Archive for the 'Holiness' Category
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As many of you know, my wife and I are in the process of moving to Greenville, South Carolina to plant Renewal Church on the southeast side of the city. In light of that transition, we have launched a web site for the church plant at www.renewalupstate.com. On this site you will find all the information about the church plant as well as my personal blog which will be a spin off of my comments on Breeding Ferrets as they relate to the local church. Thanks for checking out what we are doing. Matt Rogers
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Sometimes when I hear people in my generation talk about God in general and the church in particular, I am embarrassed. Kinda like that feeling you get when you watch someone on stage forget their lines. I don’t know whether to giggle or puke, but I know that I am uncomfortable. The conversations are endless in their redundancy…Statements such as these: · “Why can’t people just love Jesus?” · “I like God, but I don’t like the Church.” · “Denominations make me mad. Why can’t people just agree?” · “Let’s just make a difference in the world (end poverty, curb homelessness, etc.).” · “Forget the church, house church is the way to go…” I don’t know if other people get uncomfortable with these statements, but they scare me. They scare me because they are the fruit of a misunderstanding of the message of the gospel and the purpose of the church. Or more appropriately, they are evidence of someone who may not have deeply considered the truth claims of Scripture and how best to evidence them in our world. In great contrast to the classic work of CS Lewis, today’s Mere Christianity is a cultural fad of minimalistic Christianity without any solid foundation or doctrinal elaboration. Again, I find Carl Trueman helpful at this point: “Salvation does not depend upon the individual’s possession of an elaborate doctrinal system or a profound grasp of intricate and complex theology. Yet this is not my point. What I am claiming is that mere Christianity, a Christianity which lacks this doctrinal elaboration, is an insufficient basis either for building a church or for guarantying the long-term stability of the tradition of the church.” Carl Trueman, “Minority Report” Living next to a college campus, I see this trend often. The typical rallying cry of parachurch ministries and many so-called non-denominational churches lies in their attempt to transcend natural denominational boundaries to impact people for the cause of the kingdom. The problem is not in this goal, but in its implications. By removing doctrine from the formula for a church or ministry, faith in Jesus and association with the church becomes such a broad umbrella that almost anybody can fit under it. The question is whether or not this is wise or realistic. Can you remove theology and doctrine from the life of the church and still have a church or ministry? For example, is there such a thing as non-denominational church? In one sense, yes. churches can chose to not associate with a denominational camp and, for multiple purposes, choose to carve their own path. However, in a more important sense, no. Denominations exist because people are forced to make theological claims. All churches must make theological claims. Therefore, the theological claims to which one holds must serve as the foundation for association with any church or ministry. The underlying motive behind most non-denominational, non-doctrinal movements is a desire to just reach people. In order to just reach people you must cater to the American consumerism that makes doctrinal minimalism possible. It is easier to attract a wide audience to something that lacks theological nuance and complexity, than it is to attract them to a robust doctrine and healthy church. Mark Driscoll illustrates this to his church using an open hand and a closed hand. In the closed hand are all the theological issues that are a non-negotiable for him and those that join Mars Hill. In the open hand are those issues on which there can be disagreement and debate while still having unity in association. The question is still: Who or what determines what theological claims go in what hand? To this question, my generation has answered by placing almost nothing in the closed hand and leaving everything in the open hand. It is all up for debate: · What is man’s condition? · How is man reconciled to God? · What is the church and how is it to be led? These are just a few of the questions that many of my peers have placed in the open hand. And in so doing, they have created a massive umbrella and attempted to rally the troops. But they have simply rallied the troops to a group gathering that stands for little or nothing. In my opinion, this is why social justice issues are so central to younger evangelicals today. There is no question that social justice causes have been neglected by the church in the past. However, there is also little doubt that social justice issues are the easiest issues to get most within the church to verbally agree to. Should we feed the poor? Yes, certainly. Should we give to disaster relief? Yes, again. The only issue here is motivating people to actually do it (something many within the church fail to do). However, when you get to more central theological issues (who is God, what is man’s problem, how is man reconciled to God, what is the nature of the church, who should lead the church) it is much more difficult to find consistent assent. Start talking about substitutionary atonement and you are likely to get much fewer amens than preaching on loving hurting people. Talk about God’s sovereignty and you are likely to get an answer that basically says “that’s above my pay grade,” but homelessness, I can handle that. It seems that there is within Christianity a natural gravitational pull to the lowest common denominator and the biggest umbrella. Does this mean that you must be a part of a certain denomination? No. However, does it mean that you must have a Biblically informed doctrinal basis for what you believe about God, man, and sin. Find a broad enough umbrella that everyone can agree upon, and before long you believe nothing. So, over the next few weeks I am going to attempt to spell out what I believe are the essential core values for a church or ministry. And, no Rihanna, I will not stand under your umbrella no matter how many times you ask!
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I have a confession. The other day I actually watched almost a full episode of King of the Hill. While I do find the show moderately funny, this is way out of the norm for me. Typically, if it does not involve ESPN I am not interested in the TV, but this show caught my attention. As you may know, Hank works at Strickland Propane and is passionate about his job of selling propane and propane accessories. After seeing an ice cream store that appeared to be a fun place to work, Hank’s boss, Buck, decides to make a few changes to the store in an effort to make it a “fun” place to work and for people to shop. In order to do this he forces his workers to wear costumes to work, have sleepovers in the office, use stupid selling jingles, ring a bell and sing a song when some buys a tank of propane, and sell the propane in three sizes: Like it, Love it, Blow Your Hair Back It’s So Big. In this episode, Hank’s job is to somehow convince his co-workers that their boss has gone mad and that people have forgotten why they work at Strickland Propane in the first place. For Hank, it’s not about the extra stuff, but the propane. As I read and write, I often feel like Hank Hill in this episode. If I could only have the hours of my life back that I have wasted learning stupid church sells tactics. We have missed the point. Somehow in the process of “doing church” we have missed God and we have taught other people to do the same. As the summer comes to a close and the school year begins I want to suggest that maybe the church needs to go back to school. I am weird, but I miss it. This week many young men and women will get the opportunity to go back to school and I won’t. The year marks the second year since I was five that I will not be in school and I don’t like it. Now granted, I did not like school in middle and high school, but when I finally got to the point that I actually cared, school became a lot of fun. I loved learning, loved reading, and loved challenging myself. And this passion carried over to the church. As a young man beginning to walk with the Lord I found myself consumed with learning all I could about my newfound faith in Jesus. However, it was quickly apparent that this was not the case for everyone. People did not seem to desire to know God. They showed up for Sunday School, survived church, and enjoyed the week, only to repeat the process again the following week. They did not know their Bibles, much less how to apply them to their lives. And to make it worse, many of these people I observed had been Christians for 30-40 years. I have to agree with Alan Bloom when he says “As the respect for the Sacred - the latest fad - has soared, real religion and knowledge of the Bible have diminished to the vanishing point.” (The Closing of the American Mind, p. 56) Now most people would not admit it, but they are more than satisfied with some various emotional experiences and a pervasive lack of knowledge of God. However, when you look at Scripture, this is foreign to the Biblical discussions of what it means to love God. In fact everywhere you look, Scripture connects love for God with obedience to his commands.
And these statements are not hidden in Scripture. The need for the church to love God with their minds is even found in the two “great” statements in Scripture: the great commandment and the great commission. The Great commandment states that “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength” (Mark 12:30). Did you see it? You are to love him with your heart and soul, but also with your mind and strength. Clearly, loving God is not just a heart thing, but a head thing as well. And the second “great” is the Great Commission in which Jesus says, “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:19). Now this verse is a little more difficult to see the point I am trying to make. We are told to go, make disciples, and baptize them, and then what? We are to teach them to do everything that God commanded us to do.” While this passage is often cited as providing the foundation of the mission of the church, many churches fail to work towards the accomplishment of the task of teaching people to do everything that Jesus commanded, a failure Dallas Willard calls the “great omission from the great commission.”[1] Os Guinness, in his marvelous work Fit Bodies, Fat Minds, points to a condition he calls anti-intellectualism in the church, which he describes as “a disposition to discount the importance of truth and the life of the mind.”[2] Unfortunately many Christians and churches fail to love God well with their minds and do not associate learning with the love of God. Charles Malik, speaking at the Billy Graham Center at Wheaton College, poignantly says: “I must be frank with you: the greatest danger besetting American Evangelical Christianity is the danger of anti-intellectualism. The mind, as to its greatest and deepest reaches, is not cared for enough.”[3] Granted, knowledge of God is not an end in and of itself. But knowledge of God leads to proper worship of God, which helps to fight against gospel substitutes. So over the next few days (or weeks or months) I am going to ponder some of the reasons for the overwhelming lack of knowledge of God in our world and in our churches. If you have some suggestions, I would love to hear them. [1] Dallas Willard, The Great Omission: Reclaiming Jesus Essential Teachings on Discipleship (San Francisco: Harper, 2006). [2] Os Guinness, Fit Bodies, Fat Minds: Why Evangelicals Don’t Think and What to do About It (Grand Rapids: BakerBooks, 1994), 9. [3] Quoted in Guinness, Fat Minds, 11.
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I think they are stupid. “To be honest” Do you typically lie? “In my opinion” Who else’s opinion do you normally give? “In the final analysis” Then why are you still talking? “Subject to Availability” Is there anything not subject to availability? “Without Further Delay” Aren’t you delaying me further by saying that? “Willy Nilly” Is that a person’s name or just exposing your ignorance? “A rose by any other name” Would no longer be a rose. I think they are stupid because I have no clue what they mean. “As beautiful as the day is long” My days are short, so is it ugly? “Be there or be square” If I don’t show up am I a circle? “Cat got your tongue” No. never. I hate cats and they would never touch my tongue “Clean your clock” How does a timing devise relate to making a football tackle? “Even Stevens” Is he related to the stunt man? “Fly by the Seat of Your Pants” What about wings? A plane? Or a magic carpet? “If I’ve said it once, I’ve said it a thousand times.” What if you only said it 995 times? You know what I mean? Stupid clichés that people use all the time and yet I have no clue what they mean. This one’s my favorite: “You are what you eat.” Well I like Kraft Macaroni and Cheese with a little 2% milk. I eat it right out of the pot, sometimes with a side of pinto beans. What does that make me? Fat? Sloppy? Cheesy? Clichés are not my thing, so I am surprised to be giving you one for my blog today. However, I understand this cliché because it is lifted right from the pages of Scripture. It goes like this: “You are what you worship.” Fortunately, I didn’t make this one up. The Psalmist tells us this one is true. “Their idols are silver and gold, the work of human hands. They have mouths, but do not speak; eyes, but do not see. They have ears, but do not hear; noses, but do not smell. They have hands, but do not feel; feet, but do not walk; and they do not make a sound in their throat. Those who make them become like them; so do all who trust in them.” Ps. 115:4-8 Clearly the Psalmist does not think much of the things that you and I worship. In fact his description is that they are impotent to meet any of our expectations. And, that’s not the bad news. The bad news is in the last phrase: “Those who make them become like them.” He says that we become what we worship. In other words, the things that we worship direct the trajectory of our lives and ultimately determine the type of person that you and I develop into. Latin scholars had a maxim by which they expressed this concept: lex orandi, lex credenda, lex vivendi. The statement literally says that the law of prayer (what we worship) leads to the law of belief (what we believe to be true) which leads to the law of life (how we live). More succinctly we can say that what we worship determines what we believe which shapes how we live. We take on the qualities and characteristics of what we worship. As a result, it is important that we think about some of the characteristics of the gospel substitutes that we worship. Here are a few: 1. Temporal Have you ever known one of your gospel substitutes to last? No. That is the folly of gospel substitutes. They always promise something that they can’t provide. Be it lust, power, pride, anger, or whatever, it never provides the fulfillment that you thought it would. As Dr. Christopher Wright says, “False gods fail. That is their only truth. For although false gods never fail to fail, it seem humans never fail to forget that this is indeed the case” (Dr. Christopher Wright, The Mission of God, p. 171). And if you worship these gods you will become just like them – you will promise something that you can’t fulfill due to your faulty worship. Maybe that is the underlying cause of the epidemic divorce rates, absentee fathers, and moral compromise. We, like them, always fail. 2. Lifeless False gods give the appearance of life while lacking the reality. People become convinced that gospel substitutes actually possess the life they are looking for, but in the end the false gods reveal their true, dead nature. Same with you. If you worship false gods long enough you will prove the reality of your death by your actions. While you may give the appearance of life – nice marriage, well adjusted kids, smiles at the right time, you might be just like your gods. We, like them, are lifeless. 3. Powerless We think that these gospel substitutes are going to come through for us. If we only had a happy marriage, a life free of pain, more money, people who respected me, or children who obeyed then I would have the life I desire. However, like all false gods, these objects of our sinful worship lack the power to provide that which our hearts long for. We, like them, become powerless. 4. Fragile False gods break so easily. Drop a golden calf on the ground and what happens? It shatters into a million pieces. It’s sad when a golden cow shatters, but I have seen much worse. Our world is littered with people whose lives shattered due to their poor worship. The storms of life came and because they worshipped at the feet of the god of comfort, fulfillment, happiness, or security their lives crumbled as well. We, like them, become incredibly fragile. Maybe this is why the first commandment says that we are not to have any other gods besides the one true God. Far from an unreasonable command, this command truly has our best interest at heart because it protects our very humanity from being like the things we worship. If I am going to be like someone, I would much rather be like the One True God than some silly gospel substitute. Watch out. “You are what you worship”
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The words are so familiar: “Jesus Loves me this I knowFor the Bible tells me so..”
Our nineteen month old daughter, Corrie, is beginning to learn the words to this song, which she has heard sung over her since her early days of life. However, her developing vocabulary fails to allow her to sing the words with mommy and daddy. Instead of the typical lyrics to the song, Corrie listens as we sing “Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so…” Corrie catches the tune and echoes the final line. Instead of the typical words, she sings: “Bi…ble…me…me…me…”Corrie picks up on the two words of the song that she knows and sings them with great passion while her mother and I clap in approval.
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