Sixteen years ago, I remember going to see Erin Brockovich when it came out in theaters. It was not just a great movie, but a great message and the fact that it was a true story, made it even better. There is one scene that came to mind this morning in our church staff meeting that just resonated with me in the topic of our Christian walk.
You see Erin Brockovich was tasked at her job in a law office to look through some old files. In her time on the job she discovered a case that needed to be unearthed. That led her to go out and find some more information. The problem was her boss thought she wasn’t showing up to work. He almost fired her when she was able to reveal what she found. They thought because she wasn’t in the office, she wasn’t working, but the truth is she was out there actually doing what the job required of her, and honestly, even more.
Too often, as Christians in America, we add church to our weekly calendar and continue on with life as if showing up to a church building on a Sunday is our job. Some go further by becoming a volunteer or by tithing and others may even attend a weekly small group or Bible Study. We get seen, get the God part of our life in and go about our daily checklist. It isn’t wrong to go to church and do all the things I listed in the sentences above, but is that really doing our job?
Matthew 28:18-20 - Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”
The church and more specifically, the building we meet in, does serve a purpose. If life were a football game, then getting together would be our time for practice and right before the game, a pep rally. But, the rally isn’t the game! More is expected of us. Some of us need to get in the game. We need to be more like Erin Brockovich. We need to be out there amongst the people if we ever want to do any Godly good. How are we to bring people to Christ if we aren’t actually spending time with people who don’t know God? Maybe we won’t be seen as much in “the office,” but if we are doing the job, isn’t that what matters? I’m not saying we should stop going to church, instead I am saying that one act shouldn’t define our religious experience. It shouldn’t just be about the act of going but the act of living like Christ in our daily lives.
I’m not a tract hander outer, and while that works for some, the best way we can show God to people is by being with them and loving them the way God would. That takes intentional living, not just going through the motions of the day to day but allowing God to lead you into the lives of people who are searching for a Savior.
Action Point: Are you really doing what God has asked you or have you become a cultural Christian? Take some time and seek God and discover what purposes He has for your life. What He is asking of you?
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