Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Bonhoeffer’s Discipleship Part II – Reflections (24)

 


“Christians are to remain in the world, not because of the God-given goodness of the world, nor even because of their responsibility for the course the world takes. They are to remain in the world solely for the sake of the body of the Christ who became incarnate – for the sake of the church-community. They are to remain in the world in order to engage the world in a frontal assault. Let them ‘live out their vocation in this world’ in order that their ‘unworldliness’ might become fully visible. But this can take place only through visible membership in the church-community. The world must be contradicted within the world” (pages 226 – 227).

 

From this paragraph Bonhoeffer will move into our vocational callings in daily life, but first he must write, “This can take place only through visible membership in the church-community.” That is, we can only be sustained in our individual callings as we experience koinonia within the church-community – going it alone may not be impossible, but it is close to impossible. For sure, if we cannot find koinonia close by us, then we must find it elsewhere in the communion of saints – such as in Hebrews 11.

 

I suppose I must state the obvious, “membership in the church-community” means substantive relationship in Christ, it means relationship we cannot live without – it means that we are desperate for one another for we are “members of one another” in Christ. It does not mean having our names on a membership list, it does not mean “joining” a church.

 

This does not mean that we should not have membership lists, it does not mean that we should not “join” a church, I think we have liberty in this matter and there can be sound reasons for membership on practical and spiritual levels. However, we ought not to confuse the form from the substance; we can have form without substance, it is difficult to have substance without form.

 

Regarding the latter, the life of God in us must have manifestation and that manifestation will hopefully take Biblical form…if allowed to mature, if informed by Scripture, if lived in koinonia, if not quashed by the scribes and Pharisees.

 

Regarding the former, do we truly have organic membership in local congregations, in denominations, and in those who style themselves non-denominational? I have been challenged by this as long as I can remember; the gulf between the Biblical portrayal of koinonia and our experience, at least in the West, has been wide and deep to my thinking in my generation.

 

This is not to say that we don’t have glimpses of koinonia, it isn’t to say that we don’t have shafts of light and beauty, but it is to say that this isn’t the American Christian way of life. We tend to live in isolation from those who we sit behind on Sunday mornings, we tend to not really know them, we seldom need them, and they seldom really need us.

 

If we can live without one another, we aren’t likely members of one another.

 

I suppose I could live without an arm or a leg, or even without both arms and both legs, but I’d rather not contemplate the possibility.

 

(How is it that we can experience seemingly harmonious Sunday morning gatherings, with smiles and handshakes and hugs, and yet have leadership and congregational meetings rife with discord and acrimony? Why can’t we be honest about the condition of our souls?)


We must live out our distinctive calling as the Body of Christ, as the People of God, if we are to live out our individual vocational callings – an arm, a leg, an eye ought to be attached to a body, it is to function as a member of a body. This is one reason why Discipleship has two parts, the first part focuses on our individual calling, the second on our collective calling to life together. (Paul structures Romans in a similar fashion.)

 

“They are to remain in the world solely for the sake of the body of the Christ who became incarnate – for the sake of the church-community.”

 

What might Bonhoffer mean here?

 

My sense is that we remain here to continue Christ’s Incarnational witness. We are here for the benefit of our brethren in Christ (Philippians 1:21 – 25), here to partake in filling up Christ’s sufferings (Colossians 1:24), here to participate in the perfection of the Body (Hebrews 11:40; Ephesians 4:14 – 16).

 

“They are to remain in the world in order to engage the world in a frontal assault.”

 

We are also here to witness to the people of the world and to confront the system of the world, striving in Christ to set others free from the bondage and death of the world. We are on a rescue mission on one hand, and on a mission to dismantle the world – system on the other hand; both are accomplished as we live in Christ, as we obey Him, as we overcome evil with good. Our collective witness accomplishes this, as does our individual witness – we need both, we are called to live both incarnationally.

 

Our obedience matters, it matters for the salvation of others, it matters for the protection of others. We have no life-giving witness without obedience to Jesus Christ.

 

In our current climate, I read Matthew 25:31 – 46 and wonder where our obedience is. It seems we have hidden ourselves in caves and forests and beneath rocks, lest we should be identified with Jesus Christ who gave his life for us that we might give our lives for others.

 

I read the Sermon on the Mount and wonder where our obedience is. I wonder if the Incarnation isn’t a myth, an illusion; if it is true, then where is it? If the Incarnation was true 2,000 years ago, then it must be true today – Christ lives within His Body; if so, then where is He?

 

Well, of course the Incarnation is true, of course the Body of Christ lives; the God who so loved the world that He gave His Only Begotten Son, who continues to give His Son, continues to give the Body of His Son; as Augustine teaches, as with the Head so with the Body.

 

When we wonder whether our lives matter, let us remember:

 

“Through the obedience of the One the many will be made righteous” (Romans 5:19).

 

This is the calling of the Firstborn Son, it continues as the calling of the many-membered Son.

 

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Abiding Joy

 

 

“But now I come to You; and these things I speak in the world so that they may have My joy made full in themselves” (John 17:13).

 

“These things I have spoken to you so that My joy may abide in you, and that your joy may be made full” (John 15:11).

 

Jesus is speaking so that we may have the fullness of His joy abiding in us. He is speaking as He is about to be betrayed by one close to Him. He is speaking as the shadow of the Cross envelopes the Upper Room. That Jesus speaks of joy before His impending crucifixion should not surprise us, for we see that Jesus, “For the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame” (Hebrews 12:2).

 

As we ponder John 15:11 and John 17:13 (see also 16:20 – 22), I hope we recognize, once again, the unity of John chapters 13 – 17; this is a tightly woven tapestry that calls us to stand back and meditate, allowing its patterns to penetrate our hearts and minds and souls, calling us to enter into it and inviting us to allow it to enter into us.

 

Jesus speaks not simply of joy, but of the fullness of joy, a joy that is completed and perfected – God desires no less for us in Christ, He promises no less. Jesus speaks not just of joy, but of His joy abiding in us, living in us, taking up its dwelling in us. In Christ Jesus we have abiding joy. Joy is our Way of Life. We see the theme of abiding throughout the Upper Room, the Holy Spirit abides in us, the Father abides in us, Jesus abides in us, we abide in the Vine, the joy of Jesus abides in us – abiding is a motif of the Upper Room tapestry.

 

Jesus’ promise to us is, “No one will take your joy away from you” (John 16:22).

 

Just as the love of God abides in us, so the joy of God abides in us. I am reminded of Zephaniah 3:17, of God exulting over us with joy, rejoicing over us with shouts of joy. Can we be quiet long enough to hear God singing and shouting? Will we allow Him into our churches with that kind of behavior? Will we know Him in the quietness of His love?

 

The joy of Christ within us is a state of being, just as the love of God within us is a state of being. It is possible to sing and dance and shout and play music, but never really know the joy of Christ, for the joy of Christ is a state of being, for God is joy just as God is love.  It is also possible to know inexpressible joy in the depths of inexpressible quiet, and in the midst of inexpressible sorrow and suffering (see again Hebrews 12:2).

 

We may express the joy of Christ in many ways, offering God’s joy in Christ back to Him in worship, sharing it with others – both quietly and exuberantly – and drawing on it as we pass through fire and flood.

 

Love, peace, hope, faith, joy; these are all elements of our state of being in Jesus Christ, they are all His…they come from Him, they abide in us, we return them to Him, we share them with others as we are Christ’s Presence on the earth.

 

Jesus speaks so that we may have His joy, that we may find joy in His Word. Do we? When we read the Bible, are we encountering Jesus Christ and His joy? Is the joy of Christ abiding in us as His Word abides in us?

 

As you ponder the Upper Room (John 13 – 17), where are you encountering joy?

 

Is it in Jesus washing our feet so that we may wash the feet of others?

 

Is it in loving others as Jesus loves us, laying down our lives for our brothers and sisters?

 

Is it finding that place in Christ that He has prepared for us, as He comes to us from the Father?

 

Is it in the coming of the Holy Spirit to abide in us?

 

Is it as the Father and Son come to make their home in us?

 

Is it abiding in the Vine?

 

Is it in realizing that our Father has given us to Jesus Christ and that we are secure in Jesus?

 

Is it in knowing that Christ sends us just as the Father sent Him?

 

Is it in the knowledge that the Father loves us even as He loves His Firstborn Son, Jesus Christ?

 

Where are we finding joy in the Word of Jesus?

 

How is the joy of Jesus abiding in us as our Way of Life?

 

Please do not misunderstand me, I love music and I love Biblically-grounded lyrics and I love singing soft and I love singing loud, and I love quite music by which to meditate and pray; but the joy of Christ Jesus is a state of being, it can be expressed in action, but it need not be external action since it is an inward Way of Life. In fact, there is a sense in which we can have singing and shouting and dancing that is not seen with the natural eye, for it occurs within our hearts and minds and souls and spirits…it never ceases. Sometimes we may be playing the drums and symbols in our hearts, other times a gentle flute. We may be sitting in a chair in a doctor’s waiting room while playing the tambourine and dancing in our souls…and praying for those around us.

 

Paul writes of “singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord” (Ephesians 5:19). What are we playing in our hearts? What melodies are flowing from our innermost beings? Yes, yes, there may indeed be times when our outward actions rekindle the embers on the hearth of our hearts, but surely this is not to be our way of life, for Jesus is our Way of Life and His joy has become our joy, his joy abides within us.

 

How is the joy of Jesus being completed and perfected within us…today?

 

If I were to knock on your door this evening, would you answer me with a song of joy?