Friday, June 01, 2007

Labelmakers

These are some headlines I’ve been following in our state newspapers recently:

The football coach at one of our state universities wants to hire a chaplain for the team. A petition has been signed by several of the faculty of the school that challenges this hiring. While this position would be privately funded, some consider the presence of a chaplain—a Christian—inappropriate.[1]

Also, the “InnerChange Freedom Initiative,” a Christian-based prison treatment program operating at the Newton, IA Correction Facility is probably going to be discontinued. Statistics have shown that this program has reduced cases of prison violence and, more importantly, increased the percentages of former prisoners being successfully integrated into society as productive citizens. The program has been declared unconstitutional in court, claiming a conflict between the separation of church and state. While that ruling is still under appeal, our state government has passed a bill that removes funding from the program.[2]

When news like this is published, like me, you mourn the hostility and resistance to the Christian faith in the public life. Many find it easy to dismiss Christians as all being “right-wing” or “fundamentalist,” using those words as a label that when applied, makes the attempt to disqualify those people as too biased, too ignorant, too judgmental, or too…whatever criticism applies to a particular situation.

It makes my head and my heart hurt when others feel they can explain my faith away by giving it a label. Believers in Jesus Christ are more than labels. We have beliefs we hold as important—guided by God’s Word to hold. We have families, friendships, and communities we value and want to keep. By nature we want to have an environment that supports our beliefs and the relationships we hold to be important. Protecting those interests should be an understandable response, to do less would mean that whatever faith we profess doesn’t have enough value for us to defend it.

All that said, often many who claim faith in Christ have earned criticism. All too often, because of our sinfulness, we fail to reflect the will of the Creator. We can be hot-tempered, selfish, mean, sharp-tongued, judgmental, inconsistent, etc. The word, “hypocrite,” flies frequently and far too accurately toward us. We’re sinners. It’s too easy to forget that we’ve been called to a higher standard.

Scripture says that there will always be challenges to our faith—even persecution. Yet the Bible also holds us to a standard of faithfulness that calls through whatever challenges we have. There are many examples of this throughout the Bible. Since we are reading through Ephesians at this time, may we be challenged by considering these words from Ephesians 4:1-6:

“…I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received. Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace. There is one body and one Spirit— just as you were called to one hope when you were called—one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all.”

A person who lives these words ends label making and starts label breaking.



[1] “ISU President Wants Input from Council” The DesMoines Register & Tribune, May 30, 2007

[2]Religious Prison Program in Doubt” The DesMoines Register & Tribune, June 1, 2007