I live in a foreign land filled with pain, sorrow, and destruction. It is filled with many people but none are from here, though many believe this place to be home. There are a few, however, that see what I see and together we eagerly await our King to rescue us and lead us back to where we belong.
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Fun Quotation
Sunday, August 16, 2009
The Madness of Sin
-Charles Spurgeon-
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Nominals, Evangelism, and the Church
I don’t have much to add to the following quotation. (Originally I was only going to put a small portion of it, but it was so good I could not stop.) We wonder why our churches are filled with so many nominal Christians. Granted Jesus told us there would be tares among the wheat (Matt.13:24-30), but at the same time are our evangelism strategies just adding to the problem?
“Some evangelism strategies seek to make the Gospel attractive to unbelievers by fronting all the benefits of Christianity and saving the costs for later. They promise that you’ll experience more satisfaction, less stress, a better sense of community, and an increased sense of meaning in life- and you’ll be prepared for eternity to boot!- if you’ll just make a decision for Christ now. Perhaps all of these things are right around the corner for the listening unbeliever. Yet what does this kind of “benefit evangelism” do to the biblical Gospel? It makes the Gospel to appear to be all about me and improving my lifestyle and making me happier.
… the Gospel is not ultimately about me. It’s about God making His holiness and sovereign mercy known. It is about God’s glory, and gathering worshipers for Himself who will worship Him in spirit and in truth. It is about God vindicating His holiness by punishing Christ for the sins of all those who repent and believe. It is about making a name for Himself in the world by gathering a people and separating them to Himself for the spread of His fame to the nations.
'Benefit evangelism' fills our churches with people who are taught to expect everything to go their way just because they became Christians. But Jesus promises persecution for following Him, not worldly perks. We want to build Christians and churches who preserve through hardship, who are willing to suffer and be persecuted and even die for the Gospel of Christ, because they value God’s glory more than the temporal benefits of conversion. We don’t want people to become Christians because it will reduce their stress. We want them to become Christians because they know they need to repent of their sins, believe in Jesus Christ, and joyfully take up their cross and follow Him for the glory of God.”
Taken from "The Deliberate Church", by Mark Dever and Paul Alexander