Not long ago, Anna came home from staying the night with her
Grandma and said, “Daddy, Mamaw’s toilet paper is so soft. Why don’t we have toilet paper like that? Do you want me to ask her where she gets her
toilet paper so we can get some too?”
“Ha!” I laughed and said, “Sweetie, we buy generic toilet
paper because Daddy likes to save money on things like that.”
“O…,” she said with a disappointed but understanding
voice.
I suppose that will play out to be one of those introductory
lessons in the difference between cheap/generic/low quality and expensive/brand
name/better quality.
Whether you are like me and are willing to sacrifice
softness for savings or vice versa I think we could all agree that no matter
how much we cheap folks may say “toilet paper is just toilet paper,” even a
child can see there is a difference between the generic and the “real
thing.”
I am convinced we live in a culture that is fed up with
generic. I believe the argument could be made that our society is tired of
politics and phoniness. People are
suspicious of anyone or group who is assigned or claims to have some form of
authority because there is a popular perception that behind that authority is
hidden corruption or deception. And to
top it all off, people are kind of angry about it.
If I have gotten at all close to properly gauging the
temperature of our present culture, then that means the Church has been given a
great opportunity to be real. In a culture
of generic, vague, half-truths, out- right lies and hypocrisy a little bit of
authenticity can go a long way in gaining credibility and serving as a catalyst
for great change.
So, what is “brand name” Christianity? James 1:27 says, “Religion that God our
father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows
in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.”
On Sunday I mentioned a Poll that was taken some time ago
that asked unchurched Americans why they do not go to church. The number one answer given: “I do not go to church because the people I
know who go to church do not live any better or different than people I know
who do not go to church.” What is that,
if not a cry for the Church to live an authentic faith?
James reminds us that at the end of the day, reaching our
community for Christ is not complicated and yet it is so hard we can’t do it
but by the grace of God. True religion
is staying clean in a dirty world and meeting the real, tangible needs of the
marginalized. If we could offer our
world this “brand-name” Christianity could we not see Jesus’ prayer answered,
“They kingdom come, they will be done on earth as it is in heaven”? I believe our world is looking for something
real and life-changing and we have been given that through Christ. If we will live out that brand-name
Christianity both together in our church family and openly and intentionally in
our neighborhoods, schools, sporting events, work and…well…everywhere…we will
see a cynical, suspicious and angry culture begin to sit up, take notice and,
if we stay at it long enough, respond to it to the irresistible drawing of the
Holy Spirit through a faith that is anything but generic.
So, while Anna will never experience the comfort of “Charmin”
in our home, I hope she we will know that while we went generic with toilet
paper, we always strived for the real thing when it came to our faith. I pray that not only for my children, but for
your children and grand-children as well.
May the generation that follows us know us by our purity and compassion
because, as James said, that is the real thing.
We want to be genuine in the world around us...and when we fall, we want the world to see Who it is Who picks us up and forgives us and gives us the strength to be real again.
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I agree, Susan, when we fall the best way to exhibit purity is to not cover it up but admit it..
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