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Ed

An imperfect and sometimes sarcastic perspective on following Jesus by Ed Cyzewski.

The Christian Quest for Legitimacy and Influence in All the Wrong Places

We’ve seen Christians latch on to enough movie stars, beauty queens, and politicians to realize that we are in the midst of legitimacy crisis. This is rooted in wanting to be viewed as legitimate, powerful, and influential in both our government and in popular culture.

Our situation speaks to not only an identity crisis, but a legitimacy crisis. Are we truly making ourselves and the Gospel we preach more legitimate by leeching on to celebrities?

You can probably guess what my answer is going to be…

When Jesus said that all authority on heaven and earth have been given to him, he was locating the source of influence and power in the world in himself. A crucified Messiah who overcame the world through his death and resurrection leads us down a path that helps us fulfill the Beatitudes today: blessed are the poor, blessed are those who mourn, blessed are the peacemakers, blessed are the meek.

In such a Savior and in such actions are where we find our identity and legitimacy.

The Messiah did not establish his Kingdom by fighting for influence on the top. He did not recruit “role models” to his cause. He initiated a mustard-seed style Kingdom that makes a mockery of our celebrities and politicians.

How can Christians find legitimacy and influence in the world today?

To quote a wise man: Sell everything you have, give the money to the poor, start following Jesus, and claim your treasure in heaven. To be perfectly blunt: we need to lose.

We can’t beat the world at its game because Jesus never intended to play that game. The more I consider what it looks like to follow Jesus, to pick up my own cross, and to die to myself so he can live in me, the more I’m beginning to realize that Jesus peals away all that we value so that we can trust in him more perfectly.

What do we want more than Jesus?

Judging by the way some Christians fawn over supposedly Christian celebrities as their standard bearers and fight for political power and influence, I think we can ID a few things pretty easily. However, bloggers such as myself treasure influence and readership, theologians crave being right, and the list goes on because we all have our idols to identify.

Once we identify those things that we want, disciples of Jesus need to give them up. Stop worrying about them. Stop fighting for them. Lose.

It is only in losing the fading things of this world that we experience not only the intimacy of Christ, but are enabled to speak to our world with true influence and power: the influence and power of Christ. We can’t speak with the authority and power of Christ fighting for influence, recognition, and power at the top. 

Paul reminds us that we are seated with Christ in heavenly places—not earthly places. Let us throw aside all that we crave, all that overshadows Christ so that we can claim our true identity and influence as loving servants of God’s Kingdom who are poor, meek, and peaceful.


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Category: culture, practical theology

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7 Responses

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by edcyzewski, Thom Turner. Thom Turner said: RT @edcyzewski: New blog post: The Christian Quest for Legitimacy and Influence in All the Wrong Places – http://tinyurl.com/ycjf3qw [...]

  2. Matt says:

    I’d agree. I can only imagine the impact a church could make if the members would lay down their lives for their community. Good thoughts Ed.

    [Reply]

  3. Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by edcyzewski: New blog post: The Christian Quest for Legitimacy and Influence in All the Wrong Places – http://tinyurl.com/ycjf3qw...

  4. Chad Estes says:

    You could sell this message a whole lot better if you sexed it up with pictures of Christian superstars, or at least had the endorsement of a well known author or two…

    You know, “lay it all down so you too can be like me!”

    [Reply]

  5. ed says:

    So you’re saying that sex makes everything better… even discipleship???

    I think I may be laughing all night after reading that comment.

    It is kind of incredible to see how fantastically we can mess this up. Thanks for the tweet man!

    [Reply]

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