Paul Madson

THOUGHTS, QUOTES & REFLECTIONS

Year: 2012 (page 2 of 2)

To Quote: Trusting God’s Goodness in the Midst of Suffering

“For I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.” (Romans 8:18 NIV84)

“When we allow God to be exalted in our difficulties we are in the perfect place to smell the fragrance of His Presence.” (A.W. Tozer)

“God is in the business of turning rough coals into diamonds through pressure. When we suffer, it is a God-given opportunity to become more like the One who suffered most.” (Randy Alcorn)

“God’s promises are like the stars; the darker the night, the brighter they shine.”(David Nicholas)

“Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God.” (Corrie ten Boom)

“Is there nothing to sing about today? Then borrow a song from tomorrow; sing of what is yet to be. Is this world dreary? Then think of the next.” (C.H. Spurgeon)

“Do not be anxious about what may happen tomorrow; the same everlasting Father who cares for you today will take care of you tomorrow and every day. Either He will shield you from suffering, or He will give you unfailing strength to bear it. Be at peace, then, put aside all anxious thoughts and imaginations.” (St. Francis de Sales)

“Christ followers contract malaria, bury children, and battle addictions, and as a result, face fears. It’s not the absence of storms that sets us apart. It’s whom we discover in the storm: an unstirred Christ.” (Max Lucado)

“There is an old proverb which says, ‘Never cross a bridge before you come to it.’ How many Christians are filled with sorrow on account of imaginary troubles! Many timid Christians have a trouble manufactory in their own houses; they sit from morning to night endeavoring to make trouble for themselves. We have quite enough real trials to bear; and if we make any more of our own, we have no promise that God will give us grace to bear our self-made sorrows. How unwise are those people who crowd a whole year’s troubles into a single day!” (C.H. Spurgeon)

“Therefore we do not lose heart, but though our outer man is decaying, yet ourinner man is being renewed day by day. For momentary, light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory far beyond all comparison, while we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal.” (2 Corinthians 4:16-18 NASB)

“What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us?… No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 89:31, 37-39 ESV)

“God writes with a pen that never blots, speaks with a tongue that never slips, acts with a hand that never fails.” (C.H. Spurgeon)

Selah!

P.S. Here are a few scanned pages from the NASB Bible that I used from 1975 to 1985. As you can see, these verses on “the goodness of God” in the midst of suffering ministered to me deeply. Also, I share these with you simply to encourage you to mark up your Bible – the notes and markings will reassure and strengthen your heart as you journey through life.

Psalm 27:13-14 (NASB)

Psalm 73:23-28 (NASB)

 

Institutional Winter is for the Birds!

One of the men that influenced me and was (what I call) a “mentor from a distance” was Dr. Joseph C. Aldrich, former president of Multnomah School of the Bible (now Multnomah University and Multnomah Biblical Seminary). He served as president of Multnomah from 1978 to 1997, when he had to step down due to the onset of Parkinson’s Disease. The motto of Multnomah School of the Bible was “If it’s Bible you want, then you want Multnomah.”

When I say that Dr. Aldrich was a “mentor from a distance,” I mean that I never had the privilege of knowing him as a friend or ministry colleague, but I read almost everything he wrote (several times) and it deeply shaped who I am today. Dr. Aldrich went home to be with the Lord not too long ago. Everyone that I have talked to over the years who had the privilege of knowing him “up close and personal” said he was one of the most godly, grace-filled, loving, prayer-focused, God-centered, evangelistic men they had ever met.

Dr. Aldrich is probably most well known for his classic book, Lifestyle Evangelism: Learning to open your life to those around you.

I realize that in recent years the term “Lifestyle Evangelism” has become an almost derogatory term in some circles. The reason: some people have inappropriately taken the term to mean “just live a good, godly life” around your unbelieving friends and family and “never open your mouth to share the actual words of the gospel.”

Nothing could be further from Dr. Aldrich’s intent when he wrote the book back in 1981. I remember asking Howard Hendricks several years ago about his recollections of Joe as a student at Dallas Seminary (back in the ‘60’s), as well as a friend in the years that followed. Dr. Hendricks said to me, “I have never had a student that personally led more people to faith in Jesus Christ than Joe and Ruthie Aldrich.”

Throughout the years, I’ve always encouraged younger pastors to read Lifestyle Evangelism (especially “Section 2: Evangelism and the Local Church” – chapters 5-8), because of it’s emphasis on ecclesiology (the doctrine of the church). This section is not, nor was it intended to be, a complete theological treatise on ecclesiology. But it did provide some very helpful insights about the importance of pastors and elders – and the effect that they have upon the life and direction of a congregation.

In a nutshell, if I were to sum up what Dr. Aldrich says in this section, it would be this:

“If you want a church that is godly, grace-filled, loving, prayer-focused, God-centered and evangelistic…then you need an elder team, a pastor and a leadership team that are living a godly, grace-filled, loving, prayer-focused, God-centered, evangelistic lifestyle.”

In other words, the lifestyle of the leadership is what will be mirrored by the congregation. Another way to say it is: a church is simply a lengthened shadow of its leaders (pastors, elders and leaders). Scripture puts it this way: “like people, like priests” (Hosea 4:9; Isa. 9:14-16; 24:2; Jer. 8:10-12; Ezek. 22:26-31; Matt. 15:14). This is why Scripture places such a high emphasis upon godly, equipped pastors and elders (this is also why GTN exists).

I found over the years that Dr. Aldrich was a man rich in wisdom, knowledge and understanding. He had insight into life and ministry that was simply amazing. One of his oft-quoted statements (that was foundational in the church Lisa and I planted) was,

“The church gathers to teach and scatters to reach!”

or another way to say it…

“The church gathers to edify and scatters to evangelize!”

In other words, the primary purpose of our weekend services is to glorify God by worshiping Him and building up the body through the teaching of God’s Word. The church scattered is tasked to take the gospel into the homes, neighborhoods and workplaces of the congregants.

Interesting Side Note: One of Global Training Network’s staff members (Dr. Roland Niednagel) served back in the 70’s as the Youth Pastor under Joe Aldrich at Mariners Church in Newport Beach, CA. It wasn’t until Roland had been on staff with GTN for a couple years that I realized Joe Aldrich had dedicated the book to “Roland Niednagel” (notice screenshot of the dedication page from my dog-eared copy of Lifestyle Evangelism).

Around 1985, Dr. Aldrich wrote an article entitled “Institutional Winter is for the Birds” that was published in Multnomah School of the Bible’s monthly magazine. I’ve kept the article, and used it over and over, often passing it on to others. I also used it with all of our original leaders in the church that Lisa and I planted back in 1990. I came across the article recently and re-read it (I had not read it in probably 8-10 years). My first thought was: this would be a great blog post – especially for pastors and leaders.

Enjoy!

“Institutional Winter Is For The Birds!”

By Dr. Joseph C. Aldrich

As regular as clockwork, salmon return from the sea to the streams of their infancy.  Unerringly they wend their way past a thousand barriers, fight man, current and predators to spawn and die at the place of their birth.  Robins herald the melt of winter under the fleeting shadow of airborne geese making their annual “V”-line northward.

Since the beginning of time, in response to nature’s silent, irresistible promptings, groundhogs appear, salmon spawn, and geese migrate.  Mission accomplished…and a new generation flits through streams of water and air, repeating the endless cycle.

Institutions have a life cycle, too.  Green and supple youth; a period of flourishing strength; gnarled old age. The cycle is as old as the spawning of salmon.  Ideas threaten institutions – and they themselves become institutions threatened by ideas.

Most churches begin with a burst of enthusiasm, a glow of warmth and a community of friends.  Basking in the glow of it all, leaders are determined that their church will be “New Testament,” will “avoid tradition” and will most certainly “be different. With naive optimism, they fully expect to ban the routine, shun the ordinary and avoid organizational dry rot.

So much for spring.  But slowly, inexorably, the seasons change.  Grand ideals and visions fall away like blossoms in a summer breeze, like leaves in a September wind.  And all too soon only the naked branches of lifeless structure remain.

Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter. Nature’s winter succumbs to a yearly conspiracy between the sun above and seeds below.  As far as we know, nature’s spring has always succeeded in loosening winter’s icy grip.

Would to God we could be so optimistic about shattering the grip of institutional winter.  Vital communities become assembly lines processing multitudes.  The personal becomes impersonal.  Creativity goes AWOL. Body life dies, trapped in forms of another era, wineskins of a different day.

Grasping for an excuse to justify their inertia, some leaders cite the apostasy of the last days. Others blame the choir, the board or the pastor.  Could be all of the above.  Perhaps none.  But the fact remains that the Lord of Glory will remove His candlestick from the church which fails to maintain a cycle of renewal, a community of love.  That was His warning to the Church of EphesusDoctrinally sound, they were spiritually dead—and on the razor edge of forfeiting their Lord’s Shekinah glory.

Most churches start with a man, become a movement and harden into a monument. The very dynamics which caused growth are killed by growth.  Unless preventive measures are instituted, forms replace function, structure crowds out fellowship and regulations replace reality.

But churches need not die – organizations need not slip into stagnation.  And yet they do.  Why?  How can this slow dance with death be prevented?  What can be done to promote continuous renewal?

Thought you’d never ask!

Most churches – and denominations – are born in a time of stress as a reaction against error, abuses and the imbalance of the status quo.  The “new kid on the block” is just that…a new kid on the block.  Sometimes opposed, generally ignored, it struggles for survival.  Finances are hard to come by.  Facilities and adequate staffing are items of weekly concern.

But some positive, temporary dynamics are at work which keep folks coming back.  Most church decisions can be made over coffee at Joe’s Pancake House.  Everyone knows everyone.  It’s a community of friends.  The efforts to survive tie folks together in a common bond.  The warmth and fellowship seem genuine, and probably are. New Testament-flavored body life is probably at its peak during these bullish days of green and supple youth.  The body functions!

People do care for one another, love one another, forgive, support and uphold one another.  There are no traditions to support.  Leaders are free to innovate, to change, flex, adapt.  Body function is free to develop meaningful and diverse forms and structures.

Vision pumps spiritual adrenaline into the fellowshipA sense of mission prevails.  Most institutions (secular or sacred) begin with a handful of people who are conceptualists. They have the ability to look out into the future and visualize new ministries, new opportunities – and new ways of meeting needsThe magnetic quality of vision must not be underestimated!  Without it, churches die.

Visionaries are dreamers. With bold strokes they paint sand castles on the canvas of the future.  It was Carlyle who said, “the minds of men are not inflamed by small ideas.” He was right. Usually, however, the dream remains a dream if it’s the conceptualist who tries to bring it about.  He can conceive but not construct.

Conceptualists need planners to put their vibrant ideas into shoe leather. A planner’s vision may fade at the horizon, but he can tell you how to get to the moon if you share the vision with him! A planner comes alongside the conceptualist and says, “That’s where you want to go?  I’ll show you how to get there.” The dream is captured, harnessed, and wrestled into reality. Once the dream is born, the conceptualists and planners move on to greener pastures.  Neither are maintainers.  Once the tracks are laid they’re looking for new challenges, new missions, new opportunities.

The maintainer takes over. He delights in keeping the train on the tracks.  Does it well.  His inner clockworks thrive on the principle of zero deviation.  Change is anathema.  It upsets his equilibrium.  The results are history…the history of most institutions.  Like I said, ideas threaten institutions and then become institutions threatened by ideas. With the maintainers in control, the institution begins to drift (on track, of course).  The vitality and vision of the “early days” – the attractive, compelling something that attracted people to the church in the first place – has gone with the wind. The new wineskins have become old, the visionaries have gone elsewhere, and the maintainers keep right on maintaining…right into the wall.

Do you see the trend?  Power becomes centralized and institutionalized.  Healthy functions become the captive of form.  And so form (structure and organization) becomes the center of focus!  Instead of a mere transporting device to get from the present into a well-visualized future, form becomes the measure of success or failure.

How quickly we become ritualists!  How quickly we lose all memory and understanding of function.  We say that our ministry is “successful” as long as we perpetuate the culturally-conceived forms. The form becomes sacred.  Its shrine is guarded by the maintainers (often pastors, by the way).  The real functional questions go unanswered.  Focus has long since shifted from a living organism and its needs to a bureaucratic organization.

Institutionalism has prevailed when church folks relate to the church primarily as an “institution” or an “organization” rather than to the living God. In institutionalized churches the primary expression of spiritual maturity is support of the institution through attendance, giving, and living a generally defined “good life.”

Institutionalism is in the driver’s seat when the church turns inward.  When it is more taken up with its own existence and preservation than it is with the mission for which it was founded. Increasingly timid and myopic, the institutionalized church becomes more concerned with the correctness of one’s doctrine than with the quality of one’s life. Beliefs become crystallized into dogma demanding acceptance.

Gnarled old age has arrived when means become ends and ends become means, when loyalty is determined by service to the organization rather than to its Lord.

Is there hope?  How can a church get back into the mainstream of God’s purposes?  Is it possible to pry the knuckles of the maintainers off the steering wheel?  Did Peter walk on water?  There’s hope!  Following are some basic “church health” principles, which can help foster renewal and momentum:

1. Think vision. Renewal begins and ends with vision.  The conceptualists and planners will come alive when thrown the bait of vision.  Talk about it, plant seeds, organize planning retreats, write mission statements.

2. Provide motivation, conviction and morale. People need to believe that their individual efforts will mean something to the organization and will be properly recognized and appreciated. Selah!

3. Develop a healthy program of recruitment…a program which doesn’t recruit to a program, but a vision!  And remember this: Recruitment without an equal commitment to the development of talent is usually counterproductivePeople are the ultimate source of renewal.

4. Work toward a healthy fluidity of internal structure. This is the old “cemetery principle”…if something is dying, bury it.  Organization is only a transporting device to get us from where we are to the future we have planned for.  Most organizations have a structure admirably designed to solve problems that no longer existOrganization is a servant to be used, not a god to be worshipped.

5. Fight hard to release folks from the prison of procedures. The rule book always grows fatter as the ideas grow fewer.

6. Combat the vested interests which plague every human institution. The continuing viability of the organization is the legitimate vested interest of perceptive Christians.

7. Focus on what you may become—not on where you have been. We’re all inclined to look at life through the rear view mirror, and yet the church cannot thrive if it develops the habit of looking backward.

8. Communicate! It’s almost impossible to overdo it.  Folks want to know what is happening…and they have a right to know.

If renewal is to become an ongoing process, the church must have a clear understanding of herself, her function and her purpose. She must be able to distinguish between cultural and biblical Christianity, and must not make cultural forms sacred. Healthy tension must be maintained between the conceptualists, planners and maintainers.  Imbalance in any direction will ultimately hinder the renewal and growth of the church.  We are mutually dependent.

Recruit new leadership in key positions.  Think vision, vision, vision…and pray for spring.

William Carey’s 11 Commandments of Missions

I love history and I love biography. The more I read these genres, the more I realize how much we can (and should) learn from those that have gone before us. We live in a day and age in which we “worship at the feet of modernity.”

When asked to describe what is “the heresy of modernity,” J.I. Packer described it this way:

“The belief that…

the newer is the truer,

only what is recent is decent,

every shift of ground is a step forward,

and every latest word must be hailed as the last word on its subject.”

Reading biographies of great Christian leaders of the past has been one of the single greatest sources of encouragement for me personally in my walk with Christ. One of the things you learn is that even the “great saints” were “mere men” just like the rest of us. One of my favorite biographies over the past 30+ years has been the biography of William Carey.

William Carey (1761 – 1834), English Baptist Minister and Missionary, is considered by most to be the father of modern missions. He left England for India back in the late 18th century to bring the gospel to the people of this land that worships over 330 million Hindu gods. Carey wrote out what he called his “11 Commandments of Missions.”

Ray Ortlund published this list a few days ago on his Gospel Coalition Blog. Even though it is over 200 years since Carey went to India to bring the Good News of the Gospel to these dear people, the “11 Commandments of Missions” are as relevant today as when he wrote them a few centuries ago.

1.  Set an infinite value on immortal souls.

2.  Gain all the information you can about “the snares and delusions in which these heathens are held.”

3.  Abstain from all English manners which might increase prejudice against the gospel.

4.  Watch for all opportunities for doing good, even when you are tired and hot.

5.  Make Christ crucified the great subject of your preaching.

6.  Earn the people’s confidence by your friendship.

7.  Build up the souls that are gathered.

8.  Turn the work over to “the native brethren” as soon as possible.

9.  Work with all your might to translate the Bible into their languages.  Build schools to this end.

10.  Stay alert in prayer, wrestling with God until he “famish these idols and cause the heathen to experience the blessedness that is in Christ.”

11.  Give yourself totally to this glorious cause.  Surrender your time, gifts, strength, families, the very clothes you wear.

(Listed in Christian History Magazine, Issue 36, page 34.)

If you are interested in reading a great, short biography of William Carey, I highlyWilliam Careyrecommend the account written by Vishal & Rush MangalwadiThe Legacy of William Carey: A Model for the Transformation of a Culture, put out by Crossway Books. It’s less than 150 pages, but it will give you a great overview of Carey’s life.

I leave you this week with this famous quote from Charles Spurgeon, from his book All of Grace

“Meet me in heaven!  Do not go down to hell.  There is no coming back again from that abode of misery.  Why do you wish to enter the way of death when heaven’s gate is open before you?  Do not refuse the free pardon, the full salvation which Jesus grants to all who trust him.  Do not hesitate and delay.  You have had enough of resolving, come to action.  Believe in Jesus now, with full and immediate decision.  Take with you words and come unto your Lord this day, even this day.  Remember, O soul, it may be now or never with you.  Let it be now; it would be horrible that it should be never.  Farewell.  Again I charge you, meet me in heaven.” – C. H. Spurgeon, from his book All of Grace (London, 1897), page 128.

 

Do you remember what was happening in your life in 1975?

This week, I’m honored to share with you the ministry work of GTN staff member, as well as long time friend and brother in Christ, Dan Smythe. Dan has been on staff with GTN for 5 years now, and I regularly hear dozens of exciting, life-transforming stories from him about the fruit God is bringing about as he trains pastors and church leaders all over the world.

As a side note to this story, Lisa and I have known Dan and his wife Debbie for 32 years now. Back in 1980, while Dan was serving as the new High School Youth Pastor (and department head of our church’s youth ministry), he was instrumental in mentoring me (a young, Bible-college attending, newly married Jr. High Youth Pastor).

After our years serving together in ministry at Northwest Community Church, he went on to plant and pastor several churches, while Lisa and I were sent out to plant NCC’s first daughter church in 1990. In 2007, God providentially brought Dan and I back together in ministry when he came on staff with Global Training Network. Dan is now training church planters and pastors in India, China, Cambodia and Nigeria.

If you want to hear an incredibly inspiring story of God’s work of transformation, take 3-4 minutes to watch this latest video where Dan tells the story of Pastor Samnang and his wife, Sharia, ministering on the front lines of the battle against sex trafficking in Cambodia. You’ll hear the connection of how training pastors is so vital to helping to bring an end to injustices such as sex trafficking around the world. I know you’ll be incredibly blessed and moved, as I was!

Consumer Christianity: Moving from Man-Centered Living to God-Centered Abandon (Part 2)

“When Christ calls a man, He bids him come and die. The cross is laid on every Christian. It begins with the call to abandon the attachments of this world. It is that dying of the old man which is the result of his encounter with Christ.” (Dietrich Bonhoeffer)

“More missionaries have been martyred for their faith in Christ in the past 20 years than in the previous 200 years.” (OMF Outreach, July/August 1995 issue)

“Every year since 1950, the average number of those killed for their faith in Christ worldwide is at least 150,000. That’s 150,000 annually!” (Ralph Winter, Community Night, U.S. Center for World Mission – September 1990)

“If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters—yes, even his own life—he cannot be my disciple. And anyone who does not carry his cross and follow me cannot be my disciple.” (Luke 14:26-27)

This week I continue sharing some quotes and thoughts (FYI…everything in orange font is a quote from either Scripture or an author) from a 1993 sermon series I taught on: Consumer Christianity: Moving from Man-Centered Living to God-Centered Abandon.

The Associated Press released an article from its Los Angeles office that had to do with “Religion in America.” The article said that religion in America today is undergoing some major changes.

It said…

“Many people in North America are today forming their religious beliefs much in the same way as they shop for groceries and other consumer goods.”

The article drew its research from studies that had been done by George Gallup and Canadian sociologist, Reginald Bibby. Three of the religious trends that this article mentioned were these:

1) Americans revere the Bible, but they don’t read it. The world’s most famous religious work has become a family heirloom instead of a source of ethical guidance.

2) Instead of selecting one religion or denomination, most Americans are demanding religion a la carte. They want to pick and choose from various religious sources.

3) In North America, religion is in danger of becoming a flexible product or mirror of existing cultural trends rather than providing moral direction.”

Someone once said, “The job of the preacher is to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.”

C. S. Lewis famously wrote…

“I didn’t go to religion to make me happy. I always knew a bottle of port [wine] would do that. If you want a religion to make you feel really comfortable, I certainly don’t recommend Christianity!”

Listen to what one Christian leader said about this:

“In my extensive travels over the past twelve years, I’ve met with pastors, talked with church members, and spoken in hundreds of churches. And from my observations I must conclude that the church, broadly speaking, has succumbed to many of the culture’s enticements.

I don’t want to generalize unjustly or be overly harsh, but it’s fair to say that much of the church is caught up in the success mania of American society. Often more concerned with budgets and building programs than with the body of Christ, the church places more emphasis on growth than on repentance. Suffering, sacrifice, and service have been preempted by success and self-fulfillment.

One pastor confided to me, ‘I try not to talk about subjects that make people uncomfortable. My job is to make sure they come back here week after week.’”

Stanley Hauerwas, who is professor of theological ethics at Duke University Divinity School said:

“The church in America exists in a buyer’s or consumer’s market, so any suggestion that in order to be a part of a church you must be transformed by opening your life to certain kinds of spiritual disciplines which involve hard work, inconvenience and self-sacrifice is almost impossible to maintain.

In America, the “called” church (which is the biblical term for it) has become the “voluntary” church, whose primary characteristic is that the congregation is friendly!”

Dave Dravecky, former all-star pitcher in the Major Leagues, who had to have his pitching arm amputated because of cancer – also a committed believer in Jesus Christ – wrote in his autobiography entitled When You Can’t Come Back, these powerful words:

“In America today, Christians pray for the burden of suffering to be lifted from their backs. In the rest of the world, Christians pray for stronger backs so they can bear their suffering.”

Here are some recent statistics (as of 2012)…

96% of the people who live on planet earth, live outside of the United States. The entire U.S. population only makes up 4% of the total population of planet earth.  If you live in this ‘bubble,’ that could properly be referred to as ‘The United States of Disneyland,’ you are living better than – and have more opportunities and resources than – 90% of the people living on earth today! The bottom class, the poorest of the poor in America, live better than 50% of the rest of the world (that’s 3.5 billion people!).

Chuck Colson, in his book Loving God, wrote this:

“And in the midst of all this [the emptiness in peoples lives, the moral decay within our society] we have the church – those who follow Christ. For the church, this ought to be an hour of opportunity. The church alone can provide a moral vision to a wandering people; the church alone can step into the vacuum and demonstrate that there is a sovereign, living God who is the source of Truth.

BUT, the church is in almost as much trouble as the culture, for the church has bought into the same value system: fame, success, materialism, and the celebrity syndrome. We watch the leading churches and the leading Christians for our cues. We want to emulate the best-known preachers with the biggest sanctuaries and the grandest edifices.

Preoccupation with these values has also perverted the church’s message. The assistant to one renowned media pastor, when asked the key to this man’s success, replied without hesitation, We give the people what they want”. This heresy is at the root of the most dangerous message preached today: the what’s-in-it-for-me gospel!”

J. I. Packer, in his excellent book entitled Rediscovering Holiness, wrote the following [this was written back in the early 80’s]…

“What do we Christians mainly preach and teach and produce TV programs and video cassettes about these days? The answer seems to be not holiness, but success and positive feelingsgetting health, wealthy, freedom from care, good sex, and happy families. I remember seeing in a Christian journal a group of eight new ‘how-to’ books reviewed on a single page. How long, I wonder, is it since you heard about eight new books on holiness? Shall I guess?”

I leave you this week with a few simple, straightforward Scripture verses that tell us unambiguously what the focus of our lives should be as followers of Christ. Let these verses sink deep within our hearts and minds and ask the Lord to give us the grace needed to live these out day in and day out.

Discipline yourself for the purpose of godliness; for bodily discipline is only of little profit, but godliness is profitable for all things, since it holds promise for the present life and also for the life to come.” (1 Timothy 4:7)

Be diligent in these matters; give yourself wholly to them, so that everyone may see your progress. Watch your life and doctrine closely. Persevere in them, because if you do, you will save both yourself and your hearers.” (1 Timothy 4:15-16)

“However, I consider my life worth nothing to me, if only I may finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me—the task of testifying to the gospel of God’s grace.” (Acts 20:24)

“And he died for all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again.” (2 Corinthians 5:15)

“But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.” (Matthew 6:33)

“For the eyes of the LORD move to and fro throughout the earth that He may strongly support those whose heart is completely His.” (2 Chronicles 16:9)

“For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain.” (Philippians 1:21)

“Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves; do not merely look out for your own personal interests, but also for the interests of others. Have this attitude in yourselves which was also in Christ Jesus…” (Philippians 2:3-5)

“You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.” (Jeremiah 29:13)

“In those days there was no king in Israel; everyone did what was right in his own eyes.” (Judges 21:25)

“It is not this way among you, but whoever wishes to become great among you shall be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you shall be your slave; just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many.” (Matthew 20:26-28)

“Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship.” (Romans 12:1-2)

“Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.” (Phil. 3:12-14)

Selah!


Consumer Christianity: Moving from Man-Centered Living to God-Centered Abandon

 

It’s been over four months since my last blog post. Why? In a nutshell: GTN has been in the middle of the single most significant growth in our eight years. By God’s grace, we’ve added 24 new staff in the last 9 months – going from 40 staff to over 60. Along with managing the growth, we have implemented five substantial (and much needed) organizational structures and systems to help deal with the current and future growth in a healthy manner. All that to say, I’ve been running at a fairly fast clip.

On top of all this, we currently have another 8 to 10 couples that are in the process of potentially coming on staff in the near future. God is certainly on the move…and we are on our knees.

Thanks for your patience…and prayers.

Now for my blog post for this week….

A few years ago, Chuck Colson wrote an article entitled: “Beyond ‘Jesus and Me’.” The article described “Christian culture” in America today in a poignant way.

Colson wrote…

What is the Christian faith all about? One thing’s for sure-it’s about a lot more than your, or my, personal happiness.

Christian Smith of the University of North Carolina…a sociologist, has studied American Christianity in depth. In his book Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Life of American Teenagers, Smith writes that the “de facto dominant religion” among American teenagers is what he calls “moral therapeutic deism.”

According to this “religion,” God created and watches over the world but otherwise is only to be called upon to solve problems. All He requires is that people be nice and fair to each other, “as taught in the Bible and by most world religions.” Not surprisingly, “the central goal of life is to be happy and to feel good about oneself.”

Smith notes that moral therapeutic deism is “more than a little visible” among conservative protestant teenagers. And it’s not only teenagers. As theologian Albert Mohler has pointed out, what Smith describes is a belief “held by a large percentage of Americans.”

This kind of pabulum is the logical outcome of reducing the entirety of the Christian faith to “Jesus and me.” This Jesus does not challenge the way we see the world, much less how we live in it because He wants us to be happy; so He sanctions our desires.

Of course, as I’ve argued in my most recent book, The Faith, this Jesus bears little, if any, resemblance to the Jesus of the Scriptures and historic Christianity.

Back in the Fall of 1993 (when our young church plant was only three years old) I preached a series of sermons (six month’s worth) entitled: “Consumer Christianity: Moving from Man-Centered Living to God-Centered Abandon.”

I began the series with this statement: “I believe that we (the Christian church nationwide) have bought into the ‘man-centered, consumer-driven, convenience-oriented mentality’ when it comes to the church in America… and it’s not honoring to God.”

The first passage we looked at was 2 Timothy 3:1-5, where it says…

“But realize this, that in the last days difficult times will come. For men will be lovers of self,…” (NASB)

Here are several of the quotes that were peppered throughout the series…

“So while the church may seem to be experiencing a season of growth and prosperity [my note: which, by the way, it was back in the early 90’s], it is failing to move people to commitment and sacrifice. The hard truth is that we have substituted an institutionalized religion for the life-changing dynamic of a living faith.” (Chuck Colson)

Colson goes on to say, “I have long been bewildered by the paradox Gallup describes as ‘religion up, morality down.'”

It reminds me of what the Apostle Paul writes in Titus 1:16, “They profess to know God, but by their deeds they deny Him…” (NASB).

“The roots of the church’s identity crisis are found in the consumer mentality so pervasive in our culture. Aside from those hierarchical denominations that assign members to the parish in which they live, most Americans are free to choose which church they will join or attend. And choose they do.

Ask people what they look for in a church and the number one response is “fellowship.”

Other answers range from “good sermons” to “the music program” to “youth activities for the kids” to “it makes me feel good”. People flit about in search of what suits their taste at the moment. It’s what some have called the”McChurch” mentality. Today it might be McDonald’s for a Big Mac; tomorrow it’s Wendy’s salad bar; or perhaps the wonderful chicken sandwiches at Chick-Fil-A. Thus, the church becomes just another retail outlet, faith just another commodity. People change congregations and preachers and even denominations as readily as they change banks or grocery stores!”

As someone once put it: “We are not selling a product to a consumer, but proclaiming a savior to a sinner.”

Gregory Lewis once said, “God is not a product to be pushed, but a King to be obeyed!”

The late Leonard Ravenhill, the well-known writer on revival, once said: “The church in America is 20 miles wide but only one inch deep!”

I have always been intrigued when traveling through the Majority World as to how Christians in most of these countries have no concept of what we refer to here as“church hopping.” In most of these nations, there is only one church within a several mile proximity (with no cars to get around) that they can attend – they haveno choice! And they learn to make it work – and learn to grow together as a body through the good times and bad times.

In the beginning of John chapter 6, we see Jesus feeding the 5,000 and then walking on water. The next day, on the other side of the lake, he runs into some of those that he had fed the day before.

Pay close attention to what the text says in vv. 25-26, When they found him on the other side of the sea, they said to him, ‘Rabbi, when did you come here?’ Jesus answered them, ‘Truly, truly, I say to you, you are seeking me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves.'”

In other words, Jesus was saying to them: “You’re not converts. You’re consumers. You’re like stray cats that follow, not out of any attachment to a new owner, but because they remember who fed them last.”

Remember what the Apostle Paul wrote to Timothy in 2 Timothy 3? “…in the last days difficult times will come. For men will be lovers of self…”

Next week I’ll share a few more quotes and thoughts from my 1993 series on“Consumer Christianity: Moving from Man-Centered Living to God-Centered Abandon.”

And finally, a quote to ponder…

“God’s primary concern is our holiness, not our happiness.”

(Note: In the coming weeks I will also be wrapping up the last few blog posts on “10 Lessons I Wish (as a pastor) that I had Known, Understood, Believed and Lived 30 Years Ago” and then combining all 10 lessons into one single PDF file for pastors, church planters and other young leaders to use and pass along).

 

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