The NYC marathon cancelled.
The NYC subway system partially underwater.
Power outages and gas shortages.
Free fuel but long lines to get your 10-gallon gift.
Unease.
Anger.
Grumbling.
Griping.
Growth?
I know. I know. This is all so last week. Havenโt I heard thereโs been an election since the storm?
Why, yes, I have. And I voted.
But I donโt write about politics.
I write about community in Christ.
For me, Hurricane Sandy teaches a great deal more about community [see “Point Pleasant Beach Football Players … Help Community Clean Up”] than Election Day 2012. Note I began with โFor me โฆโ
The perfect storm provides the messy conditions necessary for growing community.
Jon Gordon in his โHurricane Heroesโ newsletter wrote:
I read that the most frequent posts on social media the last few days were “Are you okay?” “What do you need?” and “How can I help?”
I’ve heard stories of families talking again, people knocking on their neighbor’s doors for the first time in years to see if they are alright and countless volunteers distributing food and clothing to those in need.
Hereโs a thought based on the super storm that blew across the east coast, devastated entire cities, and made thousands awfully uncomfortable.
Crisis creates community in ways comfort never could.
You donโt need a Hurricane Sandy for a crisis to arise. It happens when a buck hits your car (I know from experience). It happens when the boss asks you to step into her office. It happens when you get a call from the doctor โฆ or the police โฆ or your child (my father with six kids has more experience on this one) โฆ or your spouse.
It happens at home, at work, on the road, and in the church.
So why does a mess offer possibility for growth in community?
Because โฆ
Crisis clears the clutter. The distractions seem to fade when the power goes out. A few candles and a good book to read to the family replace the television noise, surfing the Internet, and outside phone calls.
Crisis creates a laser focus. When a police officer said, โYou need to get to the hospital as soon as possible; your son was involved in an accident,โ I dropped everything else and focused on the one necessary thing, being with my injured son (he survived without any permanent damage).
Crisis couples you with unlikely partners. A New York City driver asked a stranger on the street, โAre you headed downtown?โ That exchange resulted in several folks, each previously unknown to the others, carpooling together. The ride offered time for strangers to become friends.
Is this idea of messes creating community even biblical?
When the Israelites endured slavery in Egypt, was that messy?
What about forty years of wandering in the wilderness? Was that messy?
The disciples following Jesus around for three years, did that ever get messy?
The night Jesus was betrayed, denied, and arrested, anything messy about those dark hours?
The early church (the one we so often want to get back toโโWe just need to be a New Testament church.โ), did it ever have messes?
And in all of those situationsโIsrael, the Twelve, the early churchโdid community grow out of the mess?
So hereโs the bottom line, the takeaway for your life in Christian community:
Embrace your messes wherever you find them.
Use those messy moments to grow.
Iโm curious. What is your experience with messes and growing in community?
Recommended links:
Carol McClain’s “Keep Company”
Jon Acuff’s “Why Are Christians Such Jerks?” (A surprising conclusion)
Dark Eyes, Deep Eyes
Two men. Two eternal destinies.
One common hope.
A poignant and compelling portrayal of heaven and hell, with a powerful look at redemption from the perspective of both the lostโฆand the saved. Well done!โSusan May Warren, best-selling, award-winning author of You Donโt Know Me.
โDark Eyes, Deep Eyesโ was a compelling read for me. The vivid descriptions challenged and ignited my imagination. Tom skillfully laid out a clever story that caused me to think and made me want to read to the end.โRon Fruit GM, WRCO Radio
Dark Eyes, Deep Eyes can be found at:
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