Written by Mike Burnard (Analytical Strategist at dia-LOGOS)
Over the past few days, we have been contemplating vices that the conflict in Gaza has exposed within the Christian community. As Christians, we are consecrated like Christ to be impartial, full of mercy, and reconciling people with God. If we fail to do so, we will inevitably relinquish our role as peacemakers. Today we look at how we sometimes pursue the false spiritual duty of alignment instead of embracing our spiritual assignment as followers of Christ.
Alignment versus assignment
Once we embrace the Theopolitical Kingdom, we enter into a culture that is alien to the worldly culture in which we live. Our assignment as peacemakers and reconcilers now overrule our sense of alignment and perceived duty to choose sides. We embrace this Godly mandate of bringing people closer to God and closer to one another. We refrain from aligning with one group only.
The Christian message according to Christ was never to align with a nation but to align with the Kingdom. This Kingdom is not built on the principles of power, supremacy or dominance but peace, reconciliation, love, grace and forgiveness – all of which were displayed on the cross.
To fully understand our assignment, we need to travel to Nazareth, enter the synagogue, take a seat next to all the other devotees, and listen carefully to how Jesus explains His mission on earth
Then Jesus puts the scroll away and looks at us. A holy silence descends on the room. “I am He,” He says. “This passage of scripture has come true today, as you heard it being read.”
Fast forward three and a half years later. This time we are seated in a different room, with a different audience, and with different expectations. This time we listen differently. We are not in the comfortable seats of the synagogue anymore. We are behind locked doors in fear of our lives. Our Saviour has just been crucified in the most inhumane and brutal way. We have now been declared public enemy number one by the Roman Empire and the religious elite.
And then, out of nowhere, the scar-ridden body of a resurrected Christ appears in our midst. “Peace be with you my friends” are His first words to us. He shows us His wounds, breathes on us, and assigns us. Within seconds, our panic transforms to purpose. We, and those around us, are assigned. We all rejoice.
The sentence “as the Father SENT me, so I also SEND you”, in the original Greek can be literally translated as:
“As the Father ASSIGNED me, so I DISPATCH you”.
This assignment, more than 2,000 years ago, remains the foundation of everything we proclaim, practice, and preach. As Christ followers, we are assigned like Christ. We are commissioned like Christ. We are dispatched in the same way the Father sent His only begotten Son.
And this is exactly what an assigned life will look like to all Christ followers in a season of uncertainties, suspicion, and fear. We dare not be aligned outside this assignment.
Written seven centuries before the birth of Christ by the prophet Isaiah, here are the uncompromising elements of an assigned life that Jesus chose to embrace as His own. (definitions added)
“As my Father sent me, so I send you.” We are now assigned to lives that will fully radiate…
- Redemption
- Restoration
- Rescue Release
- Remission
- Rejuvenation
- Replenish
- Representation
- Reproduction
- Replication
- Reconstruction