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Biography
The Rev. Dr. Tony Campolo is Professor of
Sociology at Eastern College, St. David's Pennsylvania. He spends
considerable time dealing with the challenges that face the poor in our
inner-cities and the poor in the Third World nations around the world.
He is also the author of many challenging books and the loving pastor of
an inter-racial, inner-city church in West Philadelphia. [Biographical
information is correct as of the broadcast date noted above.] We
encourage you to purchase Tony Campolo's
books through Amazon.Com
which will donate 15% of the purchase price back to the Chicago
Sunday Evening Club
and 30
Good Minutes.
"The Kingdom As the Kiddie City"
I'm delighted to be with you again. I
have a good topic. Jesus said, "Unless you become as little children you
will in no wise enter the Kingdom of Heaven." Children. We all have to
become like children.
Children are fun. I have a friend who's a school teacher and she showed
me an essay. It was about Benjamin Franklin. The essay read like this:
"Benjamin Franklin was born in Boston but he didn't like it there so he
went to Philadelphia. He got off the boat, he bought a loaf of bread,
put it under his arm, walked up the street, met a lady and married her.
Then he discovered electricity." It's lines like that that you have to
laugh at because they come from children who, in their innocence, are
very humorous.
I also find that children can be very touching. I have a letter from a
friend of mine who teaches school in the upper peninsula of Michigan -
one of those schools from first grade all the way through eighth and she
even teaches Special Ed. One little boy who is in her class is a Down's
Syndrome child - the child is not as bright as the other children - but
he's a special child. I think that Down's Syndrome children are better
than other children - there's a sweetness and a loveliness and a purity
about them. I love this little boy and what he said.
It was Christmas and they were doing the Christmas Pageant and he wanted
a part - not just an ordinary part, a speaking part. Well, they gave him
a speaking part. They made him into the inn keeper. Mary and Joseph come
to the inn and he only has two lines and they are the same line. The
line is, "No room." Well, Mary and Joseph knock, he opens, he says, "No
room."
Joseph pleads and says, "But it's cold and we're tired and my wife is
about to have a baby and the baby will be born in the cold, cold night."
The little mentally retarded boy said, "I know what I'm supposed to say
but, she can have my room." It's that kind of sweetness, it's that kind
of loveliness that Jesus saw in children that made Him say, "Unless you
become as little children you will in no wise enter the Kingdom of
Heaven."
What is it about children that is so special? First of all, they know
that they are loved by God. It takes a while, when children are
rejected, to even realize it. Early on in life, they believe themselves
to be loved. They think of themselves as precious and valuable.
I have a friend who has a five year old girl and on the night of a
thunderstorm - it was one of those horrible storms where the thunder and
lightning roar and flash - he ran upstairs to see if his little girl was
upset and frightened and crying. When he got up to the room she was
standing on the window sill, stretched out, spread-eagled to the glass.
He said, "What are you doing?"
She said, "I think God is trying to take my picture," absolutely
convinced she was special, she was unusual, she was precious. You know,
that's exactly what God wants you to understand. He wants you to feel
special about yourself and wonderful about yourself. I don't know
whether God carries a wallet, but if He does your picture's in it. You
are special to God, you are unusual, you are wonderful to Him. He loved
you so much that when He saw you in trouble He sent His Son into the
world to rescue you. That's what the cross is all about - it's not just
for humanity, it's for you. When Jesus died on the cross it was to
rescue you from sin. It was to take your sin upon himself and make it
His own. Jesus died on the cross in punishment for all that you've done
wrong and thus makes you once again precious and wonderful.
We run an inner-city program in Philadelphia. One of my inner-city
workers had a group of young people on a retreat. As they went to the
retreat, there was one little girl who was very withdrawn, very morose,
very sullen. She didn't say anything the whole retreat. They played the
games -she didn't participate. They sang the songs - she didn't sing. On
Sunday morning, when they were wrapping the whole thing up, the leader
said, "Does anybody here have anything to share?"
It was then that this little girl spoke. She said, "Yes, something
wonderful happened to me last night. I had a dream and in the dream I
was in this room with beautiful mirrors. There was a lovely orchestra
and they were playing lovely music. People were wearing beautiful gowns
and the men were wearing tuxedos. This handsome man came over and asked
me to dance with him. As I danced with him, suddenly, I realized it was
Jesus and He bent over and whispered in my ear. Do you know what He
said? He said, 'Kathryn, I'm crazy about you.'"
Now I know that the neo-Freudians will have a hey-day with that. But be
that as it may, if you knew the children who grow up in the ghettos of
Philadelphia, if you knew the horrible lives that many of them have to
live, you would know that there is nothing more important than this:
that Jesus Himself should come and say, "I'm crazy about you."
But let me assure you that Jesus says that not only to a child in the
ghetto. Jesus says that to you and to me. He wants us to regain that
precious, childlike sense of worth and value, that childlike awareness
that we are important people. Have you ever noticed children? They know
they're important, they know they're special. God wants you to know that
you are important, that you are special and He sent His Son into the
world as a messenger to deliver that good news. YOU ARE LOVED BY GOD.
The second thing is this: Little children have a sense of joy. Jesus
came into the world to impart His joy to you. He says in one place, "I
have come that my joy might be in you and that your joy might be full."
You know, Jesus not only died on the cross, but He was resurrected -
He's here and He's now, He's right there with you. And if you will
invite Him, He will become a personal friend who will walk with you and
talk with you and be with you every moment of every day. You will feel
His presence, you will be touched by His nearness. And when you get
close to Jesus, you will know joy, joy, joy, unspeakable joy. "The
Fruits of the Spirit," says the book of Galatians, "are these: love and
joy and peace..." And there will be joy in your heart - the joy of it
all.
I have a son, his name is Bart. One time I took him to Disneyland and
after a day of fun and recreation we were leaving the place and he said,
"I want one more ride on Space Mountain."
I said, "I'm out of time and I'm out of money."
He said, "Jesus wants me to go." (I liked that one!)
I said, "How do you figure?"
He said, "When you were speaking in church on Sunday, you said that
whenever we cry, Jesus cries and whenever we are sad, Jesus is sad; that
He feels what we feel." I admitted that I said that. He went on to ask,
"If Jesus feels what we feel, then when we're laughing and having a good
time isn't he laughing and having a good time, too?"
I said, "That seems to make sense."
He said, "I think He would enjoy me having one more ride on Space
Mountain." That's not bad theology. God wants you to have joy, He has
vested interest in your joy. Do you know why? Because God is a loving
Father. I'm a father. I have no joy if my children are filled with
sadness. When my children are going through spiritual and psychological
hell, I go through it, too. God is no different. He feels what you feel
and He doesn't want you to be in emotional pain. He wants you to
experience joy because He has no joy if you have no joy. He is that
deeply involved in your life. He's a great God and He wants you to have
fun.
Lord Chesterton once said that he thought God might be the only child
left in the Universe because all the rest of us have grown old and
cynical because of sin. That's easy to understand. There is a joy about
children and there is a joy about God and God wants to put that
childlike joy in you. All you have to do is say, "Jesus, take possession
of me. Give me your joy, take away my sin, return me to innocence and
purity, establish my sense of worth and give to me your joy." It's a
gift and you can have it.
Children are visionaries, children are dreamers. This Jesus, this God,
that I am telling you about, brings to you dreams and hopes and
aspirations. I can't say that to you strongly enough. The Bible says
that when the Holy Spirit comes upon people the young men and the young
women have visions and the old men and the old women dream dreams. When
I work with the inner-city children of Philadelphia, when I go into the
ghetto and I talk to the children, I say, "What are you going to be when
you grow up?" They always talk in glorious terms "I'm going to be an
astronaut, I'm going to be a medical doctor, I'm going to be a lawyer."
It hurts me, because I know that the social conditions in which they
must live deny them the opportunity of living out their dreams - of
fulfilling their visions. God has given them dreams, God has given them
visions, but those dreams and visions get frustrated. That's why we, as
a Godly people, must work for justice in our world. We must remove all
barriers to fulfillment of dreams. When children want to become the
great things that Jesus has told them to be and there are social and
economic barriers, we, as servants of God, must go to work to remove all
those things that keep them from becoming what God planned for them to
be when they were created. Children have dreams.
I was on the boardwalk at Atlantic City one day and there was a little
girl carrying cotton candy. Have you ever seen cotton candy? It's a huge
fluffy thing on a stick. It was so big and she was so small I said to
her, "You're so little and that candy is so big, it's bigger than you
are."
I remember her saying, "You don't understand, mister, I'm really much
bigger on the inside than I am on the outside." Isn't that the good news
of the Gospel? God wants to make us bigger on the inside than on the
outside. On the inside He wants us to have dreams and visions. No matter
how much the world puts us down on the outside, He wants those dreams
and visions to blaze with aliveness on the inside. He wants us to see
that there are wonderful things in store for us, wonderful ventures of
faith waiting for us.
I don't know what God wants you to do, I don't know what God wants you
to be, but I can be sure of this: that he puts dreams and visions in
your heart. He lets you know what you might be. Sometimes you say, "No,
I could never do that, no I could never be that." I think that sometimes
you are your own worst enemy. Henry Ford once said, "If you say you can
or you say you can't, either way you are right." In reality, Jesus puts
in you hopes and dreams and aspirations and, in lighter moments, makes
you envision what could be in your life. He says, "Go for it. I will be
with you." Is there something that you ought to be doing with your life
that you're not doing? The truth of the matter is that you are called to
do it.
Let me put it to you simply and directly. There's a great poem by Shel
Silverstein, it goes like this:
Listen to the MUSTN'TS, child,
Listen to the DON'TS
Listen to the SHOULDN'TS
The IMPOSSIBLES, the WON'TS
Listen to the NEVER HAVES
Then listen close to me -
Anything can happen, child,
ANYTHING can be.
[from Where the Sidewalk Ends]
When I talk to children, they believe that they can be anything and do
anything, but little by little, the world beats them down. Perhaps the
world has beaten you down and you don't feel your life can accomplish
anything of worth. Well, you're wrong. Jesus is here with you. Jesus is
speaking to you and He calls you to dream great dreams and to have great
visions and to believe that you can do the wonderful things that He has
put into your mind and heart.
The spontaneity does get crushed. A friend of mine tells the story of a
little boy on the first day of school. The teacher said, "Everybody draw
a house." Little Billy got his crayon and scribbled all over the place.
He used black and purple and green - it was a multi-colored mess. The
teacher screamed, "Billy, you didn't wait for directions!" The next day,
the instructions were to draw a tree and once again Billy went to work
all over the paper - crayons going in all directions, all kinds of
colors. Once again the teacher said, "Billy, you didn't wait for
directions." The next day when Billy went to school the teacher said,
"Today we're going to draw lions, everybody draw a lion." Billy picked
up his crayon and waited for directions. Something died within Billy, a
spontaneity, a freedom, a joyfulness that would enable him to go forth
in life and attempt things gloriously. Jesus wants to put that
spontaneity and joy back into you.
I know that in my own life I find great joy and spontaneity in following
Jesus and it's not just the pious things. Just the other day I was in
New York and I got on an elevator. I always play games on elevators -
those of you who know me know that. I love to get on elevators and not
turn and face the door like you're supposed to. It always blows people
away. You know, there they are and there I am and I put on my Alfred
Newman smile and say, "What me worry?" And as I looked at the people I
realized that they were all serious businessmen. They had lost their
childlike excitement about life. We were going on the express elevator
all the way to the 40th floor. So I said to the group, "Gentlemen, we
are going to be traveling together for quite a while. Why don't we
sing?" They were so intimidated by me they did! I couldn't believe it! I
had all these guys on the elevator in New York City, going to the 40th
floor, singing, "You Are My Sunshine." I couldn't believe it!
You say, "What is this about? I thought this was a religious show, I
thought this was about Christianity." Jesus said, "I want to make you
like little children. I want you to laugh and skip and dance with me. I
want you to enjoy life." Jesus didn't come into the world only to get
you into Heaven when you die, He came to take away your sin. He came to
be a friend who would walk with you and talk with you, a person who
would impart to you His joy, His aliveness, His sense of ecstasy. Jesus
comes to you and says, "Dream with me. Together we can do great things,
wonderful things, unusual things. Jesus wants you to dream like a child,
to have joy like a child, to have self-confidence and self-value like a
child. He said, "Unless you become as little children you will in no
wise enter the Kingdom of Heaven."
There's a difference between being childlike and being childish. He
doesn't want you to be childish. Childish people are people who bear
grudges. Childish people are people who are picky and critical.
Childlike people are like God who, as I said earlier, may be the only
child left in the universe.
I call upon you to listen to the scriptures. You know, I cry for people
a lot. That's the last thing about children: they cry for people a lot.
If you tell a child a crying story and the child cries. I just got back
from Haiti where we do economic development work. I saw children with
their swelled bellies and their skinny arms and legs. I cried a lot.
Jesus cries a lot. Children cry when they see suffering.
There's enough to cry about right here in the United States. Recently, I
had an Evangelistic Crusade out in Sacramento, it was one of those Billy
Graham-like things. You know, they hired an arena and they had a big
committee who rounded up people from more than 97 churches and packed
the people in - there were 12,000 present each night. After the first
meeting, the committee got together and said it was a wonderful meeting,
hundreds of people made decisions for Christ, but there wasn't any
newspaper or television coverage. I tried to explain that there was no
big deal with filling an auditorium with Christian cheer leaders. In
reality, Bruce Springsteen fills the place and Mick Jagger fills the
place and the Sacramento Kings fill the place - it's no big deal filling
the arena. I said, "If you want to get news coverage, I'll tell you what
to do. Tomorrow night let's take the whole offering and give it to
people in this city who are suffering from AIDS, who are dying from
AIDS, who are in pain because of AIDS." I said, "The news media will be
here." I said, "I don't keep the money, I always give it to missionary
work anyway, so we can afford to do it." So they did it.
The next night I was there to preach. I was in high gear - I was doing
my thing. The television cameras did not photograph me, the newspaper
reporters did not write about me. I preached my best, the choir sang,
the television cameras did not cover the choir. When the offering plates
were passed every camera went on, every light went on. You know what
they were photographing? They were watching people give. They watched
people give to people with AIDS. They watched people whose hearts were
broken by the things that break the heart of God. They photographed
people who could cry like little children about the sufferings of the
world. When it was over, the television stations did not even want to
interview me. I was disappointed. I wanted to be on television. They
didn't interview the choir. What they did was interview the people
coming out of the meeting.
They asked one question, "What did you think of the offering today?"
Strange question to ask Christians. The first man out was perfect. He
had one of these pot bellies and a tattoo - I mean he looked like the
macho, truck driver, beer drinking type. "What did you think about the
offering?" they asked.
He said, "Well, what about it?"
"It was for people with AIDS."
"So?"
The interviewer said, "Well, people with AIDS usually are homosexuals
and religious people usually are hard on homosexuals."
His answer was beautiful, it was perfect. I would have said, "We love
the sinner even as we hate the sin," or something pious like that. This
guy said, "Look, I don't know anything about this homo stuff, all I know
is that when people are sick, Christians ought to help them." I like
that; that's a great testimony. When Jesus makes you like a child you'll
have the empathy and sympathy of children.
One day, when we were walking down the streets of Port Au Prince, Haiti
my little boy was confronted by a child begging for money. I said,
"Bart, don't give him any money. If you do, every kid in Port Au Prince
will be on top of you and you won't be left alone until they've got
every penny you've got."
I remember my son looking at me and saying, "So?"
Little children don't have enough sense to realize that you could end up
giving people everything you have and are in the name of Christ. Jesus
says, "Unless you become as little children you will in no wise enter
the Kingdom of Heaven."
To be children is to see yourself as valuable in the eyes of God. To be
children is to be filled with a spontaneous joy. To be children is to
have dreams of wonderful things you can do for other people in the name
of Christ. To be children is to have your heart broken by the things
that break the heart of Jesus. And Jesus said to His disciples, "You
want to know who's going to be great in my Kingdom? Those who become as
little children." Be childlike - be Christian.
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