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Fish wars in a drive-by world

Representing the depths of Christ in a culture obsessed with surface-level symbols

Vancouver Island is not a place known for being a hotbed of some of the “culture wars” that take place south of the border. As far as I’ve been able to tell, it is a very post-Christian environment with a whole bunch of eclectic spiritualities from quasi-paganism to charismatic Christianity to the garden variety unreflective secularism. Having said all that, I’ve been surprised to notice that the fish wars seem to have a small but noticeable presence over here.

Once upon a time, way back when the world was young, I, too, was the owner of a Jesus fish sticker and displayed it, if not proudly, then optimistically on the back of my Honda Civic.

Looking back, I don’t know that I thought much about what my fish might communicated to those that observed it or, more importantly, how it communicated whatever message it was supposed to convey.

Did I think that people would look at my fish and find their hearts warmed by my obvious good will and concern for them? Was I hoping they would breathlessly run up to me in a parking lot and plead with me to explain the significance of my Jesus fish or inquire as to whether or not they could attend my church?

Would they angrily confront me, thus giving me an opportunity to demonstrate my unparalleled skill in apologetics, not to mention my obvious humility and willingness to “suffer” for my faith?

Whatever I may or may not have expected, we eventually sold the car and that was the last time a fish of any kind made an appearance on a vehicle of mine.

Spotting Fish on a Motorcycle Ride

Last week, as I was enjoying a beautiful motorcycle ride along the ocean on my day off, I couldn’t help but be irritated by the visual pollution of these fish as they passed my view on the highways and byways. Even though the fish are still relatively infrequent sightings around here, once or twice is enough to annoy.

One one level, of course, it’s somewhat embarrassing to admit that symbols like these annoy me. If my highly informal and selective research is to be believed, annoying and antagonizing people seems to be the chief purpose of these cultural artifacts—a purpose that is achieved with alarming regularity.

On another level, though, I think all people who even pretend to be interested in some of the big questions of life ought to be annoyed and offended by what the fish represent. They symbolize a tragically common and almost completely useless approach to how we think and talk about complicated issues.

The church has sometimes been guilty of substituting a symbol for a conversation. Click To Tweet

In a culture where everything from coffee to hamburgers to banking to pharmacy pick-up is available in a drive-through format, the fish stickers fit right in. With a minimum amount of effort or personal investment, we can stake our claim and substitute a symbol for a conversation.

Instead of taking the time to actually get to know people who think differently than us and engaging in respectful dialogue with them about issues that matter deeply to us both, we slap a fish bumper sticker on our vehicles and (defensively) make our “positions” known to all who drive by. In many ways, it is something of a pre-emptive strike in the realm of worldviews wars.

Some time ago I preached a sermon on James 2:1-13. As I read through the book of James that week, I was struck once again by how little James thinks of outward professions of faith that are not accompanied by action.

Throughout the book I heard him saying, “Don’t tell me what you believe, show me.” Of course, in a world drowning in cheap words that are easily reproduced and transmitted, we desperately need people who are willing to live out the truth of what they believe, who love their neighbours first and speak about their beliefs later.

Yet, I wonder if James would slightly modify his message if presented with the fish phenomenon (Jesus, Darwin, or any other kind)? Maybe he would say something like this:

Don’t show me what you believe, tell me. Don’t pretend that a fish on your car accomplishes anything other than irritating people and making somebody rich. Let’s sit down and have a conversation. What are your hopes? Your fears? What are the questions that you think Jesus (or Darwin, or the ‘Truth fish,’ or the devil, or ‘Sushi’) is the answer for? What do think is the best way to communicate this to your neighbours?”

The Depths of Christ in a Surface-Level Culture

In a drive-by--drive-through--advertising-saturated culture like ours, the fish-on-a-bumper approach to sharing our beliefs fits right in. And this is precisely why, as Christians, we should be most averse to adopting it.

We follow One who took time to be with people, to tell stories, to ask questions, to meet needs, to tell stories and to ask questions. Rather than mimicking the methods of an inattentive, easily-distracted, image-obsessed, reactionary culture of which we are a part, our approach to our neighbours ought to look a lot more like the One we claim to be representing. An approach immersed in the depths of conversation, encased within a posture of reflection, respect and authenticity.

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About the author

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ChristianWeek Columnist

Ryan Dueck is a husband, father, pastor, blogger and follower of Jesus Christ living in Lethbridge, Alberta. For more of his writing, visit ryandueck.com

About the author

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