Friday, August 31, 2007
Pharisees still resist Jesus
Pharisees are self proclaimed keepers of the truth – they have a tightly defined system of beliefs about God. Anything that lies outside of that system of belief is immediately and vociferously attacked as from the devil. Because Jesus never seemed to adhere to their system of beliefs, He was proclaimed to be from the devil. They still demonize people who deviate from the accepted system of beliefs. Pharisees freely use the terms like “false teachers”, “snakes”, and “deceived” to describe anyone who would dare to disagree with them. They care more about the protection of their doctrinal systems than about people. To even question their pet doctrines is heretical to them. In a reality, the truth they proclaim is not God’s truth but their own. They may find scriptures that support some of their beliefs, but at the core, they hold to their own truth not God’s truth.
Pharisees are never wrong in their eyes – Since they are the “keepers of the truth”, they cannot be wrong. While they profess to love truth, what they really love is themselves and their projected image of God. Since they cannot be wrong (they will find the scriptures to PROVE they are not wrong), anyone who disagrees must be wrong.
Pharisees refuse to humbly and honestly search the scriptures – Pharisees take a great deal of pride in their adherence to the scriptures. However, they come to the scriptures with their own set of paradigms. In so doing, they frequently make the scriptures say something they were never meant to say. They will allow and even promote shoddy exegesis of the scriptures if it will further their own agenda. They are not “learners” due to the fact that they have God “figured out”. They resist learning from and embracing the pattern of Jesus as revealed in the Gospels. Rather than interpret the scriptures through the life and pattern of Jesus, they attempt to fit Jesus into their belief system. Where He does not fit, He is ignored
Pharisees love judgment – Since they have all truth and are the epitome of godliness in their own eyes, they eagerly await the judgment of those that do not hold to their accepted belief system. They profess that their judgment is motivated by love, but their attitude displays anything but love and graciousness. Sinners MUST be punished and the earlier God punishes the sinner the better it will be. As I stated earlier, they are quick to label anyone who disagrees with them as deceived. They have a clear line of demarcation – people are either “in or out”.
I work with a great deal of pagans as well as new believers in Jesus. The Pharisees always make my work more difficult. Instead of bringing healing, they cause pain. Instead of bringing freedom, they bring bondage. Instead of bringing life they bring death. Instead of encouraging vulnerable learning and curiosity about the scriptures that depends on the Holy Spirit’s teaching, they dictate rigid dogma. At every turn, they resist the work of Jesus.
I believe that we live in the most exciting time in history. Unfortunately like in Jesus' day, the greatest resistance will come from Pharisees. I expect that as God's plan continues to unfold, the Pharisees will beome more vocal and vehement. Be encourage though, their poisonous doctrines will not prevail against the work of Jesus!!
Saturday, August 25, 2007
Superstar??? Christians
On the 23d as well, the Tampa Tribune released the news that Randy and Paula White, pastors of Church Without Walls in Tampa, were announcing their divorce. Church Without Walls is reported to be one of the largest and fastest growing churches in the United States. The Whites have been under scrutiny for some time for their lavish lifestyles.
Both cases reveal a deep sickness in the American church. The church has been transformed from the Body of Christ into what is the equivalent of a large corporation. Leading these corporations we have superstar leaders who justify their extravagant lifestyles by pointing to the corporate world. These are the leaders who are placed on a pedestal by gullible believers who carnally desire to have a king.
These two stories reveal the moral rot that frequently exists behind the facade of success. While I have no expectations that leaders live perfectly (they wouldn't need a Savior if they did!), I do have problems with the way they position themselves as superstars, their attitude frequently mirroring that of professional athletes. It is an attitude of "I deserve more". Instead of standing with the people they lead, they stand above - in extravagance of lifestyle, in the demands to be served, in the expectations of financial remuneration.
When placed against the example of Jesus, the lifestyle of these superstar leaders bears no resemblance to the Son of Man. Jesus washed His disciples feet (donkey doo and all). Jesus exercised His authority for the benefit of messy, broken people, not to build a soft life of ease. Jesus freely relinquished His rights to self aggrandisement. In reality, Jesus penetrated the lowest strata of society, choosing to live in a way that indentified with the poor and the marginlized.
Perhaps it is time for the followers of Christ to begin to emulate His lifestyle instead instead of the lifestyles of the rich and famous in our society. Now wouldn't that be a novel idea!
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
misplaced focus
Let me illustrate. A young man recently related to me how he had been part of a church who had stressed that God has a specific destiny for each person. While that teaching is correct, he realized that at some point he placed the pursuit of his destiny ahead of his pursuit of God. In so doing, he made his God-given destiny his idol. It happened for me as well. For years I pursued God because I needed Him for successful ministry. It was not until several years ago that I realized that I did not pursue God for Him, I pursued Him for what He could do for me.
We so often subtly shift our focus away from God on to some good thing - things like church, ministry, work, family, worship, prayer etc. In so doing, we sacrifice abundant life; we sacrifice the fruit of the Holy Spirit (love, joy, peace, etc). Our life becomes consumed with activity and busyness; God 's presence is more of a token afterthought than an ever present reality.
Return to Him, to the simplicity of relationship, to life, abundant life. Pursue Him, not ministry or church, or any other good thing that seeks to steal your focus.
Saturday, August 18, 2007
consumer Christians
- I spoke on the phone with a woman from another state. She lamented the fact that her family could not find a church where they "were fed". As I processed through our conversation later, it occurred to me that she related to church from the same perspective that she would have seen a store. She was looking for a "store" that had the product she wanted. When I encouraged her to take the responsibility to create what she saw lacking, she resisted the encouragement. She wanted to be fed.
- I recently have noticed that most church advertisements play on this consumeristic mindset. They all, in some form or another, present the message of "we have something you want (or need)". Come and get it.
- A recent post on an Internet forum I frequent at times informed people of the availability of an empty church building in the poster's community. The last line of the post read "the only competition would be a Baptist church down the road". It would seem to me the competition would not be another church, unless you saw church as a product to market to consumers.
When I place these mindsets over the template of Jesus' life, the glaring flaws of this kind of thinking becomes apparent. Jesus never invited people simply to be consumers, using slick marketing tools to promote the advantages of following Him. Instead, He expected people to become involved in His work. He demanded a sacrifice that frightened the consumers away.
If the church is to become a transformational force in our communities, we must address the consumeristic tendencies in people instead of taking advantage of them (the consumeristic tendencies) to build something impressive. We must teach people to feed themselves. We must ask them to make an "all or nothing" choice when it comes to following Christ. If we do not address the consumeristic tendencies, we are doomed to becoming irrelevant to the cause of Christ.
Saturday, August 11, 2007
the goodness of God
I am discovering that we truly were created to experience abundant life. I am also discovering that the abundant life only comes as we follow Jesus, heeding the desires that He places in our hearts.
While following Jesus frequently pits us against seemingly insurmountable obstacles, as we persevere and conquer the obstacles, we discover the Father smiling on us. There were times in the life of Jesus when the veil between heaven and earth was shattered by the affirmation of the Father. The same is true in our life as well. In that affirmation, our hearts readily respond with worship and gratitude.
My prayer for you is that you can discover the goodness of God as I have experienced it. The words "God is good" is not some trite phrase to me. It is experiential reality.