Thursday, August 27, 2009

Shuffling Deckchairs

There is a phrase used in popular English that describes any futile attempts to make changes to one's destiny in the face of impending and unavoidable doom. "Shuffling deckchairs on the Titanic" is how it goes. Of course it references the great ocean liner that sank on its maiden voyage. When the Titanic hit an iceberg all those years ago, it's demise was guaranteed, and any attempt to change the circumstances (like rearranging the deck chairs for instance) would not have altered its destiny.

I've been working in a role for the last 3 years that has involved working to engage young people effectively with the Bible. During that time I have been involved in numerous efforts, and spoken with many other people engaged in this pursuit to come up with strategies to achieve this goal. These strategies have included things like producing new products, marketing plans, adopting advances in technology, editing approaches to programming and launching competitions. I'm always checking new books/publications, websites, social networking forums, programme outlines, video clips, music recordings, concert events and other well intentioned efforts to find relevant points of connection between today's Australian teenagers and the ancient Scripture texts. Now while I still believe all these things may have their place in a holistic response to the challenge we have before us, I have this sinking (pun intended!) feeling that we are just 'shuffling deckchairs on the Titanic'.

I am currently re-reading Dietrich Bonhoeffer's classic, "The Cost of Discipleship". Seventy years ago, he spoke out against what he believed was the death knell of his beloved Lutheran Church in Germany. It was what he called "cheap grace". By this he meant an understanding of grace that received the forgiveness of Christ through belief, but would not embrace the call of discipleship. He identified cheap grace as "an intellectual assent to the idea" of grace without the subsequent death of self that true grace requires. To accept Christ is to follow Christ! For the Christian who would live by the mantra of cheap grace, let them "rest content with worldliness and with the renunciation of any higher standard than the world". Cheap grace presents faith in Christ as an 'add-on' to a safe, affluent, bourgeois, middle-class lifestyle. This practise justifies the world rather than the sinner! Bonhoeffer predicted that cheap grace would be "utterly merciless to (the) Evangelical Church". It is the secularization of the Church.

I get the feeling we are tinkering with the tools and giving scant attention to the message. What are we actually inviting teenagers to come and join, and by what process are we bidding them come? What are we actually telling them a disciple of Jesus must become? As far as Bible engagement goes, I'm beginning to think our efforts are futile unless our message is cased in the basic notion of completely forsaking all worldly narratives for the one true narrative of the Word of God.

8 comments:

Tim Fawssett said...

Thanks Marty. On reading your post, my first reaction was to hit the Facebook "Like" button, as I quickly give my agreement to your thoughts. But that too cheapens the weight of your challenge.

I am today reflecting on my own pursuit of Christ. May God help us in the comfortable West to truly know and obey what it means to follow Christ.

vikkir said...

All you bin doin for the past 3 years is shufflin chairs? I'm telling the boss! :)

Marty said...

VIKKI! ... ssshhhhhhhh!

Zachary said...

Really hard-hitting Marty. While I agree that all the stuff people put on to reach out can be pointless, I still hold faith that there is still value in those activities.

In my view, the 'shuffling' of various media avenues, events, internet outreach etc. serve an essential step in the process IF it points to the true faithful lifestyle beyond itself. Disciples are made in the McCafes with a friend, in exciting small groups discovering the Bible, and in questioning a challenging sermon with a pastor... but without the hype of 'shuffling' bringing them to the point of true disciple-making activities, how will they initially reach that point?

For example; my coworker was a self-professed atheist, and he still may be. He has consistently resisted my attempts to 'go deep' with spiritual matters when I present the opportunity. Yet when he wants questions answered, he finds answers. However, I have been able to consistently get him along to youth group, social events etc... basically the 'shuffling' of our church. And this has left the door open for future spiritual discussion, even after the past blunt refusals to more engaging subject matter.

Maybe I'm missing the point of your post. But I see the really Biblically engaging growth happening as a flow-on from the often superficial Christian efforts. And yes, when these efforts don't direct people beyond the banter, then the ship is definitely sinking!

Thanks for the post, Zac

Pilland said...
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Billy said...

Bro,

loving your thoughts...

Missed commenting on the last one. This line really sparked me... "Discipleship must be about assisting young people to reject all narratives that the world offers (there are many!) for the one narrative of the Way of the Cross."

Powerful. Keep it up.

Cheers, Billy.

Billy said...

Bro,

loving your thoughts...

Missed commenting on the last one. This line really sparked me... "Discipleship must be about assisting young people to reject all narratives that the world offers (there are many!) for the one narrative of the Way of the Cross."

Powerful. Keep it up.

Cheers, Billy.

JK said...

Maybe we too often omit the call to come and die with Christ. We think it sounds morbid, until we realise that to die with Christ means to die to sin as He did. In other words, it's not a call to the hard slog, working hard at being a good boy or girl in the hope that you'll make it. It's the Gospel, that Jesus would take people who are his enemies and die for them so they can die to themselves and now live for him.
I wonder if maybe we try too hard to get young people to engage with the Bible when they have no real subjective reason to do so, no matter how much fun it may seem - ie. their hearts have not yet been captured by the amazing grace of God in the cross, so they are unable to say 'Your Word is sweeter than honey to me, because I am captured by your love for me.'