If I sit down beside a stranger on an airline, and if we decide to introduce ourselves to each other, invariably one of us will ask, "So what do you do?" It's a standard get-to-know-someone question. It's relatively safe and non-controversial. And it also a good question because what people "do" says a great deal about who they are. We acknowledge as much when we ask young children, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" Even though we may say "be" we aren't asking about their existential status. We expect them to answer with a vocation or occupation. "I'm going to be a firefighter."
We tend to draw a significant part of our self-identity from what we do: our work, our hobbies, our studies, our volunteer activities, etc. However, in my own perception of growing up Christian, that identity had more to do with what I believed than anything I did.
In today's reading from Exodus, God shows up to give the Israelites the "10 Commandments." This isn't the tablets that many associate with these commandments. This is simply God speaking directly to the people. God does not generally speak directly to people in the Bible, and so an introduction is necessary. "I am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt,
out of the house of slavery." Who are you and what do you do? "I'm Yahweh, and I free people from bondage."
There's been a great deal of talk in recent years about the "practices" that form individuals and communities into people of faith. In some congregations, what had been called "Christian Education" is starting to be referred to as "Christian Formation." The shift, in part, speaks of a move beyond what I know or believe, a move that also speaks of what I do.
Jesus certainly did plenty of teaching, but he also did lots of healing and feeding and such. And he told his followers lots of things the were to do. Jesus talked a great deal about the Kingdom drawing near, and this Kingdom was not a hope for heaven. It is a transformed world that operates by different rules, a place where things get done for the sake of the neighbor, the weak and oppressed, rather than self or for those with influence and power. It is a new sort of world where life has been completely reorganized around the practice of neighborliness.
So what do you do? I think Jesus is God's fullest answer to that question. And if we are going to slap the label "Christian" on ourselves or our society or our country, then surely our answer to "What do you do?" needs to look a bit like God's answer.
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