Tuesday, January 29, 2013

The Jesus Fish and the Glorious Monotony


The roads of this country would be a much safer place if Christians remembered they had a plastic Jesus fish stuck to the back of their car. Then we might drive like we were law abiding, polite, saved drivers instead of cutting people off and visibly showing our distaste when it happens to us. It turns out that the plastic sea dweller on the back of your car is actually making a statement. That is, of course unless you have that Jesus fish that is showing his superiority to evolution by eating that blasphemous Darwin fish with legs.

Hundreds of years before we started sticking this iconic symbol on minivans and business cards, the Early Church used it as a kind of secret password between followers of the “Way.” Times were hard and emperors were cruel and when everyday faced the reality that you could be stoned, flogged, or eaten by lions to the delight of thousands of spectators, having a way to secretly identify other believers was vital. The symbol was placed over door frames and on aqueducts to show believers that that was a safe place to stay, free from Roman tyranny. I think I always knew that part but I have always wondered why a fish would represent this supernatural movement in history. Curiosities turn to Google searches rather quickly for me.

I found out that the symbol itself represents an acronym for the Greek word for fish, Ichthys, which kind of sounds like you are sneezing if you say it really fast. Go ahead and try it. Now wipe your nose and get ready for a very brief lesson in Greek. Ancient Greece had a different alphabet than we do, so they would have seen this word as ΙΧΘΥΣ with each letter representing a different word that translates into "Jesus Christ, God's Son, Savior.”   

Well that is cool, but it is still all Greek to me.

The significance of using a fish was still a mystery to me though, until I remembered what the disciples used to do before they started changing the world. Before they dealt with people, they dealt with fish. Most of the disciples would have grown up into a family with a generational tradition of vocational fishing. Their fathers fished, as did their fathers before them and before them. Fishing was what they were born to do and what they would die doing. They knew that for the rest of their lives they would wake up early, get in a boat, cast a few nets, draw the nets back in and pray that it would be enough to make a living. It was the monotony they were destined for. 

Then a man named Jesus came and changed everything. He walks right up to these fishermen, says one very simple statement and these men literally drop everything and dedicate their lives to Him. He does not promise them a life of adventure away from all this boring fish stuff. He does not tell them that their lives are going to be super exciting and that they won’t dread waking up in the mornings. All He does is take what they were already doing and makes it more significant.

He says “I will make you fishers of Men.”

Basically Jesus was telling His disciples “I am calling you to do something that matters, something with eternal value and significance that you would never be able to do on your own. And I am going to start with your current monotonous life and make it glorious.”

The great majority of people live lives full of monotony. We file papers, drive kids around, and listen to professors, teachers and executives talk all day. We do the same basic task every day with the hopes that one day we can earn enough to retire from it all and then commit to doing nothing until we croak.

What Jesus and the little fish stuck to the back of your car are trying to tell you is that one day it will all mean something. One day that thing you were faithful in doing your whole life regardless of how boring and tiring it was will be worth it. One day God will show up and show out right in the middle of your workplace and you will see that you have not been working in vain. One day God is going to use all the knowledge and ability you have gained over your whole life (though you did not know why) and use it to further His kingdom. One day your day job will matter.

Following Jesus sometimes feels like a glorious monotony where we wander aimlessly in the desert but are daily surprised by fresh revelation and added significance. God sees you and He knows your heart and how long you have been waiting for His promise. He has seen your faithfulness to doing whatever you needed to do to make it all happen and letting Him take care of everything else. He has seen every time you turned off the alarm, rolled out of bed and knowingly went off to a job or a situation you did not want to face but did anyway with a smile. He has seen every promotion and accolade you deserved but did not get. He has seen how long you have been doing the same thing just to make ends meet. Let Him make it all worth something.

Let Him add value to what you are already doing by asking His vision for your circumstance. Ask Him what He wants to do in your workplace or school. Ask Him where He can be found in the glorious monotony called your life.

Wake up tomorrow with vision instead of dread. Wake up with mission from God. Kick your monotony in the jugular and show it who is boss.

 

Monday, January 7, 2013

Peace Chucks


A hipster is someone who thinks that they were cool before being cool was cool. I was never cool, so that does not include me.

 I realized a long time ago that the cooler you are today the funnier your old pictures will be to your kids so I have made it a life goal to wear clothes that my future children will not make fun of. I stick with jeans, a T-shirt, and the single pair of tennis shoes that have been around for generations that I am certain will still be in style whenever Jesus comes back- the one and only, Chuck Taylor All-Star High-Top Converse. These shoes were created in the 1920’s as a basketball shoe endorsed by the professional player of which they are named. Thankfully, basketball shoes have improved in technology over the years, but this pair of shoes has outlasted every other shoe craze and has been worn consistently for close to a century.