Monday, March 05, 2012

We are a rebellious lot

Mark 12.1-12

It was a beautiful, warm spring day in Sioux Falls, SD. I was sitting on the plaza outside my dorm at Augustana College reading the Sunday paper. Many of my fellow students were walking to worship on campus or were leaving in cars for worship services around town. That had not been my habit for several months. In fact, I hadn’t really had much to do with God or the things of God for several months. I had done what many young men and women do after high school. I had checked out of the whole church, following Jesus thing. I was enjoying freedom and not giving God his due. I was having a revolt against the God and the faith I grew up with.

As I sat there reading the paper, a great sense of conviction came over me. Something had been missing from my life and it had been showing. I knew it. I knew why. I had been in rebellion from the One who gave my life grounding and focus. At that moment, I set my paper down, walked to my car, and drove to St. Mark’s Lutheran Church. That day I met a man who would become an important mentor in my life, Gary Schwerin. In God’s grace, when I ended my rebellion, God had someone waiting in the wings to help me get back on track. It was one of the most important moments in my faith journey.

I mentioned earlier that my story is typical of many people in the years following high school. Recent research by the Barna Group, a social research company that focuses on religious beliefs and practices, shows that 59 percent of 18- to 29-year olds with a Christian background drop out of attending church, after attending regularly. Almost 40 percent say they have gone through a time when they significantly doubted their faith. (Kinnaman, David. You Lost Me. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2011).

Dropping out is not the only kind of rebellion. Last weekend several of our youth group members went to a great youth event called Planet Wisdom. This year’s theme was focused on the importance of the Bible to one’s faith. One of the speakers introduced us to the work of Michael Novelli. Novelli stepped back and looked at the Bible from a broad perspective and identified seven movements in the story of God and God’s relationship with humankind. At creation, people and God enjoyed a close relationship. But you only have to go three chapters into Genesis before that close relationship is disrupted by human rebellion. And from that time on, the Bible tells of the story of God’s great love for us, God’s mission to redeem us, and God’s patience with us as we continue to rebel by going our own way and doing our own thing.

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