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Neither East Nor West
Language is perhaps the most frustrating shock.
People seem to be talking at machine gun pace. They run their words together
and use confusing idioms. An Indian student spoke of disembarking from the
ship in New York to be greeted by signs saying “hot dog.” He said, “I knew
what ‘hot’ meant; I knew what ‘dog’ meant and I got sick.”
Food is different and seems either too bland or
too hot depending on one’s taste.
Difficulty in the use of eating utensils, chopsticks,
silverware or the graceful use of fingers can be embarrassing.
Shifting to an unfamiliar educational system can
be a difficult experience with its variation in examination and assignment procedures
as well as its overall approach to the educational enterprise.
Cultural differences involving personal relationships
and social graces are more subtle in their nuances but cause insecurity until
their complexities are fathomed. Friendship and family patterns are often completely
different as are such little matters as whether to open a gift when it is received
or wait until one is alone. Customs vary as to how best to compliment a hostess
on her meal. The essence of politeness in one culture is sometimes vulgar in
another.
These all combine to make one feel obvious and
looked at when he crosses into a different culture. One realizes for the first
time how much he is a product of his own culture and how different other customs
and cultures are.
But there are other things that do not change by
crossing the border. They are transcultural. Loneliness is exactly the fame
feeling in Brazzaville as in Boston. Fear is the same in Chicago or Calcutta.
Grief over the death of a loved one is the same everywhere. These feelings
do not vary with the color of our skin or the way we dress or eat our food.
They are common to us as fellow members of the human race, completely apart
from our cultural background.
These common human experiences show us that we
are much more alike than we are different because of superficial cultural differences.
One time after hearing a baby cry, a Japanese professor friend of mine exclaimed
with a smile, “Universal language!” Christianity is transcultural because it
speaks to our universal humanity.
Westernism
Unfortunately, many aspects of Western culture
have insinuated themselves into Christianity. Western architecture, clothing,
music and customs, like church services at 11:00 am on Sunday morning, have
helped to convey the erroneous idea that Christianity is inherently a religion
of the West and of the white man.
It must be admitted that many have naively imposed
Western culture patterns on Christianity and attempted to equate them. But
these culture patterns are not an integral part of Christianity and must be
clearly distinguished from the essence of Christianity itself. There may be
no inherent cultural, political, economic or social system in Christianity.
This is an important realization. An overseas
friend bitterly said to me one day, “You in America want us to become Christians
in my country so we will be a democracy. I don’t believe that democracy is
the answer for our country. Socialism is a much better solution for our problems.”
It was several weeks before he came to see that “the American way of life” and
democracy are not a necessary part of Christianity.
Christianity has greatly influenced Western and
American culture, but it is not coterminous with it. Neither America nor any
other Western nation is really a Christian nation in the terms that Jesus
Christ defined Christianity. Ours is a basically materialist society where
lip service is paid to God on Sunday and “In God we trust” is put on our coins.
As a nation, however, we live as practical atheist with material considerations,
refusing God control of our everyday lives.
Christianity has had impact in every kind of economic
and political system and was actually born in a territory occupied by a totalitarian
Roman government.
Christianity in Jesus Christ is transcultural because
He touches our lives at precisely those points which are the same for every
human being the world around regardless of his cultural milieu. Loneliness,
guilt, lack of purpose, insecurity, inner turmoil, fear of death, anxiety, incompleteness,
frustration and boredom are but a few of the experiences common to human existence.
Jesus Christ offers a dynamic solution to these problems by providing a radical
cure for the mortal disease of which these problems are merely symptoms.
Diagnosis
His diagnosis of the disease that is common to
every human being is rebellion and indifference toward God, our creator. He
created us to function properly in a particular relationship with Himself, one
in which we eagerly give Him control of our lives. We, in a sense, are like
automobiles which are created to function properly only when an intelligent,
sober driver is behind the wheel.
Under these circumstances an automobile is an instrument
of tremendous usefulness and pleasure. However, if an automobile is taken to
the top of a hill, has its break released and is given a gentle shove, it is
free only to careen wildly down the hill, crashing into anything in its path
and ending battered at the bottom of the hill. It inflicts damage and destruction
on anything in its path. This is because the automobile was not created to
operate without control.
We function properly as human beings personally
in relation to each other only when God is in the driver’s seat of our lives
and in control. Having pushed Him out of our lives, consciously or unconsciously,
we have become separated from Him. This is the source of all our problems.
This basic disease of rebellion is called sin by
Jesus Christ. Its symptoms vary with different people even though the disease
is universal. Lying, stealing, immorality as well as the more refined sins
of the spirit like pride, lust, greed, envy and jealousy, are all symptoms of
the disease. Because of the inner corruption of which we are all aware, we
are separated from God who is infinitely holy and pure. Just as light immediately
destroys darkness and the two cannot coexist, so the blazing purity of God consumes
evil and impurity. We cannot as sinful people exist in His presence, defiled
as we are.
Jesus Christ not only diagnosed our problem (and
it is all humanity’s problem too), but He has given us a dynamic cure. He came
into human history to make it possible for us to be cleansed, forgiven and reconciled
to our creator and given power to live a new life. He did this by voluntarily
dying in our place on a cross, thereby taking the sentence of death that God
had passed on all those who had violated his moral law.
Peter, the great apostle, puts it this way, “Christ
also has once suffered for sin, the just for the unjust, that he might bring
us to God” (I Peter 3:18). St. Paul said, “He made him (Christ) to be sin for
us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.”
(II Corinthians 5:21).
Claim And Credentials
This is possible only because of who Jesus Christ
is. He claimed Deity very clearly. His claim was so clear that He was accused
of blasphemy by the Jewish people. They said, “We have a law and by our law
he ought to die because as a man he claims to be God” (John 5:18). Since they
were an occupied country without the power of criminal punishment they handed
Him over to the Roman government.
The Roman governor, Pilate, who comes down through
history as one of the world’s greatest vacillators, allowed Jesus Christ to
be killed on a cross even though he believed Him to be innocent. It all came
about because He claimed to be God.
Not only did Christ make the claim but He brought
the credentials to substantiate this claim. Five times during the course of
His life He predicted He would die but rise from the dead three days later.
Even His followers did not take this claim seriously but they were revolutionized
when He rose from the dead and appeared to them, not as a ghost but as a person
who could be touched, talked to and who took food (Luke 24:42).
Personal Commitment
How does Jesus Christ become meaningful in personal
experience as the cure for the dread disease of sin with all its symptoms?
There is confusion about this and many mistakenly think one becomes a Christian
by some external act, such as joining a church, being born into a Christian
family, participating in a Christian ritual like baptism or communion. These
are things a Christina does, but this is not how one becomes a Christian.
The clearest statement as to how one becomes a
Christian is in John 1:12. “As many as received him (Christ) to them gave he
the power to become the children of God, even to them that believe on his name.”
The three operate verbs are believe, receive, become.
The New Testament uses the illustration of marriage
to explain what it means to be a Christian and how we become one. Applying
these principles to marriage we can see the parallel in becoming a Christian.
One may intensely believe in a particular fellow or girl as to their integrity,
beauty, ability, etc. This, however, does not make them married. They may
also have a strong emotional attraction. This is good but still does not produce
marriage.
Only when they commit their wills and mutually
receive one another into their lives do they become married. Marriage takes
place when one person believes in another person, then receives that person
into his life. By this he becomes married. Marriage is a relationship, not
a mental belief.
Similarly, in becoming a Christian one first believes
that Jesus Christ spoke the truth about His identity as the God-man; His diagnosis
of us as defiled, rebellious sinners; His death for our sin in our place so
that we might freely have forgiveness, salvation and new life as a free gift
if we will receive it; His resurrection from the dead and that He is living
today and powerful to enter the life of any person who will invite Christ into
his life.
Having believed these things, we must then receive
Him into our lives personally; only then do we become children of God. We believe
Him, receive Him and so become a Christian. In becoming a Christian there is
something to be believed and Someone to be received.
Failure to realize and act on both aspects of establishing
this relationship can lead to confusion and disillusionment. Many professing
Christians to whom Christianity means very little are like a fellow who says,
“I believe in marriage. I’m sold on marriage. I’ve read books on marriage
and I’ve even gone to a lot of weddings but it’s funny, marriage doesn’t mean
a thing to me.” The reason is very simple. He is not married. Marriage is
a relationship, not a philosophy; and the same is true of Christianity.
There is one other parallel between becoming a
Christian and marriage. In order to have a successful marriage one must give
up his independence and enter into a consultative relationship about every area
of life with the person to whom he is married. It is like this in becoming
a Christian too. Since it is a personal relationship with Jesus Christ once
must be willing to give up his independence, (which is the essence of sin) and
become dependent on Jesus Christ, entering into a consultative relationship
with Him about every aspects of life.
How then do we actually receive Jesus Christ?
In Revelation 3:20 Christ compares our life to a house. He says, “Behold I
stand at the door and knock. If any man hears my voice and opens the door I
will come in to him and eat with him and he with me.” Just as we get someone
inside our room when there is a knock at the door by opening the door and inviting
the person to come in, we receive Jesus Christ by recognizing He is standing
outside the door of our life and by inviting Him into our life in our own words,
thanking Him for dying for us, and committing our lives to Him.
From the forgoing it is obvious that becoming a
Christian is something that is internal and personal. For this reason it is
impossible to bribe or force a person to become a Christian. A profession of
faith made for those or other inadequate motivations is false and worthless.
Christianity in Jesus Christ meets us at our points
of deepest need as human beings. These needs are not the result of our cultural
background but come from our membership in the human family.
Copyright Information:
Reprinted from HIS magazine, October 1964 issue.
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