Jesus_is_LORD
Loyal
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2015
- Messages
- 2,836
No, be contented in yourself, you are what God is working in you, don't try to be someone or something else.
That said, we do need to understand and relate to certain issues specific to certain sections. The young have to contend with social media, the Internet, drugs and sexualisation that I never faced. Ethnics and gays face prejudice on a daily basis.
The Gospel is life changing and so relevant to everyone but how do you get that message across?
I like how you are reflecting and thinking on this topic.
I would say when you state "be contented in yourself" I agree. I don't think we should change who we are ("In Christ") to communicate the gospel,
but we should try to understand others. We do this all the time, think of jobs. A business person will learn the business culture to better communicate
and relate to his business clients. A doctor will understand the food and nutritional culture of his/her clients to better communicate about their diagnosis,etc.
A lawyer or judge may better understand the crime culture to better communicate to the defendant of plantiff, we do this all the time. Not to change ourselves
but to better communicate and relate.
In terms of your questions :
The Gospel is life changing and so relevant to everyone but how do you get that message across?
I would say two points. Point one, find a common/universal point of connection.
Point two, find a culture category that is a lens and changes the perspective of the individual.
So the common/universal point could be things like love, or justice, or forgiveness, or redemption.
Values that are universal.
Culture categories can be language, norms, behavior, etc.
So you find a universal point in Christianity and then you communicate it into that particular's cultural category.
For example there is a universal value of Justice in Christian theology, and in the African American culture there is
a value on justice as well( a universal value), however in the African American culture sometimes one might
put their identify first in their racial identity and not in Christ first. So knowing that (generalization , I know) about
the African American culture in general, you could communicate to someone of that culture by trying to speak
to that value of justice (universal) but helping them to find their identity in Christ first.
Another example is the LGBTQ community. Love is a universal value shared by everyone. Yet in the
LGBTQ community a secondary culture lens is oppression. They believe that people are oppressing
them of their rights. Knowing this, you can better communicate to them that the real oppression
is the oppression of sin that is holding them in bondage, and true love cannot be expressed outside
of the WILL of God, etc, etc.
So the idea is find a universal Christian value which transcends all cultures, and then understand
that particular culture and the lens they see the world through and use that to better communicate
that universal truth which resonants with their soul.