In the modern day, convenience has surfaced to the top of what we strive for in terms of what we (especially in the western world) see as valuable. We’ve all heard the term ‘microwave generation’, and that my friend, is what we are. Take a look around your own home for a quick second. What do you see? A DVR so you can watch your favorite shows without the ‘hassle’ of commercials; an alarm clock where the largest button reads “Snooze”; a cell phone, ready to carry out your bidding to the ends of the earth and back in 2 seconds flat. We have surrounded ourselves with all of these things in order to make our lives more convenient. With or without our noticing, we have given convenience an increasingly prominent position in our society.
The convenience movement started long before we had technology making our lives so effortless. It’s in our nature as humans. We are all familiar with the idea of habits. We get ourselves into the habit of something and our brains automatically make the decision to continue the habit without having to constantly consult our conscious mind. It’s really very awesome to think that our minds and bodies have the power to run without us. At some point, we no longer are dependent on ourselves to make decisions. The process is completely self-sustaining.
We are creatures of habit. We like to do things a certain way and keep doing them until the process no longer proves effective or the results are undesirable (and even sometimes after). Change is constant and uncomfortable and well, inconvenient. It requires movement and raising questions that we don’t always want to ask. So we don’t bother. We let habits creep up to steer the ship and pretty soon mutiny has taken place. Your conscious mind is lulled to sleep and you aren’t making the decisions anymore – your habits are.
Passion is not fostered in an environment that doesn’t change. Sometimes the church is the worst offender of abdicating to habitual cycles that are ineffective and outdated. In the process we have made ourselves obsolete to the world and done the very relevant Gospel a horrible injustice. Even though we may think that the modern church is on the edge of what God is doing, I wonder how many have stopped to ask God Himself. How many of us have really gone after God with reckless persistence, asking Him to take us where no man has gone before and require of us what we ourselves cannot comprehend? One quick glance at the effectiveness of the church today, and I can tell you, not many have.
The early church had no cycles. How could they? They were green in every way imaginable. Processes, growth plans and evangelism strategies weren’t set out before the apostles by forerunners. No, they had a very different method of executing what God told them to do. They were completely dependent on God for all of the answers. Completely. Outside of God’s wisdom, there was no recourse for the troubles they had. The problems they faced and issues they came up against had no case law on how to judge things or deal with them. They had only Jesus to look to because He’s the only one who knew the plan.
Perhaps this is why they saw so much more fruit than the church of today sees. Dependence on God demands proximity to Him. The early church literally let God run the show and sought His wisdom for everything they did, even down to who should wash the tables, and guess what? He had the answers they needed. He had the plan and I submit this to you, had the first apostles been privy to the way things were going to take place, we would have a very different Bible today. The early church worked because they followed His lead. They didn’t have preconceived notions or opinions even on how Christianity should look. God said ‘this is the best way’ and they took Him at His word. And what happened? They turned the world up-side-down- they had a revolution.
Its time for a revolution today-it’s been time. One thing I know to be true: if discontent breeds long enough, revolution will occur. It’s formulaic fact. The endless, mindless cycles will break down and new, God-centered ideas will take their place. Christianity calls this a ‘great awakening.’ I call it church.
Convenience can be a great thing, but when it stops us from depending on God, there is nothing more detrimental or digressive. Vive la Révolution!