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Are you a Christian? If so, imagine if you were wrongly imprisoned for being a Christian. Underfed. In a dark cell. Lacking hygiene products. Limited guests. What would your attitude be? What would your actions be? This was the Apostle Paul’s situation as he wrote to the local church at Ephesus. His action was to write a letter to encourage church members in the faith. Notice the Christian’s calling, character, and community. Here’s part of what he wrote:
“I therefore, a prisoner for the Lord, urge you to walk in a manner worthy of the calling to which you have been called, with all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love, eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.”
First , consider the Christian’s calling. The calling is to “walk in a manner worthy of the calling to which you’ve been called.” Both noun and verb forms of “call” are in this sentence. “Walk” was an ancient Semitic metaphor for manner of life or pattern of behavior. From prison, the church’s leader urged the people in their manner of behavior. He desired them to be oriented toward a Christian manner of living. He urged them in their “walk” with Christ.
Second , consider the Christian’s character. When we think of calling, we often associate it with a sense of geography or vocation. Where am I supposed to be? What am I supposed to be doing as a job? These are not bad questions to ask; however, this is not the manner in which Paul writes here of “calling.” Here, calling is about how one lives rather than where one lives or what one does for a living. Interestingly, in the qualifications for overseers in the local church, the New Testament prioritizes exemplary Christian character over competencies. The Christian is implicitly urged here to focus on pattern of life right where they are rather than waiting to get to just the right time and place. Faithfulness is an orientation not a perfection. Faithfulness is about the here and now not the later and optimal. The first Christian calling is to character.
Third , the Christian’s community. The Christian’s calling is to worthy character, and, those character attributes are not private and personal. Interestingly, the character called for here is communal and interpersonal. The Christian is called to local church community. Notice the relational nature of of the descriptive words in Paul’s imprisoned exhortation to the church: humble, gentle, patient. C.S. Lewis wrote of humility not as thinking less of yourself, but as thinking of yourself less. Think of others. Be gentle rather than harsh or obtuse. Be sensitive to what your fellow believers are going through. I can hardly think of a more efficient way to accomplish this than as an involved member in your local church. For example, there you will get to know other believers personally. There you will learn how to pray for their concerns and what needs you are capable of meeting. You will be aware of the callings God has on other people’s lives and how we complement one another in the faith. You will have an opportunity to live in a manner known as humble, gentle, and patient in Christian community.
One biblical phrase comes to be synonymous with Christian community, that is, “one another.” Here, Paul urges the members to be enamored with “one another.” Once, a group of Christian collegiate students that weren’t particularly committed to a local church community, went on a weekend retreat. There, they studied the New Testament carefully, asking for the Spirit to guide them. What they discovered was so old an application it was thought new. They noted the sheer volume of community language in the New Testament. Count the number of times “one another” appears as a phrase in John’s writings and in the letters. Note the context for the “one another” passages in the New Testament. Enlightening, inspiring and challenging you will find it! The collegiate student weekend resulted in a deeper commitment to living out their callings in the local church. How else could they apply “bearing with one another in love”? Where else would they express an energetic spirituality but locally, that is, “eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit though the bond of peace”? Where is the Lord bringing His shalom, his peace, but to his covenanted people? This bond is unbreakable but stands in need of being more expressible. That’s where we come in. We can join in a covenant community of members pursuing others that profess faith, pursuing a membership of regenerated-by-the-Spirit believers. Only then, by God’s indwelling Spirit, will we have the resources to attain unity. In fact, we don’t ‘attain’ unity but rather ‘maintain’ unity.
Unity is an exhausted buzzword in culture but an assured reality in Christ. Michael Horton wrote aptly on the subject of Unity: “One thing is for sure: unity has never been a good rallying point for unity. No great movements seem to have ever coalesced voluntarily around unity. But the force for Christian unity is the gospel and, wrapped around it, the whole teaching of Scripture. Unity is a gift of the Spirit, as people agree in the truth. But to agree in the truth, we have to talk about the truth and perhaps even argue about it. May God give us the grace, the charity, the patience, and the courage to love each other enough to pursue that truth, wherever it leads, and to joyfully accept the unity that it generates—however humble it may be in the eyes of the world.” Jesus, during his priestly prayer, prayed for us this way, that we would be one as the Godhead has always been One (see John 17:21). When we eagerly pursue this unity, bearing with one another, we are an answer to Jesus’ prayer. Channel your spiritual energy largely toward life in a faithful local church. We are a maintenance crew of sorts for the internal unity God the Spirit has inured and secured. Have you ever thought of your calling as to character in community this way?
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