Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about
“home” – the place for which we long, and
believe that if we reach, we’ll finally be
satisfied – our heart’s destination. This
desire for home seems to be programmed into
us – into all mankind. It is therefore
unsurprising that man has given himself many
places to which he can attach the title of
“home”.
For some, it is the glassy, white-clad
apartment in the sky – a feat of modern
architecture, an understated (but
unmistakable) tribute to one’s very good
tastes. Others look for the oversized
country manor atop 40 acres: with a swimming
pool, four-car garage, and a go-kart track –
for the kids, naturally. For others still,
it may not even be a change to their
house; rather, a change to their neighbor’s
– if the neighbors would just keep the noise
down, and the property value up, then,
finally, that would be home.
Some instead look for home in an emotional
or social state that promises contentment.
After all, there are more solutions than
brick-and-mortar ones: maybe financial
security, safety, fame or recognition in
one’s field.
Did you find your dream home in that list?
I found mine. And we fool ourselves if we
think we’ve never felt our heart wrap around
one of these homes – and found our plans and
pocket books attempting to posses it.
But often paired with this longing is
a sense that in the end, these things will
disappoint us. For myself, I find it hard to
believe that if I just got into one of the
smaller lofts in a downtown high-rise, I
would cease to be interested in the master
suite at the top. These “homes” aggravate
our appetites but do not satisfy our deeper
longings. Our senses tell us something’s in
the oven, but we know we’re not invited to
dinner. We are faced with a longing for home
and with the unhappy knowledge that it
cannot be found here.
What are we to do? CS Lewis has excellent
insight:
Creatures are not born with
desires unless satisfaction for those
desires exists. A baby feels hunger: well,
there is such a thing as food. A duckling
wants to swim: well, there is such a thing
as water. Men feel sexual desire: well,
there is such a thing as sex. If I find in
myself a desire which no experience in this
world can satisfy, the most probable
explanation is that I was made for another
world.
Our home is not here, and John 14:2 gives us
some insight as to its location: “My Father’s
house has many rooms; if that were not so,
would I have told you that I am going there to
prepare a place for you?” We are invited to
call the house of the Lord, “home” – to be
with him, and live with him forever.
The Command of
detachment
This invitation is extraordinary, and its
glory is outside of our comprehension.
However, it brings with it a challenge while
we still live in this world. Our current
life and world are not our final
destination, and like the child who has
plopped down on the sofa, we hear our father
say, “Don’t get too comfortable”:a simple
way of saying, don’t order your life in a
way that makes it harder for you to leave
this place. The Bible presents this
challenge, this call to detachment, in a
somewhat starker form:
“You adulterous people, don't you
know that friendship with the world is
hatred toward God? Anyone who chooses to be
a friend of the world becomes an enemy of
God” (James 4:4).
“Do not love the world or anything in the
world. If anyone loves the world, the love
of the Father is not in him” (1 John
2:15).
These are not easy words to hear. I like the
world. I even like a few of the things in the
world! But the Lord seems serious that I not
become too attached. And when considering the
Lord’s commands from an eternal perspective,
this makes a lot of sense. Further, anything
but a certain detachment from the world is
foolishness! “What good is it for a man to
gain the whole world, yet forfeit his soul”
(Mark 8:36)?
But this call to detachment from the world
is not hardship for hardship’s sake – a sort
of spiritual boot camp. It is the loving
direction from a father as he helps his sons
and daughters navigate the stock markets of
eternity.
"Do not store up for yourselves treasures
on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and
where thieves break in and steal. But
store up for yourselves treasures in
heaven, where moth and rust do not
destroy, and where thieves do not break in
and steal” (Matthew 6:19-20).
Consider the Titanic – when the ship was
going down, the class of one’s cabin was
trivial; a spot on the lifeboat was not. The
things of this world are passing away, and
our home is not here; and so the Lord says,
“Don’t get too comfortable.”
The challenge of
engagement
This command for detachment from the world
comes with a somewhat paradoxical call to
vigorous engagement. This follows from a
very simple toggle between home and work. If
our home is not here – if our rest is not
here – work, engagement, is the somewhat
obvious alternative.
And this seems to be the way the Bible
talks about the identity of the heaven-bound
on earth: “laborers” in the field from Luke
10:2, “servants” in the Parable of the
Talents in Luke 19, and perhaps most
famously, the call of the apostles to become
“fishers” of men.
I am unfamiliar with the parable that
begins, “The kingdom of God is like a man in
his armchair.” While we wait for our eternal
home – our eternal rest – we are to be
working for our Lord.
The challenge of love
But beyond labor, engagement has a second,
and more challenging, component: love.
Consider Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:37, “O
Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the
prophets and stone those sent to you, how
often I have longed to gather your children
together, as a hen gathers her chicks under
her wings, but you were not willing.”
Jesus loved Jerusalem, but not in the “I
Heart NY” sense of the word. One can suppose
that Jesus’ attraction to Jerusalem was not
on account of all its wonderful cultural
amenities – its cafés, historic shopping
centers, or exotic restaurants. His love was
not contingent on “liking”: it was a love
based on commitment, and a desire for the
people – his people – to come to a good
place. His was a love for the mission field,
out of love for the mission. Not necessarily
the field: in some ways, despite it.
This love challenges me – do I love my
city, my temporary home, with the same
fervor Jesus loved Jerusalem? Doubtful – and
that gap exists for many reasons. But I know
of at least one way to narrow it. When we
cease to look for a place to be our home, we
are freer to love a place because it is
where the Lord has asked us to be. We become
free to labor out of love for those around
us and out of love for the Lord – not
necessarily because we like where they
happen to be, or where the Lord has put us.
Our eternal home
In all this “our home is not here” talk,
there can be a tendency to borrow an
approach that is a hybrid of two different
systems of belief: Hindu indifference to the
thing of this world mated with a Wall Street
work- alcoholism. But these miss that our
approach to this world is grounded in the
hope of the one to come. Far from a stoic
indifference to the world or a grueling
approach to labor, our lives should be
marked by a joyful abandonment and a
contagious zeal for the work the Lord has
giving us. If we need convincing, consider
what’s coming:
And I heard a loud voice from the
throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place
is now among the people, and he will dwell
with them. They will be his people, and God
himself will be with them and be their God.
‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes.
There will be no more death or mourning or
crying or pain, for the old order of things
has passed away” (Revelation 21:3-4).
Then you will look and be radiant, your
heart will throb and swell with joy; the
wealth on the seas will be brought to you,
to you the riches of the nations will come
(Isaiah 60:5).
These passages describe our true home – our
final destination: a promise of wealth,
comfort, eternal life, and a new order. And
this promise is the beginning, not the end. If
we consider our afterlife simply in terms of
wealth, satisfaction or comfort that can be
understood here and now, we’ve stopped short
of the best part. Even if we hope our heavenly
reward to be all the riches of the earth,
we’ve set our sights much too low.
Our inheritance is the Lord, himself: “LORD,
you alone are my portion and my cup; you make
my lot secure. The lines have fallen to me in
pleasant places; Yes, I have a good
inheritance” (Psalm 16:5-6). We are invited to
the House of the Lord; and more, invited
forever to be with him. Our home is not here –
and praise the Lord – we’re invited to a far
better one.
[James Munk is a mission director
for Kairos
North America and a member of the Work
of Christ Community in Lansing,
Michigan.] |