I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.
~John 8.12
The light of Christ is in all those who choose to belong to him and be a witness in a dark world. One small candle can cast quite a bit of light, yet imagine the amount of light produced when joined with a community of believers. Our own singular light will produce enough to
see the path directly in front of our feet but no further. When we come together, joining our light with fellow worshipers, we see much further than we can alone.
We are meant to be in community. It's one thing to love God and serve him, but not alone. Throughout history, God called his people to be in community, he calls for gatherings: from the Israelites who paused in their wilderness journeys to worship, all the way to the home churches of the early believers. The desire of God is for us to be in relationship with him and with each other.
For some, their relationship is outside the community of believers, or 'church', if you will. They have given up on the church for one reason or another. Be it from religious abuse, hurt feelings, boredom, bad encounters... etc. I will be among the first to admit that 'the church' is not perfect. It is a mass of broken people who need healing, who need God, and who need each other. The people outside of the community called church say that the concept of church needs to change. Perhaps in the changing of the church, our attitudes about church need to change as well. It is not one or the other, it is both.
Our relationship with God, and with others, is not something that is an 'all about me' relationship, it is about us... us together in community. This light of Christ that we carry inside is within all of those who choose to be his. The brokenness of life tries to blow out the flame of Christ within. By trying to protect the light on our own without the worship of God in community, we can easily slip into a self-centered spirituality. But when we take our candles inside, to a place of worship, we are able to fan the flame of the Spirit within us. Then and only then, do we have light enough to carry into the darkness outside.
We are meant to be in community. It's one thing to love God and serve him, but not alone. Throughout history, God called his people to be in community, he calls for gatherings: from the Israelites who paused in their wilderness journeys to worship, all the way to the home churches of the early believers. The desire of God is for us to be in relationship with him and with each other.
For some, their relationship is outside the community of believers, or 'church', if you will. They have given up on the church for one reason or another. Be it from religious abuse, hurt feelings, boredom, bad encounters... etc. I will be among the first to admit that 'the church' is not perfect. It is a mass of broken people who need healing, who need God, and who need each other. The people outside of the community called church say that the concept of church needs to change. Perhaps in the changing of the church, our attitudes about church need to change as well. It is not one or the other, it is both.
Our relationship with God, and with others, is not something that is an 'all about me' relationship, it is about us... us together in community. This light of Christ that we carry inside is within all of those who choose to be his. The brokenness of life tries to blow out the flame of Christ within. By trying to protect the light on our own without the worship of God in community, we can easily slip into a self-centered spirituality. But when we take our candles inside, to a place of worship, we are able to fan the flame of the Spirit within us. Then and only then, do we have light enough to carry into the darkness outside.
Maybe this Advent we could stop trying to light our own candles, but could light one another's in community. Come and worship, come to Christ, because he is the Light of the World.
Grace and peace,
Grace and peace,
Diane









