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  • Loving the City as the Children of God

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    How do we as the body of Christ see our role as the church in the city?  We are constantly carrying the tension of seeing the city as the city of God that is being restored by the power of the Gospel and will one day be fully restored in the New Creation (Jerusalem—see Rev. 21) and the city of Satan that is now present and in opposition to the city of God.  So when we look at the city we tend to see it in one of four ways:

    • We despise the city. Church as fortress. (Forgetting the city as Jerusalem).
    • We are the city. Church as mirror. (Forgetting the city as Babylon).
    • We use the city. Church as space capsule. (Forgetting the city as battleground).
    • We love the city. Church as leaven. Jeremiah 29.

    Do you despise the city, only seeing it as a place to turn your nose up at and toward which to fire “evangelistic missiles”?  Do you see the church as a mirror, trying to make the church look as much like the city as possible?  Do you see the church as a space capsule, cloistered from the sinful world outside; a holy huddle safe from the dirtiness of the city?  Or do you see the church as leaven, seeking the welfare of the city, being witness not only by our individual lives, but by the beauty of our communal life?

    Jeremiah 29 gives us a beautiful image of God’s people working for the welfare of a city that is not their home.  The Israelites want to return to Jerusalem.  They have their bags packed.  But God speaks through Jeremiah, telling them to dig roots.  He says, “seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile, and pray to the Lord on its behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare.  The Israelites were now citizens of Babylon (whether they liked it or not), but their heart longed to be in Jerusalem.  Christians today are in a very similar situation.  We have one foot in this present age and one foot in the age to come.  We are at the same time citizens of an earthly city and citizens of a heavenly one.  So the church should reflect this dual citizenship in her generosity with money and simplicity of life; in her racial diversity ethnically, economically, and socially; and in the purity of her members.  We are not to despise the city, mimic the city, or use the city—we are to love the city.

    So how are you loving the city?  How are you working for the welfare of Louisville?  When is the last time you simply got to know your neighbor—that person in the apartment ten feet from yours that you pass every day and never say a word to?  Have you been living as leaven, seeking to love the city, or have you sought only your own welfare, forgetting that Christ died not only for you, but for your neighbor as well?  Take courage, Christian!  Be bold and seek to love your city by loving your neighbor!

    (Adapted from Tim Keller’s A Biblical Theology of the City, http://www.e-n.org.uk/1869-A-biblical-theology-of-the-city.htm).

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Discussion One Response

  1. December 15, 2009 at 1:40 am

    Thank you so much! God has burdened me with this for the past few weeks. It’s always so easy to forget why He chose to place us here in this city, or even in our own neighborhoods. Thanks Jesse for the reminder

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