Excerpt from John Starke post:
Not Your Typical Christian Conference
...
But the conference landed on a unique weekend for me, personally.
That weekend I also preached my first sermon as the lead pastor of All
Souls Church in the Upper West Side of Manhattan, and my sermon text
just happened to be on the topic of work. My manuscript was already
typed and set to be preached the next morning, so there wasn't much time
to borrow any thoughtful content. But Mouw's opening address subtly helped changed my tone.
He began with challenging the usual divide between secular and
sacred, but he did so by setting our minds upon the presence of Christ.
"Welcome to the center of the universe," Mouw said, "not because you're
in New York City, but because you're in the presence of Christ." We were
in the presence of Christ, not because we were in the beautiful St.
Bartholomew's Cathedral in Midtown Manhattan, and not because we were
gathered together with 400 other Christians, but because Christ is
present everywhere and holding together the universe. Like Abraham
Kuyper famously said, Christ is sovereign over every square inch of this
world. The reign of Christ is not only central for our Sunday
gatherings, but it also infiltrates our work, family, and friendships.
It shifts and transforms our obligations and allegiances.
The next morning, I'm confident my preaching was different than if I
had not listened to the questions and concerns of the conference
attenders and reflected the foundation of a sovereign Christ. How? I
didn't just preach to the congregation of All Souls Church. I preached
to congregants who were ad agents, writers, financial consultants, and
teachers, who all had commitments, deadlines, and obligations. And their
ultimate allegiance to Christ does not lessen those obligations;
rather, it deepens them. Paul in Colossians 3:22-23 instructs slaves, whose ultimate allegiance is to Christ (Col. 3:24),
not to neglect their duties to their masters, but rather to "obey in
everything" and "work heartily." What a radical and subversive view of
life!
In Paul's words and in our work we see that our relationship to God
is not merely an ethereal reality detached from life on earth. Actually,
how we relate to God has a significant effect on the world around us.
Our relationship with God helps make sense of the world around us, not
simply take us out of it. That is Christianity, and there's nothing in
this world like it.
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