Our Real Work
GREAT BASEBALL CATCHER Yogi Berra played a game in which the score was tied with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning. The batter from the opposing team stepped into the batting box and made the sign of the cross on home plate with his bat. Berra was a Catholic, too, but he wiped out the plate with his glove and said to the pious batter, "Why don't we let God just watch this game?"
Letting God just watch. That's good theology when applied to the outcome of a baseball game. It's terrible theology when applied to the way we live our lives and carry out the work of the church. Worse than that, it's fatal.
But too often that is precisely the outlook we bring to our vocation as Christian elders, deacons, and pastors. God attends the game, but only as an honored spectator. Our prayers are merely ceremonial functions, like asking the President of the United States to throw out the first baseball at the beginning of baseball season, they are tips of the hat, verbal recognition over the loudspeaker between innings. He may even be in the dugout, but he rarely, if ever, gets on the playing field.
Are my words too strong? Not if I am to believe half of what I hear from my colleagues about the weight and frequency assigned to the role of prayer in their work. Prayer is always getting nudged aside, neglected, or perfunctorily performed as more pressing concerns cake center stage. Many of us feel we just have too much to do to have time to pray. That's the problem. We don't believe we are really doing anything when we pray—other than saying the words, chat is.
That attitude is one of the most subtle and pernicious forms of worldliness infecting the church today. Why don't we believe we're getting anything done when we pray? Two reasons: ...
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