitch hangings), because at
some level I believe they’re important. But the tether linking all of that to
Jesus is admittedly convoluted as I loop and weave it through all kinds
traditions, preferences, cultural traits, and customs. Not so with serving
someone who is poor or on the margins. It characterizes almost every healing
story, teaching, or action of Jesus that we have in the gospels.
It’s wacky that so much of American Christianity talks so
much about evangelism and so little about serving those who are poor and on the
margins. Because if we’re not doing the latter in some way, nobody knows or
cares what exactly we’re talking about when we call ourselves disciples of
Jesus.
Serving those who are poor and on the margins is a way of
interpreting the meaning of the word Christian. If not for that, our cultural
paradigms will be quick fill the void and interpret that word for us. And those
interpretations are almost always exactly wrong—like, not a little bit, two
plus two equals five off but, like, opposite day, forward is back, hot snow
falls up, Ryan Leaf should have been drafted over Peyton Manning wrong.
Jesus, as far as we know, focused on just about everything
but the family. He didn’t support “Christian” radio. He would apparently choose a party over piety
every time. He was neither meek nor mild, and there were a lot of people to
whom he wasn’t even particularly nice. And Ricky Bobby’s preferences
notwithstanding, the gospels are notably short on stories of Jesus as a child
beyond the two mentions in Matthew and Luke that don’t go much beyond
suggesting that he was one once. Jesus, as far as we know, was silent on
contraception, masturbation, and homosexuality, despite the fact that these
were all hot button issues in the holy book of his religious upbringing. He
seemed to hate adultery on principle, and yet, we only have stories of him
forgiving and standing up for adulterers, not a peep about him condemning one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5A0-u85aAYg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5A0-u85aAYg
What we do know, beyond any doubt whatsoever, though, is
that adult Jesus had a huge heart and a tireless endurance for serving those
who are poor and on the margins.
So why is it that in church councils and annual meetings
everywhere, when an idea comes along for how to serve the ones whom Jesus
specifically calls blessed, the burden of proof is always on the idea person to
show why that would be an appropriate thing for a church to do? Shouldn’t the
burden of proof always be on the naysayers to show why serving them wouldn’t be
an appropriate thing for a church to do?
If the burden of proof can be shifted in the other direction,
then maybe my five favorite board room objections will be seen for what they
are and discredited. With any luck, maybe we can just ban them from the
Christian lexicon altogether and go about serving those who are poor and on the
margins like disciples do.
1) “We need to take care of our own first.”
The person who raises this objection seems to have no
interest in Jesus’ way of doing things. You would think, at the very least,
they’d be curious why he takes every opportunity to contradict them.
2) “Why are we
traveling to [x] when there are people to help here in our own backyard?”
I’ve met many people who have raised this objection. Never
has one of them ever been caught serving the people “in our own backyard.” This
is not unexpected. People who actually extend themselves to serve anyone beyond
their own inner circle in significant ways are operating out of a worldview of
grace. And people with a worldview of grace don’t draw geographical either/ors.
3) “We would love to give to [x] but someone has to pay the
bills.”
The average Christian in North American gives away about
2.2% of their income. I’m sure it wouldn’t work out quite this neatly, but the
mathematical fact is that if every Christian worldwide gave 10% (which isn’t
Jesus’ ideal for us but is just a somewhat arbitrary biblical benchmark)
hunger, water insecurity and lack of education would be solved across the globe
overnight. That we would sit there in a council meeting and mince words about
how to divide up 2.2% of the pie to balance the budget rather than asking why anyone
in the world is still hungry while we all sit here with hearts of stone, is a
disgrace to the Gospel. Sure we will always fall short of the radical
self-sacrifice to which the Gospel calls us, but at least repent for that and
trust in God’s grace for crying out loud, don’t try to justify it with sensible
sounding words about the electricity bill. You feed them. What? You mean you
only have two fish and five loaves? Uh huh, uh huh, sure…Hey listen, you feed
them!
4) “Well we would love to open up our campus to something
like that, but then wouldn’t we have them
you know…loitering around?”
Firstly, people don’t usually just want to hangout around
your church property for no reason. Just trust me, they don’t. But if they
should happen to, hypothetically, congratulations! They’re people. And you’re a
church.
5) “But won’t somebody please think of the children!”
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