One day, while attending the Kingdom Bound Christian Music festival, I
couldn't help but notice two seagulls bickering over half of a hot dog
bun. One arrogantly held the prized piece in its beak while the other
one was making itself hoarse with vulgar quibble. The one with the bun
turned and ran (Wouldn't you???), but the second, less fortunately gull,
followed closely behind. In its haste the lucky gull dropped its prize
and the bun broke in two. It quickly grabbed up one of the pieces and
swallowed it whole (I had no idea they had such big mouths! Or should I
say beaks!). The second gull then grabbed the other half of the bun and
flew away.
I had to wonder: Wouldn't it have been a more pleasant
experience if they had just shared the bun with one another?
These two seagulls remind me of how much Christianity has become known
for its incessant bickering over doctrines: "I am right, you need to do
this this way!" "No, I am right, you have to do it MY way!"
To
tell you the truth, neither of them is right! Both sides have deviate
from Jesus' main message: "Love one another. As I have loved you, so you
must love one another." (John 13:34 NIV)
Didn't Jesus emphasize
this message? Didn't He say that the world would recognize His followers
by their love? "By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if
you love one another." (John 13:35 NIV)
Promoting a God of
doctrine does not promote unity. It promotes discord! Take, for example,
the Egyptian Christians of the Byzantine period. The Orthodox Christians
of that time insisted that Jesus had one nature, both divine and human,
without separation (Called monophysitism). The Coptic Christians
emphasized also that Jesus had only a single nature, but retained all
the characteristics of both the divine and human nature (Called
Miaphysitism).
That's religion for you, no one agrees with one
another!
And when the Muslim general Amr ibn al-As crossed to
conquer Egypt, the Coptic Christians were so tired of the harassment of
the Orthodox Christians that many of them actually helped the invaders!
Does this single doctrine even promote Jesus' main message of love?
"I pray also for those who will believe in me through their message,
that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in
you. May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have
sent me." (John 17:20-21 NIV) Notice that Jesus says it is by unity that
to the world will know that our message is legitimate!
More often
than not we are like these bickering seagulls, fighting over a morsel of
dried-up food, all the while ignoring the buffet that God Himself has
prepared for us. We didn't become Christians so that we could fight with
one another. We did that before we became Christians! Instead, we were
touched by Jesus' unending love, and this is what motivated us to want
to get to know Him better!
Where have we gone wrong? Have we
forgotten the Parable of the Good Samaritan? Have we become like the
legalized Pharisees who, though Jesus was in their midst, couldn't even
recognize Him?
It is time that we drop our differences and start
following Jesus. Let's follow in His steps by promoting real love and
real life, not the fossilized doctrines of religious institutions.
"From him the whole body, joined and held together by every
supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love, as each part
does its work." (Eph 4:16)
Remember 1 Cor 8:1 "Knowledge puffs
up, but love builds up."
Will we continue to fight for our morsel
of doctrine? Or are we going to start sharing what Jesus came to this
planet for?
Only in love and unity can we truly worship the One
who came to save us from dire misery.
"But it's the ONLY way! You
have to believe it!"
"That's fine. Have I ever told you that I
love you?"
Rob Chaffart