By
now, most of you have probably seen this video. I love this video. I
hope you have enjoyed it as well. But there is a specific reason I
love it.
What
do I love about this besides a) She's a GYMNAST, or b) She's freaking
awesome, or c) She's an inspiration to short women everywhere?
I love the crowd. They may be the best part of this video. At every moment, you can hear them. Cheering her on. Holding their collective breath when she falters. Screaming at her that she can do it and she's amazing. And she was. And so were they.
I love the crowd. They may be the best part of this video. At every moment, you can hear them. Cheering her on. Holding their collective breath when she falters. Screaming at her that she can do it and she's amazing. And she was. And so were they.
No
one put her down for being a woman in a (previously) man's sport. No
one yelled that they could do it better. No one called her out on her
form or finesse. They crazily, noisily, exuberantly cheered her every
effort. They held her up when she struggled. They were a community.
They were one.
You go, girl. |
I've
seen this before. When my daughter and I ran (ran as in, walked, but
let's not quibble) a Mud Run, I watched a crowd of women cheer
another woman, overweight and on my side of older, as she attempted
to run up a muddy hill and pull herself over with a rope. She did it,
too. Probably because a noisy group of complete strangers stood there
cheering her from the bottom.
We'e
all seen the runner who stops, potentially losing a chance at today's
glory, to help another runner in need.
The
amateur athletic community knows something the church needs to know.
They know they won't run any faster or compete any stronger by
criticizing someone else's form. They know they won't improve a
personal best by wishing for someone else's fall. They know cheering
helps us all to do better.
They
know they need one another to push everyone toward being their best.
They
know what community really means.
Church
people—we don't.
The
New Testament uses a couple words when it talks about church and
believers together. One is koinonia—a term that means to be in
fellowship, sharing, united, in community. Another is oikos—which
basically calls the church to be an extended family. People who are
there for one another through everything, even weird uncles and
difficult cousins.
The Bible also uses the phrase “one another”
often when referring to how believers are supposed to do life
together. Be devoted to and honor one another (Romans 12.10), serve
one another, (Galatians 5.13), accept one another (Romans 15.7),
encourage one another (Hebrews 3.13), be kind to one another
(Ephesians 4.32).
How
are believers supposed to act toward one another? Like that. Like a
team. Like a community. Like runners who look at one another as
people on the same track with the same goal who help each other to do
their best.
How
do we act all too often? Um, not so much.
If
a church member offends us, we're more likely to walk away and find
someone else than to say, “Hey, you're family. Let's work this
out. I love you.”
If
we disagree with someone's point of view, we seem all too happy to
use personal insult to “prove” we know better than to listen and
learn.
One
of the largest reasons given among Millennials for why they are
leaving the church is this one—too many Christians would rather
infight than love their world together. Too many are so focused on
being right that they have forgotten how to be Christlike. They want us to care more about a hurting world than about our personal preferences.
Completely
lost in the ensuing madness are Jesus' words: “Your
love for one another will prove to the world that you are my
disciples.” Perhaps, Jesus
himself is completely lost in the madness as
well. That is an indictment we should not be able to live with.
I'm
picturing the revolution that might happen if, instead of calling
someone out when we are unhappy, we racked our brains for ways to
serve and honor that person.
This
is not easy. It's certainly a personal challenge for me. I can think
of a number of people I strongly disagree with that I really do not
want to honor. But what if I tried? What might happen?
This isn't to say we always agree with one another. We don't. We can't and shouldn't. But we can disagree compassionately, thoughtfully, without personal conviction or vendetta entering the picture. We can offer forgiveness, even when it isn't asked for. Because that's what the whole "one another" thing is about. We're supposed to be different in a culture that considers relationships disposable. What if we were?
What
if you tried, today? What would it look like?
Our team. We did it--together. |
Over
the next few weeks, I am planning to do a series of posts on another blog I work on about the church—what it is, what it's supposed to
be, and where it's going. Please join me. Please tell me what you
think about those questions. I'd love your ideas.
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