By Tyler McKenzie
I love the principles of the Restoration Movement. I was raised in one of our churches, educated at one of our schools, and lead one of our churches.
But the most compelling principle to me has always been our commitment to live in the tension between truth and unity. Perhaps itโs time to call for a restoration of that ideal in our movement, because I believe we are out of balance.
From what I read in the New Testament, unity was an undeniable essential for the earliest church. Here are four principles that I hope will move us in the right direction:
Humility
The calling card of the humblest people I know is a willingness to listen. Listening generates empathy and understanding, the key ingredients for peaceful disagreement. Itโs saying to your counterpart, โYou talk first.โ Through listening, we earn the right to be heard. Listening is acknowledging that no one has all the answers.
Iโm not suggesting humble people are passive or lack confidence. In fact, passivity often is just a different form of pride. The student who fears raising his hand to answer a question is just as prideful as the one who always raises his hand. Both are self-absorbed. Both care too much about how their peers see them. Humility isnโt about having high self-esteem or low self-esteem. Humility is having no self-esteem, but rather esteeming Christ alone. If you esteem the One who gave his life for his enemies, you will certainly be willing to listen to your fellow Christians.
Accommodation
By its very nature, unity demands joining with people whose views differ from yours, and yes, that is possible to do. It requires making a calculated decision to prioritize common ground over personal opinion, mission over method, Jesus over generational difference. Itโs much like the accommodation Paul described in 1 Corinthians 9:22 when he said, โI have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save someโ (English Standard Version). Itโs the kind of unity James articulated in his letter to Gentile Christians when he asked them to โabstain from what has been sacrificed to idols, and from blood, and from what has been strangledโ (Acts 15:29), so they might be in fellowship with Jewish Christians.
Truth
Unity is not uniformity, but it can cultivate it when we lead with humble listening and accommodation. The trick here is sharing the truth in love. We need both in equal measure. Love without truth isnโt love at all. Itโs enablement. Truth without love will never be heard because itโs self-righteous. But when we balance both truth and love, suddenly we find ourselves on common ground with a common goal. Suddenly we find ourselves fighting like family rather than enemies.
These first three principles all point to the final one.
Cross-Shaped Love
This is the cruciform love Jesus selflessly embodied and which we bear when we choose to carry our own cross.
I donโt know if you have ever experienced that sort of radical, selfless, cruciform love in your life, but I did, and its effects were supernatural. I think cross-shaped love either repels others or transforms them. You either run from that love and resent it because itโs just so strange, or you canโt help but reciprocate it.
God will bless unity. Jesus told us this much in John 17:21: โI pray that they will all be one, just as you and I are oneโas you are in me, Father, and I am in you. And may they be in us so that the world will believe you sent meโ (New Living Translation). Jesus said our unity should be so different that it seems divine. It should be so irregular, itโs irresistible.
Perhaps this is the greatest apologetic the American church today has to offer in the Unitedโor, maybe more accurately, the DividedโStates of America. Perhaps this is our greatest evangelistic tool. I canโt help but think in a country so clearly divided along political lines, in a day when families and marriages are failing more than ever, in a culture where racial tensions are high, in a time when the old have lost hope in the young and the young have lost respect for the old . . . I canโt help but think we have an opportunity. We have an opportunity to shine the countercultural light of unity and give the watching world a glimpse of the presence of God and reconciling power of the gospel.
How irresistible would it be to see all races, colors, and cultures worshiping together? How strange would it be to see Democrats and Republicans praying together? How awe-inspiring might it be to see a community where the young heed the wisdom of the old and the old encourage the young? Would people not notice if our marriages never dissolved? Would they not wonder about a group that is โoneโ?
Our Trinitarian God is One because of his commitment to unity. His essence could not be love without his commitment to selfless unity. And so, let it be with us! We know we cannot always be right, but we can unite. We know we cannot always win, but we can be one. And oneness will evoke wonder in this divided day.
We at The Solomon Foundation, couldnโt agree more with Tylerโs words as we strive to be a catalyst to drive the mission of reaching a lost world for Christ by being committed to unity in the natural tension with the truth of the Word of God. We do that by empowering churches in our movement to get to the next level by leveraging the unity of our investors to provide the funds while at the same time giving a great return on investment. We believe that this honors God and draws people to our Lord Jesus Christ. For believers, thereโs nothing more fun than that!





