Jesus: a joined-up life
Well, we’re coming to
the end of our blog-dabble in Andrew Cameron’s book Joined-up Life, and if I’m honest I don’t know how to finish.
There are almost too
many things to look at. Cameron rounds off his book looking at some ‘hot
topics’: women, sex, homosexuality, bioethics, diversity and the catch-cry ‘don’t
impose your values on me!’ Each of these topics can easily make us feel scared,
hurt or uncomfortable. But Cameron deals with each of them with a refreshing
wisdom, sensitivity and brevity – although sometimes I wish there was a bit
more, but I guess that’s for another book and another time!
He finishes with the
reminder that ultimately ethics isn’t just about the big decisions and
dilemmas, it’s about our everyday defaults and directions, the first thoughts
our minds go to, our gut reactions and gut fears and seeking to transform them
so that we can discern what God wants (Rom 12:2).
I guess it all comes
down to trust. Trust that the bible is dripping with wisdom that is richly satisfying
for the age we are in. Trust that what God says about how to live does not
reflect a dry or dusty or ‘don’t touch’ attitude to the good life but it IS the
good life. And when I look back on my life, time and time again I can see times
when following God’s wisdom worked out for the best.
Perhaps the best fuel
for this trust is Jesus himself. As Cameron points out, Jesus managed to ‘upset
moral categories everywhere, yet he inhabited the most joined-up life
imaginable’. He’s the human ‘who knew how to be human’. Again and again I feel
that society tries to put the Church, Christianity, even the Bible, in a
box. But they struggle to put Jesus there. So often reading about Jesus in the
NT is like a slap from a wet fish: his words sting and then comfort. My fear is
that my decisions and defaults follow the status
quo and are not anything like a ‘slap from a wet fish’ to the world’s
well-worn way of doing and thinking.
And so once again I
pray that God would renew my mind and give me the energy to chase down his
thoughts in the Scriptures and apply them in my life.