Thursday, July 12

Mere Christianity


Last week at my new home church, Harvest Bible Chapel, they opened the service with a video testimony of one of the worship leaders. He had achieve success in the music business at a young age when his band, the Smoking Popes, was signed by a major record deal. In usual Behind The Music fashion, he quickly got swept up in alcohol and drugs and a feeling of loneliness. He eventually turned his life around and dedicated his life to serving Christ through his music, and he attributed this to reading C.S. Lewis's masterpiece Mere Christianity.

After hearing his story, I felt inspired to read Mere Christianity again. I first bought and read the book as a senior in high school, at that time in life where I began to think and ask questions and doubt everything I'd ever been taught about everything. Reading Mere Christianity was the single most impacting event that transformed my faith, and it did so for three reasons:
1. It reestablished my beliefs.
The book begins assuming the reader is starting with a clean slate. It begins with a proof of a Creator, builds upon that foundation to defend that Creator as the God of the Old Testament, and eventually the Jesus of the New Testament. This is perfect with any doubts of God's existence or Christ's divinity.
2. It reaffirmed my faith.
I knew I was a Christian. I knew I believed that Jesus Christ was the son of God. But I really didn't know why I believed that other than I had been told those very things from birth. Lewis explains things in such a way that I felt silly for ever doubting the basic tenets of Christianity.
3. It revitalized my confidence in Christianity.
Lewis's wisdom and intellectual power made me feel proud to be able to call myself a follower of Christ. Not only that, but his numerous expressions of God's love for His children made me all the more excited to be counted as one of His.

So after I removed Mere Christianity from my shelf, blew off the dust that had accumulated, and began reading it again, I shouldn't have been surprised by its continued relevancy in my life, even though I am 5 years wiser, spiritually and otherwise. But I was.

Lewis's writing voice continues to amaze me. Even after four years of undergrad level study in the areas of English, in which I read unceasingly, and Writing, in which I study the art of shaping sentences. His command of the English language is impressive, powerful, and smile-inducing. And even though I consider my walk with Christ light years beyond what I was as I read Mere Christianity for the first time, this read through is not without its lessons.

For example, in his "What Christians Believe" section, Lewis comments on the three ways in which we enter in the "new life" of Christianity, baptism, belief, and communion, as ways in which we "share the humility and suffering of Christ." And by participating in these sacraments, we are "keeping up a life [we] got from someone else." A life, Lewis calls a "Christ-life" because it is like "Christ operating" through us, which we causes us to do "good," but one which we can lose if we don't keep it up.

We are the body of Christ, as Romans 7, Corinthians 11, and Lewis explain ("we are the physical organism through which Christ acts"), and the three processes in which we maintain His body are metaphors for how we maintain our earthly bodies. Belief is the mental process through which we spread this new life of Christ in us. Baptism and Holy Communion are the physical, or "bodily" acts which spread life: baptism, the cleansing and purification of the body, communion, the nourishment of the body.

I always knew communion and baptism, and, of course, belief, were important aspects of a continually growing Christian life. And I always approached every one of these processes with reverence, but not until reading Lewis's description of why these rituals are significant did I really "get it." Never again will I view them without the respect and seriousness they really deserve.

Now I'm finding myself craving the Word more, and looking forward to learning more lessons from Lewis.

Monday, July 2

Update: Job, Beatles, Noah, Oden, etc.


Here are some thoughts since my last post of June 15:

-God provides. I applied for about 40 or 50 jobs from February to June and I only heard back from two. One in March that didn't go anywhere, and then another less than a week after I just up and moved to Palatine with no real clear prospects. That second call resulted in a phone interview the next week, a real interview the following week, then a job offer three days later. And of all the jobs to call me back, it's the closest to where I currently live. It can only be explained as God's direct intervention. I am blessed.

-I love The Beatles. I watched the eight-chapter, five-disk Anthology and it only made me want more. I dare anyone to listen to "A Day in the Life" and tell me it is not one of the best songs ever written. Double dare. Oh, and The Beatles cover band American English was surprisingly entertaining (Palatine Fest). Their Paul was even left-handed. I was empressed.

-The Bulls drafted Joakim Noah which makes me very unhappy. I don't like his cockiness and primadonna attitude (and did you see what he wore to the draft? Seersucker suit and a bowtie?), but I guess his energy works in the Bulls' system. It's not a deal breaker for me, unlike my buddy Jason who said, "There goes my interest in season tickets." I'm not that mad. I only wish we could have gotten more low-post scoring, the one thing we need to make a finals run next year. Perhaps GM John Paxson will swing a deal, perhaps shipping out Chris Duhon and Ben Gordon or Andres Nocioni for a big guy. It's just a shame that I'll have to see his goofy self donning my team's uni for the unforeseeable future.

-Speaking of the draft, way to go Greg Oden! He was chosen by the Portland Trailblazers with the number one pick. They showed video from his arrival in Portland on Sportscenter, and he was dancing around, smiling from ear-to-ear. I love this kid, and I'm glad he's the face of a franchise that's really trying to do something great with young players who are equal parts talented players and quality individuals. And congrats to Mike Conley, as well, getting drafted number four by Memphis. I couldn't be more honored and proud as a Buckeye fan than to be able to say these two guys spent a year in Columbus, sporting the Scarlet and Gray.

-There is no excuse for me not getting better at guitar this summer and fall. Its not like I have a lot to do (at least until July 16). I just wish the F chords and B chords were easier. The fact that I have the hands of a 7th grade girl doesn't help.