The reason we get restless with where we are and want, as we say, "more of a challenge" or "a larger field of opportunity" has nothing to do with prophetic zeal or priestly devotion; it is the product of spiritual sin. The sin is generated by the virus of gnosticism.
Gnosticism is the ancient but persistently contemporary perversion of the gospel that is contemptuous of place and matter. It holds for that salvation consists in having the right ideas, and the fancier the better. It is impatient with restrictions of place and time and embarrassed by the garbage and disorder of everyday living. It constructs a gospel that majors in fine feelings embellished by the sayings of Jesus. Gnosticism is also impatient with slow-witted people and plodding companions and so always ends up being highly selective, appealing to an elite group of people who are “spiritually deep,” attuned to each other and quoting a cabal of experts.
The gospel, on the other hand, is local intelligence, locally applied, and plunges with a great deal of zest into the flesh, into matter, into place - and accepts whoever happens to be on the premises as the people of God. One of the pastor's continuous tasks is to make sure that these conditions are honoured: this place just as it is, these people in their everyday clothes, "a particularizing love for local things, rising out of local knowledge and local allegiance."
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