Sunday, June 14, 2020

A Call for a Different Flag

Salaman: “You’re either with us or against us!”
Philip: ”I’m not with you, neither am I against you!”
Salaman: “Can he do that?”
Jack Sparrow: “He’s religious. I believe it’s required.”
           —Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides

*****

I can’t say I was the biggest fan of the fourth Pirates of the Caribbean movie, but I can say that this quote has stuck in my head for the last 9 years (since I first saw the film). Jack Sparrow has an unexpected knack for wisdom sometimes, and I believe this is one of those times.

As I expand, perhaps I should clarify up front that, in this post, I aim to speak to the Church, to my brothers and sisters in Christ. The rest of y’all, I love you—but this message is for those who, like me, have called Christ their Savior and Lord.

You’ve all, I’m sure, seen enough of the news and of social media to agree that the cacophony of voices sounds a lot like that first line quoted above. Everybody’s yelling, “You’re either with us or against us!” Opinions rise like forest fires, and it seems like every day we’re bombarded not just with opinions on one cause but by brand new causes (or old causes that somebody thought needed emphasis now). We started with opinions on COVID-19, then we got opinions about stay-at-home orders and masks and proper ways to clean things and who gets to work and what it all means. And then came the opinions about racism and protests and riots and police and social justice and all number of other things that one person or another has decided relates to any of these topics. Then we got opinions about politicians and voting and...the list goes on.

And I’m sick of it.

Hear me well: It’s not the mass bombardment of opinions that disturbs me. That’s been going on for years—decades, centuries...keep on counting.

What bothers me is this: The bombardment of opinions and the aggressive—even threatening—demand for alliance to cause after cause is coming not just from the world but from Christians.

Guys. We already have a flag. And in our pursuit of other banners to raise in the name of justice or safety or whatever else has become the catchphrase of the day, I believe we have been letting that flag drag in the dirt.

Look, the world is doing its best to advocate for what it thinks is right and good. But it’s lost; it’s screaming for causes because it doesn’t know what else to do.

Why are we listening? Why are we caving to the demands of a world that can’t even see the battle that we wage as Christians every day? Have we lost sight of the fact that the real battle is and always has been one “not against flesh and blood but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms” (Eph. 6:12, NIV 1984)?

Don’t you see? The enemy is having a hey-day right now. He doesn’t care what cause you pick if it means he can get you to set down the banner of Christ in order to hold another flag. He doesn’t care what you fear as long as you fear something. He knows that every time we give into fear we’ve given him ground.

Every cause that’s being proclaimed right now has some element of good in it. But we know, don’t we, what happens when we make a good thing an ultimate thing? Any banner we choose to hold besides the banner of Christ is idolatry.

And I tell you as strongly as I know how: The banner of Christ doesn’t look like any of the causes that are being thrown around in this global tug-of-war.

What does our banner look like?

It’s a banner that says when we’re slapped in the face, we don’t go out and hold a protest. We turn our other cheek and let ourselves be slapped again.

It’s a banner that says we clothe our enemies with love.

It’s a banner that says we let people steal from us—no, more than that! We give them more than what they were trying to steal.

It’s a banner that never gives an ear to worry and never lets fear or concern for safety be a reason for any action.

It’s a banner that says righteousness is primary and that the humble get heaven.

It’s a banner that blesses the peacemakers and the ones who work out their salvation in their closets while still being lights to the world.

It’s a banner that says we don’t pay any attention when someone says, “Look, here is our salvation!” or, “No, salvation’s over there!” We know where our Messiah is, and we know that it’s the meek who get to see Him.

Ours is a banner that advocates death as the path to life.

Ours is a banner that advocates suffering as the path to virtue.

Ours is a banner that advocates the kind of love that the world will call pathological, self-sabotaging, and absolutely foolish.

Because it is foolish. It’s always been foolish. 

But I ask you—in tears—will you let that banner drop because the world says it is foolish? Will you let that banner drop because some other cause is ringing more loudly in your ears than your Master’s voice? Will you let that banner drop because you fear men who might kill or shame your body? Have you lost your fear of the One who holds your soul?

My challenge for you, my brothers and sisters—beloved ones who make up the Body of Christ, the Church—is this: Follow HIM. Please. I beg you. Look into His face. Listen to His voice. I guarantee you that His voice is not going to sound like any of the rampant, raging causes that are demanding your alliance. He is the whisper in the whirlwind. He’s the One who says there’s a lot more going on here than the world realizes, the One who’s asking us to pay attention to what He is up to, not to what the world is proffering on its idolatrous tables.

My call to you is, quite simply, what Peter says in II Peter 3:11-14:
Since everything will be destroyed in this way, what kind of people ought you to be? You ought to live holy and godly lives as you look forward to the day of God and speed its coming. That day will bring about the destruction of the heavens by fire, and the elements will melt in the heat. But in keeping with His promise we are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, the home of righteousness. So then, dear friends, since you are looking forward to this, make every effort to be found spotless, blameless and at peace with Him. (NIV 1984, emphasis added)
Friends, nothing else matters. Our mission is to point people to Jesus—our existence on this planet is for the sole cause of introducing people to Him, of bringing His Kingdom here, even as He did.

If you find any other flag in your hands, I suggest you drop it. Drop it, and start living in all things the sort of life that our Lord has called us to live: a life of humility, a life focused on righteousness and love, a life that reflects Him.

We’ve been given a Kingdom that heals sickness, casts out demons, dissipates social divides, and throws world systems on their heads through humility and forgiveness, not through uproar. We have nothing to fear. And, on top of that, we’ve got a world before us that is crying out in agony for help.

Let’s help it, then, not by abandoning our flag to take up its causes but by holding our flag up with more courage than we’ve had before. We help the world not by seeking its life but by calling for its death—by calling for repentance and surrender to the King and to the Kingdom that is truly life.

So let us look to Him, lay down all other flags, and hold up His. We are neither for the world nor against it. We are for Christ. And we’re religious, so yes, Jack: that’s required.

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Belshazzar's Lesson

Clang! The brassy sound pierced my ears and caused quite an unfortunate jump in my poor arm, which had been up to that minute most expertly engaged in an elaborate pouring of wine into the three precariously-suspended goblets that swayed in the uplifted hands of my esteemed table guests. Fortunately, the nobleman whose lap I graced with a new splash of purple was already lost in such a wave of slovenly stupor that he didn't even seem to notice my addition to his wardrobe.

Deciding not to alert him of my mistake, I turned instead to see what had made the dreadful noise. It was easy enough to discover. The king had dropped his goblet. Another servant was already running over to amend the situation, but his efforts to restore the vessel to its master's hand were rejected by a loud hiccup and a drooling laugh. The king shoved the goblet away, and the servant's robe received a splash of purple nearly matching the one I had just given my guest. "Ahaha, not that one!" the king gurgled. "Leave it on the floor! I've got—hiccup—a better idea! Bring out the gold, the silver—all those fine goblets my dear ol' father stole from that blasted temple in Jerusalem! Ha! A toast to the fallen gods of Israel, let us say." He motioned carelessly to the servant still holding his old goblet. "Go, find them for me, will you? Bring 'em out, and we'll all have a toast!"

The servant hurried away. He was followed by four or five other servants who understood that the chore wasn't nearly something that could be handled with one set of hands. Not long after, they returned with the requested drinkware, and my ears received uncountable echoes of the first abhorrent clang as the king's thousand guests celebrated this new opportunity by throwing their own goblets onto the floor. Laughter and uproarious exclamations followed, each man trying to bend his drunken brain to yield some sort of eloquent monologue of support for the king's decision.

Trying my best to ignore the commotion—and to dodge the flying chalices—I focused my attention on gathering the old goblets and mopping up the puddles of wine that were most in the way of my fellow servants' frantic efforts to ensure the guests' new goblets were kept full through their series of toasts.

The king, now standing on his throne with two gold chalices raised in his hands (and wine tipping out of both of them), began a ceremonious soliloquy in salute of a long line of gods: gods of silver, gods of gold, gods of iron, gods of stone, gods of wood, gods of bronze...and some other suite of deities whose names were garbled in his slobbering speech.

Then suddenly his monologue was abruptly stopped—mid-word, I think (if the syllables he was saying at the time were actually going to become words at all). I looked up from my diligent wine-puddle mopping to see what had silenced him, and my heart froze. He looked as though he had seen a ghost. His whole body was stiff, unmoving. The blood had drained from his face, and even the drool that had been running down his cheeks seemed to halt in its tracks. His eyes were bulging out of his fat face, the lids growing wider and wider as he stared at something on the wall to my left.

I turned slowly to see what had summoned his terrified attention, and my own eyes widened in horror as I saw—on the wall right next to the lamp stand—a hand. A human hand, I mean—a hand unattached to any visible body—just a hand by itself, writing on the wall. I rubbed my eyes in disbelief. I hadn't so much as tasted a drop of the alcohol I had been serving, but part of me wished I had, if only to give myself an excuse for the vision I was witnessing. But the hand remained, and it wrote a message on the plaster of the wall that was as illegible to my eyes as my king's jumbled speech had been unintelligible to my ears moments before.

The hand vanished when its message was complete, but the writing remained. I turned my gaze back to the king. He was still standing, frozen, on his throne. His body was shaking now, and the drool on his lips had been wiped away. A glance at the rest of the room showed me that all the others had seen it too. All were silent, still, gripped by terror.

Then suddenly the king spoke up again, clearly this time: "The enchanters! Call them. Call them now. Get the astrologers and diviners—all the wise men of Babylon. I want all of them here now."¹ His gaze never left the writing on the wall as he spoke, but three servants dashed out of the room to fulfill his wish as the king muttered on, "Whoever reads this writing and tells me what it means will be clothed in purple and have a gold chain placed around his neck, and he will be made the third highest ruler in the kingdom."

The servants returned in record time with all the wise men they could find. Trembling with fear, these respected folk gathered around the writing on the wall, their eyes wide and their faces tense. After a few moments, I could hear them whispering, and soon they had to tell the bewildered king: Not one of them had the slightest clue what the writing said.

At this, the king sank into his throne. His whole body was shaking miserably, and his face became even whiter with worry. The thousand nobles around him were of no more help than the wise men. They stared at the wall, blinking in helplessness. The whole room was baffled.

Then, suddenly, a flash of bright movement caught my eye near the door where the wise men had just entered. If my eyes could have widened more than they already were, they certainly did. It was the queen. Her beauty on a normal day was striking, but in this terror-stricken scene, she seemed other-worldly. Her jet black hair and graceful manner sparked a strange hope in my soul even before her steady voice broke the silence of the room.

"O king, live forever!" she said. The king's gaze darted her way, and she strode up to him with poise, not flinching as the attention of the room shifted from the ghostly writing to her regal face. "Don't be alarmed!" she continued. "Don't look so pale! There is a man in your kingdom who has the spirit of the holy gods in him. In the time of your father he was found to have insight and intelligence and wisdom like that of the gods. King Nebuchadnezzar your father—your father the king, I say—appointed him chief of the magicians, enchanters, astrologers and diviners. This man Daniel, whom the king called Belteshazzar, was found to have a keen mind and knowledge and understanding, and also the ability to interpret dreams, explain riddles and solve difficult problems. Call for Daniel, and he will tell you what the writing means."

The king sat up. "Daniel? Yes—um, call for Daniel. You!"—he pointed at me—"Go and find this man."

Leaving my wine-soaked towels on the floor where I had been kneeling, I stumbled to my feet and darted out of the room. Daniel was not hard to find; his quarters were nearby, and he was there. To be honest, he half looked as if he had been expecting me. I had not looked very deeply into his face before, but in my desperation for an answer in this puzzling state of affairs, I found myself searching his features intently as I related to him the matter for which he was being called. His dark eyes were gentle; his face was worn and webbed with soft wrinkles which betrayed that his usual expression was a peaceful smile, though he certainly was not smiling now. No, now there was instead a grim resolve. His eyes reddened with tears, and his jaw set, but he did not cry. He merely placed a steady hand on my shoulder and quietly nodded, "Let us go."

I returned to the banquet hall to find the king attempting an air of nobility that, on any other occasion, would have looked perfectly comical. He had straightened his robes and given both of his gold goblets to a servant to hold. He was seated, half-reasonably, on his throne, but the peculiar tilt of his head and the white-knuckled grip of his hand on his scepter betrayed that he was still quite drunk and had not in the least gathered his wits.

Daniel entered the room gravely. He looked at the wall briefly, seeming unsurprised but not delighted at the writing he saw there. His gaze then settled on the king as he awaited the latter's permission to speak. His solemnity and submission to the king's authority—even his authority in that drunken state—struck me. How is it that an old Jewish exile—let alone an old Jewish exile who's spent years among ambitious magicians and conniving astrologers, serving under the whims of king after king—could look unrattled, noble, and even sane as he stood in the middle of a room in which the king's wisest wise men were huddled and unnerved in a corner, the king's most regarded friends were slobbering and hiccuping in wide-eyed and drunken terror, and the king himself was frumpishly seated on his throne, feigning the appearance of sobriety while drool began to trickle down his chin once again?

Yet there Daniel stood in perfect calm, awaiting the king. The king did not make him wait long. He sat up and leaned forward anxiously. "Are you Daniel?" he asked. "One of the exiles my father the king brought from Judah?" Daniel did not respond, but the king continued: "I have heard that the spirit of the gods is in you and that you have insight, intelligence and outstanding wisdom. The wise men and enchanters were brought before me to read this writing and tell me what it means, but they could not explain it. Now I have heard that you are able to give interpretations and to solve difficult problems. If you can read this writing and tell me what it means, you will be clothed in purple and have a gold chain placed around your neck, and you will be made the third highest ruler in the kingdom."

Daniel met the king's gaze and answered, "You may keep your gifts for yourself and give your rewards to someone else. Nevertheless, I will read the writing for the king and tell him what it means.

"O king, the Most High God gave your father Nebuchadnezzar sovereignty and greatness and glory and splendor. His high position made nations dread him and men fear him. He killed whomever he wished to be killed, spared whomever he deemed worth sparing. He promoted whomever he liked, humbled whomever he hated. But he was riddled with arrogance, hardened with pride. And don't you remember? He lost his throne because of this; his glory dissipated. He was driven away from people and given an animal's mind. His home was with the beasts, his body was soaked with dew, he went absolutely mad—and all this until he acknowledged that the Most High God is King. All this until he recognized that the Most High God is sovereign over the kingdoms of men and sets over them anyone He wishes.

"But you, Belshazzar his son—you knew all this, you surely remember it well. But you're walking the same line. You have not humbled yourself either. You've set yourself against the Lord of heaven. Those goblets you had brought in—those were from His temple. And you knew this. Yet you drank freely from them, and your nobles and wives and concubines all drank from them too. You used them to toast a long list of gods who are not gods, mere 'names' who neither see nor comprehend. But when it came to the Living God, the One who holds your life in His hands? You have not honored Him.

"Therefore, He sent the hand and had written this inscription: Mene, Mene, Tekel, Parsin.

"Here is what it means, O king:
Mene: God has numbered your days. Your reign is at its end.
Tekel: You've been weighed on His scale. You're wanting.
Parsin: Your kingdom is divided. It is given to the Medes and the Persians."
As Daniel finished his interpretation, the king's face was unchanged. The blood that had drained from it at the hand's appearance kept its distance still. His whole countenance was pale, expressionless. He made no reply to Daniel's words, yet he kept his promise and commanded that Daniel be clothed in purple, that a gold chain be placed around his neck, and that he be made the third highest ruler in the kingdom.

I was dismissed from the room at that point. We all were—I mean the servants, anyways. Apparently the wine spills could be cleaned up later. I don't know what happened in the room after we left, and I don't know what became of any of the drunken nobles or the drunken king for the rest of the day. But that night, Daniel's words came true. That very night, Belshazzar, king of the Babylonians, was slain. And that very night, we got a new king: Darius the Mede. The writing on the wall, in all its shock and all its splendor, rang true.

*****

In the face of crisis, it seems that there are always some whose mouths stay open, whose minds are clear, and whose actions are direct and weighty, as if they saw the storm coming and know exactly how to walk through it. I am grateful for those leaders, grateful for their willingness to step up and lean in, laying their own uncertainty and fear aside in their effort to make sure the rest of us—the stragglers—make it up the mountain, whether they know what's at the summit or not. They simply know we've got to keep going, and they give all they've got to get us there.

I'm grateful for them for many reasons. One of the biggest: A lot of times, I'm not that kind of leader. I want to be, of course. But that desire proves flimsy in the face of some waves. In the face of this wave—this crisis into which our nation and our world have been plunged the last few months as we wrestle between our fears of virus and death and our wild agonies at the thought of isolation and time—in the face of this wave, I have not been that kind of leader. I've felt more like one of those "splat" balls that you can win with arcade tickets or purchase at a kiosk in a mall—you know, the ones that fly with boundless energy into the air before colliding with a wall in an epic "splat" (hence the name) and stay there in all their sticky glory until gravity gradually peels them off the wall and sends them diving to the floor. This crisis froze me. I hit walls I never expected to exist and found myself flattened against them, stuck in goo while the rest of the world shifted and adapted and kept moving forward as best it could.

But the good news? I feel like I've finally peeled off the wall and made it to the floor—yes, admittedly, for another disgraceful "splat." But on the floor at last, I feel as though I'm rising again to my feet, and my tongue found words at last to ask the Lord, "What are you doing? What are you saying to your people?"

He gave me, in response, a verse and a story. The story you have read. The verse follows:
"...[I]f my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land." —II Chronicles 7:14 (NIV, 1984)
He gave this promise to Solomon long, long ago as He repeated the reality of His covenant with the people of Israel in response to Solomon's prayer of dedication for the temple he had built.

Our nation doesn't have that sort of covenant, but the principle, I think, stands as steadfastly as we could hope. Finding words at last to respond and to lead in the midst of this crisis, this is what is on my heart:

Belshazzar realized too late that every breath he had been given was a chance to honor the God who held his life in His hands. He ignored the knocks on his door until the writing on the wall declared his time was up. But we're still breathing.

Whatever this crisis is, whatever this time means, the fact that we're still alive means we've still got a chance. By God's grace, we've still got a chance to lay off our toasts to gods who are not gods. We've still got a chance to acknowledge that it really doesn't do for us to trample on the things that the Living God has called sacred. We've still got a chance to open the door, to heed the knock. We've still got a chance to ask with every breath, "Lord, how might I honor you today?"

I don't know where you're at right now in the flood of fears and dreams and confusing tensions. Maybe you feel like a "splat" ball too, or maybe you're the leader who still has words in your mouth that you're hanging onto as if your life depended on it.

Wherever you are, may the Lord touch you there. May He grant you the grace to look into His eyes, to set at His feet the load you've been carrying and the gods you've been toasting. May He set at rest your wild wishes to see the future and anchor you in the present, teaching your heart in each minute to keep asking, "Lord, how can I honor you now?"
—————————————
¹From this point forward, the quotations of the characters in the story are either copied or paraphrased from Daniel 5, NIV (1984).