Pastor Tim Keller. |
By Leah MarieAnn
Klett, Christian Post Reporter
Through disasters like the coronavirus pandemic, God is reminding
humanity of their need for Him and challenging the Church to love and support
those of different races and religions, according to noted theologian and
bestselling author Timothy Keller.
“We’ve never had a
global pandemic like this, and it’s because we’re globalized that this sort of
thing can happen and can happen again,” the 69-year-old retired pastor of
Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, told The Christian Post.
“God’s message to the
world during times like this always is, ‘You’re not really in charge. You may
think you are going to get ready for the next one, but you never will. The
world isn’t under your control; it’s under my control. You need to turn to me.
You are not sufficient to run your own life. You need my wisdom and you need my
help.’”
“In every disaster,
whether it’s 9/11 or COVID-19, God is saying to people, ‘Eventually, I’m going
to put an end to all of this. But for the time being, this world is broken, and
every time you think you don’t need me and that you can get on top of it,
something like this will come along to remind you that, no, you do need me,’”
he continued.
Keller, co-founder of
The Gospel Coalition and author of The Reason for God and The Meaning
of Marriage, founded Redeemer in the fall of 1989 with a group of
15 people meeting weekly in an Upper East Side apartment. By 2016, the
Manhattan-based church was holding eight Sunday worship services each week
averaging over 5,300 people in attendance.
Three years ago,
Redeemer became three smaller churches with locations on the East Side, the
West Side, and Downtown. Though he retired as senior pastor of Redeemer in
2017, Keller told CP he remains “very much involved” with the church, which he
revealed has been “deeply impacted” by the virus.
“Three weeks ago I
knew of 12 pastors and staff members who had come down with COVID-19,” he
shared. “And that was three weeks ago. There are lots and lots of members with
COVID. I don't know anyone who has died, but keep in mind, Redeemer is a young
church. There are very few old people, therefore my hope is there won’t be many
fatalities.”
With more than 222,200
confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 10,913 deaths as of Friday morning, New York
state has by far the most cases in the United States,
with more than a third of the national total. According to Keller, in many of
the neighborhoods in Queens and other areas, "most everybody knows
somebody who has died on their block."
“I hope other places
don’t go through what we’re going through; it's truly a terrible thing,” Keller
said. “We’re so densely populated here and so international. We’re so much more
connected than the rest of the world. I’m hoping New York City is the
hardest-hit place in the whole country."
Keller, whose latest book Uncommon Ground focuses
on how Christians should interact with the fractured world around them, told CP
that right now, he’s not certain what God is telling the Church, specifically,
through the pandemic. The real test for Christians, he posited, “will come
several months down the road when presented with opportunities to witness that
we can’t even envision just yet.”
“For example: What if
your community escapes pretty much and in three to four months you’re OK, yet
some communities you know are hurt economically and there are tons of
unemployed people?" he asked. "Maybe you could lock arms with a
Church in a more hurt area. I think in the future, there will be ways to help,
but that won’t be obvious for a while."
Short-term, Keller
said the best way to “love your neighbor and family is to not take risks.”
“It’s odd because by
you trying to avoid getting it, you’re also loving your neighbor,” he said.
“You can’t take a risk and say, ‘I’m going to go out and do things because I
don’t care if I get it or not.’ The trouble is, you’re risking the health of
those who might not be able to get over it so quickly."
Keller pointed out
that when disaster strikes, “people tend to come together and work alongside
those they otherwise wouldn’t agree with.”
“We’ve been through
this before,” he said. “Redeemer did have fatalities in 9/11; people who were
in the towers when they fell. With 9/11, it took weeks for us to figure out
what we should be doing, because nobody knew what was going to happen. You have
to hold tight, spend a lot of time trying to keep up and thinking about the
future, but you won’t be able to know for sure immediately.”
Dubbed “the most
successful evangelist in the city” by New York magazine, Keller currently serves as
the chairman of Redeemer City to City, which has helped start
more than 500 churches in dozens of the most influential cities in the
world.
According to Keller,
the coronavirus is doing what 9/11 did to the state: presenting a unique
opportunity for Christians to serve as a beacon of hope amid darkness.
“At the national
level, I don’t have much hope,” he admitted. “Politicians are trying to pin the
other side with the blame for the virus and it’s discouraging. They’re trying
to score points so that when the pandemic begins to ease, they look good.”
“But at the local
level, that’s probably not going to happen. Everyone is going to say, ‘OK, how
do we deal with the devastation in our communities?’ And that’s where I think,
if Christians are willing to get out there and be Good Samaritans and say, ‘How
do we work with people of different races and religions and just try to love
them and how can we join hands?’ we will have less polarization and a real
opportunity to witness.”
Source:
https://www.christianpost.com/news/pastor-tim-keller-on-gods-message-to-the-world-amid-covid-19-duty-of-the-church-pt-1.html?uid=*|UNIQID|*
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