The morning walk with dog friend Hannah and my trusty iPod generated some thoughts. A tune by Kenny Chesney is chock full of catchy rhythms and bad theology. The song is called Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven but the underlying theme is that nobody wants to go there right now. I think that is true for most of us. As long as God allows I want to live and serve here while I enjoy family and friends.
But what caught my ear was the theology. I am aware that Kenny Chesney is not a theologian so I am not throwing him under his tour bus. I found it interesting because the song reflects the theology of many people and churches in this nation. It used to be mine.
Preacher told me last Sunday mornin`
Son, you better start livin` right
You need to quit the women and whiskey
And carrying on all night
My issues might not have been whiskey and carrying on all night but I had plenty of my own. And that was my church upbringing. Preachers telling me I had to do better, shape up, quit sinning and live right. It was always mixed with a large dose of what if. If you don’t live right you won’t go to heaven. If you sin you will lose your salvation and you won’t go to heaven. If you don’t believe the doctrine of this church you won’t go to heaven. So getting to heaven meant conforming my behavior to earn God’s favor.
The problem in the message of this song and my upbringing is that the onus falls on the sinner to shape up and quit sinning. Good luck. Can’t do it. The next verse also suggests that we can do something to manage our sin debt.
Said preacher maybe you didn`t see me
Throw an extra twenty in the plate
There`s one for everything I did last night
And one to get me through today
Here`s a ten to help you remember
Next time you got the good Lord`s ear
Donations for past or future sins won’t get it done. The problem is not a list of bad behaviors. The problem is sin. No word as powerfully communicates any behavior that separates me from a Holy God. The law did not convict me of blunders, slip-ups and shortcomings. The law convicted me of sin. When we reduce the power of the concept of sin we negate the awesome gift of grace. You don’t need grace to rescue you from idiosyncrasies. I haven’t been moved by a hymn that says…
Amazing Grace. How sweet the sound,
That empowered a dysfunctional but spiritually seeking and fundamentally good person like me.
Somehow John Newton’s original line about saving a wretch like me hits a little closer to my story. I am not talking about self-bashing and looking for fault. I am not talking about the potential false humility of spiritual groveling. I am talking about the mind boggling prospect of facing a holy and sinless God with the resume that I would have to present. Am I a good person? Yeah, I think so. Am I up to that appointment without the redemptive endorsement of Jesus? No way. The classic hymn He Took My Sins Away by Margaret Harris would lose some luster if many in our current culture were writing it today. Here is the refrain as she wrote it in 1901.
He took my sins away, He took my sins away,
And keeps me singing every day!
I’m so glad He took my sins away,
He took my sins away.
One hundred and seven years later it might go something like this…
He recognized my dysfunctional past, He helped me find my inner voice
And showed me it was not my fault
I’m so glad He understood my syndrome
He took away my responsibility.
Same verse…everybody sing along now.
Sin breaks the covenant between a Holy God and myself. God doesn’t have scales to weigh our sins versus our good deeds. Sin separates me from relationship with God. I had a sin problem and I needed that fixed. Jesus came to fix it. That gift of forgiveness is incomprehensible. Jesus called sin by it’s name. And He said if we believe in faith that He came to deal with that sin debt then He will call us by another name. His child. All it takes is accepting the gift of salvation. That is how you get to heaven.
Don`t you wanna hear him call your name
When you`re standin` at the pearly gates
I told the preacher, “Yes I do”
But I hope they don`t call today
I ain`t ready
No matter when the call comes you can be ready. Trust Jesus. Let Him help you change your habits. It is a whole lot easier that way.
Kathy
Agree with the comment about people’s perseption of the judicial nature of God. It may be labeled as “bad theology” but this is what is held as the sole belief of an extraordinary many. The song is wonderful in its honesty and certainly opens up a lively discussion about God with anyone who has heard it. It’s a story–simple but honest. Christ taught with stories. How can you label this as “bad”? As a matter of fact, I’d like to see the verse about putting money in the collection plate used as an illustration of why people give. It’s part of a stewardship sermon waiting to happen.
Don Kimrey
I enjoyed reading your blog very much. I also like your format. You have expertise that I’ll probably never acquire. I started a blog intending for it to be a devotional study of Scripture. No political stuff, no divisive or controversial studies. I’d welcome any suggestions you can offer about how to improve the outreach. keep up your good work! ~donkimrey
David
I’m glad I’m not the only one who gets caught up in the bad theology of Kenny Chesney’s new song. Everytime I hear it on the radio I get caught up wondering about how many people actually believe the very things Chesney is singing about. Maybe I’m trying to be too intellectual with country music.
David Mackey
Great post! I think I’m gonna use it with my youth group as a discussion starter. One item – I think as a whole, we as evangelicals focus too much on the judicial nature of salvation, while failing to also emphasize the healing/restorative nature. God does not only judicially declare us righteous – He also performs the healing of our inward brokenness – that permanent, unhealable bent toward sin. Being forgiven is not enough, we also need to be healed…otherwise we will continue to repeat the same error for all eternity and continue to hurt others.