What you are about to read is essentially the first book report I have ever written
that is not a result of a school assignment, but rather the result of a
self-motivated desire to write on something about which I find the workings of
my mind turning in thoughts of awakening, new life and new wonder towards the
One I call my Savior and my God. The book I will be reviewing today is called Jesus
is Better Than You Imagined and it was authored by Jonathan Merritt about
whom I wrote a few lines of applause for two blog posts before this one. I have
been following Jonathan on twitter for about two years now (or maybe even a
little longer than that). I began reading Jonathan’s news articles, which he
writes for Religion News Service as the result of a friend sending one of his
my way. I was attracted to Jonathan’s writings for his moderate and reasonable,
but still distinctively Christian perspective on news/current cultural issues
(how refreshing and unique!).
When he started tweeting about an upcoming book on faith he was writing, I was so excited to read it. For reasons none other than laziness, business and financial tightness at the time of its release, I sort of let my feet drag on actually purchasing the book, but still kept it on my ever growing “to read” list until I finally asked for it for Christmas. On Christmas day, I was so excited to receive the book that I immediately opened it up and consequently found myself loving it from the first page. This book is one for those who want their faith to reach beyond the weekend church routine, beyond the rigidness of man-made religion and straight into a very real life journey with a very real God with a very real purpose for every breath breathed on earth and into eternity.
As I had previously suspected, Jonathan and I lived very similar
childhoods in regards to religious experience. We are both from strong
Christian families who struggled through the 1980/90s conservative movements
that have left many an individual burnt to the crisp by legalism and
less-than-grace-filled judgment inside the very churches who claimed to be
sharing the love of Jesus with the world. Jonathan’s personality shines through
here in a way that makes his accusations feel somewhat lighthearted and more as
calls to reasonableness for the average Protestant church, and less as strong
condemning thoughts towards the Church, but while still certainly retaining
enough of a sting to point out the true and uncomfortable obviousness of the
multiple centuries-old problem of Pharisaical behavior amongst Christians.
After reading only a few pages, I had to send Jonathan a message quickly
telling him that he had me from “burgundy carpet” (and when you read the book,
you’ll surely be laughing too). While Jonathan absolutely makes some excellent
points on the issue of legalism that many the every-Sunday church goer and
indeed many church leaders should examine within their own hearts, this is
actually not at all a book about tearing down nor insulting organized
traditional religion, but rather it is an invitation to encounter a God who
wants to breathe new life straight through the walls of the world, the
individual heart and yea, the walls of your local church too. If you have been
a Christian for a long time (or if you are very familiar with Christian
teachings), then while reading this book, Jonathan will have your thoughts
spinning on what is Truth from Scripture versus what very well may be made up
tradition.
Even with all the overdue and well worded
points on the gross misconduct of modern day American churches, Jonathan still
asserts that this spiritual gathering community is what we as Christians are
called to participate in and grow in even amidst all the failures and
shortcomings. The Bible has made it clear that the Church is the Bride of
Christ and is definitely a vital part of the Christian journey, so I would
fully agree that we must stay faithful and trust God to sort out the problems
and misinterpretations. He is Sovereign and He will grow His true Church even
when there's much wrong mixed in with the right.
A large portion of the book Jesus is Better Than You Imagined is
dedicated to encouraging and reminding the reader that there exists a God worth
discovering outside the limits of religious tradition, legalism and even
systematic theology. Why do we think the miraculous God of the Bible stopped
being miraculous the second the authors laid down their pens? The God who
created the universe is not done creating new life and revealing truth in the
midst of a sin-scarred world. Jonathan shares even from his own personal
sufferings as a child and how the journey of healing has enabled him to pour
out God's grace upon an equally suffering world. Reading his story inspired me
to think of how I can share parts of my own story in the future in order to
love others with the love of Jesus and point them to His arms- the ultimate and
only place of true healing. Jonathan also speaks of those dark periods in a
sincere spiritual pursuit where God seems to fall silent or back away out the
door. The times where we can't see Him or hear Him and circumstances seem bleak
and miserable. I won't give away Jonathan's words for those times, but I will
say that I read them on exactly a dark night as such when I needed them. God
never leaves us, but if it is a true relationship we pursue with the Almighty,
He will lead in higher and wiser ways than what our souls may hope for or
enjoy. He is still good. He is still there and He will break through the
darkness on His time table, not ours.
Jesus is Better Than You Imagined directly echoed
my own personal journey of going deeper into faith that God has been leading me
on for about ten years now. My own journey began during my teenage and college
years when I started to question widespread “Christian” rules with which I
could never fully bring myself to sign on the dotted line of agreement. For
example, I never really understood the concept of being forced to dress up for
Sunday morning. If God accepts me as I am, why does it matter if I have fancy
clothes on or not? If He accepts the vagabonds and outcasts, why do I have to
measure up to some arbitrary rule not actually found in Scripture? Don't we
dress up for work and school and life in the world because man looks on the
outside instead of looking inside us at the heart like God does? These blaring
contradictions made no sense to me and left me frustrated and not able to
embrace church fully or ever feel fully myself. I wasn’t able to just breathe
in God’s truth and love and be transformed by grace. Nowadays, I don't think
God cares if I wear stockings and a skirt or jeans and a sweatshirt on Sunday.
I now know God loves me the same amount when all I accomplish on a Sunday
morning is just getting out of bed and showing up on time to church because He
knows how difficult this task alone can be for me. Nevertheless, back in my
childhood and early teenage years all this rule-culture did was imbed in me a
deep pathway of constantly having to ensure my own self-righteousness while
strictly judging all others according to man-made standards.
Around this same time I began to suffer
from strong anxiety for which there was no evident physical cause. A few doctor
visits into it, my very secular pediatrician very determinedly told me that because
I was a Christian, I needed to begin each day by handing the day over to God
and telling Him of my dependence upon Him (talk about God showing up in
surprising places). Also around the same time, or perhaps shortly after this, I
began discovering the books of Narnia
and other writings by C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien and slowly found the door
of faith swinging open to a much bigger Deity fully of love and reasonable
sense and never ending, far reaching grace. God suddenly moved from Someone I
knew from a distance to Someone I walked with daily as my faith became my own.
I learned not to care about the disapproving voices of legalism scorched into
my brain. I discovered that true life is right here and right now. During this
period of new growth, I read one book after another with pages spilling over
with the truth of the Grace story- of God's true love for humanity.
A couple years after this time of newness
of life, God showed up even stronger and broke me to pieces so many times
through family issues and personal heartbreak in painful, but sovereignly
ordained ways so that I would learn to find Him the only One capable of picking
up the pieces and putting me back together anew for an adventure of learning to
let Him take over and lead. Over the past ten years, God has consistently
revealed to me His eternity-sized love for those who accept His grace offered
at the cross of Jesus and follow Him with their hearts. Even today, God is
still leading my life in the very real way of causing me to wait on Him to
fulfill certain spiritual and life desires He has placed inside me. I am not
naturally one to sit still and I am not afraid of causing drastic change (nor
do I regret for one second any of my life experiences because they have all so
clearly been filled with God’s guidance); but now I am beginning to learn to
still myself and wait on God to take the lead wholly as I attempt to faithfully
follow Jesus Christ each day.
Many of the truths I have learned over the
past ten years were so closely related with the lessons Jonathan has written
about in Jesus is Better Than You Imagined. It seems he has also
discovered that Christianity has far more to do with the heart-fruits of the
Spirit and far less to do with external rules. If the inside is being made new
daily by a holy God, surely, He'll teach the outside how to love Him and serve
others as well with real truths from the Scriptures and not legalistic
nonsense. The Bible calls not for do’s and don'ts, but actually for much, much
more- your whole life laid down and dead. It's a resurrection to a new life on
a journey you couldn't have imagined with a God whose grace is bigger, deeper
and longer-lasting than you ever could have dreamed. The one true God is a God
who doesn't expect you to reform yourself while being filled with constant
anxiety over getting things just right, but a God that says "I've already
paid the price for your sin, your shortcomings and even your very life. Now
follow Me and I will do the work as My Holy Spirit changes your heart and My
love breathes into you right out of your body into the world around you. It
will cost you everything, but you can't earn it on your own because it is a
gift. Even the freedom to surrender and have a relationship with Me is a part
of the gift."
Jesus does not call us to be perfect
before we can approach Him, but rather He has already traveled right to our
broken selves and offered His own blood to heal our mess. If those He used in
the Bible were met in their mess and then served God in miraculous ways, even
in the midst of their own brokenness and during their spiritual
transformations, then we must believe that God is still in the work of healing
the broken and using the imperfect to point to His perfect love for the world. Jesus
is Better Than You Imagined will teach you that God really is love and He
really is chasing us down with a burning passion because He wants each of us,
every part and all of us. I want the God of the Bible for all my days. "He
calls us not to a destination but to a lifelong posture whereby we live aware,
peering around every corner knowing that God may be waiting there." (pg.
180 of Jesus is Better Than You Imagined). Jonathan’s writing invites us
to the true journey of faith where God takes over, turns our thoughts (and
quite often all of our life plans) upside down and builds us anew as we are
continuously overwhelmed by His awesome grace and work both in our hearts and
in the world around us. I encourage you in this midwinter to get your own copy
of Jesus is Better Than You Imagined and take a page from the life of
Jonathan Merritt who has simply, but bravely, asked God to show up in a brand
new and very real way in life. Actually, I challenge you to begin the journey
on which you’ll discover that Jesus really, really is more than you imagined.
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