What the Church Should Stand for in These Chaotic Times

If anything, the church should stand for liberty.
If anything, the church should stand for liberty. (Flickr )

When the world shows its terrible side, the church gets to speak prophetically, with truth, grace and hope to our communities and to our culture. There's never been a more appropriate time for us, as Christians, to ask ourselves what Jesus wants His movement, His people, His kingdom to stand for.

We will never agree on every socio-political issue, and we'll all interpret the Scriptures and the life of Jesus a little differently. But there are certainly some big themes we can agree on. Some principles reflect the values of Scripture, as modeled and taught by Jesus and as exemplified by a freshly commissioned early New Testament church. They are timeless values that have the power to bring redemption and healing to a broken humanity. Here are at least four.

Equality. Justice. Mercy. Liberty.

These are all good ideas. And they were originally God's ideas.

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1. We stand for equality. God thought up humanity. He thought you up, along with every other person on the planet. And because we all bear God's image—old, young, born, unborn, rich, poor, male, female, slave, free—we possess inherent dignity, worth and value. So the church, carrying out the mission of Jesus in this world, stands for the equality of all people. We're all precious to the Creator—so much so that he sent his Son, Jesus, to pay a ransom for all of us.

James the Just, the brother of Jesus, understood the principle of equality and drove it home in his general epistle to the dispersed Christians of his day. He challenged us to reject favoritism and prejudice and to practice something America needs now more than ever—empathy. We are increasingly, as a society, slow to listen, quick to speak and quick to get angry. But James urged the opposite. Be quick to listen. Be slow to speak. Be slow to get angry.

As I wrote last year, all human life is precious.

2. We stand for justice. It was the prophet Amos whom Martin Luther King Jr. quoted when he said, "But let justice roll down like water, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream" (Amos 5:24). God is just, and justice was his idea. Not only will God render justice for all of the sins of humanity, but He will bring to justice all who oppress the disadvantaged. We stand for justice, especially on behalf of those who can't stand up for themselves.

3. We stand for mercy. Mercy is the act of giving good things, including forgiveness, to those who don't deserve it or who can't pay it back. God spares us because He loves us, out of mercy. And He commissions us to go and be agents of His mercy to the rest of the world. We stand for mercy for the oppressed. We believe in mercy so much, in fact, that we give our time, our talent and our treasure to serving people and helping people who can't necessarily help themselves.

4. We Stand for Liberty

Jesus was the great liberator, setting free all who were enslaved by sin who would come to him by faith. We believe in liberty and in freedom. And we also believe in restricting our personal freedom, of our own free will, for the good of other people. The church is on a mission to free captives, whether those in literal slavery or those living under the weight of spiritual bondage and addiction.

In times like ours, we need the Prince of Peace more than ever. And He has commissioned us to go in His place, as His hands and feet, and extend the reach of His kingdom and its values to everyone who will hear us. We carry out the ministry of the Anointed One:

"The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He has anointed Me to preach the gospel to the poor; He has sent Me to heal the broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed; to preach the acceptable year of the Lord" (Luke 4:18-19).

Let the church rise up to speak truth, extend grace and show radical love to everyone around us so that all the world will know the One we follow.

Brandon Cox has been a pastor since he was 19 and has served churches, large and small, including serving as a Pastor at Saddleback Church. Currently, he is planting a purpose-driven church in northwest Arkansas. He also serves as editor of Pastors.com and Rick Warren's Pastors' Toolbox, and authors a top 100 blog for church leaders as well as a blog about men's issues, a blog about blogging and a blog about social media .

For the original article, visit pastors.com.

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