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books christianity church

unChristian 5

Chapter 5 is title “Anti-homosexual”, and the thesis of the chapter is that Christians must become known more for there love of individuals regardless of sexual brokenness, rather that against the sin itself.  I understand the basic premise, and agree with the conclusions, yet the latter half of the chapter is subtitled “A Biblical Response” which is woefully lacking in biblical content and exegesis.  If the authors’ desire is to change the hearts and minds of Christians, then this section ought to include more than mere opinion and quotation, but actually resolve a biblical argument for the “complexity of the issue”.  This is still my main beef with the book as a whole: a woeful lack of biblical and gospel engagement to the findings of their research.

Below are a few of the quotes that stuck out:

  1. “Our concerns about preventing the advancement of homosexual rights often translate into a desire for unrealistic boundaries on people’s lives” ~Page 97

    This argument is definitely an interesting one, and is the issue concerning the legislation of morality.  It would seem that the authors would be in favor of extending political rights in order to create greater personal freedom, and yet we must draw some legal lines for legislation of morality.  The sticky question is where.  All legal authority is based on some definition of morality, and we must decide at what point on the scale we draw the moral line.  The issue is enhanced, however, because in an American context, this is both a moral issue and a personal rights issue, and the two certainly collide here.  The majority of Americans would side with a more conservative stance on morality, and yet the minority is advocating for personal rights, which is in part why the conversation is so muddled.

    Basically, I’ve confused myself, but the bottom line is political engagement on the issue is a very complex topic.  The next quote will resolve something of my opinion on the issue…

  2. “You change a country not merely by bolstering its laws but by transforming the hearts of its people” ~Page 106.

    A hearty amen to this comment…for too long the Evangelical right has thrown countless resources at reforming a nation through political engagement.  Political engagement is absolutely necessary and the call of all Christians in a democracy, but we must understand that it will never have the power to transform, only to conform to morality, which is no saving grace at all.

    When political posturing becomes our the Churches primary means of engagement, and not focusing on the call of believers to make disciples (baptizing and teaching), then we have put our trust in a false savior.  I believe the call of the authors to be correct as they invite individual and ministerial engagement with homosexuals, rather than political and pulpit posturing.  Platforming is a dangerous bedfellow for Christians and the Church when it is not accompanied by a similar commitment to relational ministry.

  3. “Born again Christians are more likely to disapprove of homosexuality than divorce” ~Page 94

    This is an unbelievable frustrating statistic, more from the perspective of the political posturing of the “pro-family” stance of most evangelicals.  The abject failure of the church in the area of marital fidelity should shock us, and force us to remove the plank in our eye first.  Perhaps we ought to demonstrate our commitment to the sanctity of marriage within the church before defining it outside the church…

This chapter was probably the weakest I have read so far, most likely because the scope of the issue is beyond the book.  It did whet my appetite to delve more deeply into the complexity of biblical engagement in the politics of this issue.

Categories
christianity

Old Stuff – Disciplined Spirit

Number 4

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2 Timothy 1:7
“For God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but of power, of love, and of self-discipline”

Most people love parts one and two of the Spirit God gives us, but part three tends to be their least favorite, and likely it is glossed over because we have already heard about the good stuff, power and love. We are, however, forced right here to deal with the naked truth that God’s gift of the spirit to us is also on of discipline, or being of sound and sober mind.
There are two major points that I want to address with this particular verse that inform us about the nature of Spiritual Discipline.

1.) The Spirit of Discipline is God given, not man derived.
-This flies in the face of much of the preaching around Spiritual discipline. The end of the view of spiritual discipline as something we do ourselves ultimately leads to self-righteousness and robs God of His due glory.
-The spirit of discipline is not reading Scripture daily, having a quiet time every day, and fasting regularly. These are specific manifestations of the spirit of discipline. When we confuse acting out the fruit of the spirit of discipline without the spirit itself is exactly the point when we become Pharisees, holding the letter of the law and not the spirit.

I would encourage you, rather than to go on a crusade for a week saying “I’m going to get up tomorrow at 6 a.m., read my bible, and pray for an hour and a half”, to instead begin humbly asking God that He would begin to reveal in you the spirit of discipline, and give you the ability to fix your hope on His grace. Pursue the inward heart change rather than the outward expressions of that heart. As long as we continue to pursue the outward expressions of discipline devoid of the spirit of discipline, we will continually fail.

Ultimately, as we begin to experience this spirit of discipline, the result will be the centering of our life on the grace of Christ, and a mind tuned moment by moment to the will of God, ready for the action of sharing the Gospel.

2.) The nature of the Spirit in us is one of discipline, and our process of sanctification should exemplify this truth.
-God has given you the Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit is disciplined, therefore you should exemplify these traits as you work out your salvation.
-As we grow in our faith, the Spirit is more manifest in our lives, and therefore fruits of the spirit ought to be more manifest as well. If discipline is not evident in your life, we need to ask ourselves some serious questions.
-Quite simply, discipline is not inherent in our nature, which leads to most of us really disliking the idea of discipline, I think because it carries a lot of baggage with it by intoning the idea of drudgery and boring work. Most of us think of our failed quiet times, our inconsistent Scripture reading, and our inability to memorize Scripture.

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assimilation church missional

Mission as organizing principle from The Forgotten Ways

This blog articulates well the idea of mission as central to small group and church sustainability.  I consistently wrestle with the concept of assimilation into mission rather than ministry, and the most effective means to accomplish this end.

I’m not sure I’m ready to abandon wholesale assimilation to ministry as a pathway to mission as Hirsch suggests (this is the route that I took, as well as many missional practitioners that I know), but the principle is important to understand.

Sustainability in community is driven by the size of the mission and vision.  Groups that are internally focused tend to turn on themselves, and ultimately die.  This creates an approximately 2 year life cycle of small groups, which is pretty standard lifetime for assimilation based churches.  Once your means of attraction becomes outdated or fails to adapt, thus drying up your source of new individuals, your church is essentially doomed to die.

Only when small groups catch an initial vision to be externally focused will they endure beyond this life cycle, in my opinion.

Read all of Hirsch’s thoughts here:

Mission as organizing principle : The Forgotten Ways.

Categories
christianity

Old Stuff – Ecclesiological Implications of Reformed Doctrine

Number 3

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Here’s another post along the lines of some of my theological musings over the past few months.  This is excerpted from some other writing I did, so I apologize if it doesn’t entirely make sense…hopefully at some point I’ll make time to actually fully develop ideas into coherent arguments and points.

“I think I have been overly dismissive of the biblical doctrine of election, or at least have failed to see the practical implications of it worked out in daily ministry. The revelation I had was mainly related to the idea of a seeker sensitive or attractional model of church. The question really boils down to our view of salvation. If we believe that God preserves free will above all, then we must therefore make the Gospel as attractive as possible to win as many as possible. Perhaps ministries will grow numerically, but I think my observation is that personal holiness and obedience is frequently not the hallmark of churches with that mentality. If instead you believe in the saving power of the unadulterated Word through God, your task is to simply preach that clearly and faithfully, with full reliance on the power of God to effect salvation. I want to trust the saving power of God rather than gimmicky ministry ideas and the titillation of worldly desires. Let those whom God has brought forth come, because He is sovereign over the salvation of all. Pragmatism didn’t have a lot of place in the ministry of Jesus (what is pragmatic about the call he gives?).

I guess there is still room for a discussion on Paul’s idea of becoming all things to all men, but somehow I’m not sure we can arrive at a justification for much of what we see in modern ministry methods. Biblical faithfulness and obedience often is not championed, rather pop psychology enshrouded in biblical wrapping. Do we view Scripture as some good suggestions, or the very command of God which He effectively accomplishes in the life of a believer through the power of the Holy Spirit?

Also, to tie into my thought from the other day about the form of ministry being predicated by one’s theological bent, I want to add the concept that it also is intricately tied to one’s Christology. Keeping a balance of Christ incarnate and Christ exalted leads to a balance ministry of missional and victorious. We are to work with our hands in mission but proclaim a victorious King. I pray that we would not err on the side of only being warriors for Christ, but also as humble, hard-working peasants who are subject to their King.”

Categories
personal

He’s On Vacation

I am in the great state of Washington right now, chilling with my family.  We’ll be heading up to the family cabin at Schweitzer mountain this weekend for some epic skiing and relaxation.

If anyone is actually reading this blog, then hopefully you will enjoy some of the material that will be posted here from my old blog.

I’ll hopefully continue reviewing unChristian, but you can catch up with my thoughts on Chapter 1, Chapter 2, Chapter 3 and Chapter 4.