I received this thought from a friend of mine Don Detrick at the Network office. It's mind provoking so I thought I would pass it on to you.
Tradition is a
slippery slope. We grasp for a handhold and cling to some treasured memory or
memento, fearing what might happen if we let go. So we hold on for dear life,
not realizing that not far below lies the firm soil of present reality, the
best place to safely chart a path to the future.
I am basically a traditionalist. I love history, antiques, and
stories from the past. A visit to my office will show you that. But these
things must be kept in perspective or they can easily become shrines to what
used to be.
Nostalgia always clouds opportunities in the present with the
foggy memories of prior success. To worship at the shrine of the past is to
plant the seeds of tomorrow’s harvest in the dry, sterile soil of yesterday’s
dust. Those seeds might survive as relics in a museum, but in that environment,
they will never produce life.
Jesus reserved his harshest criticism for traditionalists, not
because of any disrespect for the past. As the, “Alpha and Omega” Jesus had the
clearest perspective any human being could possibly have on the past, present,
and future. He understood the limitations of viewing time only through our own
lens of the present. Jesus criticized traditionalists because of what they
enshrined: adherence to a set of rules only they were empowered to interpret
and enforce, rather than valuing a vibrant relationship with the living God.
That’s the problem with religious tradition. With the best of
intentions, we may wish to preserve a valid object or practice that brought
yesterday’s blessing, without realizing that our efforts to do so will be no
more successful than Israel’s efforts to preserve yesterday’s portion of manna.
Those objects and traditions held over from the past can easily become idols,
and distract us from worshipping the living God in the present.
Of course I’m not talking about abandoning our Christian
heritage, the inspiration and authority of the Bible, or orthodox doctrine. I
am talking about our tendency to consciously or unconsciously promote our own
version of the past above those non-negotiable elements of our faith and
practice.
A healthy view of
tradition values the past for what is was. We learn from it, and move forward.
We choose not to live there because we can’t. Those moments are gone forever.
It was, but today is and thus is full of promise by acknowledging and accepting
the present, and by planting our feet in and sowing seeds in the soil
that now exists. We cannot live in a constant state of reminiscence
without detachment from reality and eventually becoming critical of everyone
and all things contemporary. As R.T. Kendall once observed, “The greatest
opposition to what God is doing today comes from those who were on the cutting
edge of what God was doing yesterday." You are loved!
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