Good day my friends. Please don't mind if I vent a bit. This blog is being written at no better a time because of how clear I am seeing the pharasaic attributes of the church which serve to stagnate the church and it's mission. If we look at the modern church and consider the time of Christ we see very similar diversion tactics being used by those who want to defend their view or institution. For example, consider time when Jesus began to explain that the Sabbath was made for the man not man for the Sabbath, the Pharisees looked for ways to accuse Him according to the Law rather than see the truth in the matter at hand (Mark 2:23-3:6). Another example is that as Jesus is teaching the Truth of the law and do miracles the religious people continually find reasons to question what He is doing for example in Matthew 15:1-20, they focus on the fact that Jesus' disciples do not wash their hands before they eat and therefore break the tradition of the elders. Legalism, what you should not be doing, was the greatest method of diversion to get people to ignore what Jesus was truly doing, and it even extends to the Apostles. Consider all the times that the Apostle Paul had to explain and reiterate the difference between law and grace and was constantly accused of making it ok for people to sin( Romans chapters 2-7; Galatians chapters 2-3; Ephesians chapter 2; might I add that you should just read the New Testament as a whole). Today, many in the Church are clearly allowing a man to determine where they will stand in regards to the truth and are not studying things for themselves, and that's depressing because one must consider how many Jews in the first centruy where led astray by this tactic- following their Rabbi. In Matthew chapter 23, Jesus Christ is issue the judgement text as to what is going to happen to the religious teachers of the Law in his time, might we read in context yet glean some wisdom from blindly following teachings that may just seem right:
" Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You shut the kingdom of heaven in men's faces. You yourselves do not enter, nor will you let those enter who are trying to. Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You travel over land and sea to win a single convert, and when he becomes one, you make him twice as much a son of hell as you are (Matthew 23:13-15)".
This week I sat down with a Jehovah Witness and during our 3 hour discussion/ debate he continually emphasized that I remind him of Obama because of how well spoken I am. Obviously, this diversion tactic was used to say that it's my speaking that is convincing, not my theology. At this point I am all to familiar with diversion tactics and strawmen that are used to confuse and diffuse truth (Check out my video series on Pulling Apart the Strawman). Fact is, truth will prevail!! And since it has been said that I am similar to Obama, I will stay true to form and say- "There is hope"! :)
There is hope that the truth will prevail over the deceit, deception, falsehood and lies that are a plague to the church and its mission. There is hope that the true gospel spoken by Jesus Christ and the apostles will be ressurected as the Christians begin to use discernment and search the Scriptures. There is hope that the gospel message that emphasizes the mission of making disciples for Christ will be renewed and revitalized in contrast to the prevailing apathetic misinformed "churchianity" message that many are comfortable with.
I titled this blog- A Theology That Works- for a dual purpose. If one is to consider the works versus grace contraversy that has continued in Christianity and is clear in the book of James, we come to the Biblical conclusion that
"In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead (James 2:17)".
Therefore, we conclude that our lives must be marked by action. But what produces the action? Our Faith! Theology is our understanding of God, so we recognize that the natural outpouring and fruit of our faith should be action. Do you feel that tug of action? What exactly is your understanding of God (theology) urging you to do?
The purpose of this blog series- Missional: Attacking the Static- was to get us to take an honest inventory of the Church, our participation as members of the Body, and now I am clearly up some of the issues so prevalent (all of which have been expounded upon in books, through quotes, and personal discernment):
apathy, passivity, Pharasaic separatism, comfortability, and inconsistent discipleship.
What I pose through this blog is an emerging profitable Christianity that starts with our theology which will produce action, as I like to term is "zeal empowered by knowledge".
As I said before, there is hope, and that hope is through a through us, the body of Christ, the Christians doing what we are commanded by studying the Scriptures, using discernment and searching the Scriptures, and allowing a natural outpouring through our lives of the things we begin to know and how we look at the world (a true Christian worldview). Their are some amazing things that are emerging thanks to the current times and the good ole information age. The challenge is on the table though, it is not an easy task for an apathetic passive comfortable Church to begin to be consistent in our dealings with the world, to offer a true good news that is rational and reasonable, and to truly engage.
Come, let's reason together....Can you consistently discuss and if need be defend/debate your faith? Are you presenting a message of good news to the world that is actually accepted as good news?
Read Ephesians chapter 2-3 (notice "you will be able to understand", "make plain to everyone the administation of this mystery). Does your gospel presentation sound like that?
These are contentions I have had for a while living as a fully engaged Christian who looks at the world as a mission field. Through my studies of the gospel we present to the world I have continually realized that we fail to speak about the kingdom of God. My continual contentions were that we are not seeing the miracles, signs, and wonders that Jesus and the Apostles did (or the 3000 people coming to the faith) because we were not being true to form. Jesus came on the scene of ministry and declared:
"Now after John was arrested, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the good news of God, and saying, "The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God has drawn near; repent, and believe the good news. (Mark 1:14-15)"
"From that time Jesus began to preach, saying, "Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven has drawn near (Matthew 4:17)".
AND THE APOSTLES:
"They arranged to meet Paul on a certain day, and came in even large numbers to the place where he was staying. From morning till evening he explained and declared to them the kingdom of God and tried to convince them about Jesus from the Law of Moses and from the Prophets (Acts 28:23)".
"For two whole years Paul stayed there in his own rented house and welcomed all who came to see him. Boldly and without hindrance he preached the kingdom of God and taught about the Lord Jesus Christ (Acts 28:30-31)".
My continual focus of seeking to understand and declare this message to the world has led me even further in realizing the failure of being consistent to the message. If you look to the end of Revelation, it is then that the kingdom of God is given to men- what kingdom is this? Is it a physical kingdom that will one day be on earth? Is it a restored world? If you read Revelations chapters 21-22, along with the Old Testament prophecies of the hope of this kingdom you realize the popular view is hardly consistent with the text. What did Jesus say to Nicodemus about the kingdom?
"I tell you the truth, no one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again (John 3:3)"
Unfortunately, as you study church history you will see the confusion and debate concerning the realized kingdom of God, the mix of Gnostic teachings, and much to our detriment today- new teachings upon new teachings to explain misunderstands by what Christ meant. If you study doctrines you will see that due to much of the confusion the popular gospel message today has many gnostic tendencies:
"Gnosticsism is a radically dualistic view of reality where physical reality is completely separate from spiritual reality...They claimed "salvation" involves escaping from the physical world, which is the source of corruption, into the spiritual realm, which is pure and eternal...deny the goodness of God's physical creation and teach that God must replace it with a new universe in the future...one of the many things that the Christian docrtine of the incarnation shows us is the perfection of Jesus Christ is possible in God's physical world. Many other holy and righteous men in Biblical history also demonstrate to us that man's problem has nothing to do with the created order; the problem is sin which resides in the human heart. The curse related to sin is not inherent in the elements of the physical world; the curse has to do with human beings and their covenant relationship to God. That is why believers can be saved, right here and now, in this world. The problem mankind has is sin, and God can take care of that for those who believe. He doesn't have to throw away the physical universe in order to do that (Paraphrased from the book: Beyond Creation Science)".
Biblical truth sounds a bit different than the spiritual hogwash being spouted at many sunday services today, doesnt it? You know... the whole recieve Jesus in your heart today that way you have the hope to be wisked away with him into heaven when you die, but you will have to follow some rules and live a good life separate from the bad people and come here to sing alot of songs, etc, etc.. And that's the good news we present to the world? Sounds a bit like Gnosticism.
"Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people's thinking"- Steve Jobs
I love that quote above. Sadly, many in the Christian Church today are living by dogma, doctrines, and a spinkle of Scriptural truth. The aspect of thinking out-side-the box or really thinking through things with discernment (intellectualism) is considered a fault in the eyes of many- because many equate faith with a lack of rational thought. As I have posed through this blog, looking at the socio-religious climate- THIS IS A MAIN TENENT OF THE PROBLEM WE HAVE IN BEING A STATIC INSTITUTION!!
"Jesus declared, "Believe me, woman, a time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain, nor in Jerusalem. You Samaritains worship what you do not know; we worship what we do know, for salvation is from the Jews. Yet a time is coming and has now come when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth for they are the kind of worshippers the Father seeks. God is Spirit, and His worshippers must worship in Spirit and in truth (John 4:21-24)"
Jesus was speaking to a woman outside the covenant of Israel. He was telling her of a time when truth would be revealed to all those who seek to know God through Christ, the Messiah. Notice that it would be spirit and truth that the Father wants those to worship Him through, we must not ever compromise these aspects! That my friends is the solution.
Becoming missional in our efforts to attack the static of the institutional church through faith and works is the solution and the greater things that we would do through Christ (John 14:12)- living in love, fulfilling the Law (Romans 13:10; Galatians 5:14; etc..).
Unfortunately, the separatist/ retreat from the world aspect that makes Christians feel good about them being the "righteous" is the hypocritical doctrine that blocks us from living in love and living missionally. Besides..it's easier to just separate and know our differences. That's exactly NOT how it is done, the incarnation of Jesus Christ is a prime example.
There is a difference between true Christianity that is reforming and emerging in small unions in radical Christ-ways from organized churchianity. We have seen the need to reform and critique many times and for many reasons in Christian history, and I would imagine the list I can compile is a very minimal list compared to the needs that must change as we emerge and engage the world as the true Christ-followers that we are.
"Where the church is faithful to its Lord, there the powers of the Kingdom are present and people begin to ask questions to which the Gospel is the answer"
Some of us from The Fellowship C.H.U.R.C.H. have taken up the opportunity to gather and learn with the local Unitarian Univeralists on Sunday mornings. Originally. we started out just going and listening and seeking to demonstrate the gospel in word and deed. The more time we spend there and befriend more and more people, we are realizing the commonalities we all share, the value of friendship ("love beyond belief"), and the process of enjoying the journey of learning, loving, and living. Recently, the minister has been sharing with us about the convictions of the UU congregation and summation of his "What Do We Believe" sermon was:
"The most important point of faith which I have not yet mentioned is, faith is for a purpose. It's to motivate you to care for yourself, so that you may help others, and to exhibit concern for the world of we're apart of"
As Christians, we are not just simply universalists with a concept of “love beyond belief” nor do we hold an atheistic do-good view rather we have a proclamation of truth changes all things. Read Hebrews chapter 11 to learn of what part faith has had in the lives of the heroes of our faith. Yet we fail.
It is time, especially in a religious, social, politcal, and economical culture we face today to be offering a consistent, clear, and not so absurd good news to the world. This will enable our efforts to smash false paradigms and views that are set up contrary to the true gospel and the reality of it. We have the unction to demolish strongholds and therefore make all thought captive to Christ (2 Corinthians 10:4-5). We have the call to be rational, reasonable, and offer the answers to the world around us through the gospel of Christ (1 Peter 3:15)- this is truly the healing of the nations (Revelation 22:3).
The depressing news is that many are misinformed because of the serious lack of studying the Scriptures, knowing church and secular history, and instead of defending the faith and searching the Scriptures many have trusted in doctrines of men and sough the the easy way out. Popular teachings stand in stark contrast to the concept of iron sharpens iron, and especially the challenge of Proverbs 18:17: "The first to present his case seems right, till another comes forward and questions him". Instead of searching out the matter, and diligently searching the Scrictures the popular teaching, even said by pastors is the inconsistent aspect of sitting under a man or school to learn truth (oddly enough, in time this is and can be disputed as reguritating the doctrines of a man, or as you learn more as desire to search things out you may recieve the rebuke of taking information from too many sources -sorry bit of a side not there :))
Sadly, as you may have noticed at the beginning of this blog the issue of defending and teaching the truth gets personal for me. As a committed missional Christian, committed to study of the Word and searching the Scriptures- I am at odds with popular doctrine. Emerging missional theology is not a stated way of doing things it simply means to emerge (defined as moving out of the way or away from something and come into view) and become missional as you learn more and more about God. I pray that this blog series has been edifying to you and that through the Spirit of God you will continue to diligently study the Scriptures and share the gospel through your learnings!
"The Spirit and the bride say, "Come!". And let him who hears say, "Come!". Whoever is thirsty, let him come; and whoever wishes, let him take the free gift of the water of life (Revelation 22:17).
and I guess this is where I extend my invite of "Come!", lets hang and let me buy you a coffee.
A brother, friend, servant of the Lord,
Pastor Michael Miano
*And yes I really am inviting you to fellowship with me over a cup of coffee, tea, or maybe a frappachino, ha ha ha...give me a call or text 239-603-5695
Theological, missional, social, and random musings of a "Jesus Freak" living for the glory of God through Jesus Christ!
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Friday, October 7, 2011
Missional: Attacking the Static Part 4 - Why the Church & What is My Role?
"Consequently, you are no longer foreigners and aliens, but fellow citizens with God's people and members of God's household, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the chief cornerstone. In Him the whole building is joined together and rises to become a holy temple in the Lord. And in Him you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which God lives by His Spirit. For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for the sake of you Gentiles- Surely you have heard about the administration of God's grace that was given to me for you, that is, the mystery made known to me by revelation, as I have already written briefly. In reading this, then, you will be able to understand my insight into the mystery of Christ, which was not made known to men in other generations as it has now been revealed by the Spirit to God's holy apostles and prophets. This mystery is that through the gospel the Gentiles are heirs together with Israel, members together of one body, and sharers together in the promise in Jesus Christ. I became a servant of this gospel by the gift of God's grace given to me through the working of His power. Although I am less than least of all God's people, this grace was given to me: to preach to the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ, and to make plain to everyone the administration of this mystery, which for ages was kept hidden in God, who created all things. His intent was that now, through the Church, the manifold wisdom of God should be made known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly realms, according to His eternal purpose which He accomplished in Christ Jesus our Lord". (Ephesians 2:19-3:11)
The above text from Ephesians clearly shows the missional aspect of spreading the good news, which Paul was called to spread to the Gentiles, and therefore the church would be established to make known to "manifold wisdom of God". Through that passage many things are made clear:
-The church is not a building, but rather the people being built and raised together
-The mystery of the gospel was the Gentiles becoming heirs with Israel concerning
the promises of God
- The calling of the church is to make known the wisdom of God, which is explainable and full of richness
- All of the wisdom and calling of the church comes through the eternal purpose of God through Jesus Christ
As missional people, set on fire with the gospel and love for others in our heart we become the church. As I read recently, it is not that the church has a mission, rather the mission has a church that makes all things possible (as illustrated through Ephesians 3).
We read about the church having it’s beginnings in the book of Acts, after the crucifixion and Resurrection of Christ. The Apostles are the sent ones to make the Church come to fruition by spreading the gospel to both Israel and the Gentiles. The Apostles go out and truly make it clear that the gospel is what many are searching for as they see thousands of people come to the saving knowledge and grace of Jesus Christ.
"Where the church is faithful to its Lord, there the powers of the Kingdom are present and people begin to ask questions to which the Gospel is the answer" -Lesslie Newbigin
St. Francis of Assisi once made the following statement:
"Preach the gospel, when necessary, use words"
I will admit up front, I see the importance of the proclaimed gospel (Romans 10), yet Francis' words ring a bell. Are we living the gospel? As the quote above by Lesslie Newbigin makes clear if we are living faithfully to our calling people will begin to ask the questions that allow for us to clearly explain the gospel in their context. How serious to do show your life to be about making disciples of Jesus Christ?
There is no doubt when we read about the early church and get a glimpse of what the church looked like in the first century we get a clear understanding of the body of Christ at work. Similarly we notice the same thing happening in the underground church in China. It is said that before the wide spread persecutions of Diocletian and other Roman leaders happened in the early Church there were about 25,000 Christians, but as the persecutions became widespread there was in increase in discipleship and by 310 A.D. there was about 20,000,000 Christians. Similarly in the persecuted underground Church in China before the persecutions of Mao Tse Tung and the Communist Party there were about 2 million Christians, yet after Mao's reign it was recorded that the discipleship during the persecutions between 1949 to 1979 rose to 60 million.
Imagine what that might look like in your location? What are we missing? Might I say..persecution. We are living as the missional people of the underground church who are extremely missional to the point that they won't even buy housing because they know they will soon be persecuted and probably lose their home because they see the importance of spreading the gospel and making disciples for Jesus Christ.
Today, in America we must turn and ask- is this what Jesus meant for his movement? It seems we are a far ways away from the discipleship/ missional attitude of the early church and even our persecuted brethren in other countries today. We face a crisis of regurgitated Christians going up for alter calls every Sunday, a lack of knowledge and substance concerning the glorious good news of Jesus Christ (half the time I don't even understand what is good about the "American- Christian" gospel), and we have lost sight of the freedom loving truth that made the New Covenant. It is so much easier for us to cuddle in our church buildings sing songs, learn some verses in the Bible, and feel religious because we don't do "the bad things the world does". A great study done by Gabe Lyons and some of his associates has proven that American Christianity has become the antithesis of what Christianity was in the first century, and ultimate what Jesus Christ wanted for His body.
So...what do we do?
Well as the body of Christ who is making known the wisdom of God we must first examine ourselves and see if we are truly of the faith. Look into the mirror of Scripture and the law of liberty given to us by the grace of God. As Alan Hirsch makes clear in many of his missional books (The Forgotten Ways, Untamed: Missional Discipleship, and ReJesus) we must vandalize our portraits of Jesus. As my lovely lady, Quanti, would say- "Where do you get your Jesus from"? We must re-introduce ourselves to the Jesus Christ of the Gospels and get rid of our faulty views.
We must see to truly become what the biblical church was. This will require breaking down our current constructs, looking at our social atmosphere, and truly being missional.
"A church which pitches its tent without constantly looking our for new horizons, which does not continually strike camp, is being untrue to its calling...We must play down our longing for certainty, accept what is risky, and live improvisation and experiment"-Hans Kung, The Church as the People of God
As the individuals who make up the body, called the Church we can begin with ourselves (oh..you thought this was going to be easy?).
"A great deal more failure is the result of an excess of caution than of bold experiment with new ideas. The frontiers of the kingdom of God were never advanced by men and women of caution"- J. Oswald Sanders
Let us begin to be courageous, bold, and zealous members of the body of Christ. A friend of mine has the church motto of:
"We exist to glorify God by pursuing and sharing our joy through the knowledge of Him".
I have always loved that statement because that is exactly it. If we understand why we exist everything we do will fall in line with that exact purpose. Are you pursuing and sharing? If we took that attitude about everything we did, just imagine what could happen? We need that primal energy!!
"The church is called to be a dynamic movement rather than a static institution...its leadership is drawn from those one the front line of the expansion of the church" –Alan Hirsch, The Forgotten Ways
If we take the above to quotes serious that would mean alot of Christians would be not counted among the membership and many of those calling themselves leaders would have a serious demotion. Our apathetic attitude coupled with passivity in matters of church leadership, evangelism, discipleship, and studying the Word of God has put us at odds with true Biblical Christianity. Consider Paul when he wrote to the Romans:
"I am obligated to both the Greeks and non-Greeks, both to the wise and to the foolish. That is why I am so eager to preach the gospel also to you who are at Rome. I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes: first for the Jew, then for the Gentile (Romans 1:14-16)".
We must see the apostle Paul as the standard of what it means to be a Christian, one who is obligated, eager, and unashamed of spreading the gospel. In this..there can be no if, and, or buts.
"If passion is eliminated, faith no longer exists"- Soren Kierkegaard
The standard of faith is passion, it brings us to the James controversy- faith versus works. Simply put, your works (your passion) will be the outpouring of your works. At The Fellowship C.H.U.R.C.H. (the church I pastor) we pride ourselves on doing everything with passion, to the point that our membership papers say:
If you don't have passion, don't bother.
With the premise that our works, our passion, our outpouring will be the natural result of our faith, what can be said of the person with no passion? Makes clear the quote above by Sorek Kierkegaard, doesn't it? Well then...let that be the challenge- a challenge of having passion for God and the Gospel because it is impossible to please God without God ( Hebrews 11:6).
The church needs or rather boldly we can say is composed of believers who are living missionally in spreading the gospel. It is a two way street, without the passionate missional disciples there is no Church, and without the Church there is no missional discipleship. That my friends is the purpose of the church- we are the unit by which God makes manifest His will on Earth. We must stay plugged in, accountable to, and working toward Spiritual disciplines in the Church.
Our purpose? "Go , and....(Matthew 28:19-20)
The above text from Ephesians clearly shows the missional aspect of spreading the good news, which Paul was called to spread to the Gentiles, and therefore the church would be established to make known to "manifold wisdom of God". Through that passage many things are made clear:
-The church is not a building, but rather the people being built and raised together
-The mystery of the gospel was the Gentiles becoming heirs with Israel concerning
the promises of God
- The calling of the church is to make known the wisdom of God, which is explainable and full of richness
- All of the wisdom and calling of the church comes through the eternal purpose of God through Jesus Christ
As missional people, set on fire with the gospel and love for others in our heart we become the church. As I read recently, it is not that the church has a mission, rather the mission has a church that makes all things possible (as illustrated through Ephesians 3).
We read about the church having it’s beginnings in the book of Acts, after the crucifixion and Resurrection of Christ. The Apostles are the sent ones to make the Church come to fruition by spreading the gospel to both Israel and the Gentiles. The Apostles go out and truly make it clear that the gospel is what many are searching for as they see thousands of people come to the saving knowledge and grace of Jesus Christ.
"Where the church is faithful to its Lord, there the powers of the Kingdom are present and people begin to ask questions to which the Gospel is the answer" -Lesslie Newbigin
St. Francis of Assisi once made the following statement:
"Preach the gospel, when necessary, use words"
I will admit up front, I see the importance of the proclaimed gospel (Romans 10), yet Francis' words ring a bell. Are we living the gospel? As the quote above by Lesslie Newbigin makes clear if we are living faithfully to our calling people will begin to ask the questions that allow for us to clearly explain the gospel in their context. How serious to do show your life to be about making disciples of Jesus Christ?
There is no doubt when we read about the early church and get a glimpse of what the church looked like in the first century we get a clear understanding of the body of Christ at work. Similarly we notice the same thing happening in the underground church in China. It is said that before the wide spread persecutions of Diocletian and other Roman leaders happened in the early Church there were about 25,000 Christians, but as the persecutions became widespread there was in increase in discipleship and by 310 A.D. there was about 20,000,000 Christians. Similarly in the persecuted underground Church in China before the persecutions of Mao Tse Tung and the Communist Party there were about 2 million Christians, yet after Mao's reign it was recorded that the discipleship during the persecutions between 1949 to 1979 rose to 60 million.
Imagine what that might look like in your location? What are we missing? Might I say..persecution. We are living as the missional people of the underground church who are extremely missional to the point that they won't even buy housing because they know they will soon be persecuted and probably lose their home because they see the importance of spreading the gospel and making disciples for Jesus Christ.
Today, in America we must turn and ask- is this what Jesus meant for his movement? It seems we are a far ways away from the discipleship/ missional attitude of the early church and even our persecuted brethren in other countries today. We face a crisis of regurgitated Christians going up for alter calls every Sunday, a lack of knowledge and substance concerning the glorious good news of Jesus Christ (half the time I don't even understand what is good about the "American- Christian" gospel), and we have lost sight of the freedom loving truth that made the New Covenant. It is so much easier for us to cuddle in our church buildings sing songs, learn some verses in the Bible, and feel religious because we don't do "the bad things the world does". A great study done by Gabe Lyons and some of his associates has proven that American Christianity has become the antithesis of what Christianity was in the first century, and ultimate what Jesus Christ wanted for His body.
So...what do we do?
Well as the body of Christ who is making known the wisdom of God we must first examine ourselves and see if we are truly of the faith. Look into the mirror of Scripture and the law of liberty given to us by the grace of God. As Alan Hirsch makes clear in many of his missional books (The Forgotten Ways, Untamed: Missional Discipleship, and ReJesus) we must vandalize our portraits of Jesus. As my lovely lady, Quanti, would say- "Where do you get your Jesus from"? We must re-introduce ourselves to the Jesus Christ of the Gospels and get rid of our faulty views.
We must see to truly become what the biblical church was. This will require breaking down our current constructs, looking at our social atmosphere, and truly being missional.
"A church which pitches its tent without constantly looking our for new horizons, which does not continually strike camp, is being untrue to its calling...We must play down our longing for certainty, accept what is risky, and live improvisation and experiment"-Hans Kung, The Church as the People of God
As the individuals who make up the body, called the Church we can begin with ourselves (oh..you thought this was going to be easy?).
"A great deal more failure is the result of an excess of caution than of bold experiment with new ideas. The frontiers of the kingdom of God were never advanced by men and women of caution"- J. Oswald Sanders
Let us begin to be courageous, bold, and zealous members of the body of Christ. A friend of mine has the church motto of:
"We exist to glorify God by pursuing and sharing our joy through the knowledge of Him".
I have always loved that statement because that is exactly it. If we understand why we exist everything we do will fall in line with that exact purpose. Are you pursuing and sharing? If we took that attitude about everything we did, just imagine what could happen? We need that primal energy!!
"The church is called to be a dynamic movement rather than a static institution...its leadership is drawn from those one the front line of the expansion of the church" –Alan Hirsch, The Forgotten Ways
If we take the above to quotes serious that would mean alot of Christians would be not counted among the membership and many of those calling themselves leaders would have a serious demotion. Our apathetic attitude coupled with passivity in matters of church leadership, evangelism, discipleship, and studying the Word of God has put us at odds with true Biblical Christianity. Consider Paul when he wrote to the Romans:
"I am obligated to both the Greeks and non-Greeks, both to the wise and to the foolish. That is why I am so eager to preach the gospel also to you who are at Rome. I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes: first for the Jew, then for the Gentile (Romans 1:14-16)".
We must see the apostle Paul as the standard of what it means to be a Christian, one who is obligated, eager, and unashamed of spreading the gospel. In this..there can be no if, and, or buts.
"If passion is eliminated, faith no longer exists"- Soren Kierkegaard
The standard of faith is passion, it brings us to the James controversy- faith versus works. Simply put, your works (your passion) will be the outpouring of your works. At The Fellowship C.H.U.R.C.H. (the church I pastor) we pride ourselves on doing everything with passion, to the point that our membership papers say:
If you don't have passion, don't bother.
With the premise that our works, our passion, our outpouring will be the natural result of our faith, what can be said of the person with no passion? Makes clear the quote above by Sorek Kierkegaard, doesn't it? Well then...let that be the challenge- a challenge of having passion for God and the Gospel because it is impossible to please God without God ( Hebrews 11:6).
The church needs or rather boldly we can say is composed of believers who are living missionally in spreading the gospel. It is a two way street, without the passionate missional disciples there is no Church, and without the Church there is no missional discipleship. That my friends is the purpose of the church- we are the unit by which God makes manifest His will on Earth. We must stay plugged in, accountable to, and working toward Spiritual disciplines in the Church.
Our purpose? "Go , and....(Matthew 28:19-20)
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Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Missional: Attacking the Static- Part 3
Part 3- Missional Discipleship
“Grace and peace be yours in abundance through the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord. His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of Him who has called us by His own glory and goodness. Through these He has given us His very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature and escape the corruption in the world caused by evil desires (2 Peter 1:2-4)”.
Discipleship is vital in every aspect of the mission. There are various "goodwill" organizations and ministries which are characterized by doing good works and not so much as being or becoming disciples of Jesus Christ. Good works are demonstrated through a Christian’s life but not everyone who does good works is on mission for Jesus Christ or as the above verse illustrates; participating in the divine nature. In this blog I would like to explain proper discipleship because it is the disciples who are the arms and legs of the body of Christ and living out the incarnation (which we explained in part 2) and through that exact mission- disciples are born.
"The Church is nothing but a section of humanity in which Christ has really taken form"- Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Understanding the Biblical story we know that the history of mankind is explained through the fall of Adam- man had chosen his own will over the will of God and has suffered in his fallen nature ever since. Christianity is the offer to restore what was lost in Adam (the image of God, the presence of God, the access to the tree of life, etc.) which is done by dying to ourselves and becoming alive in Christ (Ephesians chapter 2; Galatians 2:20). As was said in the book, Untamed by Alan Hirsch :
"At the very beginning of following Jesus, we are all called to be un-dragoned by repenting, dying to our fallen selves, and surrendering our identities and purposes to the Lordship of Jesus..".
Soren Kierkegaard coined the term contemporaneousness which meant that within the mind and life of a Christian, Jesus Christ must be a "living reality, seen through the eyes of faith, and contemporaneous with each generation. His reality must be such that it transcends both time and space". As it was further spoken that this is done through a conscious and responsible effort to reach beyond church tradition, inherited presuppositions, and encounter Jesus for who he was to the eyewitnesses...and "in that painful tension of the dilemma; make his own choice as to whether Jesus is the God-man who has absolute claim to his life or a madman who should be avoided at all costs".
The prevailing problem today is that most who call themselves are not acting a disciples of Christ, dare I even say they act as half-hearted converts. Most of this is done through a seemingly dumbing-down process which creates a zeal without knowledge. Consider how many so-called Christians cannot clearly explain the gospel (as is the narrative of the Scriptures, not the emotional. How is this so? This zeal without knowledge is what has taking a stronghold over popular Christianity and therefore disables true disciples of Christ engaged in a reality of Him which would be true missional living. As it has been clearly stated "...ignorance of Jesus by those who claim His name is toxic to both the believer as well as those around him or her".
"If you conception of God is radically false, then the more devout you are, the worse it will be for you. You are opening your soul to be molded by something else. You had better be an atheist"- William Temple
As I have grown in the knowledge of God, which has been quite the journey, I have struggled with what exactly being a disciple of Christ means today in modern society. Should we sell everything and follow Him as the disciples did, should we seek to be persecuted, WHAT SHOULD WE DO? Studying history of Christianity, along with experimenting with monasticism, homelessness, and various other concepts I have realized the truth of the following statement:
“To be a follower of Christ does not mean to imitate literally but to express him through the medium of one's own life. A Christian is no unnatural reproduction of Christ...The task of the Christian consists of transposing Christ into the stuff of his own daily life"- Romano Guardini
Unfortunately, today the prevailing thought of living a Christian life seems like a holiness exercise. Think about it, every Bible study, every discussion, somehow, someone brings up sin. I thought sin was defeated? (Romans chapters 3, 5 & 6; Hebrews 2; John 1:12; 1 Peter 2:24; 1 John 2:1-2; Revelation 1:5-6). Ever since (and before) I became a Christian I have had discussions, debates, and confrontations with those in Christ and those outside Christ regarding sin- it seems everyone is just “stuck on stupid” when it comes to grace and the righteousness of Christ. It took a while for me to figure this out, but through study, observation, and constant prayers with God I realized- the Christian communities emphasis on sin is actually a cop-out of our larger responsibility to be set on fire to live and do the will of God. It has always been easier to doubt, fear, hate, and ostracize people and other aspects of life rather than to believe, have faith, and show love.
Recently, I went to an event called Man up. The conference called men to begin living Biblically by becoming more like Jesus Christ. I started to think about a conversation my girlfriend Quanti and I had with a fellow Christian concerning his preoccupation with sin. Quanti strictly told him “it’s about doing the things He did, not doing the things He didn’t do”. Our religious spirit clings to the concept of sin and makes us look at others in a way of judgment and keeps us personally from doing what we should because all we can think about is how we keep doing the things we should. Sadly, we treat the sacrifice of Christ with contempt and make it of no effect in the matters of sin.
As I illustrated above, seemingly living “holy” lives centered on not sinning and not doing what the “bad people” do makes it easier for us to pass off our apathy and lack of passion. As Soren Kierkegaard once said:
"...there is a demand by "the crowd", the mass of people, to live an ordinary unexamined and passionate life in which God is essentially irrelevant, and yet they want this life to be regarded as Christian"
The fact of the matter is that Christians should not be concerned with the do not's but rather the do's, face it you are a sinner and your righteousness will never account for worthiness in the eyes of God (Isaiah 64:6; 1 John 1:8; Romans 3:23; 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Corinthians 1:30). Mark Batterson said it best, "It seems to me that the modern church has become fixated on sins of commission. Don’t do this. Don’t do that. And you’re alright. But the problem with that is this: you can do nothing wrong and still do nothing right! Think of it as holiness by subtraction. So holiness becomes the byproduct of subtracting something from our lives that shouldn’t be there instead of maximizing our God-given potential. Don’t get me wrong. Holiness certainly involves subtraction. But I think God is far more concerned about sins of omission—those things we could have and should have done. Maybe holiness has as much or more to do with seizing opportunities as it does resisting temptation? Those who simply run away from sin are half-Christians. Our calling is much higher than simply running away from what’s wrong"And again he illustrated the point in his book, Primal:
"Too often we try to stop sinning by not sinning. But that is a losing battle. It's what psychologists call a double bind...of course; you can try to stop sinning by not sinning. And when that doesn't work, you can try even harder to stop sinning by not sinning. But what you need is a vision from God that captures your imagination and consumes your energy. Vision is the cure for sin". –Mark Batterson
Let’s get scriptural. Check out Mark chapter 5 verses 15 through 33.
The first story we come across is Jesus casting demons out of a man and He sends them into the pigs, after this the man wanted to go with Jesus but what did Jesus say? “Go home to your family and tell them how much the Lord has done for you, and how he has had mercy on you” (Mark 5:15-20). Then Jesus once again goes on mission across the lake and is asked to heal a man asked Jesus to heal his child. As this is happening, a woman hoping to be healed touches Jesus’ clothing and Jesus realizes. Jesus turns to the woman and tells her, “Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering” (Mark 5:21-33). How dare we go about making Jesus Christ into some holiness preacher so worried about our sins. As it was once said about Jesus Christ, that he had:
"...radical, redemptive holiness that went way beyond mere morality".
The holiness of Christ led to personal liberation and societal transformation. Jesus Christ heals these people and tells them to go. Legalism (which was the issue of the Pharisee, those who killed Christ) holds us to a “touch not, taste not” mentality. Many times throughout the Gospels the religious people were confused and insulted by what Jesus Christ did in order to show grace and understanding for the lost. Remember what Christ said:
“It is not the healthy who needs a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners (Mark 2:17)
Jesus Christ came set those under the Law free which enabled them to be missional (Check out my blog titled: I am free to love).
The first step that the eternal seed must pass through was death (see, 1 Corinthians 15:36). It was not man's will which brought about this death; and by this I do not mean the death of the body, which is unimportant. It was God's will which brought about the death so that the fullness of His nature would be produced in the seed He planted. – Brother Paul Richard Jr. Curran
We must die to ourselves, our way of doing things, and even our righteousness so that the glory of God (Christ in and through us) may be revealed! It is when we do this that we are enabled to know God.
Death to self. Dying to everything about ourselves, our selfish ambition and goals, is the only way to truly worship God!
"Worship turns out to be the dangerous act of waking up to God and to the purposes of God in the world, and then living lives that actually show it"- Mark Labberton, Dangerous Act of Worship
WAKE UP! That is discipleship!
Jn 12:24 (NIV) "I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds. The man who loves his life will lose it, while the man who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life."
So now what?
I have always been fascinated with the concept of “prophetic imagination”, which is how the prophets acted when they were called to tell the message to the people(). I have written blogs about this concept which basically is defined as being creative, risky, and bold in our efforts to display the message of Christ to the world. Truly a zeal empowered by knowledge of all that God has done.
As we grow in Christ everything in our lives becomes a part of the mission. The social set theory is the efforts to explain social atmospheres and the two main types are centered set versus bounded set. Dare I pose that popular Christianity has become a bounded set theory in which there are people inside and outside but no real way to cross boundaries. Does this sound like what Jesus did?
Instead, Christianity must focus on living through the center set theory which is the characterized by a clear vision and ideology at the center but no real boundaries to cross in order to join. The Greek Orthodox Church has a concept called theosis- which demonstrates the growth in the knowledge of God which draws you closer and closer to God. (2 Peter chapter 1).
As we come to Christ and grow in the knowledge of God we become alive. As we become alive it is only natural to seek to express and share the life that is in and through us (Galatians 2:20 type of stuff). The mission is not a program it is simple a natural response to the knowledge of God. Brothers and sisters, seek to know the will of God and therefore become a disciple of Christ. As you grow you will become a disciple who makes disciples!
"Of all the works of creation, it is passion which is very good, without which man cannot serve God, or truly live" Martin Buber
“Grace and peace be yours in abundance through the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord. His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of Him who has called us by His own glory and goodness. Through these He has given us His very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature and escape the corruption in the world caused by evil desires (2 Peter 1:2-4)”.
Discipleship is vital in every aspect of the mission. There are various "goodwill" organizations and ministries which are characterized by doing good works and not so much as being or becoming disciples of Jesus Christ. Good works are demonstrated through a Christian’s life but not everyone who does good works is on mission for Jesus Christ or as the above verse illustrates; participating in the divine nature. In this blog I would like to explain proper discipleship because it is the disciples who are the arms and legs of the body of Christ and living out the incarnation (which we explained in part 2) and through that exact mission- disciples are born.
"The Church is nothing but a section of humanity in which Christ has really taken form"- Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Understanding the Biblical story we know that the history of mankind is explained through the fall of Adam- man had chosen his own will over the will of God and has suffered in his fallen nature ever since. Christianity is the offer to restore what was lost in Adam (the image of God, the presence of God, the access to the tree of life, etc.) which is done by dying to ourselves and becoming alive in Christ (Ephesians chapter 2; Galatians 2:20). As was said in the book, Untamed by Alan Hirsch :
"At the very beginning of following Jesus, we are all called to be un-dragoned by repenting, dying to our fallen selves, and surrendering our identities and purposes to the Lordship of Jesus..".
Soren Kierkegaard coined the term contemporaneousness which meant that within the mind and life of a Christian, Jesus Christ must be a "living reality, seen through the eyes of faith, and contemporaneous with each generation. His reality must be such that it transcends both time and space". As it was further spoken that this is done through a conscious and responsible effort to reach beyond church tradition, inherited presuppositions, and encounter Jesus for who he was to the eyewitnesses...and "in that painful tension of the dilemma; make his own choice as to whether Jesus is the God-man who has absolute claim to his life or a madman who should be avoided at all costs".
The prevailing problem today is that most who call themselves are not acting a disciples of Christ, dare I even say they act as half-hearted converts. Most of this is done through a seemingly dumbing-down process which creates a zeal without knowledge. Consider how many so-called Christians cannot clearly explain the gospel (as is the narrative of the Scriptures, not the emotional. How is this so? This zeal without knowledge is what has taking a stronghold over popular Christianity and therefore disables true disciples of Christ engaged in a reality of Him which would be true missional living. As it has been clearly stated "...ignorance of Jesus by those who claim His name is toxic to both the believer as well as those around him or her".
"If you conception of God is radically false, then the more devout you are, the worse it will be for you. You are opening your soul to be molded by something else. You had better be an atheist"- William Temple
As I have grown in the knowledge of God, which has been quite the journey, I have struggled with what exactly being a disciple of Christ means today in modern society. Should we sell everything and follow Him as the disciples did, should we seek to be persecuted, WHAT SHOULD WE DO? Studying history of Christianity, along with experimenting with monasticism, homelessness, and various other concepts I have realized the truth of the following statement:
“To be a follower of Christ does not mean to imitate literally but to express him through the medium of one's own life. A Christian is no unnatural reproduction of Christ...The task of the Christian consists of transposing Christ into the stuff of his own daily life"- Romano Guardini
Unfortunately, today the prevailing thought of living a Christian life seems like a holiness exercise. Think about it, every Bible study, every discussion, somehow, someone brings up sin. I thought sin was defeated? (Romans chapters 3, 5 & 6; Hebrews 2; John 1:12; 1 Peter 2:24; 1 John 2:1-2; Revelation 1:5-6). Ever since (and before) I became a Christian I have had discussions, debates, and confrontations with those in Christ and those outside Christ regarding sin- it seems everyone is just “stuck on stupid” when it comes to grace and the righteousness of Christ. It took a while for me to figure this out, but through study, observation, and constant prayers with God I realized- the Christian communities emphasis on sin is actually a cop-out of our larger responsibility to be set on fire to live and do the will of God. It has always been easier to doubt, fear, hate, and ostracize people and other aspects of life rather than to believe, have faith, and show love.
Recently, I went to an event called Man up. The conference called men to begin living Biblically by becoming more like Jesus Christ. I started to think about a conversation my girlfriend Quanti and I had with a fellow Christian concerning his preoccupation with sin. Quanti strictly told him “it’s about doing the things He did, not doing the things He didn’t do”. Our religious spirit clings to the concept of sin and makes us look at others in a way of judgment and keeps us personally from doing what we should because all we can think about is how we keep doing the things we should. Sadly, we treat the sacrifice of Christ with contempt and make it of no effect in the matters of sin.
As I illustrated above, seemingly living “holy” lives centered on not sinning and not doing what the “bad people” do makes it easier for us to pass off our apathy and lack of passion. As Soren Kierkegaard once said:
"...there is a demand by "the crowd", the mass of people, to live an ordinary unexamined and passionate life in which God is essentially irrelevant, and yet they want this life to be regarded as Christian"
The fact of the matter is that Christians should not be concerned with the do not's but rather the do's, face it you are a sinner and your righteousness will never account for worthiness in the eyes of God (Isaiah 64:6; 1 John 1:8; Romans 3:23; 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Corinthians 1:30). Mark Batterson said it best, "It seems to me that the modern church has become fixated on sins of commission. Don’t do this. Don’t do that. And you’re alright. But the problem with that is this: you can do nothing wrong and still do nothing right! Think of it as holiness by subtraction. So holiness becomes the byproduct of subtracting something from our lives that shouldn’t be there instead of maximizing our God-given potential. Don’t get me wrong. Holiness certainly involves subtraction. But I think God is far more concerned about sins of omission—those things we could have and should have done. Maybe holiness has as much or more to do with seizing opportunities as it does resisting temptation? Those who simply run away from sin are half-Christians. Our calling is much higher than simply running away from what’s wrong"And again he illustrated the point in his book, Primal:
"Too often we try to stop sinning by not sinning. But that is a losing battle. It's what psychologists call a double bind...of course; you can try to stop sinning by not sinning. And when that doesn't work, you can try even harder to stop sinning by not sinning. But what you need is a vision from God that captures your imagination and consumes your energy. Vision is the cure for sin". –Mark Batterson
Let’s get scriptural. Check out Mark chapter 5 verses 15 through 33.
The first story we come across is Jesus casting demons out of a man and He sends them into the pigs, after this the man wanted to go with Jesus but what did Jesus say? “Go home to your family and tell them how much the Lord has done for you, and how he has had mercy on you” (Mark 5:15-20). Then Jesus once again goes on mission across the lake and is asked to heal a man asked Jesus to heal his child. As this is happening, a woman hoping to be healed touches Jesus’ clothing and Jesus realizes. Jesus turns to the woman and tells her, “Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering” (Mark 5:21-33). How dare we go about making Jesus Christ into some holiness preacher so worried about our sins. As it was once said about Jesus Christ, that he had:
"...radical, redemptive holiness that went way beyond mere morality".
The holiness of Christ led to personal liberation and societal transformation. Jesus Christ heals these people and tells them to go. Legalism (which was the issue of the Pharisee, those who killed Christ) holds us to a “touch not, taste not” mentality. Many times throughout the Gospels the religious people were confused and insulted by what Jesus Christ did in order to show grace and understanding for the lost. Remember what Christ said:
“It is not the healthy who needs a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners (Mark 2:17)
Jesus Christ came set those under the Law free which enabled them to be missional (Check out my blog titled: I am free to love).
The first step that the eternal seed must pass through was death (see, 1 Corinthians 15:36). It was not man's will which brought about this death; and by this I do not mean the death of the body, which is unimportant. It was God's will which brought about the death so that the fullness of His nature would be produced in the seed He planted. – Brother Paul Richard Jr. Curran
We must die to ourselves, our way of doing things, and even our righteousness so that the glory of God (Christ in and through us) may be revealed! It is when we do this that we are enabled to know God.
Death to self. Dying to everything about ourselves, our selfish ambition and goals, is the only way to truly worship God!
"Worship turns out to be the dangerous act of waking up to God and to the purposes of God in the world, and then living lives that actually show it"- Mark Labberton, Dangerous Act of Worship
WAKE UP! That is discipleship!
Jn 12:24 (NIV) "I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds. The man who loves his life will lose it, while the man who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life."
So now what?
I have always been fascinated with the concept of “prophetic imagination”, which is how the prophets acted when they were called to tell the message to the people(). I have written blogs about this concept which basically is defined as being creative, risky, and bold in our efforts to display the message of Christ to the world. Truly a zeal empowered by knowledge of all that God has done.
As we grow in Christ everything in our lives becomes a part of the mission. The social set theory is the efforts to explain social atmospheres and the two main types are centered set versus bounded set. Dare I pose that popular Christianity has become a bounded set theory in which there are people inside and outside but no real way to cross boundaries. Does this sound like what Jesus did?
Instead, Christianity must focus on living through the center set theory which is the characterized by a clear vision and ideology at the center but no real boundaries to cross in order to join. The Greek Orthodox Church has a concept called theosis- which demonstrates the growth in the knowledge of God which draws you closer and closer to God. (2 Peter chapter 1).
As we come to Christ and grow in the knowledge of God we become alive. As we become alive it is only natural to seek to express and share the life that is in and through us (Galatians 2:20 type of stuff). The mission is not a program it is simple a natural response to the knowledge of God. Brothers and sisters, seek to know the will of God and therefore become a disciple of Christ. As you grow you will become a disciple who makes disciples!
"Of all the works of creation, it is passion which is very good, without which man cannot serve God, or truly live" Martin Buber
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Missional: Attacking the Static - Part 2
Part 2- RESTORING THE MISSION
"There exists in every church something that sooner of later works against the very purpose for which it came into existence. So we must strive very hard, by the grace of God to keep the church focused on the mission that Christ originally gave to it"- C.S. Lewis
The quote above demonstrates the need for what Alan Hirsch called Mdna. Mdna is the transmission of inherited traits that characterize the mission that should be inherent in every church body. Every follower of Christ infused with the Word of God, the Holy Spirit, and a bit of "holy rebellion" should be ever-reforming the Church back toward the mission- spreading the gospel of the kingdom of God ( which we discussed in part 1 how important it is to have a gospel -a message of good news, that is consistent and empowers Believers). As disciples engaged to the mission by the will and grace of God, we will be making disciples! Be disciples who make disciples!
One of the most energizing books I have read about being mission is REJesus: A Radical Messiah for a Missional Church, in which it is clearly demonstrated that we must be taken captive by the true Jesus Christ and His mission, -not create a image of Him in our minds and thus make him captive to our particular agenda. Many Christians have and still do this without realizing because- yes! your mission and agenda may have good intentions and be a great cause, but it might just be your cause, not necessarily what Christ is seeking to do and initiate.
What we do know through Scripture about the mission of God is clearly shown through John 1:1-18. Read it! That is the incarnation- which is basic terms is the story of how God took on flesh and became a man in order to show us His nature (gave us an inspiring model) and to fulfill His purpose- redemption of mankind! God's ways are amazing and many times incomprehendable, yet He continually reveals things to us. So, we know that God sent His Son (which was God made manifest through the seed of a woman) to die in our place and thus fulfill the covenant of love- that whosoever should believe on His name should be saved, a child of God, and have eternal life (John 3:16). That was the beginning of what was to come! Now, if you read further along, namely chapters 17-20, you begin to realize that Jesus Christ is sending out messengers of this message- "Just as you sent me, I am sending them". Now the disciples had the same mission, to be incarnational, as Paul said he was all things to all men so that he may win a few (1 Corinthians 9:22-23). Upon fulfillment of the New Covenant, we know that there are those who are inside the gates of the kingdom of heaven (the spiritual understanding of the Lordship of Jesus Christ = abundant life) and those missing out, who sit outside- and it is our goal, those exercised by the Spiritual knowledge of God, to use the leaves of the tree of life (the gospel of the Kingdom) to heal the nations.
Learning from the disciples and specifically the Apostle Paul we acknowledge that "to act incarnationally therefore will mean that in our mission to those outside of the faith we will need to exercise a genuine identification and affinity with those we are attempting to reach". ...."There is a time for "in-your-face" approaches to mission, but there is also a time to simply become part of the very fabric of a community and to engage in the humanity of it all"
The point of the incarnation was that "when confronted with the reality of God in Jesus, God in human flesh, God is no longer beyond and unfathomable, but immediate and present. He has come close to us, and his claim on our lives becomes somewhat more unavoidable". Through incarnational ministry we demonstrate the same passionate love our God had for us by coming and relating to us, being tempted, suffering, and being killed by and for us- this is truly putting flesh on it! (or as Francis Chan might say "Crazy Love").
The point is that ministry and relating to people is not a church program that we should have to talk about. As I explained in part 1, it is necessary that we begin to have an understanding of God and His mission that enables all of this to be natural. Religious "christianity" has allowed for a separatist mentality where it's us and them ( the good "christian" people who have to preach to and shun the morally bad people)-THIS IS NOT CHRISTIANITY. Jesus Christ actually did the exact opposite and hung around the "bad people", and they wanted to be in His presence, and ultimately it was those who chose to become disciples rather than the religious people. Unfortunately, we have the opposite extreme becoming a prevailing attitude in Christianity today. Instead of engaging the world with the message of Christ, many have chosen to just blend in and "be cool" which is called backsliding, not ministry. In his book, The Next Christians, Gabe Lyons does a great deal in explaining these things. It's the restorers, those who are rooted in the truth (there is that zeal empowered by knowledge thing again) who live out the mission for Christ! It is the restorers whose ".. faith activity isn't restricted to "religious" activities, but carries over into every day life".
The incarnation of Jesus Christ did not occur in order to create a religion or a set of moral rules by which the "good people" who say they believe in Jesus should live by. That's nonsense! (and by saying that I mean it makes no darn sense)- the Pharisee's were doing quite fine with moral laws and touch not, taste not rules! The incarnation was about bringing the redemption back to mankind- the image of God (which means the idea and concept for which He had created mankind). Each and every disciple that learns the knowledge of God embraces and becomes the image of God and therefore becomes an ambassador of the kingdom. It is in the gates that we recognize what true life is and have joy in it! That's the mission! God literally got involved in the mission to make it that clear on how important it is to spread and live it out, hello!!! HE DID!!!
Ivan Illach, the Austrian philosopher and Catholic priest said the most radical way to change a society is to tell an alternative story ( I do well to mention my blog by this title in which I speak about the kingdom of God- how ironic it is exactly what Christ came preaching!). The gospel of Jesus Christ is exactly that- the alternative to everything this world hopes for, lives for, and thinks is possible. It is this gospel that we must:
"resdiscover...recalibrate...rethink...reimagine...redeploying...revitalize.." in order to be missional!
"Telling others about Jesus is important, but conversion isn't their only motive. Their mission is to infuse the world with beauty, grace, justice, and love. I call them restorers because they envision the world as it was meant to be and they work toward that vision. Restorers seek to mend earth's brokenness..sowing seeds of restoration...they don't seperate from the world or blend in: rather, they thoughtfully engage". -Gabe Lyons
ARE YOU A DISCIPLE OF CHRIST CALLED TO BE A RESTORER?
"There exists in every church something that sooner of later works against the very purpose for which it came into existence. So we must strive very hard, by the grace of God to keep the church focused on the mission that Christ originally gave to it"- C.S. Lewis
The quote above demonstrates the need for what Alan Hirsch called Mdna. Mdna is the transmission of inherited traits that characterize the mission that should be inherent in every church body. Every follower of Christ infused with the Word of God, the Holy Spirit, and a bit of "holy rebellion" should be ever-reforming the Church back toward the mission- spreading the gospel of the kingdom of God ( which we discussed in part 1 how important it is to have a gospel -a message of good news, that is consistent and empowers Believers). As disciples engaged to the mission by the will and grace of God, we will be making disciples! Be disciples who make disciples!
One of the most energizing books I have read about being mission is REJesus: A Radical Messiah for a Missional Church, in which it is clearly demonstrated that we must be taken captive by the true Jesus Christ and His mission, -not create a image of Him in our minds and thus make him captive to our particular agenda. Many Christians have and still do this without realizing because- yes! your mission and agenda may have good intentions and be a great cause, but it might just be your cause, not necessarily what Christ is seeking to do and initiate.
What we do know through Scripture about the mission of God is clearly shown through John 1:1-18. Read it! That is the incarnation- which is basic terms is the story of how God took on flesh and became a man in order to show us His nature (gave us an inspiring model) and to fulfill His purpose- redemption of mankind! God's ways are amazing and many times incomprehendable, yet He continually reveals things to us. So, we know that God sent His Son (which was God made manifest through the seed of a woman) to die in our place and thus fulfill the covenant of love- that whosoever should believe on His name should be saved, a child of God, and have eternal life (John 3:16). That was the beginning of what was to come! Now, if you read further along, namely chapters 17-20, you begin to realize that Jesus Christ is sending out messengers of this message- "Just as you sent me, I am sending them". Now the disciples had the same mission, to be incarnational, as Paul said he was all things to all men so that he may win a few (1 Corinthians 9:22-23). Upon fulfillment of the New Covenant, we know that there are those who are inside the gates of the kingdom of heaven (the spiritual understanding of the Lordship of Jesus Christ = abundant life) and those missing out, who sit outside- and it is our goal, those exercised by the Spiritual knowledge of God, to use the leaves of the tree of life (the gospel of the Kingdom) to heal the nations.
Learning from the disciples and specifically the Apostle Paul we acknowledge that "to act incarnationally therefore will mean that in our mission to those outside of the faith we will need to exercise a genuine identification and affinity with those we are attempting to reach". ...."There is a time for "in-your-face" approaches to mission, but there is also a time to simply become part of the very fabric of a community and to engage in the humanity of it all"
The point of the incarnation was that "when confronted with the reality of God in Jesus, God in human flesh, God is no longer beyond and unfathomable, but immediate and present. He has come close to us, and his claim on our lives becomes somewhat more unavoidable". Through incarnational ministry we demonstrate the same passionate love our God had for us by coming and relating to us, being tempted, suffering, and being killed by and for us- this is truly putting flesh on it! (or as Francis Chan might say "Crazy Love").
The point is that ministry and relating to people is not a church program that we should have to talk about. As I explained in part 1, it is necessary that we begin to have an understanding of God and His mission that enables all of this to be natural. Religious "christianity" has allowed for a separatist mentality where it's us and them ( the good "christian" people who have to preach to and shun the morally bad people)-THIS IS NOT CHRISTIANITY. Jesus Christ actually did the exact opposite and hung around the "bad people", and they wanted to be in His presence, and ultimately it was those who chose to become disciples rather than the religious people. Unfortunately, we have the opposite extreme becoming a prevailing attitude in Christianity today. Instead of engaging the world with the message of Christ, many have chosen to just blend in and "be cool" which is called backsliding, not ministry. In his book, The Next Christians, Gabe Lyons does a great deal in explaining these things. It's the restorers, those who are rooted in the truth (there is that zeal empowered by knowledge thing again) who live out the mission for Christ! It is the restorers whose ".. faith activity isn't restricted to "religious" activities, but carries over into every day life".
The incarnation of Jesus Christ did not occur in order to create a religion or a set of moral rules by which the "good people" who say they believe in Jesus should live by. That's nonsense! (and by saying that I mean it makes no darn sense)- the Pharisee's were doing quite fine with moral laws and touch not, taste not rules! The incarnation was about bringing the redemption back to mankind- the image of God (which means the idea and concept for which He had created mankind). Each and every disciple that learns the knowledge of God embraces and becomes the image of God and therefore becomes an ambassador of the kingdom. It is in the gates that we recognize what true life is and have joy in it! That's the mission! God literally got involved in the mission to make it that clear on how important it is to spread and live it out, hello!!! HE DID!!!
Ivan Illach, the Austrian philosopher and Catholic priest said the most radical way to change a society is to tell an alternative story ( I do well to mention my blog by this title in which I speak about the kingdom of God- how ironic it is exactly what Christ came preaching!). The gospel of Jesus Christ is exactly that- the alternative to everything this world hopes for, lives for, and thinks is possible. It is this gospel that we must:
"resdiscover...recalibrate...rethink...reimagine...redeploying...revitalize.." in order to be missional!
"Telling others about Jesus is important, but conversion isn't their only motive. Their mission is to infuse the world with beauty, grace, justice, and love. I call them restorers because they envision the world as it was meant to be and they work toward that vision. Restorers seek to mend earth's brokenness..sowing seeds of restoration...they don't seperate from the world or blend in: rather, they thoughtfully engage". -Gabe Lyons
ARE YOU A DISCIPLE OF CHRIST CALLED TO BE A RESTORER?
Labels:
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Kingdom of God,
missional,
restorers
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Missional: Attacking the Static (PART 1)
Part 1 :::::: "A TRUE BACK-TO-THE-BIBLE MOVEMENT"
The title of this blog is the point of this blog- the body of Christ (the Church) is called to be missional which is the natural outward impulse of God's chosen- the Church (otherwise known as the body of Christ or simply Christians). The natural impulse of understanding of who God is, what God has done, and what He is doing enabled the Church as well as each and every Christian to attack the static. The static being the lack of energy, passion, and movement seen in the 1st century Church largely due to a failure of Biblical theology and a reality of Jesus Christ.
The good news as noted by Gabe Lyons in his book, The Next Christians, is that "there is a movement among Christians......asking these same questions and offering meaningful answers. They want to be a force for restoration in a broken world even as we proclaim the Christian gospel. They want the label Christian to mean something good, intelligent, authentic, true, and beautiful". Gabe Lyons, as well as many other authors and leaders (Mark Batterson, Alan Hirsch, among many others) see what is on the horizon for Christianity whether we call it a reformation, revival, or an emergence! Gabe Lyons even quoted the late Billy Graham, who noticed the same things- Graham is noted as saying "Back when we did these big crusades in football stadiums and arenas, the Holy Spirit was really moving- and people were coming to Christ as we preached the Word of God, but today, I sense something different is happening. I see evidence that the Holy Spirit is working in a new way. He's moving through people where they work and through one-on-one relationships to accomplish great things. They are demonstrating God's love to those around them, not just with words, but in deed".
If one is to look through history at all the movements that changed the face of Christianity it was always a "back-to-the-Bible-movement", because that's where the solution lies. And that is where the solution to the "missional crisis" is at today in the Church and in the theological application in the lives of Believers. The lack of knowledge always creates either an apathetic spirit or a false passion based on assumptions and presuppositions (in Scripture this is called "zeal without knowledge"). Therefore, the missional movement will be based upon a zeal empowered by knowledge that is revealed through the Word of God- a true back to the Bible movement.
The local church I pastor, The Fellowship C.H.U.R.C.H., offers practical conversational theology that allows the true zeal of missional living to become practical and realized in our lives. We pride ourselves on the fact that as we seek to understand God more and more (grow in the knowledge of God) that we are becoming the true expression of Christianity, and I always say that if Christianity was to become illegal in Fort Myers, they will come for The Fellowship C.H.U.R.C.H. first!
"If passion is eliminated, faith no longer exists"- Soren Kierkegaard
Gabe Lyons made another great point (actually quite a few I will quote throughout this blog) when he spoke about "the problem with half stories" and he called it a "truncated gospel". I would definitely imagine that Gabe Lyons and I have some disagreements on the full extend of the good news brought by Christ but he makes great strides speaking on how the popular notions of the gospel only dwell on the fall and redemption, but ignore the implications of creation and restoration, and ultimately consummation. The lack of a cohesive message destroys the good news, and for many the failure to be intellectually honest with the story has caused this missional crisis which in essence is a full failure in regards to the message of Jesus Christ.
The popular song "Jesus is coming, people get ready" illustrates this point well. As a Christian who takes Jesus Christ at every word He spoke to the disciples, I recognize the fulfillment of everything he said. Jesus was not talking some far off message- He was directly speaking to the people in front of Him, who understood what the good news was- the kingdom of God. (I will not expound on the full truth and understanding espoused through Full Preterist theology but I advise the reader- read my blogs and read more Scripture in context!). The fact of the matter is- we are now living in the reality of the kingdom of God, Satan and his minions are a defeated foe (although we still suffer from the effects of evil), and therefore Revelation chapter 22: 1-5 is where we are at. WE HAVE ACCESS TO THE TREE OF LIFE (WHICH IS FOR THE HEALING OF ALL NATIONS), WE ARE IN THE PRESENCE OF GOD, AND GOD REIGNS! WE ARE NOT WAITING FOR ANYTHING! STOP WAITING!!!!
That's the point of being missional- we must stop waiting. Proper theology is needed to enable the body of Christ to a zeal empowered by knowledge. We have the healing of the nations- the gospel which restores everything to the original intent in the image (idea and concept) of God!
"The next generation of Christians believe that Christ's death and Resurrection were not only meant to save people from something. He wanted to save Christians to something. God longs to restore His image in them, and let them loose, freeing them to pursue His original dreams for the entire world". -Gabe Lyons
As I take a step back and look at the body of Christ (THE CHURCH), specifically here in North America I see a missional crisis due to static. Yet, possessing a zeal empowered by knowledge I feel and see a holy rebellion "based on loving critique of religious institutions modeled by the original apostles and the prophets" on the horizon. In history it was men like Martin Luther who stood up for the Scriptures against tradition, John Wycliffe who did the same, William Tyndale who died to get the Scriptures into even the poorest mans' hands, John Wesley who was committed to "no less than the recovery of the truth, life, and power of earliest Christianity and the expansion of that kind of Christianity", and Dietrich Bonhoeffer who lived out the responsibility of understanding the message. Today, I take the stand- DO YOU?
"There exists in every church something that sooner of later works against the very purpose for which it came into existence. So we must strive very hard, by the grace of God to keep the church focused on the mission that Christ originally gave to it"- C.S. Lewis
It's all about the glory of God and seeing all things restored to His image. We must remember Martin Luther King Jr.'s words "that which we would first change, we must love first".
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Zeal and Spiritual Fervor
"For I can testify about them that they are zealous for God, but their zeal is not based on knowledge (Romans 10:2)".
I believe we are on the verge of a great movement within Christianity, a reformation that will bring Christianity yet again closer to Biblical Christianity. It is exciting to see and participate in, yet it is sad to see those who are stuck, may I say it bluntly- stuck on stupid- and cannot seem to realize, grow, and climb out of the rut that they are in.
This is the history of Christianity though. We see even since the early centuries of Christianity that there was confusion, doctrines of men, hypocrisy, and so forth, which lead to a culture of backslidden Christians and a working against that which was originally intended through Jesus Christ. Consider the councils of debate in early Christianity ( Acts 15:1-29; 325 A.D. Council of Nicaea, 381 A.D. First Council of Constantinople, 431 A.D. Council of Ephesus, 451 A.D. Council of Chalcedon, 553 A.D. Second Council of Constantinople, to name a few), or the Crusades, the reformations (Protestant Reformation, Anabaptists, Calvinism, Arminianism, etc), and the revivals (Azusa Street, Methodism, William Booth and the Salvation Army, Jesus People of the 1970's, etc), which have all sought to bring Christianity back to the original intentions of Jesus and the Apostles.
For a while now, I have though the Church (the universal body of Christ) needed a revival, and was dead to the mission and life that it received in Christ Jesus. Yet, as time has progressed, especially where I am at right now as a diligent student of the Word of God, I realize we need a reformation. The traditions of men have crept in and made a bed for themselves, and have masqueraded as the truth (isn't that the style of evil?- ), and now with a comfortable foot in the door- they are able to discredit truth when it comes up.
Remember - John Huss?
So many professing Christians have no studied enough to discern the knowledge of God, and this is ridiculous because salvation comes through knowledge of God. Without true knowledge and understanding of the things of God we can create a zeal, that seems to be right, but is not and is labeled- "zeal without knowledge". This is not Christianity- rather Christianity is zeal empowered by knowledge, after all it is Jesus Christ who said "If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you shall know the truth and the truth will set you free" (John 8:31-32).
In Romans chapter 10, Paul addressed this issue. The Jews were the people of the Old Covenant with God, the chosen people of God through the Law of Moses and circumcision and they were consistently criticized and yelled at by the prophets to get in line with who god called them to be. The Messiah, whom was predicted throughout the Old Testament (The Law and the Prophets) arrived on the scene and yet again many missed out on acting in accordance with who God called them to be. They had zeal, a zeal for their traditions, and a zeal for what they thought was right, but this zeal without knowledge, failing to realize the truth, would be their downfall. The truth that they were missing was Jesus Christ (who is and was The Truth- John 14:6). Due to their faulty understanding and not willing to listen to the truth, they were missing the mark.
Do you see where they went wrong? We are at a similar point today. Fact of the matter is- do you know what you believe? Why, is it based on truth or tradition of what you think is right? Have you examined this knowledge? Searched the Scriptures? If you have not, can you quote possibly be guilty of having zeal without knowledge?
I ask you to consider this because I see the professing people of God (Christians) to be in a dangerous place right now. In an age of information and knowledge, we have become lazy and apathetic; this has led many to have zeal without knowledge. The truth will always prevail, especially in the matters of a Mighty God, but where will you stand?
Ask Questions. Demand Answers. This will be the cry of the next reformation in Christian History. Let the "Holy Rebellion" begin, a reformation based on loving critique of religious institutions and teachings of men, in the style of the Apostles and prophets. As Martin Luther King Jr. said, "That which we would change. We must first love".
"This is good, and pleases God our Savior, who wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of truth (1 Timothy 2:3-4)".
(Knowledge of God is salvation, See: Luke 1: 76-77; John 8:32; and 2 Peter chapter 2).
I believe we are on the verge of a great movement within Christianity, a reformation that will bring Christianity yet again closer to Biblical Christianity. It is exciting to see and participate in, yet it is sad to see those who are stuck, may I say it bluntly- stuck on stupid- and cannot seem to realize, grow, and climb out of the rut that they are in.
This is the history of Christianity though. We see even since the early centuries of Christianity that there was confusion, doctrines of men, hypocrisy, and so forth, which lead to a culture of backslidden Christians and a working against that which was originally intended through Jesus Christ. Consider the councils of debate in early Christianity ( Acts 15:1-29; 325 A.D. Council of Nicaea, 381 A.D. First Council of Constantinople, 431 A.D. Council of Ephesus, 451 A.D. Council of Chalcedon, 553 A.D. Second Council of Constantinople, to name a few), or the Crusades, the reformations (Protestant Reformation, Anabaptists, Calvinism, Arminianism, etc), and the revivals (Azusa Street, Methodism, William Booth and the Salvation Army, Jesus People of the 1970's, etc), which have all sought to bring Christianity back to the original intentions of Jesus and the Apostles.
For a while now, I have though the Church (the universal body of Christ) needed a revival, and was dead to the mission and life that it received in Christ Jesus. Yet, as time has progressed, especially where I am at right now as a diligent student of the Word of God, I realize we need a reformation. The traditions of men have crept in and made a bed for themselves, and have masqueraded as the truth (isn't that the style of evil?- ), and now with a comfortable foot in the door- they are able to discredit truth when it comes up.
Remember - John Huss?
So many professing Christians have no studied enough to discern the knowledge of God, and this is ridiculous because salvation comes through knowledge of God. Without true knowledge and understanding of the things of God we can create a zeal, that seems to be right, but is not and is labeled- "zeal without knowledge". This is not Christianity- rather Christianity is zeal empowered by knowledge, after all it is Jesus Christ who said "If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you shall know the truth and the truth will set you free" (John 8:31-32).
In Romans chapter 10, Paul addressed this issue. The Jews were the people of the Old Covenant with God, the chosen people of God through the Law of Moses and circumcision and they were consistently criticized and yelled at by the prophets to get in line with who god called them to be. The Messiah, whom was predicted throughout the Old Testament (The Law and the Prophets) arrived on the scene and yet again many missed out on acting in accordance with who God called them to be. They had zeal, a zeal for their traditions, and a zeal for what they thought was right, but this zeal without knowledge, failing to realize the truth, would be their downfall. The truth that they were missing was Jesus Christ (who is and was The Truth- John 14:6). Due to their faulty understanding and not willing to listen to the truth, they were missing the mark.
Do you see where they went wrong? We are at a similar point today. Fact of the matter is- do you know what you believe? Why, is it based on truth or tradition of what you think is right? Have you examined this knowledge? Searched the Scriptures? If you have not, can you quote possibly be guilty of having zeal without knowledge?
I ask you to consider this because I see the professing people of God (Christians) to be in a dangerous place right now. In an age of information and knowledge, we have become lazy and apathetic; this has led many to have zeal without knowledge. The truth will always prevail, especially in the matters of a Mighty God, but where will you stand?
Ask Questions. Demand Answers. This will be the cry of the next reformation in Christian History. Let the "Holy Rebellion" begin, a reformation based on loving critique of religious institutions and teachings of men, in the style of the Apostles and prophets. As Martin Luther King Jr. said, "That which we would change. We must first love".
"This is good, and pleases God our Savior, who wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of truth (1 Timothy 2:3-4)".
(Knowledge of God is salvation, See: Luke 1: 76-77; John 8:32; and 2 Peter chapter 2).
Labels:
knowledge of God,
reformation,
revival,
spiritual fervor,
zeal
Monday, May 16, 2011
A Day in the Life
Ok, so let's look at a day in your life. We are all going to die, right? Well than you might as live it up by your own standards and do as you do. How is that working for you? Let's face is your not completely satisfied, so now you decide to start fixing up the mess you created, how do you do this? Well, besides the basics like job, car, making things right at home, maybe, just maybe some of that "spiritual stuff" them Christians (not the Muslims there kind of bugged out), but that Christian things sounds like it might be a good way to get on the right track, hey it might just be right, after all who doesn't want to go to heaven? Man, this whole being good for God thing isn't all that easy, you start feeling bad constantly, you always need to repent and try better. Let's face it , that constant trying not to sin, and trying again not to sin thing isn't exactly working- your a sinner (Romans chapter 3; James 1:13-14; 1 John 2:15-17)). But you look around, all these so-called Christians don't have it all together, maybe the pastor, but atleast your trying your best and God sees that and you have the hope that you will die and since you confessed Jesus name, you will die and be in heaven. WELL, GUESS WHAT?? That is everything but salvation. First, that is zeal without knowledge, salvation and faith are based upon the knowledge of God, therefore understanding why and what you are convinced of is important. 2nd, your apathy of just trying your best and getting by- looks horrible as a witness for Christ and is not pleasing in the eyes of God (ahh..the lukewarm message!).
Imagine this with me. Jesus Christ came to destroy the works on the devil (1 John 3:5-8; John 12:31; Matthew 12:22-30; Colossians 2:13-15; Hebrews 2:14; Revelation 20 cf. Revelation 22:15; Romans 16:20). This leads to a process in theology called "Soteriology", which means study of salvation. Jesus Christ initiated and fulfilled the process of redemption and salvation (also justification and glorification) for mankind. God creates covenants, we read about these in Scipture (covenants with Abraham, Jacob, Moses, the nation of Israel, and finally through all of those- those who rest in the assurance and faith of Jesus Christ). - that is the whole story in a nutshell.
Understanding this and living with this understanding leads to a life without sin and death (Hebrews 9:26-28; Romans 6:4-7, 23; Romans 8:1-2;1 Corinthians 15:20-28 cf. 2 Timothy 1:8-10; Romans 7:7-11; Romans 5:12-14; Romans 4:13-15; James 2:10), a life that has been transformed by the presence of God and will never end (John 8:49-59; John 11:25-26; Titus 1:2; Jude 1:21; John 3:16 ), and the power of being a child of God with a power that is unmatchable (Ephesians chapters 1-2).
Do you see why that zeal without knowledge just flat out sucks? God loves us and fulfilled this plan for us to grow into it with all our mind, hearts, soul and strength.
Fact of the matter is that Jesus Christ did not fail in what He had come to do. To destroy the works of the devil (1 John 3:5-8). The Bible is the story of how man allowed Satan to get in the way of a perfect relationship with God (which causes man to die, spiritually- Genesis216-17 cf. Isaiah 59:1-2 ) and then God being a loving an amazing God through His ultimate wisdom and glory restored that relationship by fulfilling His promises and defeating death- this is called the Kingdom of God ( Revelation 21:1-5; Mark 1: 14-15, 25; Luke 15:21-24), which is what leads us to salvation. Did you catch that?
When you begin to understand and realize the true message and good news of Jesus Christ, you glorify God. John Piper said, "God is most satisfied when we are most satisfied in Him". Through the Word of God, we begin to have a renewing of the mind (Romans 12:2). This renewed mind allows for us to engage the world in a whole new way, we are ambassadors and proclaimers of a whole new way- as Shane Claiborne and those within his community would say- "Another world is possible!". As Christians we don't live in a battle between sin and death, life and joy- the battle has been won, our Lord is King! We have the freedom through the knowledge of God to make all thoughts captive to Christ ( 2 Corinthians 10:5).
As an ambassador of the kingdom of God thats the offer I extend to you. Within the kingdom of God we have a glorious message of how amazing and glorious God is, this message is the healing of all nations (Revelation 22: 2) and the water of life to all who are thirsty (Revelation 22: 17).
What do you think?
Live-Love-Laugh, all for the glory of God,
Michael Miano
*Do you fully understand God's plan of redemption? Ever wonder why, either as a Christian or an unbeliever- you struggle with the concepts of battling sin? Contact me and we can go through it. In the meantime- Search the Scriptures!
Salvation understood (study some verses)-
Hebrews 10:35-39; Romans 13:11-12; Revelation 12:10; I Thessalonians 5:8;
Luke 21:28; Ephesians 1:14; 4:30; Romans chapter 8; Hebrews 9:23-28; Romans 13:11-12; Hebrews 11
Isaiah 11:6-9 cf. Ephesians 2:17-18
Isaiah 65-66 cf. John 11:25-26
2 Corinthians 5:1-4 (better yet, read all of 2 Corinthians)
ASK QUESTIONS, DEMAND ANSWERS!!
Imagine this with me. Jesus Christ came to destroy the works on the devil (1 John 3:5-8; John 12:31; Matthew 12:22-30; Colossians 2:13-15; Hebrews 2:14; Revelation 20 cf. Revelation 22:15; Romans 16:20). This leads to a process in theology called "Soteriology", which means study of salvation. Jesus Christ initiated and fulfilled the process of redemption and salvation (also justification and glorification) for mankind. God creates covenants, we read about these in Scipture (covenants with Abraham, Jacob, Moses, the nation of Israel, and finally through all of those- those who rest in the assurance and faith of Jesus Christ). - that is the whole story in a nutshell.
Understanding this and living with this understanding leads to a life without sin and death (Hebrews 9:26-28; Romans 6:4-7, 23; Romans 8:1-2;1 Corinthians 15:20-28 cf. 2 Timothy 1:8-10; Romans 7:7-11; Romans 5:12-14; Romans 4:13-15; James 2:10), a life that has been transformed by the presence of God and will never end (John 8:49-59; John 11:25-26; Titus 1:2; Jude 1:21; John 3:16 ), and the power of being a child of God with a power that is unmatchable (Ephesians chapters 1-2).
Do you see why that zeal without knowledge just flat out sucks? God loves us and fulfilled this plan for us to grow into it with all our mind, hearts, soul and strength.
Fact of the matter is that Jesus Christ did not fail in what He had come to do. To destroy the works of the devil (1 John 3:5-8). The Bible is the story of how man allowed Satan to get in the way of a perfect relationship with God (which causes man to die, spiritually- Genesis216-17 cf. Isaiah 59:1-2 ) and then God being a loving an amazing God through His ultimate wisdom and glory restored that relationship by fulfilling His promises and defeating death- this is called the Kingdom of God ( Revelation 21:1-5; Mark 1: 14-15, 25; Luke 15:21-24), which is what leads us to salvation. Did you catch that?
When you begin to understand and realize the true message and good news of Jesus Christ, you glorify God. John Piper said, "God is most satisfied when we are most satisfied in Him". Through the Word of God, we begin to have a renewing of the mind (Romans 12:2). This renewed mind allows for us to engage the world in a whole new way, we are ambassadors and proclaimers of a whole new way- as Shane Claiborne and those within his community would say- "Another world is possible!". As Christians we don't live in a battle between sin and death, life and joy- the battle has been won, our Lord is King! We have the freedom through the knowledge of God to make all thoughts captive to Christ ( 2 Corinthians 10:5).
As an ambassador of the kingdom of God thats the offer I extend to you. Within the kingdom of God we have a glorious message of how amazing and glorious God is, this message is the healing of all nations (Revelation 22: 2) and the water of life to all who are thirsty (Revelation 22: 17).
What do you think?
Live-Love-Laugh, all for the glory of God,
Michael Miano
*Do you fully understand God's plan of redemption? Ever wonder why, either as a Christian or an unbeliever- you struggle with the concepts of battling sin? Contact me and we can go through it. In the meantime- Search the Scriptures!
Salvation understood (study some verses)-
Hebrews 10:35-39; Romans 13:11-12; Revelation 12:10; I Thessalonians 5:8;
Luke 21:28; Ephesians 1:14; 4:30; Romans chapter 8; Hebrews 9:23-28; Romans 13:11-12; Hebrews 11
Isaiah 11:6-9 cf. Ephesians 2:17-18
Isaiah 65-66 cf. John 11:25-26
2 Corinthians 5:1-4 (better yet, read all of 2 Corinthians)
ASK QUESTIONS, DEMAND ANSWERS!!
Labels:
fulfilled promises,
gospel,
Kingdom of God,
knowledge of God,
life,
salvation,
study
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