I have heard it said that “Jesus is imprisoned within many believers and desperately wants out. “ It’s not that he wants to separate himself from any of us. It’s just that Jesus decided to take up residence within us by his Spirit so that he could continue to have a physical presence on the earth through us.
Paul put it this way, “ I have been crucified with Christ, and I no longer live but Christ lives in me” (Gal.2:20). The implication of that statement is that Paul lived constantly by the leading of the Spirit so that in any given moment he would do what Jesus would have done and say what Jesus would have said. In that way, Christ was incarnated once again in Paul.
We all remember the WWJD bracelets that were popular a few years ago. The idea seemed to be that when confronted with an issue, a challenge, or a dilemma, we should ask, “What would Jesus do if he were in my shoes?” It’s a great question, but I think most of us want to consult with Jesus or meditate on his life when we get to a fork in the road and we are uncertain of our path, when crisis rolls in and we are uncertain how to pray, or when temptation is pulling at us and we are thinking about giving in.
But Paul’s statement seems to encompass every moment of every day rather than moments of crisis or indecision. Have you ever wondered…
- What would Jesus do if he were just wandering around Wal-Mart?
- What would he do in the midst of screaming parents at a little league game?
- What would he do when no one was looking?
- What would he do in the face of tragedy as he sat with a family who just got a diagnosis of stage-four cancer in the mother of two small children?
- What would he do with the homeless man on the corner hustling money?
- What would he do with a thirteen year old girl who just came home and announced she was pregnant or gay?
- What would Jesus do at the scene of an accident where a six year old boy who was hit by a car just died on the side of the road?
- What would he do as he sat at board meeting for a Fortune 500 business?
- What would he do while he was on the job checking people out at an all night convenience store?
My point is that Jesus wants to live through us in every circumstance of life – not just when we are stuck or in a moral dilemma. To let Jesus out, we need to sense through his Spirit what he would do or say in any of those settings. What would he talk about with the people paying for gas at midnight? Would he immediately pray for supernatural healing for the cancer victim or pray for life to reenter the six year old body of an accident victim? Would he take the homeless man for a meal and talk about his life? If he would, then we should.
If we are to let Jesus out of his prison, we must do whatever he would do. Sometimes I believe he would just tell someone that God loves them. Sometimes he would just carry a heavy grocery bag for an arthritic grandmother. Sometimes he would get the in the face of a religious tyrant and at other times he would heal the sick, cast out demons, raise the dead, and talk to someone about the kingdom of God – even at Starbucks. He might even mow his neighbor’s yard just for fun.
So…just for fun, let’s all be Jesus today in every setting in which we find ourselves. Let’s ask the Spirit to prompt us to absolutely be Jesus not only in the extraordinary moments of our day but also in the most ordinary moments of our day as well. For today, let’s let Jesus out and then do it again tomorrow.