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God
Pursuit of Racial Diversity At Infinite
Cost
By John Piper
Revelation
5:9-10
And
they sang a new song, saying, "Worthy are
You to take the book and to break its seals;
for You were slain, and purchased for God
with Your blood men from every tribe and
tongue and people and nation. 10 "You have
made them to be a kingdom and priests to
our God; and they will reign upon the earth."
My
aim this morning is to move from the experience
of the Sixties to the work of Christ recorded
in the Word of God to Bethlehem Baptist
Church in order to stir you up to care about
racial diversity and racial harmony in our
church.
I pray that God will awaken your desire
for us to be more racially diverse, rooted
in Biblical truth and Christlike love in
order to display the surpassing value of
Christ and his suffering.
History
in Black and White
We
begin in Birmingham, Alabama, April 11,
1963 (I was seventeen years old in Greenville,
South Carolina). At the Gaston Motel, Room
30, Martin Luther King, Ralph Abernathy,
Wyatt Walker, and Fred Shuttlesworth decided
to lead a peaceful, non-violent demonstration
the next day, Good Friday, against the racial
injustices of the city. As in most southern
cities in those days (including the one
I was growing up in 350 miles away) bus-seating
was segregated; schools, parks, lunch counters,
restrooms, drinking fountains - they were
almost all segregated. Some called it the
most segregated city in the country. Its
bombings and torchings of black churches
and homes had given it the name, "Bombingham"
- the "Johannesburg of the South."
There
was one catch. The sheriff had served Martin
Luther King with a state-court injunction,
which prohibited him and other movement
leaders from conducting demonstrations.
With a wife and four children back home
in Atlanta, King decided to violate the
injunction, pursue a peaceful, nonviolent
demonstration, and willingly go to jail.
On Good Friday, King led his fifty volunteers
downtown, up to the police line, came face-to-face
with Bull Connor, and knelt down with Ralph
Abernathy in prayer. He and all the demonstrators
were thrown into paddy wagons and put in
jail.
On
Tuesday, April 16, King was shown a copy
of the Birmingham News, which contained
a letter from eight Christian and Jewish
clergyman of Alabama (all white), criticizing
King for his demonstration. In response,
King wrote what has come to be called "Letter
From Birmingham Jail," and which one biographer
described as "the most eloquent and learned
expression of the goals and philosophy of
the nonviolent movement ever written" (Stephen
Oates, Let the Trumpet Sound: the Life
of Martin Luther King Jr. [New York:
Penguin That, 1982], p. 222.).
What
It Was Like
We
need to hear the power and insight with
which King spoke to my generation in the
Sixties - enraging thousands and inspiring
thousands. The white clergy had all said
he should be more patient, wait, don't demonstrate.
He wrote:
Perhaps
it is easy for those who have never felt
the stinging darts of segregation to say,
"Wait." But when you have seen vicious mobs
lynch your mothers and fathers at will and
drown your sisters and brothers at whim;
when you have seen hate-filled policeman
curse, kick, and even kill your black brothers
and sisters; when you see the vast majority
of your 20 million Negro brothers smothering
in an airtight cage of poverty in the midst
of an affluent society; when you suddenly
find your tongue twisted and your speech
stammering as you seek to explain to your
six-year-old daughter why she cannot go
to the public amusement park that has just
been advertised on television, and see tears
welling up in her eyes when she's told that
Funtown is closed to colored children, and
see ominous clouds of inferiority beginning
to form in her little mental sky, and see
her beginning to distort her personality
by developing an unconscious bitterness
toward white people; when you have to concoct
an answer for a five-year-old son who is
asking, "Daddy, why do white people treat
colored people so mean?"; when you take
a cross-country drive and find it necessary
to sleep night after night in the uncomfortable
corners of your automobile because no motel
will accept you; when you are humiliated
day in and day out by nagging signs reading
"white" and "colored"; when your first name
becomes "Nigger," your middle name becomes
"Boy" (however old you are) and your last
name becomes "John," and your wife and mother
are never given the respected title "Mrs.";
when you are harried by day and haunted
by night by the fact that you are a Negro,
living constantly at tiptoe stance, never
quite knowing what to expect next, and are
plagued with inner fears and outer resentments;
when you are forever fighting a degenerating
sense of "nobodiness" - then you will understand
why we find it difficult to wait. There
comes a time when the cup of endurance runs
over, and men are no longer willing to be
plunged into the abyss of despair. I hope,
sirs, you can understand our legitimate
and unavoidable impatience.
(M.
L. King, Letter from Birmingham Jail,
with an introduction by Paul Chaim Schenck
[no place, no date], p. 8-9.
The
Letter may be read on many Internet
web sites by simply entering the title in
your search engine; one site, for example,
is (http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/subjects/afam/mlkjail.html)
To
the charge that he was an extremist he responded
like this:
Was
not Jesus an extremist for love: "Love your
enemies, bless them that curse you, do good
to them that hate you, and pray for them
which despitefully use you, and persecute
you"? Was not Amos an extremist for justice:
"Let justice roll to down like waters and
righteousness like an ever-flowing stream"?
Was not Paul an extremist for the Christian
gospel: "I bear in my body the marks of
the Lord Jesus"? Was not Martin Luther an
extremist: "Here I stand; I cannot do otherwise,
so help me God"? And John Bunyan: "I will
stay in jail to the end of my days before
I make a butchery of my conscience." And
Abraham Lincoln: "Thus this nation cannot
survive half slave and half free." And Thomas
Jefferson: "We hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal. . ." So
the question is not whether we will be extremist,
but what kind of extremist we will be. Will
we be extremists for hate or for love? (Letter,
p. 14)
Powerful
Call to the Church
And
finally he delivered a powerful call to
the church, which rings as true today as
it did thirty-eight years ago:
There
was a time when the church was very powerful
- in the time when the early Christians
rejoiced at being deemed worthy to suffer
for what they believed. In those days the
church was not merely a thermometer that
recorded the ideas and principles of popular
opinion; it was a thermostat that transformed
the mores of society. . . . But the judgment
of God is upon the church [today] as never
before. If today's church does not recapture
the sacrificial spirit of the early church,
it will lose its authenticity, forfeit the
loyalty of millions, and be dismissed as
an irrelevant social club with no meaning
for the 20th century. (Letter,
p. 17)
That
is Martin Luther King's prophetic voice
ringing out of the Birmingham Jail in 1963.
Now we turn to the work of Christ recorded
in the Word of God. Let's turn to Revelation
5:9.
It
is amazing and sad that great Biblical truths
that are full of practical, life-changing
power can be obscured and blunted by controversy.
For example, for many it is very controversial
to say that Christ not only died for everyone
in such a way that "whosoever believes on
him shall not perish but have eternal life"
(John 3:16), but that he died also with
a definite aim of obtaining a particular
people for himself - a particular bride
(Ephesians 5:25-32) - whom God had chosen
from before the foundation of the world.
What he purchased was not only the bona
fide offer of salvation to all (on
the basis of an all-sufficient sacrifice),
but also a new heart of faith and obedience
for those whom the Father gives to him (John
6:37; 10:29; 17:2, 6, 9, 11).
But
if you believe this - if you see it, for
example in this text - the implications
for racial diversity and harmony are huge.
Every major doctrine in the Bible has something
important to say about racial harmony, especially
the doctrine of the atonement - the death
of Jesus for sinners.
God's
Intention:
People
from Every Tribe and Tongue and People and
Nation
Consider
Revelation 5:9. This is a glimpse into the
purposes of God in the death of his Son,
the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ: "And they
sang a new song, saying, 'Worthy are You
[referring to the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ,
risen from the dead] to take the book [that
is, the book of history in the last days]
and to break its seals; for You were slain,
and purchased for God with Your blood men
[people] from every tribe and tongue and
people and nation.'"
Now
notice. It does not say that Christ purchased
all individuals in every tribe and tongue
and people and nation in the same way. Christ
purchased people "from every tribe
and tongue and people and nation." In fact,
there is no direct object for the verb "purchased"
and so the emphasis falls very hard on the
"every tribe." It's as though I said, "I
paid a huge sum to purchase from every booth
in the market," and only then tell you what
I bought.
I
know it is possible to interpret this text
loosely, as though the purchase of people
from every tribe were not designed by God
- that it just happened that way because
people in all the tribes simply chose to
believe. And so the make-up of God's people
is by human chance and not a certain divine
design. And I wish I had time to point to
all the texts in the writings of John's
other writings, his Gospel and epistles,
to show you why I don't think he means it
that way (for example, John 6:44, 65; 6:37;
10:16; 11:51-52). But all I have time to
do today is appeal to the fact that when
you purchase something, you generally purchase
something particular. You choose it and
you buy it.
So
when it says in verse 9 that Christ was
slain, and by his blood purchased people
"from every tribe," it is not likely that
it is a coincidence or merely by chance
that those he bought come from every tribe.
It is more likely that this is Christ's
design. This is his aim. In dying, he meant
to gather a people, a bride, a church, a
kingdom, a priesthood, from every tribe.
Purchased
at Infinite Cost
Now,
if you agree with me on that - that this
purchase of a people from every tribe is
intentional, purposeful, designed - then
you will see what I mean by the title of
this message, "God's Pursuit of Racial Diversity
at Infinite Cost." If the purchase of a
people - a bride, a church, a kingdom, a
priesthood - "from every tribe"
is intentional, designed, purposeful, and
not a coincidence, not by human chance,
then the implications for racial diversity
and racial harmony in the church are huge.
1.
God intends to have a people not just from
white or black or red or yellow ethnic groups
but from all ethnic groups. All shades and
all shapes. This is underlined by the four
words, "people, tribe, language and nation
[ethnos]." This covers the whole
range of ethnic diversity in the world.
God designed, aimed, purposed to have a
people that is very diverse.
2.
God intends for these people to be in profound,
God-centered harmony. You can see this in
the words of verse 10: "You have made them
to be a kingdom and priests to our God;
and they will reign upon the earth." All
of them will be priests, and all of them
will reign. Now this would be utter chaos
and religious anarchy if the single priesthood
and the reign of all were not profoundly
unified. You can't have priests who hate
each other and refuse to serve together
in one temple, or live together in one neighborhood,
or hang out together after hours.
If
all those who are purchased from every tribe
are priests to God and fellow rulers with
God, who worship God and reign with God,
then they must have a deep unity in the
truth and in love. The kind of divisions
and hostilities and prejudice and mistreatment
and ridicule and suspicion that has existed
in the church among races is unthinkable
in view of what Christ is pursuing in this
text.
3.
The third implication is that this aim of
ethnic diversity and harmony in the people
of God (the single priesthood and kingdom)
was pursued by God at infinite cost. The
cost of diversity was the blood and life
of the Son of God. This is not an overstatement.
Consider the wording of verse 9 very closely:
"you purchased for God with Your blood men
[that is, people] from every tribe." God
paid the infinite price of his own Son's
life to obtain a priesthood of believers
- a kingdom of fellow rulers - from every
race. Think on it. The issue of racial-ethnic
diversity in the church is not small, because
the price of racial diversity and harmony
was infinite.
4.
The final implication from the text is that
this infinite price was paid, and this racial
diversity and harmony was pursued by Christ,
"for God." Don't miss those little
words in verse 9: "You were slain, and purchased
for God with Your blood people
from every tribe. . ." Racial diversity
and racial harmony in the blood-bought church
of God is "for God." What do we see this
people from every race and tribe doing in
verses 13b-14? "They were saying, 'To Him
who sits on the throne [God, the Father],
and to the Lamb, be blessing and honor and
glory and dominion forever and ever.' 14
And the four living creatures kept saying,
'Amen.' And the elders fell down and worshiped."
Blood-bought racial diversity and harmony
is for the glory of God through Christ.
It is all aiming at the all-satisfying,
everlasting, God-centered, Christ-exalting
experience of many-colored worship.
Here
at Bethlehem
Which
brings us now in closing to Bethlehem.
1.
Very simply, racial diversity and racial
harmony are very, very important. To buy
it cost God the Father his Son's suffering
and death. And to pay for it cost Jesus
his life. Therefore it is very, very important.
2.
And if it cost the Father and the Son such
a price, should we expect that it will cost
us nothing. That it will be easy? That the
devil, who hates the glory of God and despises
the aims of the cross, will relent without
a battle? No. To join God in pursuing racial
diversity and racial harmony will be costly.
So costly, that many simply try for a while
and then give up and walk away from the
effort to easier things.
3.
But if you love God - if you live to spread
a passion for his supremacy in all things
for the joy of all peoples - trust him,
seek his help, and pursue with your life
what cost Jesus his. Take the insert from
the worship folder and do one or more of
the suggestions on it. Go to the racial
harmony table and talk to the team of people
who carry the torch at Bethlehem. Pray for
God to forgive you for sins of the past
and attitudes of the present. Buy a book.
Make a friend.
Can
anything good come out of Birmingham? Yes.
Not only the Letter from Birmingham
Jail, but now the most recent book
on racial reconciliation comes from Timothy
George (white) and Robert Smith (black)
who both live and teach in Birmingham. The
book is called A Mighty Long Journey.
The title is from an old African-American
prayer chant:
It's
a mighty long journey,
But
I'm on my way;
It's
a mighty long journey,
But
I'm on my way.
That's
where we are at Bethlehem - on a journey
toward the perfect experience of Revelation
5:9 in the kingdom of God. And we want as
much of it now as we can. So the world will
see the glory of God and the worth of Christ.
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