This time of year we are often thinking of the Incarnation, the idea that God became a flesh and blood human in Jesus. We focus on the memory of Jesus as a baby in poor surroundings. The Incarnation plays out through the entire story told by the Gospels--Jesus teaching and healing and most of all loving people, then dying, being buried, and coming back to life in a new flesh and blood body before his ascension.
I've been studying 1 Corinthians this semester with two of the student core leaders I meet with weekly, and something new jumped out at me in chapter 6. In the midst of a warning about sexual immorality and a reminder that our bodies will be resurrected like Jesus' one day, Paul writes, "Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ himself?"
I'm so familiar with Paul's metaphor of the body of Christ in Romans 12 and 1 Corinthians 12, that we each have different gifts to share and roles to play so that his church can be healthy. But here in 1 Corinthians 6:15, Paul says something more specific--my body is a member of Christ. The incarnation continues in me as his Holy Spirit comes to inhabit my physical body.
What people need is not to encounter more ideas. Our world is FULL of ideas. We're on idea overload! What people need is to encounter Jesus, his physical presence, his touch, the sound of his voice. The original children's minister at my church would always say that children's ministry was about being "Jesus with skin on" to kids. Now, setting aside the gruesome image of a de-skinned Jesus that would sometimes pop into my mind when I heard that, I think he had it right.
One of the great revelations of the gospel is the Incarnation, that "in Christ all the fullness of the Deity lives in bodily form" (Col 2:9). And we participate in that! The things we do matter--the meals we share, the affection we show, the times we just show up to be present with people in celebration or mourning or the humdrum of daily life. Our bodies are members of Christ. When we show up, he shows up.
That's what campus ministry is all about--these students need to encounter Jesus on campus. Not just as an idea, but as a person. And it's what your ministry is all about too--your kids, your spouse, your friends, your coworkers, the stranger standing next to you in line--they don't need another idea; they need to encounter Jesus, embodied in YOU. As we reflect on the mystery of Christ in a manger, reflect too on the ongoing mystery of the Incarnation in your own life as a disciple, "which is Christ in you, the hope of glory" (Col 1:27).
Managing Expenses
Jacob and Kole were the ones I was studying 1 Corinthians 6 with! |
I also meet with Felipe and Paul this year. Felipe told me after that he "doesn't smile in pictures." Lol! |
My UTD staff team got to take a picture with Santa and Mrs. Claus (Arianna's mom and stepdad) at our student Christmas party. What a fantastic team! |
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