JohnH wrote: ↑Sat Jul 26, 2025 7:55 pm
I’m not sure how many people actually want a Christianity that means leaving nation, politics, ethnic identity, and family ties behind. Yet Jesus called to do exactly that, and become part of a new nation, learn a new kind of politics, and abandon ethnic separatism and instead learn about where there is “neither Jew nor Greek”.
I agree - Jesus really did call people to leave behind the things they once rooted their identity in: nation, tribe, politics, even family loyalty. And that’s still a hard word today. You’re right that many people don’t want to let go of those things.
But I don’t think it’s just “them.” I think it’s also us.
Even those of us who say we want revival aren’t always willing to pay the price. We want God to change the world, but we hesitate to let him change us. We hang on to pieces of our worldview that we picked up from the culture—security, power, reputation, comfort. We want new wine, but we don’t want new wineskins.
The Pharisees and Sadducees come to mind. Most of them weren’t outright evil—they were just deeply invested in preserving a religious system that no longer made room for the living presence of God. They were trying to protect the old container, even as Jesus was offering something far better.
Revival, as I see it, means letting go of the old wineskins. It means trusting God enough to be transformed, to be broken open and reshaped by the Spirit. That’s not easy. But it’s the kind of Christianity people might actually see as compelling and real.
1. Are we discussing the topic? Good.
2. Are we going around and around in a fight? Let's stop doing that.
3. Is there some serious wrongdoing or relational injury? Let's address that, probably not in public and certainly not for show.