Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Church Renewal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church Renewal. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

MAINTAINING FORMS

While reading II Kings 22 this morning, I observed something that had previously gone unnoticed.

But before we go there, let’s review what’s going on in this chapter:

·         Amon only reigned in Judah for two years. He was an evil king like his father, Manasseh.

·         Amon’s son, Josiah, became king at the age of eight [639-609 B.C. It is likely that he was advised by the priests.] He was a good king and lived as his ancestor David had lived. (v.2)

·         After ten years as king, he instructed one of his leaders to go to the Temple and have him empty out the money the gatekeepers had gathered from the people. (v.4)  [Although a figure is not reported, there was apparently a significant amount there to buy timber and cut stone to repair the Temple. (v.6)]

·         As this work was begun, “Hilkiah the high priest said to Shaphan the royal secretary, “I’ve found the Book of the Teachings in the Temple of the LORD. He gave it to Shaphan, who read it. Then Shaphan…went to the king and…read from the book to the king. When the king heard the words of the Book of the Teachings, he tore his clothes to show how upset he was.” (portions of vs. 8-10).

·         This initiated a massive restoration of order and the purging of all the evil that had become part of Judah’s practice! “There was no king like Josiah before or after him. He obeyed the LORD with all his heart, soul, and strength, following all the Teachings of Moses.” (23:25)

I find it interesting that although Judah had become very evil and had actually misplaced the book of the Law – the people still visited the Temple and paid the gatekeepers to do so!

It was SO BAD that the high priest had lost the Book of the Teachings!  😳

We discover (chapter 23:4) that they had filled the Temple of the LORD with idols made for Baal, Asherah, and all the stars of the sky! The kings of Judah had chosen priests for these gods. These priests burned incense in the places where the gods were worshipped in the cities of Judah and the towns around Jerusalem. (v.5) 

Josiah had all of this dismantled and destroyed! He purged the land of all these objects and practices!

No one – not even the king or the high priest – had realized that anything was wrong!

___________________________________________________

The Temple was still there! 

They still had a high priest!

People still visited the Temple!

They paid the gatekeepers!

Then they went out and did whatever they wanted to do! 

This reminds me of a verse I discovered way back when I was a college student. I was reading Psalm 106. At that time, I was still reading the King James Version, but here is the passage from the New Century Version:

Then the people believed what the LORD said, and they sang praises to him.

But they quickly forgot what he had done; they did not wait for his advice. They became greedy for food in the desert, and they tested God there. So he gave them what they wanted, but he also sent a terrible disease among them.  (vs.12-15)

 The KJV stated it a bit more abruptly:

…He gave them their request; but sent leanness into their soul.

_____________________________________________

I frequently get the sense that we [the American Church] have become good at maintaining forms but have lost our direct connection to God through His Holy Spirit! 

Are there those who give God a couple of hours on Sunday morning and then go out and live the rest of the week as though He doesn’t exist?

Are His priorities our priorities? Do we care about the spiritually lost – which was Jesus’ highest priority?

Have we lost our Bibles? Is His Word really a ‘lamp unto our feet’?

Is our only prayer when we recite ‘The Lord’s Prayer’ on Sunday morning? Or the occasional “Oh, God!” when crisis interrupts our lives?

Are our pastors and worship leaders using spiritual discernment as they plan our Sunday mornings? Is liturgy our guide or the Holy Spirit?  Is consideration given as to how HE might want to direct our time together?

Do we faithfully give of our finances to the Lord without the joy or hilarity that the scripture references? Do we really live as though it ALL is HIS and we are just stewards of the resources HE has made available to us?

_________________________________________________

During our years in China, we worshipped most Sundays with an International Church that met in an ‘approved Chinese church’. We were unhindered in the expression of our worship, but Chinese people were not allowed to attend.

Usually there were from 40-100 people who came from many nations. We had a pastor who – like all of us – was in China for some reason. The worship was alive and genuine!  Every Sunday, those from African countries would plead with us to pray for their home countries!  Prayer requests were shared and prayed over. The singing was jubilant – sometimes hearing a number of different languages being used! We were NOT a homogenous looking group! Testimonies interrupted the services frequently! Appeals for urgent prayer were also common!

The bond we experienced was not because of ethnic commonality, shared national allegiance, language, vocational connections, or regional familiarity. The bond that brought us together was our love for God and the connection we had with Him through His Holy Spirit! AND IT WAS WONDERFUL!

 

ALMIGHTY GOD: Father, Son and Holy Spirit,

May we see these same dynamics at work in our churches here in America! FOR YOUR KINGDOM’S SAKE.

AMEN

Saturday, October 26, 2024

HELP! I LIVE IN AN ANTI-CHRISTIAN CULTURE!

I read a Facebook post yesterday because the familiar faces of Kirk Cameron and Candace Cameron Bure caught my attention.  After reading the article, I browsed through some of the comments and was shocked at the vitriol and hatred that was represented.  Many readers challenged these hateful and bitter remarks. The language was flatly offensive!  Although once loved and respected [the FULL HOUSE years], their open expressions of faith seem to have earned them the hatred of the culture!  

What is the source of this animosity toward Christianity?  When did the tide change?  Has this development been gradual or steep?  Can it be identified when we actually lost our status as a Christian nation?  

The symptoms scream at us!  

  • we're closing churches at record rates!
  • the percentage of those attending church, temple or synagogue recently dropped below 50% for the first time ever!
  • there is a serious shortage of people being called into the ministry!
Many of us were shocked at a scene from a recent political rally when two young men hollered out "Jesus is Lord!" and were told by the speaker that they were at the wrong rally!  

My wife attended a pregnancy center dinner last evening.  The speaker - a highly educated leader who has been associated with the pro-life movement for forty years - spoke of the continual opposition that pregnancy centers face from our government!  

These signs are frightening for all of us as we migrate aggressively toward an anti-Christian rhetoric in America!  
______________________________

Let's look to our history for some hope.

America actually experienced its First Great Awakening before we were even a nation (1730-1740).  It was sparked by preachers like George Whitefield who had freshly arrived from England where revival was already underway.  

Around the same time, Jonathan Edwards from Massachusetts was putting forth the theology of "total dependence" on the transformative emanations of the Holy Spirit.  

This renewal swept the American Colonies, bringing people back to a greater intimacy with God.

The Second Awakening (1800-1830) did for the unchurched what the first awakening had done for church members.  It firmly established the concept of personal salvation through repentance and dependence on Christ.

The Third Great Awakening (1860-1900) was literally interrupted by the Civil War.  It produced the Social Gospel Movement and worldwide missionary work!

The Fourth Great Awakening [declared by some] (1960-1970) gave rise to megachurches and parachurch organizations that emphasized the gifts of the Holy Spirit.

The ensuing fifty-four years have left us in desperate need of another Great Awakening!  
_________________________________

Unfortunately, many believers have begun to put their trust in a political victory and resolution to the anti-Christian chaos!  This is a misguided and ineffective hope.

True renewal will NOT come through a human intervention!  It will only come as a result of a divine intervention!  

Divine interventions biblically and typically are the result of intense, fervent prayer and fasting!  

Do we care enough about the future course of our country - and by inference, the WORLD - to pray and fast in hopes of seeing the mighty hand of God move?  

The answer to that question will NOT be given by churches or church leaders!

The answer to that question will be given by YOU!

Sunday, October 13, 2024

"LOOK FOR THE HELPERS, FRED!"

When John the Baptist – during a discouraging time while he was in prison – sent a message to Jesus asking, “Are you the one who was to come, or should we expect someone else?”, here is the message that Jesus sent back to John:

“Go back and report to John what you hear and see:  The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor…”

The proof of Jesus’ messiahship was actual changed lives! 

This is quite different from the annual reports of many churches today.  I compiled those annual reports for over forty years.  Sometimes I had to be creative to try to show that we’d made any impact at all on our community.

[They often sounded something like this:]

We averaged 78 in Morning Worship which was a slight increase over last year.  We had an average attendance of 39 in Sunday School.  We had a weekly prayer meeting that was attended by 7-12 people.  We held a Vacation Bible School for a week in the summer with 25 children attending.  We published a monthly newsletter and mailed it to our constituency.  We had several men’s gatherings.  We participated in the community Thanksgiving service.  We took our turn serving the community food bank twice during the year.  We had one conversion, no new members and no baptisms.

Do you hear the difference between that report and the one Jesus sent to John?

How can we make the kind of difference that Jesus made?  After all, we ARE His representatives – as though He was making His appeal through us!  (II Corinthians 5:20)

I mentioned that this wake-up call changed the way I led the church.  I was determined to challenge the church to be relevant and to make a difference in our community.  By God’s grace – and with His help – I believe we made some significant strides in that direction! 

We must believe that we are here for a purpose!  We are in the precise location where He can use us for His purposes.  We must also understand that our impact will sometimes be united and sometimes individual. 

Listen to Luke’s report from Acts 9:36-43,

In Joppa there was a disciple named Tabitha (in Greek her name is Dorcas); she was always doing good and helping the poor. About that time she became sick and died, and her body was washed and placed in an upstairs room. Lydda was near Joppa; so when the disciples heard that Peter was in Lydda, they sent two men to him and urged him, “Please come at once!”

Peter went with them, and when he arrived he was taken upstairs to the room. All the widows stood around him, crying and showing him the robes and other clothing that Dorcas had made while she was still with them.

Peter sent them all out of the room; then he got down on his knees and prayed. Turning toward the dead woman, he said, “Tabitha, get up.” She opened her eyes, and seeing Peter she sat up. He took her by the hand and helped her to her feet. Then he called for the believers, especially the widows, and presented her to them alive. This became known all over Joppa, and many people believed in the Lord…

Now the first thing we notice is that Tabitha had a ministry all her own!  She made clothes for the poor!  This wasn’t apparently a ministry of her church.  She simply had a gift of sewing and dedicated it to the Lord!  She came up with this idea on her own – possibly under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit! 

We also notice that Peter was clearly moved by Tabitha’s death.  But he didn’t join the mourners, he spoke to her and raised her up to added years of service!  Peter exercised the apostolic gifts that God had bestowed on him.  Like His Master, Jesus, Peter spoke with authority and Tabitha came back to life! 

And finally we notice that the community was impacted!  This became known all over Joppa, and many people believed in the Lord…

Because this incident is recorded for us in the book of Acts, it is clearly a picture of what Christ expects of His people and His church! 

It seems to me that a much larger portion of our time and energy should be directed toward those around us who are facing trials, challenges, fears, need, desperation and despair.  We should be seeking them out!  We should be applying our creativity toward finding them, helping them and serving them!  If we did this, perhaps our annual reports would be a bit more exciting…

Children’s television personality Fred Rogers said that when he was a little boy and heard about an accident or natural disaster, his mother would tell him, “Look for the helpers, Fred.  Whenever something terrible happens there are always people who hurry to help.

Here is the challenge for the church in laymen’s terms!  As a community of believers in Christ, we must ask ourselves if we are among those “helpers” who rush in at times of crisis. 

Listen, every community faces crises from time to time!  People are displaced by fires or floods.  Storms damage homes and people’s lives are disrupted.  Acts of violence occur and families are plunged into grief.  Plants shut down causing massive unemployment and families are forced to redefine themselves and even caused to relocate to continue their lives.  These kinds of dilemmas are unending.  They’re happening frequently to varying degrees in most of our communities.  And when they happen, we – the church, the people of God – need to be among those who are running in with assistance! 

It seems to me that we should be far more willing to cooperate with other churches, other helping agencies, and even local government to address these kinds of critical times. 

If this were more true, then our churches would be considered an invaluable asset to our communities.  People would see us as valuable contributors to the general well-being of our community! 

I read a book that analyzed the responses to several major crises, including the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting and the 2011 tsunami that hit Tohoku, Japan on March 11, 2011. 

These two tragedies – though greatly different in type and circumference – reveal incredible pictures of those that Fred Roger’s Mom referred to! 

On that horrible day in 2011, a 9.0 earthquake shook the east coast of Japan for three to five minutes.  Roads buckled, bridges cracked, bookcases toppled and some buildings collapsed.  The earthquake had such force that it jolted Japan’s largest island eight feet closer to North America.  The earthquake hit with such force that it caused the earth to shift on its axis, reducing daylight by a few microseconds, upsetting GPS monitoring stations around the world, and releasing six hundred million times the energy of the atomic bombs that fell on Japan in 1945. 

After that violent five minutes, all was still for forty-five minutes as residents picked themselves up and surveyed the damage.  Then came the wave.

A wall of water, first taking shape out in the ocean by the quake’s epicenter, accelerated to 500 mph as it sped toward land.  The coastal region of Tohoku had subsided two feet during the quake, opening wide the gate for the onrushing wave, so that the tsunami crashed over protective sea walls like a giant stepping over a curb.  Videos shot on iphones by eyewitnesses (some retrieved from corpses) resemble the special effects scenes from a horror movie:  ships, houses, and trucks tossed around like toys;  a modern airport suddenly submerged under water;  a nuclear reactor tower exploding in a thick black cloud. 

When people in the region began to realize their peril, they began rushing to upper levels in buildings or trying to run up mountains to safety.  Over the next hours the water rolled in and washed back out seventeen times!  All the while, frantic cries for help could be heard. 

When it finally ended, a dense forest was gone.  Over twenty thousand were dead – many washed out to sea and never recovered.  150,000 evacuees lost their homes; 50,000 of them are still living in temporary housing. More than 120,000 buildings were destroyed, 278,000 were half-destroyed and 726,000 were partially destroyed.  Please understand that the devastation is truly indescribable!

A Christian author visited Tohoku exactly a year later.  As he toured the area he couldn’t help but notice the many cars among the debris.  He wondered out loud:  “I wonder how many automobiles were destroyed…”  Immediately, a Japanese colleague pulled out his smart phone and googled the answer:  410,000. 

During the same visit he saw a huge ocean freighter – nearly the size of a football field – sitting in a residential area.   No one has any idea how to get it back to the ocean a half-mile away.

But then, the “helpers” began to rush in!  Teams arrived quickly from the Philippines, Germany, Singapore, and the United States.  Organizations such as Habitat for Humanity and Samaritan’s Purse mobilized immediately after the earthquake and were still sending crews a year later!    

Samaritan’s Purse crews were living in cramped communal housing and working long hours without pay.  One such worker said:

“We don’t proselytize.  We don’t need to – the people know why we’re here.  We’re simply followers of Jesus trying to live out His commands.  Just before handing owners the key to their new homes, we ask if we can pray a blessing on the house.  So far, no one has turned us down.” 

Although the church in Japan represents only one per cent of the population, Christian organizations took a lead in rebuilding efforts, and some Japanese churches became distribution centers for food and supplies.  One church sheltered more than a thousand evacuees the first few months after the tsunami. 

What wonderful models of Christian love these examples were and are. 

John Marks, a producer for television’s 60 Minutes, went on a two-year quest to investigate evangelicals, a group he had grown up in and later rejected.  He wrote a book about his quest called Reasons to Believe:  One Man’s Journey Among the Evangelicals and the Faith He Left Behind.  The church’s response to Hurricane Katrina turned the corner for him and became a key reason to believe.  One Baptist church in Baton Rouge fed 16,000 people a day for weeks;  another housed 700 homeless evacuees.  Years after the hurricane, and long after federal assistance had dried up, a network of churches in surrounding states was still sending regular teams to help rebuild houses. 

Most impressively to Marks, all these church efforts crossed racial lines and barriers in the Deep South.  One worker told him, “We had whites, blacks, Hispanics, Vietnamese, and a good old Cajun (working together)…we just tried to say, ‘Hey, let’s help people.  This is our state.  We’ll let everybody else sort out that other stuff.  We’ve got to cook some rice.’”

In other words, people are desperate and have massive needs – let’s get her done!  In most cases, these people and agencies didn’t clamor for attention or pimp for the cameras.  As a matter of fact, much of what I’m sharing with you today – you have never heard before!  The news covers a story for a few days and then moves on.  The onrush of “helpers” rarely catches any camera time.  Besides, they don’t do it for public recognition.  They do it out of obedience to their Master! 

In my humble opinion, every church needs to continually ask itself,

·      “Why does God have us here in this precise location?”

·      “What does He want us doing to impact hurting people in our area?”

·      “How can we use the resources and connections within our congregation to make a difference in our community?”

As a church leader for four decades, I can tell you that you have to be intentional about asking these questions over and over and over…   There is a strong, natural tendency for us to drift back to services and programs that serve ourselves.  It takes intention to maintain an outward focus!  After all, we’re not in this for what we can get out of it;  we’re in this for what we can give through it! 

We must push ourselves to get past the good intentions phase.  Good intentions salve our consciences and relieve our guilt without actually doing anything.  I recently contacted Samaritan’s Purse to inquire about being part of one of their clean-up teams.  I have talked with nearly a dozen people since who told me they’ve always wanted to do that – but I know of no one who actually has. 

All of us are moved with compassion!  People want to make a difference.  They need examples!  They need leaders who will sign them up and organize the work.  If churches would be better organized to be first-responders, I think they’d see two results:

1.   They’d be surprised to see how many people would be willing to help;  and

2.  They’d soon find that their sanctuary didn’t have enough seating capacity!

People expect us to help!  It’s what Jesus would do! 

At the Sandy Hook shooting - which was not a natural disaster but one of human making – the stories of response are amazingly encouraging (although most of us have never heard them). 

·      The state patrol assigned an officer to each family to protect them from intrusion.

·      Freezers full of food were delivered within days.

·      There are lots of Italians in the northeast, and one family with a full freezer begged, “Please – no more pasta!”

·      Christmas presents beyond counting arrived from around the country and world.

·      60,000 teddy bears and stuffed animals were given;  it took months to deliver them to homeless shelters.

·      People came from all across our country with their juggling acts, free pies, pets, and counseling booths.

One touching gesture came from other school children.  At the suggestion of a Sandy Hook parent, the president of Connecticut’s PTA sent out an email asking them to cut out snowflakes to help decorate the new school where Sandy Hook students would attend.  The request went viral.  Within two days the snowflakes started to arrive on UPS trucks and even semi-trailers.  Thousands and thousands of snowflakes arrived from every state and fifty foreign countries.  It was an avalanche of snow!  Many included handwritten notes by children. And the underlying message was clear:  YOU ARE NOT ALONE! 

Let me return to John Marks one more time. 

“I would argue that [Hurricane Katrina] was a watershed moment in the history of American Christianity…nothing spoke more eloquently to believers, and to unbelievers who were paying attention, than the success of a population of believing volunteers measured against the massive and near-collapse of secular government efforts. The storm laid bare an unmistakable truth.  More and more Christians have decided that the only way to reconquer America is through service.  The faith no longer travels by the word.  It moves by the deed.”

Would you like to be part of this movement to reclaim America for Christ? 

Would you like to be part of a church that truly desires and plans to make a difference in its community?

Would you like to turn your faith into action?

Remember Tabitha!  It’s not always a church-driven momentum.  Sometimes it simply means assessing our own skills, resources, interests and connections to discover a way that we can personally make a difference. 

Remember too, that your church has only one Head – and that’s Jesus Christ!  Continually evaluate your potential as His Body and then seek to please Him! 

Thursday, September 26, 2024

A NEW WORD FOR THE CHURCH - 1

The word is 'innovate'.

From Merriam/Webster:  to make changes do something in a new way

There's a little dialogue - between Debbie and I - that has played out in church quite a few times over recent years:

DEB (as she joins me in the pew):  "Did you pick up a bulletin?"

ME:  "No.  I read it last year!"  

She rarely sees the humor of my response and typically gives me 'the look'!  😆

_________________________________

A number of years ago [when Jon and Tracie were still living in Connecticut], we were visiting and attended their church-plant on Sunday morning.  It met in a school, so a lot of set-up was involved.  As we arrived, we were greeted and made our way to the middle of the auditorium and found seats.

We waited a bit for the time of service to arrive.  Just as the worship team members moved to the front, Coltin [probably about eight at the time], leaned over to me and said:  

"They'll start with a song.  Then there'll be announcements and a time for greeting.  Then, we'll sing three more songs.  After that, the pastor will pray.  Then he'll preach and have another prayer.  One more song and then we'll leave."

He nailed it!  Spot on!  An eight-year-old had noticed and memorized the pattern!

____________________________________

Is there anything wrong with this?

I suppose not - technically.  For many people, predictability is a good thing.  

Obviously, I wrestle with this pattern.  Here's why...

1.  I think that predictability leads to boredom! 

    Everyone knows almost exactly what's going to happen before it happens.  All I have to do is stick it out until 12:00 PM.

2.  This pattern of consistency tends to turn worship into a ritual!  

    Rituals can be [and often are] followed mindlessly!  

3.  Who plans the details of the 'Detail Sheet'?

    Is it the pastor?  the church secretary?  the worship team?

    I've seen 'Detail Sheets' that actually listed time components for each segment of the worship experience.

4.  What role is prayer, discernment and the Holy Spirit given in the process of preparation for worship?

__________________________________________

Let me diverge for a few moments:

Consider the expansive creativity of our God!  

For many of us the year is divided into four very different seasons that even dictate how we dress.

The rough estimate of all the tree species in the world currently stands at 65,065, distributed in all countries worldwide.

The Clements checklist of birds of the world lists 10,906 bird species that live in practically every habitat from open oceans to arid deserts!

I'm not going to wear you down with more; you get the idea.  

God has so wonderfully illustrated creativity, diversity and curiosity in the making of our world.  Why can't we do the same with our worship?  

Have we pandered to a segment of the population who are just interested in checking off the box ☑ Have attended worship today.

Have we ignored and omitted those who would be prone to add color, fun, humor and engagement to our worship?

Does anybody in the church ask these questions?  Are they relevant?  Are they appropriate?  

_______________________________________

For nine years, I led a church where I was set free to tamper with the traditional forms of worship.  I wrote skits to illustrate my messages.  My sister-in-law [Laurie Mahosky] took those skits and recruited and trained people to present them on Sunday mornings.  Some were humorous and others were quite impactful.  A unique and surprising group of people stepped forward to volunteer to be part of this team.

We also used video songs and video clips to supplement worship.  Eventually, we took advantage of the videographer skills of a few of our people and featured video testimonies.  The advantage of this was that we could control the time and edit the content.  I tried to create messages of interest and illustrate them with humor and stories.

Guess what?  The church grew from 70 to over 200.  Two years in a row, we were recognized by our denomination as a 'Multiplying Church'!  

__________________________________

Dare we allow the church of Jesus Christ to be deemed irrelevant by the world?  

Mega-churches draw crowds by creating an environment where everything is provided!  You can come here every Sunday and you don't have to do anything.  Just sit in the dark in our theater seats and enjoy the show!  Is this success?  Is this pleasing to God?

I attended a local mega-church a while back.  It was great!  Everything was done so well!  You couldn't help but be impressed.  When the service ended, I simply remained in my seat and observed what happened.  People got up and filed out the aisles through the foyer and out the doors to their cars.  No one talked to one another!  There was no recognition of fellow worshippers!  No engagement!  The show was over - it was time to head home or to the restaurant!  

Is this the Church we want to model for our world?

______________________________________

I'm just finishing an eight-month role as an interim pastor.  I've enjoyed the opportunity to lead a church again.  However, as an interim, there were obvious limitations on what I was allowed to do.  Prudence also created barriers regarding how much change it would be appropriate for me to instigate.  I restrained myself appropriately!  

I spoke candidly to the staff on a few occasions indicating things that I would love to see happen.  I mentioned that if I was assigned to lead the church, the first thing I would do would be to remove 100 seats from the sanctuary!  

To my surprise, a couple of men did just that one week!  

Surprisingly, the congregation took it in stride the next Sunday and I never heard a complaint about it.  As a result, we sit closer to one another now and tend to have more interaction with one another.  Pretty cool!

Why are we so afraid of change?  

_______________________________________

The 15th century reformer, John Calvin, proposed that there were three ways that we could know about God:  reason, revelation and tradition.

A couple of hundred years later, John Wesley suggested that there was a fourth: experience.

REASON - I can use the brain that God has given me to make observations and think things through, enabling to understand better the nature of God.

REVELATION - God has revealed Himself through Christ and through The Word!  I must give precedence to these revelations and allow them to influence and guide my life!

TRADITION - The collective voice and practice of generations of believers trickle down to us through the centuries.  We must revere these traditions, evaluate their effectiveness for our age, and employ them wisely to provoke, inspire and guide our people.

EXPERIENCE - God may choose to reveal Himself to me in intimate, personal ways that will guide and influence me throughout the course of my life!  

QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER:

  • How much should I allow tradition to influence the way I worship?
  • Shouldn't it be balanced with the other four sources?
  • Is there new revelation since we live in the age of the Spirit that could liberate us in our worship?
  • What does it mean to worship Him in Spirit and in truth?  [John 4:24]


Wednesday, September 25, 2024

HOW TO FIX A RUINED WORLD

I suppose every generation tends to think that cultural demise is a terrible thing.  The longer we live, the more changes we tend to see.  The changes feel abrupt to us.  It rattles our comfort zone!  We are prone to think of the changes in negative light.  

These changes inevitably catch our attention and cause alarm:

  • increased violence in the global culture
  • the fear of a major upheaval that threatens our long-established freedoms
  • the redefinition of the traditional family structure
  • an invasion of illegal immigrants that is creating irreversible impact
  • the fear of war that could change the structure of our world
The list could be expanded...

However, other changes have been beneficial:
  • social media that allows us to stay in contact with friends from around the world
  • entertainment technology that allows us to tailor what we watch to that which is acceptable
  • the knowledge that although Christianity is faltering in America, it is prospering and growing in other parts of our world
  • transportation systems and freedom of movement that allow us to travel widely
  • in spite of high inflation, financial stability is still possible for many
Currently, two movements are clashing, each of which promises hope and prosperity in the future.  An election is currently underway that will give precedence to the winning designee.  We all wait with hope and bated breath to see what the results will be...

But regardless of the outcome, the world will go on.  A miniscule number may flee in hopes of finding greater security elsewhere, but the vast majority will react, adjust and continue to strive for security, stability and peace.

But the truly discerning realize that our hope is not in a savior, but in a Savior!  

Dividing lines divide!  They always have and always will!  

Conflicting views will continue regardless of the election results.  

An old hymn states: "My hope is built on nothing less than Jesus' blood and righteousness, I dare not trust the sweetest frame, but wholly lean on Jesus' Name.  On Christ, the solid Rock I stand, all other ground is sinking sand - ALL OTHER GROUND IS SINKING SAND!"  

Pastor Edward Mote wrote this hymn in The United Kingdom in 1834.  That year, England had four different Prime Ministers.  Public hanging was abolished in England.  One year earlier, slavery in England was abolished.  Parliament and the Palace of Westminster were destroyed by fire.  The word 'scientist' was first used in the QUARTERLY REVIEW, but it was noted that it was "not generally palatable".  The first trade unions were being established.  The able-bodied poor could only receive government aid if they entered government-run work houses.  Immorality was so rampant that the government ruled "authorities should no longer attempt to identify the fathers of illegitimate children in order to recover support for them."  
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1834_in_the_United_Kingdom]

Like today, Pastor Mote must have observed negative and positive influences at work in his culture.  His resolution was to point people to something that would sustain them in spite of the upheavals they were experiencing.  

We would be wise to follow his example in 2024.  

We must revive spiritual hope in our culture!  Most of us wouldn't consider writing a hymn to influence others (although I wouldn't rule it out!  😊).  But what can we do to turn people's hearts and minds toward a genuine faith?  

I believe our responses will need to be creative, innovative and radical!  

For instance:  [Re-read the former line before proceeding!]
  1. I sincerely believe that the church needs to return to the home!  Perhaps not entirely, since there are churches that are growing and making a difference in people's lives.  However, most churches do a poor job of genuinely intersecting in people's lives.  The average person who is trying to live a Christian life needs accountabilty that isn't being offered in most churches!  They need to know others intimately and be given an environment where they can regularly share personal needs and exercise their gifts in a warm and loving community.  I believe that a house-church movement will be essential in enabling this kind of deep fellowship and connection.
  2. Innovations like THE CHOSEN movie/television series is opening doors for influencing people in an impactful way!*  Non-followers viewing this series WILL HAVE QUESTIONS!  Some will need to be reminded of the liberties that the creators have included.  All will need to be sent to the Bible to discover "the rest of the story" [to borrow a Paul Harvey line].  These episodes could be utilized in a house-church [small group] and trigger ongoing discussions and study that could vitally impact the way people are living their lives!
  3. The American church needs desperately to reinvent itself in line with the Holy Spirit!  Remember: we live in the period of the acts of the Holy Spirit in the lives of the apostles!  THAT'S US!  Think about it!  As soon as a church builds a building, they have set a limit on their growth and capacity for ministry!  The day of cathedrals is long past!  We need to think invasively!  Bible study groups in coffee shops!  Rent out a roller skating arena and play Christian music - open to ALL and FREE!  Yard sale after church where everyone who attends gets to buy items REALLY CHEAP [Give the proceeds to the Red Cross!]  Outdoor worship events that coincide with a car show; offer free food!   
  4. Christian groups that repeatedly offer or sponsor:
    • Divorce Care Groups
    • Financial Recovery Groups
    • Grief Share Groups
    • Twelve-Step Groups
    • Depression Support Groups
    • Bible for Dummies Groups
    • First Steps in the Christian Life Groups
            [The leaders of these groups need to be carefully selected and highly capable!]
    5. Churches that are less encumbered with enormous building debt burdens and that are not focused on recruiting people to work in the church as teachers, leaders, nursery workers, youth leaders, committee members, etc..  Instead, churches that recruit and equip people to serve in community-based agencies, efforts, projects and endeavors where evidence of their faith leaves a positive impression on the neighborhood!  Imagine a village or town where the community leaders considered the local church as a resource for getting projects resourced and accomplished!
    6.  Christ-followers who live out their faith day-to-day in the workplace and neighborhood in such a way that their example draws people to them and to Christ!  People whose lives regularly intersect with others and leave the fragrance of Christ in their trail!
Anemia/anemic [according to Miriam/Webster] means:
  1. a condition in which the blood is deficient in red blood cells, in hemoglobin, or in total volume.
  2. lacking force, vitality or spirit.
  3. lacking interest or savor.
The American Church is clearly lacking force, vitality and Spirit!  It also lacks interest in its Savior!  Instead of changing its culture, IT'S BEING CHANGED BY ITS CULTURE - AND NOT IN GOOD WAYS!  

I pray and long to see it be transformed!  

Here are the other verses to Pastor Motes' hymn:

When darkness veils His lovely face, I rest on His unchanging grace.
In every high and stormy gale, my anchor holds within the veil.

His oath, His covenant, His blood, support me in the whelming flood.
When all around my soul gives way, He then is all my hope and stay.

When He shall come with trumpet sound, O may I then in Him be found;
Dressed in His righteousness alone, faultless to stand before the throne!

On Christ the solid Rock I stand, all other ground is sinking sand - 
ALL OTHER GROUND IS SINKING SAND!
_____________________________________________________________________________

"Jesus said to them, 'Who do you say that I am?'
Simon Peter answered, 'You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.'

And Jesus said to him,
'Blessed are you, Simon, because flesh and blood did not reveal this to you,
but My Father who is in Heaven.
I also say to you that upon this rock [of truth]
I WILL BUILD MY CHURCH
AND THE GATES OF HADES WILL NOT OVERPOWER IT.'"
___________________________________________________[Matthew 16:15-18 Amended)]


*  I do not like EVERYTHING about The Chosen series.  I struggle with some of the liberties they take with the narratives [and have written to the creators to express my opinions].  However, the creativity is unparalleled.  I end almost every episode in tears and expressions of joy!  Debbie and I have viewed the first three seasons at least four times and will continue...

Monday, January 15, 2024

TAKING THE WHEELS OFF

I would guestimate that around thirty years ago, one of our Free Methodist bishops gave a message titled “Taking Off the Wheels” (or something like that).  His text was Genesis 11:31-32. 

Terah took his son Abram and grandson Lot (Haran’s son) and his daughter-in-law Sarai (Abram’s wife). They left Ur of the Chaldeans together and traveled in the direction of the land of Canaan. When they arrived in Haran, they settled thereTerah was 205 years old at that time, and he ended up dying in Haran.

 

He suggested from this text that the original call to go to the land of Canaan had come to Terah – Abram’s father!  He had gathered up his family and embarked on the lengthy journey from Ur of Chaldea [near present day Kuwait City at the tip of the Persian Gulf] to Haran [in today’s north-central Syria – along the Euphrates River].  This has been estimated to have been a trip of approximately 600 miles and took place approximately 1,900 B.C.!

 


Arriving in Haran and finding the land livable and appealing, Terah took the wheels off the wagon and settled in.  However, after he died, Abram felt the compelling call of God to go on farther to the land o Canaan.  As a result, he put the wheels back on the wagon and completed the journey!

It’s easy to get distracted!  It’s part of the human condition to settle for less.  Terah was old and the journey had been LONG and HARD!  Living along the Euphrates must have been very appealing.  So, he settled!

_______________________________

How often does this happen to us?

I believe that churches make this compromise frequently. 

Again, it’s easy to be distracted! 

The goal is to have a global impact, but once you begin to see fruit and your impact is making a difference – it suddenly becomes your Haran! 

The deadliest thing a church can do is to build a building! 

Now, you’re set the limits on your growth! 

Oh, you can go to multiple services [and many do].  But to some extent, you’ve compromised your mission. 

It’s a lot of work to take care of a growing congregation! 

·         Planning worship

·         Being creative

·         Visiting the sick

·         Caring for the needs of the people

·         Recruiting, training and releasing new workers and leaders

·         Property care

·         Etc.

The wheels either get taken off, or go flat!  The mission gets compromised. 

____________________________

How much does this happen in our personal lives, too?

When we first awaken to the call of Christ in our lives, we see all kinds of possibilities.  We work hard and make sacrifices.  But then life’s distractions come along and we may cool in our commitment to the mission He had shown us. 

Leadership gurus speak to this issue frequently.  How do we sustain the vision and keep our focus?  Whole books have been devoted to this topic. 

How do we maintain a daily walk with God?  J  Same question! 

We all know the answers for us personally:

            Prayer

            The Word

            Engagement with other believers

            Daily praise and worship

            Service in the name of Christ

For a church it has a lot to do with re-casting the vision consistently and frequently!  Also, with leaders holding one another accountable to the mission!


Lord,

Help us to stay focused – as people and as churches!

This is a journey we are on and we don’t want to be distracted.

Speak to us daily!  Correct us when we need it!  Lean on O King Eternal!

Amen! 

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

THE MESSAGE DOESN'T DIMINISH OR WEAKEN OVER TIME!

Colossians 1:6-8

As Paul continues his opening lines to the Colossian people, he reminds them of how they initially heard the gospel.  It was through the efforts of a friend of Paul’s named Epaphras.  He is simply described as being a faithful servant of Christ and a close associate of the Apostle Paul. 

Let’s take note of this!  Epaphras had seen Paul at work and apparently caught his enthusiasm for spreading the gospel.  Being especially drawn to the people of Colosse, he went there to share what he had learned from Paul.  It caught on and a church was established for the glory of God! 

Paul writes this to the Colossians and uses it as an example of what is always going on regarding the gospel:

“The Message is as true among you today as when you first heard it. It doesn’t diminish or weaken over time. It’s the same all over the world. The Message bears fruit and gets larger and stronger, just as it has in you. From the very first day you heard and recognized the truth of what God is doing, you’ve been hungry for more. It’s as vigorous in you now as when you learned it…” [v.6 TM]

 In case you don’t trust The Message for accuracy, here it is from the New American Standard Bible:

 

“…the gospel which has come to you, just as in all the world also it is constantly bearing fruit and increasing, even as it has been doing in you also since the day you heard of it and understood the grace of God in truth…” [v.6]

_______________________________

Let’s observe some truths from this passage:

·         The Message doesn’t diminish or weaken over time!

·         The gospel is constantly bearing fruit and increasing.

·         After the Colossians heard and recognized the truth of what God is doing, they were hungry for more!

QUESTIONS

1.      Is the gospel constantly bearing fruit and increasing in your life?  In your church?

2.      Since recognizing the truth of what God is doing, are you hungry for more?

________________________________

Obviously, I believe these scriptures are true!  I believe the gospel is bearing fruit and getting stronger all over the world today – just not in the United States!  Here, we see almost universal decline in the church.  Here, we seem to have been seriously distracted and divided.  Perhaps like the church at Ephesus [Revelation 2:4], we’ve left our first love? 

Early in every year – as a pastor – I had to fill out a detailed ‘annual report.  It was one of my least favorite things to do!  Especially when it came to the line recording new converts!  There were more years than I care to acknowledge that I had to put a goose-egg on that line. 

We’d functioned fully as a church. Held worship services fifty-two Sundays of the year.  Sponsored revival meetings.  Prayed. Talked about evangelism. All with no results!  It was discouraging as a leader.  Then I realized that if we kept doing the same thing in the same way, we would continue to get the same results! 

I began to change the way I led the churches that I served.  I realized that that zero also meant that I had not led anyone to Christ!  I knew things had to change!  I began to let go of non-essentials.  I started questioning why we did certain things and why we did them the way we did.  I gathered up courage and began leading in new directions.  If others wanted to continue to support dead branches, I let them.  But I did not! 

Guess what.  Things began to change.  Convert growth began to take place.  One new convert can create a lot of enthusiasm.  When I was leading the McClellandtown FMC, I was able to lead the girlfriend of one of my parishoners to Christ.  Not knowing any better, she began attending the Wednesday night ‘prayer meeting’.  This was a group of my older members (less than twenty) who were propping up a formality that had been going on for decades.  Not being bashful, she began asking questions about how she should handle situations she was facing as a new believer.  She started praying out in the simplicity of someone who had just found something revolutionary and life-changing!  This one new believer transformed the dead prayer meeting into something exciting and life-forming!

However, many churches today [in America] haven’t seen a new convert in years!  There may have been a growth in numbers, but it’s because of transfer growth – not conversion growth!  Sad!

When I was leading the Oakland FMC (East Liverpool), we began to see very significant growth through new converts!  It was exciting!  WRITE THIS DOWN: New converts signal that something unique is going on here.  Transfer growth always follows convert growth! 

When – as a fairly young pastor – I first saw this happening, I didn’t like it.  I didn’t want transfer growth!  Consequently, I ignored people who visited when I knew they were members of another church.  I didn’t follow up on them.  I was deliberately rude to them [I know – hard to believe, huh?].  Ultimately, one of the families saw what was happening and asked to see me in my office.  They confronted me about my rudeness.  They explained that they heard about the growth at Oakland and wanted to be a part of it.  They wanted their kids to experience a church with vibrant faith and dramatic worship!  And I immediately realized that I had to rethink my position! 

____________________________________

LESSONS FOR US TO LEARN

A.      Pray for the American Church to rediscover its purpose and cut away all the unnecessary distractions and activities.

B.      Pray for your church to cease the rituals and routines that have become a replacement for genuine faith!  I Chronicles 28:9 reads:  “If you seek Him, He will let you find Him” [NASB].

C.      “Seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you” [Matthew 6:33 NASB].

Having experienced this kind of spiritual awakening in several churches, I can tell you that it is exciting and life-changing! 

_____________________________________

Father God,

Help the American Church to rediscover a hunger for You that will drive them to seek You, serve You, love You and spread Your Word to all who will listen!

Amen.