Guest Post |
Don’t fall victim to our insular culture: shift priorities and love a non-Christian with your time
Author |
Anonymous
It was a painful ten minutes in front of my screen.
“No worries that tennis game can wait, but it would have been nice to catch up for chats / snacks sometime.”
My friend wasn’t telling me that he really needed this catch up. Nor was he signalling that this was a last chance for our friendship; or even suggesting that he didn’t understanding about my other priorities. The writer, my dear dear, non-Christian mate Dan indeed has his own priorities.
But what could I say?
As I looked at my diary, there just wasn’t another opening… for six weeks. I know God’s sovereign. I know he will save who he’s planned to. I know my mate can come to faith without me in his life at all. But I know that the gospel moves me to prioritise relationships too; and that God’s leaving this current creation still ticking over so that he can bring more people into his family. Like you, I do have a real care for the lost (even if it often slips away to the back of my mind).
So with a genuine grimace on my face, I started to type:
“Mate, with symbolic tears, I’m really sorry to say that I’m just too busy for the next little while. It’s a mixture of life, family expectations, work. Yeah I really haven’t been giving work the attention I should have.”
I suppose that’s fair enough, I thought; God really is sovereign… And I really shouldn’t fail those close to me… or my work.. in order to put Dan first. But seriously, what the heck am I doing?: I’ve seen him only twice all year… And it’s not like I’ve been having much time with a whole lot of other non-Christian mates. Ahhh, they said it would happen and it’s happened: most of my social time is with Christians. Arghh…
I really believe the gospel and I really believe that God uses people to share it with other people. Sending this e-mail is just lame, I thought.
So, as is often the case for me, a better solution came, with a calm re-think of my priorities. The family, the church-stuff, the work-stuff all needed to stay high up the list… So what could go? Well, not my sport/ exercise. Stopping the little of it I get to do probably would not be good for my mental health and wouldn’t free up much time anyway. Likewise, for bits of down-time. They feel good for me when I have them and feel right when I look at the Bible’s take on rest.
What else could go? Well… here it is: time with other believers.
As I looked at it all, it seemed like I was getting enough feeding from the Bible: during the week in groups, at church on Sun, and it’s almost daily with my wife at home too. But other time I’ve booked in with Christian friends… do I need that?
Well sometimes: yes. When I need it, fellowship with Christians, especially ones I’ve known for years, is a great source of care. But also, it’s fair to say that lots of the time I have with other CHristians is simply enjoying each others’ shared interests. It’s not necessarily always rich, Christainly-shaped fellowship. We label it fellowship because we’re all Christians there, and we say grace when we have a meal together, but really it’s just comfortable, social time. And I’m not saying that’s all wrong… I’m just saying that that in light of how little time I have socially with non-believers, that Christian-only social time, is what I need to cut.
Maybe obvious, but it felt like an epiphany at the time. I had an injection of joy as I decided to pull out of my regular social catch-up with other Christian friends. In turn, I deleted what I had first typed in that e-mail and keyed a new one to arrange a time with Dan.
That’s it. A swap of priorities.
So fellow believers, here are the questions for you:
- Is having non-Christians in your life a high enough priority for you?
- Is your social life full with Christian-only stuff?
- Is there stuff you do now with only Christians, that you could include non-believers in- sport, book club, going for coffee, gym…??
I had a mate once, who said he was pulling out of his weekly Bible Study so he could play in a basketball team with non-Christian mates. I’m not sure about that, but hey, desperate times call for desperate measures. Around 3% of people in Sydney in gospel-serious churches and for many of us as low as 0% of our social time is spent with non-believers. Yeah… maybe these are desperate times??
Well, if you buy this, do something about it:
- Pray.
- Change your priority list and your diary.
- Encourage a Christian friend to do likewise.

May 10, 2010

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