It has been brought to my attention that my previous blog might have caused some confusion among my home church with regards to a certain situation there.... That was not my intention at all, and I apologize to anyone that may have been confused by my blog.
I mentioned that we had asked two Latins to leave the church, and currently there is a similar situation that occurred in my home church. There are two differences in the situations that should be made aware to those reading my blog. First, is that those two young men were bringing major division to the church by their attitudes, and were completely unrepentant. They were given chance after chance to redeem their ways; sadly that is not the case of the situation in my home church.... Secondly, and most importantly, our ENTIRE church was in agreement with the decision we made; it was not a few people making a decision for "the greater good" of the people. I know for a fact that my home church (which means every member according to the Bible!) has not been in unanimous agreement with this decision, and that is the biggest difference between the two situations. Please also keep in mind that I am still a member of my home church, even though I am serving here in Peru for God's glory. It is not my intention to cause division in the church, only to bring the bride of Christ back to it's Biblical roots.
Again, I apologize to everyone that I may have confused, and I hope this has clarified it. If anyone wishes to talk to me, please feel free to email me at redhusky03@gmail.com and I will get back to you as soon as possible.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Monday, July 6, 2009
Being the Church Is Not Easy (a.k.a. It's Hard!!)
I would like to share with y'all what's been going on the past few days down here in Iquitos... Where to start, where to start?? Well, I'll start at the end, and work my way backwards. Yesterday, as the church, we asked two believers to leave the training, and return to their home town. Some sins came to light about a trip they had recently made while going through the training here. We asked them about it, and they were completely unrepentant so we had to do what the Bible calls us to do in the situation (Matt 18:15-17): we had to, in loving kindness, ask them to leave because of the harm they were causing to the church. Through their attitude they were destroying the other believers' focus on God, and refocusing it on immature things of this world. I'm not going to lie; the last two days have been extremely hard on me because this is not the first time I've done this. I've done it before, last December in Bolivia; same situation... A missionary was in sin and was unrepentant, so we decided as the church to send him back home. I thought to myself; "When have I ever heard of a 'church' in the States asking someone to leave?! What in the world?! How can I have partaken two times in the last seven months asking people to leave and there are 'churches' in the States who have never done it in their entire history??"
The answer is simple enough: being the church is not easy! Yes, I know that pretty much everyone will agree with their mouths "we are the church all the time, Jeff" but the majority are not practicing that in any way. They've learned to parrot it whenever someone says that so as to feel Biblical in some small way, but to look at their lives speaks something completely different. Easiest example of this: where do Christians go Sunday mornings? To church, of course! Well, that seems to me like the underlying feeling then is that people aren't the church, and a place is. As a result, people revere the building because "it's God's house." I can't remember how many times I've heard that phrase from pastors talking about the building. That is nowhere in the Bible! Every time the New Testament speaks of church, "εκκλησία" in the Greek, it speaks of people. The word literally means "congregation." Hmm, that's interesting... Just crack open Hebrews and start reading; that letter just tears to pieces the idea of a building as 'the church.' Just listen to this (Heb 3:5-6): Now Moses was faithful in all God's house as a servant, to testify to the things that were to be spoken later, but Christ is faithful over God's house as a son. And we are his house if indeed we hold fast our confidence and our boasting in our hope." So we are his house....
1 Corinthians 3:16- "Do you not know that you are God's temple and that God's Spirit dwells in you?" 2 Corinthians 6:16- "What agreement has the temple of God with idols? For we are the temple of the living God; as God said, 'I will make my dwelling place among them and walk among them, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people.'" So we are his temple....
Read chapter 9 of Hebrews... Go on, this blog will still be here after you finish. What did you think?
"So why did Jeff go off on this rant against the 'church'?" you ask yourself. I haven't... I'm just trying to open eyes and hearts to see that we are called to be the church every day, not just one pitiful hour on Sunday morning; that is NOT the church as Christ imagined it, yearns for it to be. At home with our familes, we definitely need to be the church. At work with our co-workers (as much as we may loathe them), we must continue to be the church. Yes, even in that building sadly called "church," we need to be the church. Being the church is not being hunky-dory all the time; it's being real, raw, more than the "I'm doing good" (when you're not good) of Sunday morning answers. And that scares people. To see the church in great action, read Acts. They knew what it meant to truly be the church. They were human as well; sometimes we lose sight of that, and picture all the real people of the Bible as saints who found it easy to be the church. No!! They struggled just as much as we do today.
I pray that God may encourage you in some way, and that He can give you the love, strength, honesty, and patience to be the church all the time in your life.
The answer is simple enough: being the church is not easy! Yes, I know that pretty much everyone will agree with their mouths "we are the church all the time, Jeff" but the majority are not practicing that in any way. They've learned to parrot it whenever someone says that so as to feel Biblical in some small way, but to look at their lives speaks something completely different. Easiest example of this: where do Christians go Sunday mornings? To church, of course! Well, that seems to me like the underlying feeling then is that people aren't the church, and a place is. As a result, people revere the building because "it's God's house." I can't remember how many times I've heard that phrase from pastors talking about the building. That is nowhere in the Bible! Every time the New Testament speaks of church, "εκκλησία" in the Greek, it speaks of people. The word literally means "congregation." Hmm, that's interesting... Just crack open Hebrews and start reading; that letter just tears to pieces the idea of a building as 'the church.' Just listen to this (Heb 3:5-6): Now Moses was faithful in all God's house as a servant, to testify to the things that were to be spoken later, but Christ is faithful over God's house as a son. And we are his house if indeed we hold fast our confidence and our boasting in our hope." So we are his house....
1 Corinthians 3:16- "Do you not know that you are God's temple and that God's Spirit dwells in you?" 2 Corinthians 6:16- "What agreement has the temple of God with idols? For we are the temple of the living God; as God said, 'I will make my dwelling place among them and walk among them, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people.'" So we are his temple....
Read chapter 9 of Hebrews... Go on, this blog will still be here after you finish. What did you think?
"So why did Jeff go off on this rant against the 'church'?" you ask yourself. I haven't... I'm just trying to open eyes and hearts to see that we are called to be the church every day, not just one pitiful hour on Sunday morning; that is NOT the church as Christ imagined it, yearns for it to be. At home with our familes, we definitely need to be the church. At work with our co-workers (as much as we may loathe them), we must continue to be the church. Yes, even in that building sadly called "church," we need to be the church. Being the church is not being hunky-dory all the time; it's being real, raw, more than the "I'm doing good" (when you're not good) of Sunday morning answers. And that scares people. To see the church in great action, read Acts. They knew what it meant to truly be the church. They were human as well; sometimes we lose sight of that, and picture all the real people of the Bible as saints who found it easy to be the church. No!! They struggled just as much as we do today.
I pray that God may encourage you in some way, and that He can give you the love, strength, honesty, and patience to be the church all the time in your life.
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