Recently I had to give a message at Youth about sanctification as we are currently working our way through the ‘big words of the Bible’. So far we have done the Trinity, justification, regeneration, and adoption. The Trinity is God in three-in-one persons: He is at the same time God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit but He is also separate from each other.
Justification is how we are now justified by Christ’s death on the cross for our sins, which allows us to be regenerated to become new creations so we can be adopted into the Family of God. Sanctification continues this process, but rather than being instantaneous, it is an ongoing development with our relationship with God as we become more like Him. Sanctification means becoming more Christlike.
The wrong and right questions
It’s odd how when we get given messages to prepare for, it actually makes you stop and think about your current situation.
Recently I read John Piper’s famous book Don’t Waste Your Life. One of the chapters spoke about how as Christians we try the ‘avoidance ethic’. This means we think being a Christian is about avoiding bad behaviours and fearful trouble.
Yes, as Christians we should avoid bad behaviours and trouble but we were made for far more than this. There are many non-Christians who avoid bad behaviours or trouble, work hard, pay taxes, watch TV at night and do fun stuff on the weekend--what more are you doing than the others?
Piper also speaks of asking the wrong questions about behaviour. We say ‘What’s wrong with it?’
‘What’s wrong with this movie or TV show?’ Or this music, video games, or friends? Or shopping at this store and wearing these clothes?
The better questions to be asking are: How will this help me treasure Christ more? How will it help me show that I do treasure Christ? How will it help me know Christ or display Christ in my life?
The Bible says in 1 Corinthians chapter 10, verse 31, ‘Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all for the glory of God’. The question now goes from a negative ‘What’s wrong with it?’ to a positive ‘How can I treasure Christ?’
Why I’m not watching Game of Thrones: Season 7
This is where the conviction hit me--when we try to downplay areas in our life that are not Christ exulting or God glorifying.
For me it was the HBO TV show ‘Game of Thrones’.
I’m not going to downplay it--the series is a movie-quality production cut down to 40 mins for 10 weeks of the year as the story progresses. I had watched every episode a couple of times and always looked forward to the new season each year to see where this giant, sprawling storyline would go – from the civil war to control of the seven kingdoms, to the defence of ‘The Wall’ in the north against the white walkers, to the rise of the true Queen Daenerys and the last dragons in the world as she prepared to invade and take back her throne.
On Fridays at my youth group I would tell the kids to be mindful of what they watch on TV and online and to make wise choices. The following Monday I myself would sit down and watch an R18 rated show full of violence, war, rape, incest, blood, gore, devilry and witchcraft. And I downplayed it by saying ‘It’s not that bad’ or ‘That’s what medieval times were like’ or ‘I’m old enough to watch these kind of shows’.
This was me, and I had it all wrong – as I said earlier, it was not Christ-exulting or God-glorifying. How can I stand on Fridays and say one thing, then a couple of days later sit down and do another?
Making much of Christ in all behaviours
Those are the reasons why I won’t be watching the new season of Game of Thrones. Another concerns whether I would I sit down next to Jesus and watch it with Him on the couch. Would I do this?
No, I wouldn’t.
Would I want my future children to watch the show?
No, I wouldn’t.
Would I want my kids at Youth who look up to me to watch the show?
No, I wouldn’t.
Does this mean I’m now confined to watching Veggie Tales and G rated shows and movies the rest of my life?
No it doesn’t.
It simply means that in all the choices I make I’ll keep Christ as the blazing centre of my life and glorious in all my actions and behaviours.
Yes, it will be tough to not watch the show. Everyone at work watches it, it’s all over Facebook, and is a huge and popular discussion over lunch the following day at work. But I would much rather make Christ the centre of my life and grow to become more like Him than to find out what happens in the next episode.
Christopher Archibald lives in Sydney and is a Youth Leader at New Life Christian Church in Blacktown. A voracious reader, he ploughs through many books in a calendar year, with a bookcase that is constantly being rearranged to accommodate new additions.
Christopher Archibald's previous articles may be viewed at
www.pressserviceinternational.org/christopher-archibald.html