Sermon - TLIS - 3.1.2 - Christian Architecture
2 Peter 1:3
His divine power has given us everything we need for a godly life through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness.
Micah 6:8
He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.
No, we are not going to be talking about how to build churches.
When I started to teach about security architecture, and business architecture, most people misunderstood the term architecture. Most people seemed to see architecture as a mere plan, or diagram, or outline of how you would put together security. The architecture is much more than that. The architecture is not a plan or a diagram or an outline. The architecture is what allows you to develop and put together a plan or diagram or outline.
So I started to come up with an illustration for the students and candidates. What if you were going to build a house? For a house, everybody understands that you need an architecture. Generally speaking, you would try and find an architect. So let's design a house. What do we need to build a house?
And, generally speaking, someone would almost immediately jump in by saying four walls. And I would jump on that. "Aha!" I would say, "but this house is in the South Pacific Islands. We actually don't *want* four walls. We live in a very humid environment. We want the breezes to blow through as freely as possible. If we don't, we are gonna have a problem with mold. So we don't want walls. We might want drapes of some kind, or screens, to give us privacy. But we don't want anything to impede the air flow. We do want a roof, because we have a lot of rainfall which contributes to the humidity. But we don't want walls because it's generally warm enough that we are not going to be uncomfortable. So all we need is a roof, and some screens or other curtains.
The point of this exercise is to get you to think bigger about what an architecture is. The architecture is so big that it is really just a set of the requirements. What is it that we need? For a security architecture, what is it that we need in terms of security? For a business architecture, what is it that we need in terms of our business? The requirements are, basically, our architecture.
You also need to learn to think smaller. The policy, for a business, is, generally, just a few sentences. It looks more like a mission statement than the five hundred page manual that most people think about when you talk about business policy. In terms of our house, our architecture really should only mention the need to keep the rain off, the need for some privacy, and the need for an airy feeling, and actuality. That is the architecture, and it allows us to create something that is appropriate in terms of an actual design and implementation.
So, when we turn to trying to design an architecture for our Christian life, We only need a few basic outlines. Love God. Love your neighbor. Spread the good news. That's it.
Anything beyond this is extraneous, and actually risks becoming an impediment. Just like our four walls in our South Pacific home.
Many people think too small with regard to security architecture. That is, they look at it too closely. They think that it should be a design that is to be implemented. They think that it should specify particular vendors and particular products. The problem with that is that when the business grows, you may outgrow that particular design, or those particular products, or even that particular vendor. Security architecture should be able to support the business as it grows. You should be able to expand the business, and expand your infrastructure, without violating the security architecture.
Similarly, the security architecture should be able to accommodate new business models or business plans. If you have a small business and you are doing business as a storefront, then, as your business expands, are you able to accommodate electronic commerce or online commerce and online business? Are you able to accommodate that within the structure of what you have been calling your security architecture? If not, then what you have is not a security architecture, but simply a design.
So it is with the Christian life. Our Christian architecture should be able to accommodate our concept of God growing larger. After all, there is that wonderful book title "Your God Is Too Small." Our God, any idea that we have about God, no matter how large, is not large enough to accommodate the reality of God. God is just simply bigger than we think, and bigger than we could *ever* think. If our idea of God is not able to grow and expand as we experience more of God then our Christian architecture is too small. It cannot accommodate all of God. As our understanding of God expands, we are going to have to change our idea of who God is, and possibly abandon everything that we have thought and considered and planned up to that point.
And just like security architecture, in terms of Christian architecture, less is more. In order to have a Christian architecture that is able to accommodate expanding ideas about God, we have to have less specific detail and more openness.
Karl Barth's work is wonderful and has contributed greatly to theological understanding. John Calvin's "Institutes of the Christian Religion" is a marvelous work and has provided comfort and assurance to many Christians and theologians over hundreds of years now. (When it was first published in French, beyond the original Latin, it immediately became the world's first best seller in a popular language.) But in terms of utility and accessibility to the everyday Christian, I assume that many, many more people have read C. S. Lewis's less than two hundred pages that are published as "Mere Christianity." The very title, "Mere Christianity," indicates that Lewis is considering the simplest and most basic aspects of Christianity. Lewis is not interested in defining the differences and distinctives. He simply wants to define what he wants to define what all Christians can agree to. Therefore, his work is more basic and more applicable to more people. Just about anyone from any denomination can agree to it and learn from it.
And it can stand the test of time as well. A "mere" Christianity will be able to address the challenges of the Internet, where everyone in the world is now your neighbor. A mere Christianity would be able to assess, evaluate, and direct the lives of Christians who are influencers on social media. John Calvin, as smart as he was, might have had a bit of difficulty with that.
Architecture security architecture includes items such as your hardware and your software. Christian architecture includes things like your beliefs, your philosophy, your perspective and worldview in seeing how reality actually works when there is a God behind it. It includes other aspects as well.
The infrastructure of your life includes your resources, such as your money, your house, your car. It also includes your very life itself: your health, your physical strength, your physical abilities, skills, and talents. Are you willing to use all of these, as necessary, in the service of God? Are you willing to still dedicate your life to the service of God if you start to lose some of these resources? The architecture allows you to give a cohesive design to how you use all of this in terms of God's service. The architecture gives you guidance as you are making decisions and makes sure that these decisions will be strategically consistent across time. It's designed to be strategic, in that it has a longer life than any immediate blueprint or design or plan for your life in the short term. This is one of the reasons that you don't want the architecture itself to be too specific because it can't become constrained by current or changing circumstances. It's not going to be invalidated by changes in your understanding of the nature of God. It should allow multiple implementations and plans for your future. Depending on how situations change, if you don't have a Christian architecture then you will have trouble being able to quickly and effectively support needs that you see popping up in front of you, with the understanding that God has presented them to you as opportunities to help.
At a Christian meeting one time, one woman was giving her testimony, and said that she had accepted the Lord as her savior when she was four years old, and that her faith had not changed from that day to this. I appreciate that we are supposed to have faith as little children. I appreciate that faith is supposed to have an element of constancy to it. But I couldn't help but think how sad it was, that her faith had not developed at all since she was four years old. What can we know of God at four years old? Yes, we can love him and trust him. But we can go little further than that. And as she had grown, evidently her faith had not.
It is this kind of issue that I seek to address when I say that we must minimize our Christian architecture, in order to accommodate a God who is large enough for the universe. As we understand more and more of the world, God's creation of it, and the marvelous planning that went into preparing it for us, grow more evident the more you know. Our humility, in the face of this magnificent planning, must also grow. The more we know, the more we know that we do not yet know. And our structure around our Christian faith must be such that it can withstand a sudden twist or shock.
I also recall another time, when I was quite alone, studying, for the first time, higher textual criticism of the Bible. I remember the anger that I felt that I had been lied to all these years. What was being presented to me in terms of higher criticism was obviously true, and yet all these years I had been presented with ideas and concept that were in direct contradiction to it, and were, therefore, wrong. My faith had to withstand that kind of a shock and twist. It did, with only a little residual anger involved. But I can certainly understand those who have been presented with equally false information, provided by the church and the Christian society around them, and were suddenly awakened to the evidence that so much of what they believed had, in fact, been fairy tales. And so many of them have, in that moment, turned away from the faith.
CS Lewis's mere Christianity is basic. It emphasizes what God is, and what God is not. It concentrates on the most basic and common elements of Christianity. It lays out the dangers, to us, that are present in the world and in opposition to God. For the most part it stays away from any controversial aspects and divisions between denominations of Christianity. It sticks with the basics, the fundamentals, the most foundational concepts that we need to know to understand and follow God. This is what our architecture needs to be. It is no wonder that the Bible so often warns us not only that we must believe everything that is in it, but not to add anything to it. Adding anything, as much as we may want to, carries with it the danger that this additional baggage may result in a loss of faith in the extra that has been added, with the added danger that faith itself may be lost.