I will never forget the time when I met Peter Lord at a Cracker Barrel in Titusville, Florida. He told me that most churches taught information when they needed to be teaching formation. He observed that the greatest neglect in American churches was discipleship. In his latter years of life, he’s retired from preaching and spends several hours a week mentoring a few men and counseling some couples. He regretted spending so much time in front of a pulpit that he neglected to minister to others “one on one.”
My opinions of the ideal pastor are somewhat unconventional. Where are all the real pastors? In my view, either we have insecure, micro-managing control freaks who are afraid to let a guest speaker in front of his pulpit without a thorough doctrine quiz, or we have cuddly but timid teddy bears who want to talk about our feelings but don’t know how to fight a spiritual battle. Am I too radical in saying that I want a pastor like Jesus? Isn’t the thought of that at least a little intriguing? I mean, what would that really look like? Does it look like church in America, or is it time to clean house?
- If I were to have my way, I would want a counter-cultural pastor who does not use up all of his time developing church programs, but prays for hours.
- I want someone who is not nice, but is full of love.
- I want a counselor who doesn’t give me a neat, color-coded model for sanctification or a chart on “how to be righteous,” but can be honest with me, sharing his own struggles and triumphs.
- I want a friend who is still figuring out his theology and is enjoying the ride, someone who knows that he’s a son of God but still cries out, “Father, why have you forsaken me?”
- I want a radical. I want some guy who gets angry and turns over tables of convention and hypocrisy, who laughs and shares meals with you, who throws mud in your face, who invites you out for a stroll on the lake (the water’s fine).
- I want a guy with a tattoo on his leg that says, “King of Kings and Lord of Lords.”
- Mostly, I just want a leader who will step down from the altar, take off the priestly garments, and show me how to do this thing called life.
Somehow, I just don’t see Jesus using someone else’s sermon illustrations. He wouldn’t need them – examples from books, movies, and other people. He’d actually be living what He’s teaching. That’s why when Pontius Pilate asked Him, “What is truth?” He didn’t respond with, “Well, Max Lucado says…” He did not answer. How could He? Jesus embodied truth.
No, I don’t see Jesus borrowing from other rabbis to prove his point. I see Him sermonizing like this: “Remember when I healed that guy who was paralyzed? Well, that’s what real restoration looks like”; “Remember when I cursed that fig tree? Well, that’s you if you don’t watch out, buddy”; and “Remember when that girl washed my feet with her hair? That’s the kind of servants I want.”
Now, I know that Jesus made use of the scriptures, bringing out examples from the Old Testament for teaching purposes, and even used examples from everyday life to prove His point. But what He taught was real. It wasn’t academic; it wasn’t intellectual. It was real, pragmatic, doable. Is the stuff that we teach in church actually do-able, or does it just tickle our ears? And if it is do-able, then who’s doing it? The preacher?
Maybe Jesus would resemble a biker more than a pastor these days. Maybe He’d talk about forgiving that guy who knifed his friend last week, or He’d be pulling over to get some gas for a total stranger on the side of the road while discussing “who is my neighbor.” He’d teach and show. His sermons would be His life. There’s something about a great, real-life story that motivates me. I can read all the self-help books I want and do nothing about it, because all I learn are concepts, check-lists, and ten steps to my best life now.
Stories really do something to me – maybe it’s because I’ve heard so many platitudes and philosophical explanations that now I really want to give some of this stuff a shot. Everyday stories challenge the hypocrite in me and awaken the activist. A good story teaches me more than a program, checklist, or self-help book ever could. It teaches me that faith is real and can only be experienced through works.
Maybe there is more to Christianity than endless arguments about worship styles and forms of baptism. Maybe Jesus’ kingdom looks more like AA than the country club. Maybe all of this is messier than we’d like to admit. Maybe that’s why Jesus used parables instead of powerpoints.
Maybe that’s the beauty of it.
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