Confessions

I have a confession. I am an NPR junkie. I listen every day to my local public radio station, KSTX, and shows like “Fresh Air”, “Talk of the Nation”, “The World” and “All Things Considered”. Today I heard a news story about a complaint made to a school concerning Bible verses on banners at football games. A group, Freedom from Religion, asked that verses be banned from banners. That infuriated me. For one thing I am a Christian and I believe the Bible is the inspired word of God. For another thing, I live in the United States. We still have the First Amendment, don’t we? Whether I’m a Christian, a Mormon, a Jew, or a Muslim, I have the right to say whatever I want to say.

The school district buckled under, separation of church and state, you know. But the school isn’t forcing the students to put Bible verses on their banners; it is their own idea. And that’s First Amendment rights. Not church and state.

Many Christians will lament that there is a war on Christianity in our country. We can’t mention Jesus, can’t wish a Merry Christmas, can’t pray before public events. We blame the government and groups like the Freedom From Religion. But I think the blame rests first with ourselves.

I live in an area of my city that has a high population of Jewish believers. There is a synagogue on a major road that leads to my subdivision. On the Jewish sabbath and other holy days, it is not unusual to see Jews walking to worship, crossing four lanes of traffic, pushing baby strollers, sunshine or rain. They are walking while all the rest of the world is whipping by them at forty-five miles an hour, if they are obeying the speed limit. The Jews are counter-cultural. They have ample evidence that there is a war on Judaism. And yet, they walk as their religion dictates while the world does what the world is going to do.

So the war on Christianity. My theory is that if everyone who called, or even thought, themselves to be a Christian, even if it was just Christians who actually went to church, if all of those Christians stood up and lived as Jesus modeled and taught how to live, our culture would look very different. There would be visible evidence in things like Bible verses on  football game banners, praying out loud before a public event, using the name of Jesus seriously and not as a thoughtlessly tossed pejorative, and wishing everyone a Merry Christmas during the appropriate time of year. More than that it would be treating others as I would have others treat me. It would be considering the interests of others above my own interests. It would be exhibiting a character distinguished by love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness,  and self-control. The war on Christianity? Game over or, at least, changed.

Even as I write these highfalutin words, my conscience is pricked. Just yesterday, I had an opportunity to pray out loud before a non-church meeting. Christians were present as well as non-Christians. I was confident I would not be chastised and yet I failed to pray as if I was talking to God.  I failed to pray in Jesus’ name. I failed.

My challenge to myself and to you, dear reader, is to be counter-cultural. If you are a Christian, live as you believe Jesus would have you live no matter what is going on around you. Let the traffic whiz while you walk. Let the world do what the world will do. As for me, I will follow my Lord Jesus.

[click here to see the news story about the football banners mentioned above]

8 thoughts on “Confessions

  1. Kay this is extremely good! You are so right about people. As for me I shall keep following Jesus! I also want to wish you and Butch an early Merry Christmas! You know that I’m outspoken and I will continue to try to live as Jesus would want.

  2. As you say, “it’s a free country”. My problem with it is that the loud mouthed minority seem to get to do all the ‘saying’. If we truly have ‘religeous freedom’ then the courts should let the ones who want to show off their Christian beliefs should have equal time with those who don’t!
    When I was a high school principal some of my students came to me wanting to know if they could be allowed to pray before the game. I told them that the courts had said that there could not be any public prayer but that if someone in the crowd was loud enough they might be able to get a bunch of people to follow along with them to have a prayer and there would be nothing anyone could do about it since it wasn’t part of the official set up of the game.
    Next game one of the fathers brought along a battery powered portable loudspeaker and from somewhere in the stands asked anyone who would like to join him and his family to bow their heads and pray. He then proceded to offer a heart-felt beautiful prayer. It became a custom and no one could stop them since he was a private citizen and exercising his rights from in the stands and was not part of the official set up of the game or the school or school district.
    There is more than one way to skin a cat beside pulling his fur over his ears. (apologies to all the cats in the crowd!)

  3. I think most Americans need to be reminded of what the First Amendment “actually” says: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”

    — The First Amendment

    Sounds like to me the students have every right to put Bible verses on banners if they choose. I’m tired of a very few deciding “which speech should be allowed and which should not”

  4. Trey spoke of this very subject at our Wednesday night class @ FPC. Sadly, there were only 10 people there to hear him. When are we going to DEMAND to be the majorit? When we stop being “Anonymous Christians”! Thanks for sharing your thoughts and your challenge.

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