Blog
Dear Trailhead family,

I was working in front of our church facility this past week on a morning that begged to be spent outdoors. You know the kind of morning: sunny, calm, and that perfect balance between warm and cool.
The eastern sky still had color from the sunrise while in the west you could see dark hues where night was reluctantly releasing its grasp on the day.
Birds chirping, long shadows where dew clung to the grass, memories of Eden being awakened somewhere deep inside.
And a man yelling, almost screaming, at a passing car “Slow down you piece of s#%*!”
This advice was followed with a long stare at the car before the man turned and rejoined a woman (presumably his wife) and they continued their morning walk.
The Eden memories are gone, replaced by a glimpse of the wreckage that is the human soul.
The angry outburst came from a salt and peppered-haired man who appeared to be of retirement age, who had the companionship of a spouse and enough health and margin in life to be out walking early in the morning. He looked normal, middle-class. But his normality hid emotions that were just under boiling, barely contained, ready to burst at the slightest provocation.
Maybe that was the most normal thing about him.
As an observer, his anger was shocking.
And yet, it also wasn’t.
From yelling angrily at passing strangers to taking literal shots at politicians, many of us are living in a state of anger, fear, disgust, or contempt that is spilling out at the least prompting.
And we would be wrong to assume that all the angry/fearful/disgusted/contemptuous people are not Jesus followers.
Many of them are.
Many of them may even include you and me.
Not only does morality seem to have slipped away, but now even common courtesy and basic kindness eludes us.
What is going on?
First, let me make a rather obvious point that needs to be made: for those who do not know Jesus and do not subscribe to His teaching or ethics, lashing out in anger or living in fear makes perfect sense. If this life is all about the survival of the fittest and all of us are the product of time and chance, then how life is lived should look very different from that of an apprentice of Jesus. Lying, stealing, cheating, and even murder, could easily be justified.
My point? We need not be surprised by non-Jesus followers acting in non-Jesusy ways.
But we should be surprised when our fellow Jesus followers are behaving and speaking in the same way as those who care nothing for Jesus.
And we should be shocked and mortified when it is you or I acting, speaking, or thinking in the same way as those who care nothing for Jesus.
The result of the Spirit in us and working out of us is not a mystery.
The Spirit effect in us will be that we become people marked by love and joy, peace and patience, kindness and goodness, faithfulness and gentleness. Self-control even. (Galatians 5, 1 Corinthians 13)
Those words should be how people describe us.
Those words should sum up our reputation.
Our reputation with those on the left and right, with those who follow Jesus and those who openly and loudly denounce Him (and us). Our reputation with the young and old, rich and poor, influential and ignored.
We are to be Spirit fruit people.
Therefore, let your light shine, let your Spirit fruit flavor your every interaction, so that people may see the beauty of your faith and glorify your Father in heaven.
I think part of the disconnect for modern Jesus followers is that we look at these characteristics of Spirit life as passive and weak, pathetic even.
“How can we advance the Kingdom of God if we are peaceful and kind?” we may think but never dare say out loud.
(Let me grab my soap box for a moment here and say something to the effect of, we are never asked or commanded to build the Kingdom of God, but rather to join it, align ourselves with it, live into it.
Now, could you give me a hand while I step down?)
We are in a battle and we are all participants. Like it or not.
But rather than take our cues from others (and eye for an eye if we are just, an arm and a leg for an eye if we want to get ahead), we learn how to push back against evil from our Teacher.
When we encounter those who fancy themselves our enemy, who are hell-bent on hurting us, persecuting us, or making our life generally unpleasant, we respond with goodness, with favor, with Spirit fruit. If we find them in a disadvantaged place we are to help them. If they are broken and battered or loud and belligerent, we are to bless. (Matthew 5, Romans 12)
Jesus envisioned his followers as those who bring flavor and light to this bland and dark world.
People bursting with beautiful behavior.
Beautiful behavior not because we have to but because we are loved and delighted in and forgiven and because no matter what happens to us today, we have a really good future.
People don’t have to like our faith or agree with our conclusions, but their lives should be markedly better because they have encountered us (or rather, they have encountered Jesus disguised as us).
Jesus put it this way, “You should be a light for other people. Live so that they will see the good things you do. Live so that they will praise your Father in heaven.”
Live beautifully.
Live bursting with beautiful behavior.
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant