Counterfeit Christianity – Mysticism – That you can find God in your heart
Mark 4:26 He also said, "This is
what the kingdom of God is
like. A man scatters seed on the ground. 27 Night and day, whether
he sleeps or gets up, the seed sprouts and grows, though he does not know how.
28 All by itself the soil produces grain-- first the stalk, then the
head, then the full kernel in the head. 29 As soon as the grain is
ripe, he puts the sickle to it, because the harvest has come." 30
Again he said, "What shall we say the kingdom of God is
like, or what parable shall we use to describe it? 31 It is like a
mustard seed, which is the smallest seed you plant in the ground. 32
Yet when planted, it grows and becomes the largest of all garden plants, with
such big branches that the birds of the air can perch in its shade."
33 With many similar parables Jesus spoke the word to them, as much as
they could understand. 34 He did not say anything to them without
using a parable. But when he was alone with his own disciples, he explained
everything.
Years
ago, a former Sunday School teacher in my previous congregation called me up to
say, “Pastor, I want to get a divorce.” Before I could pick up my jaw from the
floor, she added, “I’m not happy in my marriage and God wants me to be happy.”
That is mysticism. Mysticism is putting feelings over God’s facts.
When I
confronted a former confirmand about his lack of worship attendance, he
explained, “I don’t need to go to church to be close to God. I’m a big hunter
and God is all around me in nature. When I’m outdoors, I can talk to God and
God can talk to me.” That is mysticism. Mysticism is finding God’s presence in
anything.
Over
the years I have had numerous conversations with people asking me what God has
to say about gay marriage or the roles of women in the church or other timely
social issues. But really, they weren’t asking what God had to say. They were
more wondering how they could get God’s thinking to conform to their way of
thinking. That is mysticism. Mysticism is substituting our words for God’s words.
There
have also been plenty of people who believe that God is giving them signs when
the sun is shining or they’ve recovered from a serious illness or they have a
strange feeling in their heart. But all of those could be explained away as
coincidence or modern medicine or gas. Yet this kind mysticism abounds within
our culture … even within our Christianity.
“Mysticism
is the belief that direct knowledge of God, spiritual truth, or ultimate
reality can be attained through subjective experiences of God or something
godlike” – Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary. Mysticism is nothing more than worship
of our emotions.
Mysticism
has found many ready listeners in American culture because our culture is a
melting pot of trying to feel good. Bruce Jenner, the head of the NAACP in Spokane , and a
whole litany of other examples are proof that we have made feeling good into an
art form.
Mysticism
affects Christians as much as it does non-Christians. We spend just as much
time casting about for something to consume that will make us feel better. That
is our way of life. It is our economy, our national pastime, and our greatest
export. We believe, teach, and confess that discomfort and any type of
negativity is bad, and that happiness is our highest goal and achievement.
We’ve become so successful at it that we assume God approaches religion the
same way.
Why
wouldn’t God want me to be happy? Why wouldn’t God want to meet my needs and
take away my worries? Why would God ever want to say no to me, allow me to
struggle or suffer pain? Surely God must want me to feel good all the time.
That is
the original lie of the devil. It is the same lie that Satan has been telling
ever since the beginning. He substitutes his words, the world’s words, our own
words – it doesn’t really matter whose words they are, as long as they replace
Jesus’ real, actual words. That’s exactly what he did in the Garden of Eden
with Adam and Eve. The devil asked, “Did God really say …?” After Adam and Eve
thought about it, they were ready and willing to replace God’s clear and saving
words with the cloudy and damning words of their hearts.
The
devil has been doing the very same thing for generations. He’s very practiced
at it. He slowly leaches away God’s words for other words. The world’s
treasures. Other spiritualities. Our feelings. This is counterfeit
Christianity. And we have all bought into it!
We
Christians in America tend
to be mystics. We try to discern God’s will by looking at the world and events
around us. We are not satisfied with the words and the will that God has
already given us. As Lutherans we know that the apostles and the prophets have
already given us God’s final words. We know from confirmation classes that God
does not desire to have a relationship with you apart from His Word. And by His
Word I mean His actual, revealed Scripture. But that’s not enough for us. We
want more. … Or actually less.
We want
more of our feelings and less of God’s words. That is mysticism.
We all
buy into mysticism when we are not satisfied with a God who has already laid
everything out for us. We really don’t want a God that we can trust. We want a
God that we can manipulate, and contact, and barter with. We don’t want a God
that says, “This is the way it is, believe it.” We want a God that gives us the
authority to find and divine the way that our world acts and connects with us.
But God
loves us too much to send us messages that are hidden beneath the clouds or in
the sunshine or in the feelings of our hearts. It’s not that God has a problem
with hearts or emotions. After all, He created them. But He didn’t create our
hearts and emotions in order to speak to us through them. That is why He
created words.
The
other reason God doesn’t speak to us through our hearts is because, as Martin
Luther said, our hearts are “idol factories.” They will create any kind of idol
imaginable, as long as it is apart from the true God. Plus, our hearts and
emotions are always changing. God’s Word is unchanging and unchangeable.
It
turns out that this is really good news. You can know everything that God wants
you to know, and you can know it firmly. We call that the Small Catechism in
the Lutheran Church . That
is the “small” portion of God’s Word that we want to repeat and remember over
and over. It contains everything we need to know for our soul’s salvation. Then
everything else we need to know for our day to day living can be figured out
from that clearly revealed Word.
So if I
need to know what I should be doing in my everyday life, I don’t look for signs
and wonders in the present. Jesus said it Himself, “It is a wicked generation
that asks for a miraculous sign” (Matthew 12:39 ).
Instead, I take the Ten Commandments and apply them to my life. How best can I
worship my God? How best can I serve my neighbor? It’s all laid out there in
the Commandments. This work I do in serving God is all done under the Good News
of the grace of God in Christ Jesus on the cross. That is His real, final word
to me … and you.
God
made the sunshine. He likes it a lot. But He doesn’t want you to use it to
listen to Him. God has given you feelings and emotions. He wants you to enjoy
them. But He doesn’t want you to figure out His will for your life based on
them. That is why He gave you Jesus.
Jesus’
plain words in Holy Scripture are the antidote for the poisoned dish of mysticism.
Reading those words carefully and learning their context is to inwardly digest
the faith that God is not only real but also gives us real, pure, true answers.
God is far more generous to us than to force us to endlessly seek Him in the
flurries of the wind or the palpitations of our hearts. He wants us to do far
more than merely imagine what His will for us might be. He wants us to be
certain. You don’t need to wait for a break in the weather to hear and know
what God thinks about you. He says it very clearly in His love letter to you
that is contained in His Holy Scriptures: “This is love: not that we loved God,
but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins” (1
John 4:10 ).
We pay
attention to God’s Word because it brings us truth. In a world of rumors, deception, and passing fads, the
Bible gives us the trustworthy, solid, enduring truth of God for our lives. It
shows us our sin without pulling any punches. It also shows us our salvation
through Jesus Christ.
God’s Word affects change and transformation. It is
like a seed planted underground. Suddenly, without any help from the gardener,
the seed sprouts and grows. It first produces a stalk, then a head, and then
the full kernel. Or it is like a mustard seed that is so tiny that it can be
blown off your finger with a light breeze. Yet it grows to become the largest
of all the garden plants. God’s Word gets planted in your heart through
Baptism. It converts your old, dead heart into the throne room for the kingdom of God .
It chases away the devil and makes room for the Holy Spirit. When you hear or
read the Bible, you’re not just connected with a book or a story. You are
receiving the Spirit of God and a message that justifies, sanctifies and saves.
That’s because the Bible is all about a real man named
Jesus who came down from heaven with real words that we still have. Words that
are inspired and inerrant. Spirit-filled words. Words that produce life. Words
that prepare for the harvest at the end of time. Words from God made man at His
incarnation in the womb of Mary. This God-Man then went to the not-so-nice hill
called Golgotha so that He could hear and feel God’s wrath poured out
on Him. All so that you would be able to escape hearing and feeling what God
really thinks about you as a sinner.
Jesus endured the cross, scorning its shame and pain.
He put His will and emotions aside, submitting to the will of His Father, which
had been recorded for centuries in His divine Scriptures. Mysticism met its match
in Jesus who could not be tempted to do anything other than trust God despite
all that He was seeing and experiencing. He is the one who told off the devil,
“Man does not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth
of God” (Matthew 4:4).
Jesus took upon Himself all our reliance on mysticism
as our hope for finding God. He took the divided, fractured, idol-maker of our
hearts and nailed them to His cross. Then His blood and water flowed over those
hearts to purify and sanctify and save us from ourselves. All so that we might
not trust ourselves or our hearts or the wind or anything else in our world.
Only that we might trust in Him and His Word which proclaims Him.
God’s act of saving the world did not happen in me,
but outside of me. That’s the seed that is planted in your heart. That’s the
Word. Not a feeling, but a written, spoken, and sung reality. A reality that is
not found in the mystical means of whatever makes us happy. But a reality that
is based on the solid rock of Holy Scriptures, Holy Baptism, Holy Supper, and
Holy Absolution. Everything else that we try to divine God’s will are the
ancient lies of the devil. The seed of God’s Word is the greatest treasure of
God’s grace. That is true Christianity. A Christian treasure planted in your
heart and bearing fruit until the harvest at the end of time. It counteracts
our counterfeit Christianity. Amen.
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