“A new commandment I give to you, that you also love one another. By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.” John 12:34-35
I recently had the great delight of seeing the movie Jesus Revolution. It is Pastor Greg Laurie’s experience of coming to faith in Christ during what has become known as the “Jesus Movement.” Beginning in the late 1960s and early ‘70s thousands of young people who initially became disenchanted with the San Francisco Haight-Ashbury hippie scene found redemption and significance through faith in Jesus Christ.
The movie
was of especial interest to my wife and I as we had grown up in Southern
California and got to spend a lot of time attending services in Calvary’s big tent.
It was a time
chockfull of “Jesus Freaks.” Most were kids that found that the promise of sex,
drugs, and rock and roll, was as empty of real and lasting meaning as they
thought their parent’s churches had been.
They left
San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury District hippie experimentation and through the
ministry of people like former hippie-turned-street-preacher, Lonnie Frisbee,
and the pastoral leadership of men like Pastor Chuck Smith of Calvary Chapel, Costa
Mesa, were introduced to the reality of a real and lasting relationship with Jesus Christ. It was the experience
with God they were seeking. This generation found a satisfying life of grace
and truth (John 1:14), not in what the world was offering but through the lifechanging
power that God offered through His Son (John 3:16-18).
I grew up in
a hardline Christian denomination that was heavy on judgement and light on
grace. There were many prohibitions within our church’s doctrinal naughty list
that smacked of rebellion against God and my church’s traditional doctrines, with dancing, and going to movies high on the sin. Card playing was in the
“questionable” bracket. Dominos-OK. But the greatest sin in my church was “mixed bathing.” It
was not taking baths with the opposite sex, as that would have been bad enough.
Mixed bathing was where boys and girls were together in their swimsuits at
pool or seashore. Oh yeah, and did I mention long hair? There was that
too.
When the
Beatles hit the U.S. in ’64 with their “Beatle cut” hair that tickled the tops
of their ears I immediately judged them as the Four Fab Squids, rebellious English
losers in need of fiery judgment, or at least to be stuffed back onto a TWA
flight to Liverpool. All through high school I kept my hair cut “high and
tight.”
Attending a
service at the Calvary Chapel tent was a new experience for my straightlaced
denominational upbringing. Guys in Nehru Jackets, Jesus tunics, tie dyed
T-shirts, beards, long hair, shorts, beads, sandals and big Bibles were
well…different. I remember during one worship time a guy with beautiful blond hair
to his waist, raising his hands in adoration to the Lord who had given him a
new life. I thought, “Are these guys for real? Looking like that? If they had
really accepted Christ, they would go to the barber and stop trying to conform
to the world.” It was twisted and legalistic thinking, yet I continued to hold
onto my bias that anyone whose hair touched their ears was still a squid.
Then one
evening, for my own good, the Lord allowed me to get ambushed. I got Hippie
Hugged. I had just walked into the tent with my brother when this hippie in a
baggy white shirt and hair past his shoulders, and beard to his chest, walked
up to me. He opened his arms, smiled at me, and said, “Good evening, my brother,
the Lord bless you!” and hugged me with the greatest show of genuine love. It
was what I have come to call a golden moment of the Holy Spirit, when He imparts
a beautiful truth that changes a life. He spoke to me as He had to Peter, “What
God has cleansed you must not call common” (Acts 10:15).
I recommend this
movie along with the book of the same name by Greg Laurie and Ellen Vaughn. We
are currently seeing God redeeming the times with another spiritual awakening
beginning amongst the youth of many universities within our nation and even
around the world. Where Satan is determined to destroy those made in God’s
image, all humanity, Christ is always faithful to raise up His banner of victory in our
defense, for the Father has given Him all authority in heaven and on earth
(Matthew 28:18).
His salvation is available to everyone, longhairs, shorthairs, bearded and cleanshaven, red, and yellow, black, and white, we all are precious in His sight. No one who asks to come into fellowship with Him will be denied. I used to think His acceptance depended only on my how I looked or performed, until the time I got hugged by that hippie.
We only need come to Him with the sacrifice of a broken spirit and
a broken and contrite heart (Psalm 51:17). All who love their brother and
sister live in the light, and there is nothing in them to make them stumble (1st
John 2:10). The Lord certainly does move in mysterious ways to see His will done in our lives, even to do so through the hug of a hippie.
Ken
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