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When it comes to grocery shopping, I’m all about saving money.
We love Aldi’s. (Can’t you tell?)
I don’t mind scrounging the crevices of my car in search of a quarter or bagging my own groceries.
Why? Because when I scan the receipt, I see all the money I saved.
But there is one thing about Aldi’s you have to anticipate—you must be willing to buy generic brands.
I don’t need my peanut butter to be labeled JIF or my crackers to be Ritz. As long as they taste good, I will eat an entire sleeve of Oreo’s whether they are the originals or the knock-off brand.
But I’m afraid as Christians, we have settled for generic Christianity.
We go to Aldi’s because the prices are cheap, but we wander into the aisles of generic Christianity when we believe the cost of discipleship is too high.
When Jesus walked the earth, he was radical.
Every message He preached required his followers to pay a high price.
He proclaimed: “Whoever desires to find their lives, must lose their lives.”
He implored us to “pick up our cross and follow him.”
He often required his disciples to give up their jobs, their possessions, their loved ones—and on one occasion—he demanded this smack-dab in the middle a funeral.
No, Jesus wasn’t peddling generic Christianity but this seems to be what most of us are buying.
Generic Christianity is choosing to be nice and polite rather than obeying God. Don’t get me wrong, Jesus desires us to exhibit the fruits of the Spirit such as love, peace, patient, and kindness.
But the problem arises when we substitute good manners in place of obedience.
God doesn’t expect us to be a glorified version of Mr. Rogers.
Jesus led by example. He only did what he saw his Father doing. He only said what he heard his Father speaking.
This obedience resulted in immense pain and suffering. This obedience led Jesus to the cross.
Who wants to sign up?
Maybe you struggle to hear God’s voice. Maybe you’re not sure what God is requiring of you. We don’t need to look far to know some of the things Jesus asks of us, they are laid out in the Word:
1. “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations.”
2. “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress.”
3. “Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you.”
Just looking at this short list, take a minute and evaluate your life.
How many people are you discipling? Not being friendly to. Not having coffee with. Not chatting about the weather on the phone. Anyone?
How many orphans or widows are you caring for? Generic Christianity gives to the food banks or donates clothes to the Salvation Army.
Yet this is the knock-off version of what God commanded. He said, “care for”—day in and day out—attending to the needs of people who are in distress and have NO ONE ELSE.
Think of the one person you despise right now? Maybe they hurt you or someone you love to such a degree that you feel you can never forgive them.
How have you been loving them this week? What have you done practically for their good?
I have a feeling we all come up short on this one!
Jesus doesn’t want our quarters or our punched time cards, indicating all the Sundays we attended church.
Jesus desires our lives—and it will cost us everything.
But at the end of the day, there is no cause I’d rather spend mine on.