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Monday, December 30, 2013

Life for the Body


Revelation 3:1-6

 

            One morning as I was hunting for turkey I noticed something. I went to the alfalfa field behind my house before daylight and set up my decoys. As the sun began to rise the cars that drove by the field started to slow down to look at what they believed were turkeys in the field. One truck stopped and rolled down his window to get a better view. A young child crawled over into the driver’s seat to see the animals in the field. After a minute or two the truck drove on, but came back a few minutes later. This time the passenger window came down as it stopped and they watched for a little longer. They drove off but came back one more time about fifteen minutes later. They kept coming back to watch the animals in the field, but what they did not notice was that the two turkeys in the field never moved. Each time they came back they were in the same place and even standing in the same position. In fact, what they were watching were not turkeys at all, they were my decoys! The people in that truck believed they were watching wild animals, but what they were actually watching weren’t even real animals. If they had looked a little closer they would have found that things were not what they seemed to be. But this truth is not limited to animals (or what we think are animals) in a field. It happens in our spiritual lives, and happens more often than we should admit in the church.

            The church of Sardis teaches us that everything is not always what it seems to be. Sometimes our perspective is limited and we do not see everything that is happening in the church. From our vantage point it may seem like everything is exactly what it needs to be. It may look like everything is going well and we have every reason to be comfortable, but that is all too often not the case. Nearly everything about Sardis illustrates this for us.

            Sardis was the place where gold and silver coins were first struck. Much of the gold in the Roman Empire was mined there giving the city great wealth. There was a large temple dedicated to Artemis, and a large Jewish synagogue also dominated the social landscape of the city.[1] The people of the city were wealthy, and the church even seemed to thrive in that place.

            Sardis seemed to be a busy church. They were doing all the things that a church is “supposed” to do. If it were a church of our day they would have had a thriving youth program, a dynamic pastor who spent all his time with the people while still maintaining a great devotional life, a top-notch worship leader and the greatest outreach program available at the time. Their reputation in the community was unmatched, and they were respected by all. Everything seemed to be falling together perfectly.

            This is the case for many congregations today. They have everything that the church growth experts recommend, but God is not necessarily blessing their work. From our perspective it may look that way, but in spite of their busyness they are not walking any closer to God than they were last month, or even last year. Things are happening, but not God’s things. The community sees what they perceive as a place of spiritual vitality and life, but what they actually view is an imitation – a fake! They see a church that once served God faithfully, but has fallen asleep to His truth and His ways in favor of the ideas and gimmicks of the world. Lillie McCutcheon commented on such a church when she said, “When Satan puts a church to sleep, the victory is in his hands.”[2]

            When we consider the state of the church today we must remember what Scripture teaches us about the purpose and call of God’s people. We also must remember to whom the church is accountable. God’s people are not measured by the standards of the world, or by their application of the ideas of today’s church growth experts. The church is measured against God’s word, and God’s word alone. Nothing that we invent or produce makes a difference in God’s assessment of the church. It is only God who gives life to the Body of Christ. It is only His Spirit who will bring vitality and revival to this body.

 

Our Works Do Not Give Us Life

 

            The works Christians do are not bad things. In fact, Scripture tells us that our faith must result in good works. “For as the body apart from the spirit is dead, so also faith apart from works is dead” (James 2:26). Our works are necessary, but they do not bring life to the Body of Christ. Works are a result of our faith; the outworking of God’s work in our hearts. Action should be taken on what we claim God has led us to believe, but our action must be taken in light of this revelation. For a couple of generation it would seem that we have neglected this truth. We do not lack for works in the church, but we do lack Spirit-led, God-inspired, Scripture-fulfilling works that grow out of our faith in God and His Word. We have forgotten that it is not enough for us to do good things, but we must do the very things that we claim to believe.

            The church has no problem sponsoring food pantries or sending money to missions, and these are good things. But the church does have a problem living out the commands of Scripture. The Bible tells us that we are to live a life of holiness, dedicated to God, but the consecrated life is harder to find among Christians. Without the fulfillment of the commands of Scripture in our lives none of our good works mean anything. They are the same as the works of the church of Sardis: incomplete!

            God has not simply called His people to good works, but complete works – the type of works that accomplish His purposes. The people of Sardis were no doubt busy, but God’s work remained undone. This is the problem the church faces today. We feel the need to dictate to God what works His people will do. We decide what needs to happen, or what the church is supposed to do and then demand that God bless our ideas. We cannot claim “perfection” or “completeness” of works if we are attempting to manipulate the power of God through our own devices. Isaiah asked, “Shall the axe boast over him who hews with it, or the saw magnify itself against him who wields it” (Isa. 10:15)?

            The busyness we have accepted in place of God’s works keeps us from experiencing His power. If we are to witness the triumphant church it will be when we replace the works that fill our lives and overwhelm our time with the Scriptural commands of God’s Word. It will be when our works become God’s works, and they become the result of our walk with God rather than a substitute for that relationship. “The problem today is that churches are striving to win their world to Christ without first having been revived themselves. The result is spiritually comatose church members going door-to-door asking unbelievers if they would live to have what they have – spiritual anemia!”[3] If others are to be impacted by our spiritual lives our existence must be just that: spiritual. When our focus is primarily spiritual, the works of the church become spiritual rather than simply good, civic works.

 

Our Reputation Does Not Give Us Life

 

            When our works our spiritual we will need to understand that people will not respond the way they did to our social activities. Sometimes other Christians will look down on what we do. They may tell us that we have become “so heavenly minded we’re no earthly good.” We will not be accepted by those who teach a social gospel, or the movements who have devalued the spiritual aspects of our life. As difficult as these circumstances are for us to accept, it is imperative that we realize that what the world thinks of the church has no bearing on what God thinks of His people.

            We spend lifetimes trying to build a reputation with the world. We do the things the world does, act like the world, and look like the world. We seldom do anything that distinguishes the church in the name of “acceptance.” We have been led to believe that unless the world accepts us we cannot do ministry, but Scripture teaches no such thing. When we look to the world we begin to measure ourselves against their standards making the Word of God something of secondary importance. We live in fear that we may not offer what someone wants, or may not meet each felt need. We become nothing more than a civic organization that helps people feel a little better about their lot in life. The church is no longer a transforming agent in the world when reputation becomes our motivation. Fear takes hold of the hearts of God’s people and they wilt in the face of pressure. The truth is, we have never been instructed to measure up to the standards of the world. And it is actually sinful to fear the world. “And do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matt. 10:28).

            The time has come for Christians to face the reality that the sinful world should not look highly upon God’s church. Jesus said, “Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for so did their fathers of the false prophets” (Luke 6:26). The church must not have a reputation that aligns her with the world, but one that distinguishes her. A reputation that causes God’s people to stand out as those who have been called out of the world, and into His holiness.

 

Life Comes Through God’s Spirit

 

            Jesus told the church of Sardis that He held the presence of God’s Spirit. He held in His hand the seven spirits of God and the seven stars. The messengers that came to each church were sent by Jesus Christ, and the Spirit who would empower the church came directly from His hand. “It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh is no help at all. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life” (John 6:63).

            We look to the world today to organize the church. Men and women write countless books on methods and gimmicks to bring growth to the church. We will do almost anything to add numbers to the church, except rely on the provisions made by Jesus Christ. It is through Him that we find direction and power. It is through the Spirit that we find vitality in our Christian lives and the church. The triumphant church looks not within, or around, but to the supernatural power of the Holy Spirit who was sent by Jesus Christ to guide her to victory over the sin-cursed world. Neil Wiseman wrote, “The supernatural is as necessary to the Church as oxygen is necessary for human life. We die without either!”[4]

            The presence of the Spirit is reserved for those who are submissive to God’s will; for those who will spend their time in prayer, seeking and submitting to the will of God. There were some in Sardis who had not defiled their garments. These are the people who will lead the church back to her supernatural roots. It is those who walk undefiled, relying on the power of prayer, the presence of the Spirit, and the working of the Word who will experience God’s reviving power in this day. But the church must be willing to follow them. They should not be the object of ridicule and scorn, but those from whom we seek direction, knowing that they are in contact with the God of Heaven. They stand before His throne each day, and understand what it means to commune with Him.

            It is the realization that God has something supernatural for our lives and our church that brings repentance. “A repenting church is God’s condition for revival, and it is always corporate repentance!”[5] It is repentance that turns us from the world, and its sinful, fallen ways back to the supernatural power of God. Repentance revives and awakens the church because it turns her attention to the one place that it belongs – to God’s throne! “When the supernatural is restored, the church becomes a meeting place with the holy god, who jars us into self-judgment and beckons us to a radical reordering of individual, institutional, and spiritual priorities.”[6] Repentance requires us to turn to the spiritual. It requires a rejection of the worldly, temporal things that consume so much of our focus and a turn to God and His power. This is what we would truly consider a living church. This is what the church of Sardis lacked.

           

            “A living church is a learning church, a church submissive to the teaching authority of the apostles. Its pastors expound Scripture from the pulpit. Its parents teach their children out of the Scriptures at home, and its members read and reflect on   the Scriptures every day in order to grow in Christian discipleship. The Spirit of god leads the people of God to honor the word of God.”[7]

 

            Where does the church of our day look for life? In Sardis they looked to their works and reputation. Today some look to programs and others to gimmicks. Some look to their pastors and many to national spiritual leaders. Life does not come from our works or our reputations, our leaders or their ideas. It comes from Jesus Christ, and His Spirit living among us. It comes from submission to the Spirit’s guidance and discernment of His will. We can do all the works we want to do, but it is the one who holds the seven spirits of God who will revive and awaken the church. A reputation of good works does not make us the church, it is having an ear to hear what the Spirit says to the churches.



[1] Carol Rotz, Wesleyan Commentary (79)
[2] Lillie McCutcheon, The Symbols Speak (26)
[3] Blackaby, Fresh Encounter (18)
[4] Neil Wiseman, The Untamed God (26)
[5] Blackaby, What the Spirit is Saying to the Churches (20)
[6] Wiseman (24)
[7] John Stott, The Living Church (25)

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Confessions of a Thankful Heart


Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God shines forth.           -Psalm 50:2

We don’t have to look very far in our day to find criticisms of the church.  We need go no further than our local Christian bookstore to read about all the ways the church is “getting it wrong.”  If we aren’t feeling ambitious enough to go to the bookstore we can find this attitude perpetrated on thousands of web sites.  If you type the question, “What’s wrong with the church today?” into Google you will find 76,500,000 hits.  A lot of the criticism deals with the idea that we are too “narrow” when it comes to doctrine, and that the church today is “judgmental” and “legalistic.”  Everywhere we go we are told that doctrine doesn’t matter anymore and we need to change course and focus entirely on the mission of getting people to make a profession of faith, even at the expense of compromising the Word of God.  We call that being “missional.”  Is it possible that in spite of all the criticism, maybe the church isn’t so wrong on some of these things?  I understand that there are certainly issues in every congregation that need to be addressed, but as I consider some of the things we claim to be wrong I find that I don’t think they are all entirely bad.  In fact, I have to confess that I am grateful for some of them.

1)       The Issue of Narrow Mindedness.  We have all struggled with those who will not open their mind to the truth God has to reveal to them, and I understand that this is a problem.  But some people in our day seem to want us to be so open-minded that we will accept things that we know to be wrong.  We are expected to ignore what the Bible says about divorce and holiness.  We are considered narrow-minded if we make the claim that God has called us to live above sin.  I am thankful that there are some who are willing to be true to God’s Word in spite of the unfounded accusations against them.  Some of the greatest influences on my life and ministry are those who have been willing to stand firm in the truth whether it’s popular or not, and for those faithful men and women I am grateful.

 

2)       The Issue of Legalism.  Scripture teaches us that we are called to be holy, but as he who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, since it is written, “You shall be holy, for I am holy (1 Peter 1:16, 17).”  Don’t mistake this, I’m not condoning that we become tyrannical about the way people dress or look.  I don’t believe that those things make us holy, but I do find a standard in Scripture for God’s people.  There are some things that Christians just should not do.  And there are some things in Scripture that are very clear and should not be compromised.  This postmodern idea that truth is different for everyone and each person should use the Bible as they see fit has no basis in the revelation of God that we have in Scripture.  Countless thousands are misled today by those who teach that we can live however we want to live as long as we claim to be a Christian.  We have lost the glory of God that comes through the transformed lives of those who are truly saved.  I am grateful for those who will uphold and teach the standard set for in Scripture of Christlikeness. 

 

3)       The Issue of Judgmentalism.  I’m not saying that we are free to tell everyone we meet everything they’re doing wrong.  I am saying that I am grateful for those who are close to me, and their willingness to tell me when I am off base.  I am grateful that they will tell me when I am not thinking clearly and can do so without fear of me telling them they are “judging me.”  We claim we want to be submissive to God, but the fact is that, at times, we deceive ourselves and are blinded to things in our lives that need to be pointed out. 

 

4)       The Issue of Truth.  Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.  Do not be led away by diverse and strange teachings, for it is good for the heart to be strengthened by grace, not by foods, which have not benefited those devoted to them (Hebrews 13:8, 9).  We are told that everyone has a different doctrine, so it is not worth our time to study it.  In a world that does not recognize definite truth I am thankful for direction and guidance from God’s Word.  We do not have to stumble around in the darkness trying to find direction.  God has called us to a life lived in His light!  This keeps us from being subject to the constantly changing whims of man, the trends of the world, and the fads embraced by the church.  It is truth, Jesus told us, that will set us free!  When other search for some foundation in this sin-cursed world, we build on the truth of Jesus Christ.  What greater gift could God have given us than Jesus, the embodiment of His truth and character?  I do not claim to know every truth in all the world, but we can stand firm on what God has revealed to us.  It is unchanging, uncompromising, and definite.  I am thankful that we can sing as we did in days past, “When the voice of heaven sounded warning all to flee, from the darksome courts of Babel back to Zion free, Glad my heart to hear the message and I hastened to obey, and I’m standing in the truth today.”

 

The world around us teaches that the church is irrelevant to our modern culture, and if God’s church is to survive “everything must change.”  Despite the constant rhetoric, some of these things are not wrong.  In spite of the difficulties we face today, the church is still God’s city.  The church remains a place where God provides for, and empowers His people.  We talk a lot about the things that aren’t going well in the church, but I remain grateful.  Grateful for the people God has placed around me to share this journey of faith.  Grateful for the truth of His Word and those who have made it their life’s work to carry that truth, clergy and laity alike.  Maybe we would be better served if we quit worrying so much about what we think is wrong, and spend our time doing what God says is right.  My ministry has never been without trial.  There have been difficulties and frustrations, but as I reflect on the church, I do so with a grateful heart.