Introduction

Balancing Act—Standing Firm and Loving Well

Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.

—HEBREWS 13:8

It was one of the most unique gifts I’d ever received.

A friend in our church had blessed me for Christmas by giving me one of the most extravagant luxuries a man can have: a handmade, custom-tailored suit. I learned these suits are called “bespoke” by the British, who are famous for their Savile Row suit making, the height of high-end menswear. My appointment was with the best tailor in Birmingham, an older gentleman I’ll call Joe. Born overseas, Joe had been tailoring in our country for decades, earning himself a national reputation for excellence.

When my wife, Tammy, and I arrived for my appointment—you didn’t think I was going to pick out fabrics and buttons by myself, did you?—Joe greeted us at the entrance to his shop. It was a discreet, unadvertised location tucked in among dentists’ offices and beauty parlors on the outskirts of downtown. The room he ushered us into smelled of starched linen and clean wool, and it was as neatly organized as the men’s section at any department store. But mixed in among the fabric swatches and photos of garments on the walls, I noticed several tribal gods staring back at me.

“Welcome, Pastor and Mrs. Pastor!” said Joe, his eyes twinkling. “I am so happy to serve you today and will make you a beautiful suit for you to look your best!”

“It’s going to take more than a new suit to help me look my best,” I deadpanned as Joe chuckled and Tammy rolled her eyes. “But I hear you’re the best in town, so if anyone can do it, you’re the man!”

My appointment flew by as Joe measured and scribbled in his little notebook, recording more angles on my body than I knew existed. He patiently showed us flannels and tweeds, wool knits and synthetic blends of the finest fabrics from around the world. Who knew there were so many details in making a man’s suit? Growing up, I just went to JCPenney like everyone else, and my mom bought a suit that was on sale and fit. Now, in Joe’s capable hands, I looked like I was ready for GQ!

Finally, with our selections made, it was time to leave, and I thanked Joe sincerely for such a remarkable experience. “You are most welcome, Pastor,” he said with a solemn smile. “You are a delight, not at all what I expected.”

Curious, I said, “Why is that, Joe? What did you expect?”

He hesitated for a moment before saying, “I have made suits for many other pastors and people who tell me they are Christians. They see my people’s gods on the wall and say they are not real. One man in particular [he named a nationally prominent leader known for evangelism] asked me to have a meal with him so he could tell me about your Jesus. I dined with him, but when I could not give him the answer he wanted, he told me I would be sent to hell.” Joe’s voice faltered with emotion. “You, on the other hand, seem most kind. You treat me with respect and make me laugh. I thank you. You are much different from what I was expecting.”

“I’m sorry you have had such negative experiences with Christians,” I said. “That is not the heart of Jesus. I’d love for you to meet the people I worship with so you can see it doesn’t have to be that way. Would you be willing to visit my church?”

“Me? Visit your church?” he said, genuinely surprised.

“Of course,” I said, placing my hand on his shoulder. “You would sit on the front row with Tammy and me, and you’d be our honored guest. We would love for you to join us.”

He grinned like a teenager contemplating an invitation to his first school dance. “Thank you, Pastor,” he said. “You are most kind. I would love to!”

When I returned to Joe’s shop about ten days later for my final fitting, he beamed when he saw me and introduced me to his cousin, a man only a few years younger than himself. After pleasantries were exchanged, I gently revisited my invitation for Joe to visit our church some time. Unexpectedly, his cousin asked if he might be able to come as well.

“Yes, we would love to have you both,” I said.

“Thank you, Pastor!” they said in unison, shaking my hand and looking as though I had invited them to the Super Bowl instead of to a sermon series.

Correct but Not Helpful

As I’ve thought about this experience, I’ve wondered why Joe and his cousin responded so differently to my invitation than they did in their prior encounters with Christians, especially when all our offers were essentially the same. I respect and admire the person Joe ate dinner with as a strong man of God. Upon reflection, though, I realized his style of sharing the gospel tends to be more confrontational than mine. While I agree with this pastor’s beliefs, I question his technique. In his approach to Joe, he was correct but he wasn’t helpful. Joe walked away from their conversation feeling the door had been slammed in his face.

And that’s the problem. Often we mean well, but we don’t love well. In every single encounter Jesus had with people, we see an unwavering attitude of love even as he called them to leave their sin behind and follow him. My favorite example of this takes place with the woman caught in adultery.

The Jewish religious leaders had dragged this poor woman from her lover’s bed into the streets where they confronted Jesus, reminding him that the woman’s punishment, according to the Law of Moses, was death by stoning. These Pharisees wanted to trap Christ between the old law, which was the traditional path to righteousness before God, and the new grace that he had been preaching. But Jesus’ response literally left them speechless:

They kept demanding an answer, so he stood up again and said, “All right, but let the one who has never sinned throw the first stone!” Then he stooped down again and wrote in the dust.

When the accusers heard this, they slipped away one by one, beginning with the oldest, until only Jesus was left in the middle of the crowd with the woman. Then Jesus stood up again and said to the woman, “Where are your accusers? Didn’t even one of them condemn you?”

“No, Lord,” she said.

And Jesus said, “Neither do I. Go and sin no more.” (John 8:7–11 NLT)

Don’t you just love Jesus’ response here? He doesn’t condemn the woman like the religious legalists; instead, he shows her grace. But he doesn’t let her off the hook either; he tells her to “go and sin no more.” Jesus avoids the extremes of either-or by displaying both love and righteousness.

I hold his example close as a model of how to interact with the diverse people I encounter with increasing frequency. Whether it’s someone like my friend Joe who has a different cultural background, a same-sex couple who moves into our neighborhood, or a liberal activist wanting to debate a topic on which we disagree, the challenge remains the same: how to stand firm and love well at the same time.

Here’s what we need to remember: Truth without grace is mean. Grace without truth is meaningless. Truth and grace together are good medicine. And that’s what this book is all about.

Calm in the Cultural Storm

Today, perhaps more than ever, we have the privilege of loving others and offering them God’s truth that we’re all sinful and in need of a Savior. This is exactly why Jesus came to live as a man—yet perfectly—and die on the cross. His sacrifice makes it possible for us to find hope in a relationship with a holy God. Once we experience his forgiveness and begin living in the freedom of God’s grace, we’re responsible to share this good news with everyone around us—no matter who they are or how different from us they may be.

 

Truth without grace is mean. Grace without truth is meaningless. Truth and grace together are good medicine.


 

This responsibility means we balance the truth of the standards in God’s Word with the reality of his loving acceptance and life-changing grace. In other words, we are to do what Jesus did with the woman caught in adultery. Living out a balanced approach isn’t easy, and it almost always stretches us beyond our comfort zones. Often, the tension between standing firm and loving well paralyzes us. We want to demonstrate the love of God to others, to serve those in need, and to share the good news of the gospel with those apart from God, but we don’t want to embrace the immorality that often seems to cause and emerge from so many rapid cultural changes.

Consequently, we feel like we don’t know our place anymore. We’re frustrated or even confused, torn between what we hear in church and what we see online. We feel caught between extremes, not wanting to alienate people who need God just as much as we do, and not wanting to compromise our convictions and biblical beliefs.

We have questions with no easy answers:

          What’s my role as a follower of Jesus in today’s constantly shifting culture?

          How can I stand firm in my faith and still be relevant to people who seem so different from me?

          How should I respond when others say my Christian views are unloving?

          How does the Christian message apply to everyone when there are so many differences in culture, ethnicity, lifestyle, orientation, political beliefs, and spiritual practices?

          Is the entire Bible still relevant, or are some parts culturally outdated?

          Is Scripture reliable?

          Doesn’t God love us all? Didn’t he send his Son to die so that all may be saved?

          If I stand for truth, what will people think of me?

          How do I help my kids engage in culture without losing them to it?

          How do I handle the barrage of constant change in our world?

When culture shifts—and it always has and always will—we tend toward the extremes, in part because they seem easier and require less of us. We may feel so angry, threatened, and frustrated that we want to withdraw from culture, attacking and condemning people who don’t agree with us. Or we may become so battle weary that we’re tempted to issue a blanket acceptance that avoids any cultural conflicts.

But the good news of the gospel means we don’t have to become paralyzed by extremes. We can be the calm in the midst of our cultural storm. There’s another response we see demonstrated in the Bible, not only by Jesus, but also by someone in cultural circumstances shockingly similar to our own. This example reveals an ordinary person thrust into extraordinary events and the challenges that forced him to maintain a faith based on God’s truth and characterized by God’s grace.

This person is the prophet Daniel.

Being Right or Being Righteous

If we study the life of the prophet Daniel and the dilemma he faced, we can learn to engage our culture without compromising our faith. He faced drastic differences and diversity, and endured the immorality and corruption of a shifting culture that closely resembles our own. He not only persevered through the slippery morals and rebelliousness of his own people, but Daniel remained steadfast when thrust into one of the most decadent cultures in all of history—ancient Babylon.

Here’s how it happened: After the reigns of King David and his son Solomon, Israel splintered along geographical and tribal lines. Within a few generations, the ten northern tribes of Israel abandoned their faith in the living God and started worshipping idols. Obviously, God wasn’t pleased and sent warning after warning to the northern kingdom, only to have them ignored. Finally, their disobedience left him no choice; he allowed the Assyrians to conquer all ten tribes in the northern kingdom (see 2 Kings 17).

Judah, including the smaller tribe of Benjamin, comprised the southern kingdom, where Daniel lived. Despite watching what happened to their northern kinsmen, the remaining people of Israel also drifted away from God. Again, God issued the same kind of warnings through his prophets—Jeremiah, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah. But the nation of Judah refused to hear the messages of these men.

This time judgment arrived in the form of the Babylonians under the leadership of their emperor Nebuchadnezzar. Having already conquered Assyria and Egypt, they descended on Judah and decimated the city of Jerusalem. They not only looted the temple but also enslaved the Jewish people. Judah crumbled, and the people of Israel became prisoners of war in an alien culture, exiled from their homeland.

Daniel was one of these exiles. He was probably around sixteen years old when he was transported along with thousands of other Jews to be slaves in Babylon. His situation was as bleak as it gets. There was no leader organizing a secret revolt, no legal recourse or government appeal to help him. Logically speaking, Daniel had no hope.

And yet because he served God he never despaired and never gave up. Daniel had no one else, yet still he trusted God to see him through. With humble confidence, Daniel glorified God through his actions and speech. His character and conduct stood out because it was both respectful and resolute. He didn’t conform to the demands of Nebuchadnezzar and all the pagan customs of the Babylonians, but he didn’t act self-righteous, judgmental, or defensive either. He knew the goal wasn’t to be right; it was to have influence. He knew being right and being righteous are not the same.

For the next seventy years of his life, Daniel faced life-threatening tests—from watching friends endure a fiery furnace to spending the night in a lions’ den. But even when the foreign culture shifted around him, Daniel never wavered in his faith.

In response to Daniel’s steadfast faith and commitment to both truth and grace, God demonstrated his supernatural power and honored the one who honored him by blessing Daniel with the respect of four different Babylonian emperors. Finally, the last one, Cyrus, granted the Jewish people freedom so they could return home.

Now that’s influence!

Catalysts for Change

Daniel stood firm and loved everyone around him—just as Jesus did. Just as we’re called to do when culture shifts. I know it’s not easy to balance truth and grace in the midst of such drastic cultural change. It’s easier to disengage and try to avoid culture altogether. It’s easier to judge and condemn those who don’t agree with us. And it’s just as easy to acquiesce and accept anything and everything. But that’s not what we’re called to do or who we’re called to be. While God calls us to be his people set apart, he also commands us to go into all the world and share the good news of Jesus Christ.

The same problems that existed in biblical times continue to challenge us today: How can we remain anchored in our Christian faith when the white water rapids of cultural change threaten to carry us away? How do we respond when culture shifts? Do we shift with it and “go with the flow”? If not, how do we interact meaningfully with a world that seems upside down to everything we believe?

From the day Daniel arrived in Babylon, he stood strong in his faith. His example shines across the centuries and provides us with a clear model of how to live a godly life in an evil culture. We don’t have to compromise our beliefs or actively participate in an “anything goes” mind-set. Nor do we have to sacrifice respectful relationships with others by judging and condemning them.

 

How can we remain anchored in our Christian faith when the white water rapids of cultural change threaten to carry us away?


 

We can find a balance between bowing down and being a doormat and becoming hardened into a ramrod of self-righteousness. But avoiding these extremes requires humility, compassion, and dependence on God. It won’t be easy. We will only reflect who he truly is, both his holy righteousness and his gracious love, by relying on his Spirit to guide us.

Like the prophet Daniel, you and I can become catalysts for redemptive change in our time. We can be people of influence who know our goal is not to be right but to be effective. We can be people who stand out because of the way we relate to others, especially those different from us. We can be people who serve those in need with a willing spirit and gracious generosity. We can be people who reflect the loving-kindness of a good God.

We can be people who stand firm and love well.