The other passage in Luke that rocked my upper-middle class world was Luke 18:18-30. This was very hotly discussed verse in our study. It is here that Jesus comes across a rich young ruler (I am rich, I am young) and this guy asks what he has to do in order to enter heaven, and he also tells Jesus that he has followed the 10 commandments exactly. Jesus replies by telling the young man that he still needs to do one more thing in order to love Jesus wholly. Jesus tells the young man to sell everything and to follow him, that’s it. The young rich ruler then becomes quite sad because he had quite a lot of possessions. I couldn’t believe how I suddenly related to this verse. Taking this passage and combining its message with that of the previous passage I began to see that God did not desire for Amanda and I to pursue our own personal wealth.
Since it was summer I finally had some time to start reading again and I just finished Don Miller’s book called “A Million Miles in a Thousand Years”. It is here that Miller talks about envisioning our lives as movie. What kind of story do we want to tell, what type of story would be a blockbuster? I concluded that story about a guy who gets married, gets out of debt, acquires a descent amount of wealth, and then retires at age 50 would be a movie that would skip theaters and go straight to DVD if I was lucky. Lame.
I was in search of another good book and began asking friends for some recommendations. Ryan a very well read friend recommended I read Shane Claiborn's book Irresistible Revolution. Wow, what a book. It was in the book that new perspective and attention was brought to Matthew 25:31-36. In this set of verses Jesus calls us to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and care for the alien, stranger. The first thing that I noticed was that no where does Jesus commend anyone for saving up a lot of money, retiring early, driving an expensive car and giving some money to a charitable organization here and there. After reading Irresistible Revolution which invited readers into a new way of life by living more simply I picked up “Crazy Love” by Francis Chan which had been given to me a year earlier by my Grandma. Guess what, Crazy Love, basically hit the same main points that Irresistible Revolution did. Things were starting to get really weird. Did God really want Amanda to truly abandon our American dreams? I still struggled to accept that.
