Jesus Doesn’t Want To Be A Part Of Your Life

Zack —  August 10, 2012 — 11 Comments

 

 

The particular words we choose to use have meaning and that meaning matters.

A few weeks ago I tried to highlight this issue in a post about the go to evangelism pitch “Jesus loves you just the way you are”.

As I said in that post, we toss that phrase around without really thinking through what those words actually, or perhaps I should say literally, mean.

Well, there’s another classic evangelism pitch that I want to examine, one which I think is equally problematic, but which I think has had an even more devastating effect on the church.

In our seemingly desperate bid to “win souls for Jesus” (a rather pagan and not particularly Biblical sentiment), we often implore our potential converts with the words “Jesus just wants to be a part of your life, wont you let him?”.

Like the assertion that Jesus loves you just the way you are, this plea simply isn’t true.

Somewhere between Paul’s call to die to self and the modern age we’ve giving up on the radical call of the Christian faith. Apparently conceding the fact that most people don’t want to literally give up everything to follow Jesus, we’ve scaled things back. While the New Testament describes following Jesus as an all consuming endeavor that requires our own death so that we may become slaves to God, we’ve replaced that radical call with an invitation for people to simply make a little space so that Jesus can squeeze in and become a part of their life, alongside work, family, hobbies, etc.

Obviously, we don’t phrase it that literally. After all, our goal is to “get sinners to the altar”. We can explain the details later. The problem, however, is that when we aren’t careful with the way we present the gospel, we inevitably end up participating in “bait and switch” ministry.”

Nobody, at least very few of us, wants to give up everything, literally everything we have. We worked hard for the stuff we have. Our relationships our important too us. We’re comfortable right where we are. So, the odds that many people will respond to a radical call like “drop your nets”, “sell everything you have and give it to the poor”, or “die to self” just aren’t that high and I think we realize that. So, in our numbers=success culture, we’ve made our evangelism pitch more palatable to the uninitiated.

We tell them on the front end that Jesus only wants to be a part of their life, with the thought being that later on we will explain to them that Jesus actually wants all of their life.

That is called bait and switch ministry.

We may not realize we’re doing it, but it happens all the time. There are lots of forms of bait and switch ministry (it’s an epidemic in youth ministry), but this particular form has become incredibly problematic for the church.

Spend any time amongst church leaders, both clergy and lay, and you’re likely to hear them vent their frustrations over not being able to get people more involved in the life of the church. As someone who was in ministry for the better part of the last decade I can tell that it seems like the church is fighting a never ending battle against layity schedules which are being increasingly consumed by school, work, sports, family activities, etc, while time for church gets more and more squeezed out of the picture.

To be honest, I don’t think we have anyone but ourselves to blame for the compartmentalization and subsequent apathy that plagues so many of our churches.

When we tell people that Jesus just wants to be a part of their lives, we shouldn’t be surprised when Jesus ends up only being a part of their lives.

The words we choose to use matter. They have meaning and that meaning shapes our response. So, when we tell people that Jesus loves them just the way they are, we shouldn’t be surprise when their lives change very little after “coming to Christ” because if Jesus love them just the way they are, why do they need to change anything?

Likewise, if Jesus just wants to be a part of their life, we shouldn’t be so upset or surprised to find that the church and their faith is something that they participate in only when they have the extra time. After all, didn’t we tell them that Jesus only wants to be a part of their life?

I know that this critique may be difficult, if not impossible to hear. Those of us who have grown up in the church know that the call of the gospel is a life of total devotion to Jesus. So, when we say something like “Jesus just wants to be a part of your life”, we “really mean” that he wants your entire life. The problem, however, is that others don’t hear what we’re thinking, they hear what we are saying.

The words we speak really do matter. When we get so desperate to have more butts in the pews at church that we tweak our words so that they become less offensive it is the entire world that suffers.

The truth is that Jesus doesn’t want to be a part of your life. He wants to be your entire life. Discipleship isn’t a part time endeavor, it’s a 24/7 way of life. Being a follower of Jesus isn’t something that can be relegated to an hour on Sunday mornings. He must be pursued and embodied every moment of every day. When we lead others to believe otherwise, even if unintentionally, we aren’t just confusing them, we’re preaching a false gospel, the result of which is a church defined by compartmentalization and apathy and the result of that is the inability to answer our call to bring the kingdom of heaven down to earth.

I’ll say it one last time, the words we use matter. If we tell people on the front end that Jesus demands everything from them, that simple intellectual assent and part time Christianity are not acceptable, we will certainly see fewer people “run down to the altars”. But as Jesus said, the road is narrow and difficult that leads to eternal life and few find it.

As the church, the success of our mission is not based on how many names are on our membership rolls, but on whether or not we truthfully proclaim the gospel and how authentically we live it out.

So, as a church we must be honest with ourselves and with those outside our doors.

Jesus doesn’t want to be a part of our world.

He wants all of it.

 

Grace and peace,

Zack Hunt

Zack

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  • Andy Unnerstall

    “When we tell people that Jesus just wants to be a part of their lives, we shouldn’t be surprised when Jesus ends up only being a part of their lives.”
    THIS!
    Also, I used to go to a mega-church that asked for “three hours a week: serve an hour, study an hour, and worship an hour.” It drove me crazy because it completely missed the point. And it was the punchline to an actually great sermon about priorities in our lives. Of course, in my observation, those teaching this kind of thought are the same folks lamenting the loss of our Christian heritage in this country. Frustrating.

  • Shawn

    Zack, this one is brilliant! This really should be your next video. & why did you not re-post some of the videos during the mad rush from all the liberals & non-Christians last week? :) Again, Zack, this was really good!

  • Jane

    On the other hand, someone allowing Jesus to be “just a part of my life” will be in for a surprise because Jesus has a way of cleverly inserting Himself into everywhere He can find to go. :-) Anne Lamott in Bird By Bird says that when you invite God to come into your life, you expect some changes, and God comes in, measures everything, and says He’ll spruce it up. You figure new curtains, and then one day you look out the window to find a backhoe and a wrecking ball in your driveway. :-)

    Since it’s the Holy Spirit who makes converts in the first place, maybe getting someone to give Jesus just “a part” of their life is a good first step. Then the Holy Spirit takes over. :-)

    • Stan

      No, you have to wholeheartedly agree to have Jesus be your Lord, meaning you have to devote your whole life to him. Getting Jesus to be part of their life as a first step is shallow and it doesn’t mean anything to God. Either you’re hot or cold, not lukewarm.

      • Jane

        I don’t think most people know *how* to give Jesus their whole life when they start. That’s why baby steps are important, and the Holy Spirit can work with what you give. You give your loaf and suddenly you’ve got twelve baskets.

        In other words, that first step is necessary but not sufficient.

        • Stan

          True, baby steps are important and training is necessary. However, the most important thing as the first step is to declare if you wholeheartedly want to follow Jesus with all your life and let Jesus be your whole life. Then Holy Spirit will begin to work in you. You don’t have to know everything when you make a decision. Once you make your decision, you can’t look back. Luke 9:57-62.

          Not “I want Jesus to be part of my life because I don’t know how.”

          • Karen

            Well, yes, but then we have the father of the epileptic son who cried out to Jesus, “Lord, I believe. Help my unbelief!” (Mark 9:23-25). And Jesus was still able to heal his son. We also have the parable in Matthew 21:28-32. And Jesus’ parable of the sower and the soils (Luke 8:4-11). It is not as important, perhaps, how we start out as how we finish in the race of faith.

            Attempting to follow Christ now for more than 4 decades, I’m leery of making God any promises only to disappoint Him again. I have learned the hard way God’s promises are worth a heck of a lot more than mine and that I am far better off on my face asking for help than making grand vows of obedience. So I throw myself again and again on His mercy asking for His help to rise from where I have fallen. He is faithful, and for that I am tremendously grateful!

    • Karen

      I love Anne Lamott’s humorous description of this. It is so true that this is how God has to work for all of us on some level. I haven’t heard many people who would have signed up to follow Christ had they known all that He had in store for them in terms of struggle and painful change. Thank God, He understands our weaknesses and is willing to work with what we give Him, even when it is imperfect.

      On the other hand, using Anne’s illustration and perhaps a little more to Zack’s point here, we can very well tell God we “like those curtains thank you very much, but enough is enough and You can just take that backhoe and wrecking ball out of my driveway. I’m not signing up for that!” The scary thing is if we persist in that attitude, honoring our freewill God will let us and allow our crumbling decrepit house to continue to fall down around us. We do have that choice.

  • http://www.thechurchofnopeople.com Matt @ The Church of No People

    Dang, Zack. Amazing how those little un-truths creep in, so quietly, so innocuously. Great work!

  • Pat

    If Jesus did became all of someone’s life, they would probably show up at church events even less often.

  • http://www.facebook.com/david.j.brancecum David Brancecum Jr

    Very Honest and thought provoking, Thanks for the article, it is a very important discussion to have in the church if we are serious about salvation. :-)