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Volume 5 - Issue 1 (Jan/Feb 2001)
The Vision
Here's Mud in Your Eye
Family Circle
What Hath God Wrought?
Ekklesia
Welcome to the Machine
Rightly Dividing
Saving Labor Devices
Tending Your Garden
A Well-Oiled Machine?
Culture Matters
Already Gone
Practicum
A Technological Dependence Testing Technique
Open Letter
Dogging the Wag
Leviathan
Tools of Dominion
Apologia
Changes
Hit and Run
Re:Views
Unless otherwise noted, all content is Copyright © 2008 Highlands Study Center
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Welcome to the Machine
by R.C. Sproul Jr.
Perhaps one sign that we are in a technological age is that we tend to equate
technology with machines, but technology is not just about machines. Technology
includes in its range of meaning the entire idea of techniques. Human technology
need not refer to mechanical pacemakers, but instead can refer to the systems
by which we bring about changes in humans. Both a ten-ton bottle-capping machine
and an insightful question are tools; one keeps a bottle of soda from spilling
and going flat on the way to market, while the other, one hopes, provides insights
toward spiritual growth. The difficulty is when we begin to see our friends,
our families and our churches as an assembly line of bottles, in need of the
right cap.
Much of the wise criticism that has been made against the church over the last
ten to twenty years falls into one of two jeremiads. Sometimes we chasten the
church for succumbing to that spirit of the age that we call the therapeutic
revolution. Other times we chasten the church for bedding down a different spirit
of the age that we call the managerial revolution. In the former, the church
exists to soothe the tender spirits of the congregants, to keep the pop from
losing its fizz with a dose of pop-psychology. In the latter the spiritual CEO
organizes the troops and motivates them until they become an efficient ministry,
what else? Machine. These two models for the church share two things in common:
first, they are both utterly unbiblical; second, they are both technologically
minded. They see the church and its members as products to be manipulated to
bring about a desired end.
The Bible never describes the church in these technological terms. Never is
the church called that which guides the soul toward health, nor that which provides
the greatest efficiency for the building of the kingdom. The Bible has all sorts
of analogies for the church, none of them technological; instead each of them
is organic. The church is not a set of gears and levers, a clockwork orange;
rather it is a set of limbs and appendages, or as Paul describes it in I Corinthians,
a body. Of course that might not steer us completely clear of our problem. We're
so technological that we have come even to think of God's great gift of our
own bodies as yet another machine to be tweaked to maximize efficiency. We see
our parts as parts, and miss the holiness of the whole.
Paul has another image for us, however, that is hard to reduce to something
made down at the machine shop. Paul says that we-the church as a whole-are the
bride of Christ. Brides are not given to technology. I'm not saying that tools
are a man thing and ladies should stand clear; rather I'm saying that when we
think bride, we necessarily think in organic and not in machine terms. No one
says as the bride walks the aisle, "Mercy, look at the torque she's able
to handle with her medial collateral ligaments." No one says to the bride,
"You know, that veil of yours is not ergonomically designed for the giving
of a kiss. Why not leave it off?" No one brings a stopwatch to measure
the bride's time in getting up the aisle. A bride is not meant to be efficient
but to be beautiful.
We will not, however, ever read a church bulletin that reads, "First Community
Church By the Freeway's purpose is to look really, really nice for Jesus."
Or, "Our first priority here at Our Lady of the Perpetual Committee Non-Denominational
International Family Center is to clean ourselves up good for the wedding day."
That, however, is the health and the business of the church. I'm not suggesting
that we shouldn't be proclaiming the good news or that we must cease and desist
from visiting the sick. I'm not saying we can never have a church picnic for
the sake of fellowship or never deliver turkeys to the poor. Instead we do these
things, all that we do, in order to make us more beautiful as a bride. We are
not a machine that needs to be honed, but a bride that needs to be beautified.
That's what the Groom has not only called us to do, but what He is doing in
us.
That's not all, though. Brides do far more, though never less, than look their
best. We are indeed a trophy to our Lord, but we are more. Brides have other
callings as well, the first of which is to love and to honor the Groom. The
problem with machines is that they lack heart, something the church must cultivate.
We are to grow in our love of Christ, to love Him more daily not with our gears
and our levers, but with our hearts and souls, minds and strengths. That's why
we study Him and His Word, why we meet Him at His table. That is why our preachers
preach His glory-to fill our hearts with sincere affections.
That we are a bride is a given; we were made for such. And so when we take a
technological approach to our calling, we turn our Groom into a machine. He
is not a machine. He is not a tool by which, if we punch in the right code,
we can have happy, successful, well-ordered lives. He is not a means, which
is all tools are, to some other end. Instead our Groom is the end. He is our
delight and our joy, not because of what He has done, what He now does, or because
of what He will do, but because of what He is.
He will succeed. He will, because our Groom is altogether sovereign in authority
and in power, get us to see what He has already told us, that we are His spotless
bride. And when we see it, maybe then we will be spotless, besmirched with neither
grease nor sin.
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