Categories
Christian Living

Follow Up Thoughts on Persecution from Albert Barnes

In my previous post, I asked the question – If I’m not persecuted can I be a “good” Christian? Today, I want to have a short follow-up on this idea of persecution.
two goats butting heads - symbolizing standing against persecution
Albert Barnes helpful definition of persecution indicated that it comes in many forms, including ridicule, insults, or even simple exclusion from a group due to your Christian beliefs or behavior. Not only did he provide a defintion of persecution, but he also provided some practical thoughts about the issue:

(1.) Christians should prepare to be persecuted. One of the proper qualifications for membership in the church should be our willingness to bear persecution and to resolve not to shrink from any duty in order to avoid persecution (which included ridicule, insults, or even simple exclusion).
 
(2.) They who are persecuted for their opinions should consider that this may be an evidence that they have the Spirit of Christ, and are his true friends. They should remember that, in this respect, they are treated as the Master was, and are in the good company of the prophets, apostles, and martyrs; for they were all persecuted.

However,
(3.) If we are persecuted, we should carefully inquire, before we avail ourselves of this consolation, whether we are persecuted because we “live godly in Christ Jesus,” or for some other reason.
      For example, a man may embrace some absurd opinion and call it religion; he may adopt some mode of dress that is unbelievably ludicrous, and may call it conscience; or he may be lacking in his manners, and rude in his demeanor with others, outraging all the laws of social life, and may call this “standing against the world.” For these types of behaviors, he may be condemned, ridiculed, and despised. But let him not believe that he is to be enrolled among the list of martyrs for this exclusion. The persecution which will properly furnish the evidence that we are the friends of Christ must only be that which is “for righteousness’ sake.”
 
(4.) Let those who have never been persecuted in any way inquire whether it is not an evidence that they have no religion. It is easy for a professed Christian to avoid persecution, if he yields to others at every point in which his religion is opposed to the world. But he needs to consider that if he finds himself yielding at every single point, then he may not be entitled to the Christian name.

—Albert Barnes (from the mid-1800’s)

Are you standing strong for Christ where others would have you bend?

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Categories
Christian Living

Excelling Still More as a Disciple of Jesus Christ

What are you excelling at in your life right now? Paul indicates to the Thessalonicans that, though they are walking well in the way they are following Jesus, they should strive to excel even more. We have used that phrase to be a distinctive of how we will strive to live as church members at FBC Newton:

“I Am a Disciple.
I Am a Disciple-Maker.
And I Am a Missionary.
So as I am going,
I will change my conversations, and
I will excel still more.”

This year, we have also added these three habits: And I will study, practice, and teach God’s Word.

As disciples, we are to walk like Jesus walked.
And, according to 1 Thess 4, we are to Excel Still More.

In verse 1, Paul says: “Finally then, brethren, we request and exhort you in the Lord Jesus, that as you received from us instruction as to how you ought to walk and please God (just as you actually do walk), that you excel still more.”

They were walking in a way to please God, but Paul urged them to excel even more.

And then again, in verse 10, as Paul speaks about them being people of love toward others, he states: “…Indeed you do practice it toward all the brethren who are in all Macedonia. But we urge you, brethren, to excel still more.”

Therefore, I encourage each of us who are disciples, to take up these commitments:
1. I will excel still more in my understanding of God and obedience to Him.
2. I Will Love God’s Word
3. I Will Love to Pray
4. I Will Love to Obey
5. I Will Use my spiritual gifts to build up the church.

If you are not doing these things – reading God’s Word regularly, praying daily, serving in a way that builds up the church, then you are not properly fulfilling your role of being a disciple.

Let us be focused on excelling still more as followers and disciples of Jesus.

Categories
Church

Family: The Gospel Unites Us in a Way Nothing Else Can

photo of the inside of a sanctuary where a church family meets each week
A Church? Nope. An Empty Sanctuary. The Church Meets Here Each Week.

In his book Love in Hard Places, D. A. Carson discusses the fact that church is a family:

The church itself is not made up of natural “friends.” …What binds us together is not common education, common race, common income levels, common politics, common nationality, common accents, common jobs, or anything of the sort. Christians come together…because they have been saved by Jesus Christ and owe him a common allegiance. In the light of this common allegiance, in light of the fact that they have all been loved by Jesus himself, they commit themselves to doing what he says….

In this light, they are a band of natural enemies who love one another for Jesus’ sake.

Do you view your church as family?
Are you bound together in love by Jesus Christ with those you worship with each week?
Are you not that committed to your church because you don’t view them as family?

We gain so much by being part of a church family.
Make sure you have one.
And make sure to love the people in it!

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Categories
Missions

What Does a Dead Church Look Like? A Dilapidated Building?

picture of an abandoned church building that is falling apart, perhaps what some would call a dead church

I have always appreciated this description of a Dead Church that I ran across a few years ago:

A painter was asked to paint a picture of a dead church. What the client expected was probably the picture of an old ruin that had been taken over by vines of ivy and has been left in disrepair, such as the remains of some Gothic cathedral such as are seen in France or Italy. The painter, however, took a different approach, and painted a picture that was like a sermon. On his canvas he painted the inside of a cozy, well-furnished church: upholstered pews, a large organ, a beautiful wooden pulpit, and a congregation whose appearance indicated sophistication and prosperity. But over in the corner near the exit, he painted the picture of a box bearing the inscription “FOR MISSIONS,” and covering over the slot for contributions you could see a large, undisturbed cobweb. The painter knew that a church that cares nothing for missions is dead (or is dying), even if there are plenty of people in attendance.

James tells us to “Be Doers of the Word and not Hearers only.”
If you are involved in a healthy church, you’ve heard that you should be involved in missions. So have you done anything about it? It doesn’t have to be missions overseas. There are people who live near you and work beside you who God has placed near you for a reason.

Don’t be so busy with your own life that you miss the very ones that God has brought into your pathway, so that you can be the hands and feet and voice of Christ to these who are hurting and need to know Jesus.

Pray that God would break your heart for the people around you who need to know Him.

Categories
Relationships

Being Sick, But Acting Healthy

Apologies all around to those who expect to see a post from me at least once a week!
In fact, I like to post something at least a couple of times a week, but this is my first post in exactly two weeks. No excuses other than just got too busy!

Who goes to the hospital? Those who know they are not well. Those who are sick. a stethoscope symbolizing the idea of being sick Other than the medical staff, other employees, and visitors, the healthy folk generally try to avoid hospitals. Jesus said that He did not come for the healthy, but for those who knew they were unhealthy and needed help.

That leads me to think that churches should be very open to those who know they are spiritually unhealthy. So why is it that we often find church to be a place where it is not okay to be anything less than perfect?

“The Church must be a place where it is okay not to be okay. The culture of the Church needs to be a safe place for the weary, weak, and wobbly. Of all places, we should welcome those who are honest about their burdens, frustrations, and pitfalls. Our people cannot be honest about their shortcomings in the marketplace. The Church provides the release valve of grace that we all desperately need, leadership included.

“It is far too common for the church to expend precious energies masquerading and upholding images rather than walking in transparency and authenticity. Ministry is messy because life is messy, and nobody is excluded from the mess. If it is not okay not to be okay in a church, then what are we doing? Where is the gospel? The hope we have in Christ is that it is okay not to be okay, but that He is leading us to greater levels of health and maturity.”
(‘Creature of the Word’ by Matt Chandler)

We are all… not okay.
We are all… not healthy.
We are all… in need of a Great Physician.

And yet… we try to hide this truth from one another so often… even at church.
Let us always remember that “The church…is a hospital in which nobody is completely well, and anyone can relapse at any time” (J.I. Packer).

Let us have grace for one another in our sickness, longing for the day of wholeness from the touch of God’s healing hand.