
"A primary task of the community of Jesus is to maintain this lifelong cultivation of love in all the messiness of its families, neighborhoods, congregations, and missions. Life is intricate, demanding, glorious, deeply human, and God-honoring, but--and here's the thing--never a finished product, never an accomplishment, always flawed in some degree or other. So why define our identity in terms that can never be satisfied? There are so many easier ways to give meaning and significance to our human condition: giving assent to a creed or keeping a prescribed moral code are the most common in congregations. . . . Belief and behavior are essential, but as the defining mark of the Christian they lack one thing--relationship. They are both prone to abstractions or programs. Abstractions (learning right belief) are good; programs (learning right behavior) are good; but it is also possible to master the abstractions and carry out the programs impersonally. In fact, it is far easier if done impersonally."
Eugene Peterson, Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places
Our goal: Holiness and Fear-of-the-Lord, cultivated by personal prayer and corporate worship, practiced in the context of the messiness that comes with particular places and particular people.
I read and I smiled.
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