Watching The Christians™ argue about that damn ‘He Gets Us’ ad had better entertainment value than the Super Bowl.
There is a deeper, darker criminal conspiracy behind these ads that we can – and should – discuss but for me, I really didn’t take much away from it other than that these ads haven’t been about building discipleship or spreading the gospel. It’s always been about rebranding Christians – and Christianity – as a whole.
Generally, we (and it’s a we – I am a disciple of Jesus. I can’t divorce myself from that grind when it’s convenient) are HORRIBLE stewards of the forgiveness that Jesus died on the cross to give us. Historically, the most oppressive laws came from those who claim to be his sheep. The enslavement – and sometimes forced conversion – of my ancestors was justified by Scripture. We’ve killed and simply maimed others under the banner of God. The results of our nasty work is every-damn-where.
That man who ran and won in 2016, almost won in 2020, had a cabal try to take down the government in 2021 and will no doubt be the Republican candidate for President in 2024 is the result of Christians. We ban books and adequate health care options. We call God’s children “monsters”. Those who claim to be faith leaders have led with so much hate in their hearts. The damage to our witness is done.
When it comes down to it, we can be some of the most self-serving people on this planet. Our theologies and our pulpits endorse it. So now folks have no problem thinking we’re generally trash bags – and telling us about it – and we’re outnumbered. So we’re shook.
But instead of doing the internal work of casting out the demons who made us so vengeful, spiteful, cruel, self-aggrandizing, oppressive, devoid-of-love, dehumanizing and, simply, a bunch of dickheads, we use advertising campaigns to cover up the work we refuse to do within ourselves and our community. We hope that others don’t see our flaws.
Our aim for perfection is what got us here in the first place. Jesus doesn’t want us perfect; he just wants us present.
I’m sure that ad assuaged some guilt. I’m sure those who watched it thought, “See! I am one of those good Christians. I believe in these things too!” This work doesn’t teach you to pat yourself on the back. It teaches you to look inward and see where you can be a better citizen of this planet. We all fail at love. Every day. But through Jesus, we get another chance to be better at it.
And that’s the beautiful thing about Jesus: He may get us but he really doesn’t need us to do his work. He gives us the privilege of acting as his bridge between his ministry and those who seek him. We get to act out the most important commandment on others as he did for us. We get to be love because we are loved. It’s not Jesus that needs a makeover, it’s us.