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Lord, Save Us From Your Followers

by Tim Adams ~ June 27th, 2008

lordsaveusfromyourfollowers062708.jpgA few weeks ago the Brentano’s at our downtown mall went out of business. By the time I made it to the store, they were just a few days from closing, but they still had a good selection - several titles that were hard to resist. At 40% off, it only seemed right to take advantage of this opportunity to add to my library.

Hello. My name is Tim – and I’m a bibliophile.

One of the books I picked up that day was the recently released Lord, Save Us From Your Followers: Why is the Gospel of Love Dividing America? I’m usually reading multiple books at a time, so I knew I would be putting this one on deck, although I did start thumbing through it and skimming some of the chapters.

Then, last Friday, HM Magazine Editor Doug Van Pelt wrote a review of the documentary based on the book on his blog. So, of course, I had to get the DVD as well.

Now I sound like George Costanza cheating on his book club assignment by watching, rather than reading, Breakfast at Tiffany’s. (Seinfeld Season 6, Episode 91). Thanks, Doug.

I’m now reading the book, but if you don’t have time to read it, please get the DVD. Better yet, get the DVD, invite some friends over for a watching party, and be prepared to take a hard look at the Church in America and how those outside the Church often perceive us.

Now before anyone says, “Here we go again, someone bashing the church,” rest assured that Dan Merchant, aka Bumper Sticker Man, is a born-again Evangelical Christian who loves Jesus.

That’s why he wrote the book and made the documentary.

As I was watching the DVD, I kept thinking about my late friend Dwight Ozard, who had a webzine called A Lover’s Quarrel. Dwight said he started A Lover’s Quarrel, not because he wanted to throw rocks at Jesus or the Church, but rather to expose “the cultural baggage that seems to have grafted itself onto Jesus, especially here in North America. This baggage, it seems, all too often eclipses the heart of what Jesus said and did, creating what he called in the New Testament a “stumbling block” to belief.”

In Lord, Save Us From Your Followers, Dan Merchant is picking up where Dwight left off. The operating assumption, demonstrated throughout the 105 minutes that the disc runs, is that the message of Jesus has been muted by the Church’s quest to rule the culture rather than serve the culture.

As a result, the Church has become a driving force in the culture wars.

There are several great quotes and insights – from believers and non-believers – from start to finish. One of the best comes from megachurch pioneer and guru and author of The Purpose Driven Life Rick Warren – “For the past 50 years the Body of Christ has had its hands and feet amputated. All we’ve been is a big mouth.”

We’ve become really good at telling people what they should or should not be doing, but we aren’t doing very well in the showing them department. You know, the whole practice what you preach thing. Then there’s the whole issue of how we’re saying things. What we’re saying is being drowned out by the way we’re saying it.

As former Pennsylvania Republican Senator Rick Santorum tells Merchant, “If we’re delivering a message that the people of America don’t want to hear, then so be it – as long as we’re not delivering it in a way that they won’t listen in the first place.”

Don’t get me wrong, I’m a strong believer in the need for prophets in the church – people who will lift up their voice and show us where we’re missing the mark (Isaiah 58:1-3). There is a dearth of prophets in the church today that needs to be addressed.

But, somehow we’ve gotten that backwards. We’ve forgotten that judgment must begin at the house of God (I. Peter 4:17) and pointed our lasers on everything we think is wrong outside the church.

Conservative talk-show host and son of a president Michael Reagan puts it this way during one of his interview segments – “Too many of the people who are upset about not having prayer in public schools won’t even take the time to pray with their kids before they send them to school.”

Ouch.

But, Lord, Save Us From Your Followers is about solutions as well as criticisms – only the solutions Merchant provides prove even more difficult.

If you’ve read Donald Miller’s Blue Like Jazz: Nonreligious Thoughts on Christian Spirituality, you probably remember Chapter 11, “Confession - Coming Out of the Closet” where Miller, Tony the Beat Poet and some of their Christian friends set up a confession booth at Reed College – an Oregon liberal arts college notorious for opposing all things Christian.

The occasion was Reed’s annual Renn Fayre celebration – an annual end of the year debauched blow out that makes Mardis Gras seem tame by comparison.

The only catch was that the purpose of the confession booth wasn’t to provide a place of penance for the pagans of Reed College. It was to allow this small group of Christians the opportunity to ask for the forgiveness of their pagan neighbors for their self-righteousness, hypocrisy, judgmentalism, lack of compassion and a long list of other sins of omission and commission committed by them and all of us who name the name of Christ.

In the movie, Merchant gives us a live demonstration of this reverse repentance in an equally hostile setting – Portland, Oregon’s annual Gay Pride Northwest festival.

The responses from the festival participants who stop by Merchant’s booth are all over the map – and some of the most moving minutes of the film. The power of love wrapped in an apology is about as disarmingly sacramental as it gets. Where sin abounds, grace abounds much more.

Of course, I could go on, but I really want you to see this movie, so I won’t give it all away, although I will tell you my favorite slogan worn by Merchant’s character, Bumper Sticker Man - “Did you hear about the dyslexic insomniac agnostic who lays awake at night wondering if there is a dog?”

Also, if you live in San Antonio and want to see the movie, shoot me an email or post a comment to the blog and I’ll loan you the DVD so long as you agree to organize a watch party so that others can see it and keep the conversation going.

If you want to order your own for a small group or for a showing at your church, click on this link to find out how. Also, the movie’s website has 27 clips from the film available for viewing online. After you take a look at a few of those you’ll have a good feel for why this movie matters.

Merchant’s goal is twofold - to get people involved in a genuine conversation so that they’ll quit talking past each other and start listening and to get us Christians to step outside of our comfortable subculture and understand that the Gospel is Good News, not ammunition to be used in the culture wars.

Lord, Save Us From Your Followers is a wake-up call the Church needs.

2 Responses to Lord, Save Us From Your Followers

  1. Darrell Lindsey

    Thanks Tim for the link. It is incredible…

  2. Administrator

    Thanks, Darrell. How’s the summer going with Mission Sight?

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