When things go well, and life is easy, we tend to develop bad habits based on the false assumption things will continue as they are. We dare not assume in serving Christ this is true. While we may well be facing the End Times, that is not the point. The world is on the verge of dramatic changes. With them may well come both natural cataclysm and social-political upheaval. At the very least, we should expect in the next few years serious economic hardship. This is not about The Great Tribulation, but tribulation in general. What would we do differently in the face of losing all the things on which we now rely? While my basic answer assumes shifting to house church operations, much of this I hope would be considered by mainstream church organizations before tribulation comes.
Were I in agreement with much of the current teaching about such things, there would be no need to write anything. So it is obvious I consider it flawed in one way or another, and would offer what I hope would be a corrective. By no means do I hope to start some movement, for such thinking goes to the core of what I believe is wrong. The churches of today, especially in the West, have become too deeply enamored with human methods and means, struggling in vain to do the work of God by their hands.
As I am addressing Baptists, much of what follows reflects that background. However, as I seek to recover the best elements of both the Reformation and the Early Church, the material should easily be applicable to most evangelical backgrounds. There are certain assumptions which are not discussed nor debated here, best summed up as the Five Fundamentals:
Politics in the Church -- Seeking to correct our understanding of the place of politics.
Christians and Government -- We examine the major Bible passages devoted to a New Testament understanding of how Christians deal with government.
Reformed Eschatology -- Dispensationalism is a recent departure from a long history of something much simpler and easier to understand.
Doctrinal Issues -- A number of other contentious issues are covered.
Church from Scratch -- Considerations on how to approach the work of making church what it should be.
Why the House Church Model? -- In many situations, the best way to do church is to simply be a church.
What If You Could? -- It may well be the local Christian leader is the only thing resembling community leadership in the coming tribulations. What if you could build your own local government from scratch?
Failed Assumptions: East vs. West -- For those who have no exposure to cultural studies, this will clarify the differences.
I've watched politics destroy a church. Not in the sense of internal politics causing a church to fracture; that's bad enough. Rather, I am referring to a church which became so engaged in secular politics she was no longer a church. The gospel message was compromised, the mission perverted, and all with the enthusiastic support of the voting members. It went to the point of temporarily hiring an administrator who was never there, but whose sole purpose in life was to give speeches and slide shows promoting a particular political agenda. Hiring him allowed him to pursue this political campaign until his books and articles began to sell, and his political foundation began producing enough money to pay his living expenses. Sure, he quoted Scripture the whole way through his many speeches, but not once did he share the gospel message, nor point to it. The church had become a secular political institution with religious overtones. It was not a lighthouse to the lost.
It is all well and good to seek a biblical understanding of modern political issues. The problem is far too many assume God favors their particular party, and anything the party supports is de facto the one and only proper Christian position. The assumption is their values are God's values, because the meaning of Scripture has been so twisted in their minds they can't see it condemns them. This is hardly different from perverting the vernacular to force political meanings into common words and phrases. At one time, to ``discriminate" meant drawing a distinction between one thing and another. The ability to do this indicated an educated and fine logical mind. There was a time when "free market" meant there we no entry fees, and no one was permitted by sheer wealth to purchase a dominant position, nor use bribes to purchase favorable regulation. Just so, we have twisted the meaning of God's Word to support a political involvement He condemns.
With so very many Western churches involved in politics these days, often loudly proclaiming they follow God's hand in supporting sometimes contradictory policies, the genuine biblical position must inevitably sound radical. It helps if we first examine the context. It requires going quite far back, even to Genesis.
Understanding why politics don't belong in the church requires understanding the history of Covenants. The original covenant between God and man is implied, but not clearly stated in Scripture. I call it the Covenant of Creation -- if you exist, you are obliged to acknowledge God is your Creator. This is reflected in Genesis 4:26, "Then men began to call upon the name of the Lord." Obviously, this would include some effort to avoid offending Him. It incorporates the most basic sacrificial system, including blood offerings. Also note, Balaam knew God from this angle.
Next comes the Covenant of Noah, something widely recognized among Jewish scholars. It applies to all humanity, and particularly aimed at sinners. Taken from the Genesis 8-9, it cites God's promise to maintain a natural order, with predictable seasons. This is tied directly to the requirement to hold men accountable for murder. That symbolizes a much larger requirement to maintain a civil order. Civilization is defined as the set of habits required for large numbers of people to live in close proximity without killing each other. Allowing humans to become predators is unacceptable. No civil order, no natural order.
With Abraham we have the first clear enunciation of personal salvation. The Covenant of Abraham is more than just a promise to bring forth a nation from him. The substance of it was offering to Abraham such as would represent in his mind eternal salvation, in exchange for Abraham offering up everything he would have valued as a man. In essence, this is the same as Galatians 2:20. It is in the following chapter of Galatians Paul makes clear the promise of Abraham was not actually to those of his bloodline, but of his faith-line. Clearly, this same covenant still stands, and in Christ was merely renewed, given a clarification in the Son of God.
In order to create the proper setting for the birth of that Son, God gave the Children of Israel a covenant of law through Moses. This Covenant of Moseswas poorly understood from the start. Paul continues in Galatians 4 explaining how the Law was never intended to be permanent. It was a temporary annex falling under previous covenants, having a distinct set of limits: that people, that time, that place. It was set to expire on the Cross. There is nothing of it left to fulfill. At that time, the natural Israel would be superseded by the Spiritual Israel. As Paul so plainly says, there is no longer any distinction between Jews and Gentiles, as all must come to God through faith in the Son as a gift of divine grace. He connects it to the Covenant of Abraham by calling all those born-again "Children of Abraham."
The Law of Moses was limited in many ways. When discussing the issue of divorce (Mark 10:2-12), Jesus made it clear Mosaic Law was a poor shadow of the actual Law of God. This accords well with the explanation in Hebrews, how the Tabernacle was simply a model of the Temple in Heaven (Hebrews 8:5). Even during the time when the Law of Moses was in effect, moments of clarity showed ritual purity was not what God really wanted from mankind (1 Samuel 15:22-23). Examine Leviticus and you'll see very few violations were fatal; most could be dealt with in a proper show of repentance. Personal redemption was still a matter of faith, and the Covenant of Abraham still applied.
This is not to say the Law did not offer any benefits. Prominent under the Law was the promise obedience to its provisions would bring shalom, usually translated "peace." Along with mere tranquility, this kind of peace implied much more: prosperity, protection from plagues, and political stability and dominance. In other words, all the things required for a society to remain stable and strong. This is the epitome of worldly comfort, what is now today often called "success." Today's American middle-class dream was offered to the Children of Israel as God's response to their adherence to the Covenant of Moses.
Here we arrive at the crux of matter. If all you really want from life is success and happiness, you need but apply the Law of Moses. Not so much in the sense of becoming an observant Jew, but simply understanding the basic common-sense principles discernible in the Mosaic Code. You see, the Law was not simply a new thing handed Moses on the Mount, but incorporated a great deal of lore already common to most Semitic cultures since the days of Noah. For example, tithing was well established before Abraham. The basic elements of kosher (dietary laws) were known to Noah. Pare away those items merely ceremonial, and one can extract good principles of daily life; it's not that hard. Surely you can grasp the educational and self-fulfillment guidelines, the healthy diet, economic principles, etc. All you need is to ensure the society in which you live observes this lifestyle.
This is precisely what most big names are preaching today as their "gospel." Sure, there's plenty of talk about being born again, but the real crux of the matter is having a prosperous, healthy and happy life. These programs seek to make the local church a cultural center, the guiding light of social renewal. That it works so well for that purpose is what keeps it selling. It goes under all sorts of labels: Purpose-Driven, Seeker Sensitive, Victory Living, etc. Somehow, they've gotten the wires crossed, convinced this is what Jesus came to reveal.
However, they fail to go far enough in obeying the Mosaic principles, and are certainly avoiding the gospel of grace saving us from a sure damnation. Indeed, do you really want a good and happy existence? Will you settle for that? Then you must first take back the social and cultural dominance of your country. Further, you will have to more arduously enforce the provisions. Want to end sexual impurity in your world? It really is necessary to execute adulterers and perverts, or politics will allow them to demand full freedom. Don't forget you must stop charging interest to anyone on your side ("the righteous"), but sock it to those with a differing social agenda ("pagans"). This places the balance of economic power with the "good" people, and impoverishes "sinners." Naturally, this includes making sure everyone votes for the right policies, and the right people. History proves such oppressive measures are necessary, and they do work, but it's not what Jesus taught.
Meanwhile, Jesus promised His followers the world would not give them prosperity and happiness. From the Wilderness Temptation on, Jesus made it clear He had no interest in ending hunger and poverty, spared no concern for keeping folks entertained and motivated, and certainly planned to avoid politics (Luke 4:1-13). His interest was revealing His Father's real agenda, then fulfilling that agenda by dying on the Cross. How did our churches get all this backwards? What happened to a bold and blunt warning to folks they were sinners, and deservedly going to roast in Hell?
It's a matter of focus. There's nothing wrong with success in this world, unless it comes at the price of interfering with the gospel. There were dozens of examples where Jesus defied the typical understanding of worldly success. It was not a waste to pour exotic perfume on His feet. Fasting had nothing to do with cleansing the system, and everything to do with preferring spiritual strength over the physical. Not a single healing was based on simple human need, but on demonstrating His authority from God. He most often used that authority to shake up the established order in religion, not in politics. He made it clear investing in worship facilities could be quite pointless (John 4:23-24). His demands of the Rich Young Ruler (Matthew 19:16-22) were not about trading up to a higher level of wealth, but a wholly different kind of wealth. Broken homes (Luke 12:51-53) were to be expected, and social admiration and respect were considered unlikely (John 15:18-20) for those who truly followed Jesus.
That all of this ran counter to Jewish expectations for the Messiah is all too obvious. Even the Twelve, after the Resurrection, kept expecting Jesus to announce it was time to campaign for a restoration of the Davidic throne with Him on it. In the last hour in Gethsemane, Peter tried to use human means to preserve this dream. Had Jesus the least concern for breaking Rome's dominance, evil as she was, He could have called an army of angels to handle it (Matthew 26:52-53). Instead, He had already warned the Jews Rome's control over the common currency gave her every right to tax oppressively (Matthew 22:15-22). Righting every wrong was far from Jesus' mind and mission, as it was far from His commission to His followers, as well (Matthew 28:18-20).
It's not a question of who rules the world: "All authority has been given to Me in heaven and earth." Rulers and laws are His problem, so leave it in His capable hands. Your calling is to focus on making sure you are empowered by your worship of Him, united in your love for Him, and committed at all costs to making sure the gospel is heard. None of this requires feathering your nest by making sure the world around you is loaded with shalom. Rather, it means being so powerfully committed to Him, and having so completely abandoned all human desires, hopes and dreams, no earthly power can prevent you sharing the gospel message. That's the real victory, the real success, real wealth, real peace, real power.
Scripture does indeed teach us how we ought to relate to human governments. For the most part, we are uninvolved, with the same degree of detachment we face all worldly concerns.
It's no secret the thirteenth chapter of Paul's Letter to the Romans has been much abused. On the one hand, those seeking support for oppressive regimes use it to bludgeon believers into a love affair with the ruling regime. For them, let's be clear the passage says "submit," not "support." On the other hand, the same passage has been read by others as describing the requirement of governments to ensure they are enforcing actual good. Frankly, this is not supported by the grammar. Twisting it around backwards to provide an excuse for active resistance to that same regime won't do. However, while I reject the most common understandings of this passage, I agree it's often taken out of context, at the very least.
The context begins with Genesis 8 and 9. Take a quick look, and you'll see where, after Noah emerges from the Ark, Jehovah promises there will be a predictable weather pattern. In other words, there will be a natural order. In return, He demands all humanity keep a civil order. The nature of His command calls for a government, and it must bear the sword, forcing those under its authority to obey on threat of death. Without this, we would see a return to the awful conditions which justified the Flood. Given there is nothing here of spiritual redemption, we rightly deduce this Covenant of Noah applies broadly to all humankind. As such, it's primary actors will be fallen beings, unredeemed sinners. In case you aren't paying attention, this is about regulating the behavior of those who don't love the Lord.
Back to Romans. Verses 1-7 pretty much echo this context of the Covenant of Noah. If you resist human government established under that covenant, the government can kill you. That's what governments do, in part because they are fallen. Paul is making a broad statement of principle applicable to all humanity, primarily those fallen sinners. Christians in Rome who knew their Old Testament, the Bible of that day, would recognize the reference.
Hidden in this is a sarcastic remark which would have made Romans chuckle. Then Emperor Nero liked to brag often he was the ruler "in whose hands the sword is idle." It was pure propaganda, and most folks realized it. Thus, "he does not bear the sword idly." Paul is mocking Nero.
In the process, he reminds the Romans they are forced to operate in this climate of violent oppression because there are so very many sinners in the world. Were it not for some harsh rulers bearing the sword, it might be well nigh impossible to get the gospel message out. Were it not for Roman hegemony, Roman Citizen Paul might not have so easily voyaged all over the Mediterranean with the message of Christ. Rome was useful, if unpleasant. And surely Nero, soon after Paul's letter, became quite the persecutor of Christians. Still, Christians had no business interfering in the process God left in place for sinners governing sinners. Pay your taxes and try to stay out of the way, because in the broad general sense of things, civil law is good.
Of course, in the previous chapter, Paul made it clear we do not live by that fallen viewpoint on life. We have a totally different orientation. We are not of this world. We turn worldly instincts upside down, because we care little for what belongs here. That is, Christians view all things in this world with a sense of detachment. All God's creation is a tool for the revelation of Eternity. So when you are abused, take no vengeance; God has a plan for that. He has a fallen world government system which He uses.
After describing that system, starting in verse 8 Paul reminds his Roman brothers and sisters they don't belong to it. They are stuck in it, and must respond to it, but it doesn't own their souls. It can take their stuff, and even their lives, but those aren't that important to Christians compared to the treasures of the Kingdom. Indeed, by our focus on following and obeying Jesus, we are relieved of our responsibilities under the Covenant of Noah, as far as God is concerned. Indeed, even under the Law of Moses, it was a matter of dealing with the things of this world. However, we are under the Lord of all Creation (Matthew 28:18). His power is love, and "Love does no harm to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfillment of the law." That "law" is a reference to both the Law of Moses and the Covenant of Noah.
If we keep our minds on obeying Jesus Christ, God does not hold us accountable to Him for whether we obey Noah or Moses. That's not to say consequences of bad law won't cause us distress, but we aren't required by God to please earthly masters when we have pleased Him. Take His viewpoint, and let go the part of you belonging to this world: "Make no provision for the flesh" (v. 14). We do what we must do to bring His presence to earth in our bodies. If that means breaking some man's law, we do so with the courage of His approval.
That means neither are we part of some resistance, nor do we slavishly obey civil law. We don't campaign for either side. For the most part, we are detached from such things. They aren't eternal, and what we see today is subject to change tomorrow, unlike the things of the Kingdom of Heaven. Stay out of politics. Oh, sure, go ahead and vote, but don't ever act as if these things matter in the long run. By no means should Christians expect to accomplish much by governing. True believers will be too merciful, and invite chaos. On the other hand, anyone capable of effective ruling will have a very limited opportunity to promote the gospel. You can engage one realm or the other, but not both.
Now turn to Matthew 25, and drop down to verse 31. It's a parable, with an extended explanation added on, running to verse 46. Notice how Jesus follows the very Eastern pattern of blending the parable with the explanation, to the irritation of Western minds. Maybe that helps to explain why so very many people don't understand this part of Matthew. The parable is rather simple:
But when the Son of man comes in His glory, and all the holy angels with Him, then He shall sit on the throne of His glory. And all nations shall be gathered before Him. And He shall separate them from one another, as a shepherd divides the sheep from the goats. And indeed He shall set the sheep on His right hand, but the goats off the left. (vv. 31-33)
Indeed, the parable is just two sentences out of that. First, understand there is nothing inherently bad about goats; they were then, and are today, an important herd animal in the economy. But they aren't sheep, and don't provide what sheep provide. Sheep are generally less trouble for pretty much the same reason goats are put in a sheep herd: sheep are stupid. Goats are aggressive and independent minded. So you put a few goats in your herd of stupid sheep to pay attention to threats. Sheep will keep their heads down and eat if a quiet predator snatches one or two of their number. If the predator is noisy, they'll run away, but will pay no attention whatsoever where they are going. Goats will either attack a threat or run from it, and will run to a safe place. They are first to run, and where they run, the sheep will follow. This is a parable, a metaphor for the bigger picture. Jesus chose carefully. The very point behind using the image was to call attention to the very important difference between the righteous and the sinners.
The righteous are like sheep. Not in the sense of being stupid, but of being preoccupied with the sort of things Jesus discussed in the following verses. We, the Redeemed, tend to see the world differently than sinners. We see human need as an opportunity, a calling upon our very lives to extend His love and kindness. He uses us that way for a reason - love is the primary manifestation of His glory. We have a peculiar power to love the unlovely, the unlovable, and to sacrifice to Him the things we offer those in need. By our living His love for a lost and dying world, they become conscious of God, and learn something about Him. We have a focus, and we aren't much good at paying attention to other things in this world.
The goats are smarter, hardier, and don't really care about the sheep. Still, they are useful, because their focus on their own needs is a clue to the sheep it's time to do things differently. It may take the sheep away from the best grass, but also away from predators, or away from the cliff face. Sheep will stumble right over a cliff face. Shepherds know goats will tend to move out to the far perimeter of the herd, their blind spot, because they enjoy neither the company of sheep nor of humans very much. Goats will respond to the shepherd rather indifferently at times, but won't care to be left completely behind when the much more obedient sheep move to another pasture. They will fight with the rams from time to time, as even rams can be rough if aroused. Generally the goats will win because they are tougher, and have more effective tactics. They'll do things rams won't do.
God's goats are needed until the Final Harvest. When the End comes, they won't even comprehend why they can't be included in the sheep. They were just taking care of themselves as goats do. The sheep may not even realize just how much good they've done, not recognizing when Jesus called to them from the dark recesses of human misery. The Holy Spirit compels so mightily, it seems natural. How could one not care? Goats will do some good, only as a by-product of their self-interest. Yes, it's messy, but it's the only way things can work out; there have to be goats. We humans have chosen the Fall, and God's answer was the Covenant of Noah: There shall be a civil order enforced at the point of a sword. This will inevitably lead to attacks on God's sheep by the goats, but He is the One to bear the losses. Our focus is feeding on His Word and Spirit, and making more sheep.
In this world, we hold to a higher purpose: We are building a kingdom not of this world. The affairs of this world are in the hands of God, and we should hardly be interested in how fallen men run this fallen world. If we get too involved, we will get hurt, and hurt others greatly. Better to let the goats take care of these matters, however poorly they may do it. It's their calling, and God rules their minds for His purposes. We have a different mind, a different purpose.
In our examination of Romans 13, we noted there is appointed by God a burden of responsibility on fallen humanity to provide a civil government. While the solution is hardly perfect, such government bears the sword for the sole purpose of preventing the mess Noah faced before the Flood. In the sense Our Creator mandated such a thing, civil law is "good." Jesus also explained it by the parable of Goats and Sheep. Paul's explanation to the Romans comes in a certain context, which is found by examining the previous chapter, Romans 12.
For our purpose here, we note 12:1 says in part, "Present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service." Whatever else you might make of that, you must include the idea our earthly existence is forfeit, a part of the covenant we make with Christ (Galatians 2:20). He owns your flesh, and all your worldly possessions. "Do not be conformed to this world" (v. 2) means we don't adopt the motives of sinners, so that we don't behave as they do. Instead, we adopt humility, especially among the Heavenly Family (v. 3). We understand that to mean accepting in Christians the variations we would never have to face in a family of mere blood kin (vv. 4-8). Just getting started on such a path requires serious attitude adjustment away from worldly ways (vv. 9-16). We show the definition of "goodness" to a watching world (v. 17).
Indeed, not just among our fellow believers, but to sinners as well, we should show the face of peace (v. 18). There are plenty of things God has commanded, and you don't have a choice in those aspects of your life. However, at every point where there is no specific command, we choose the path of maximum peace. That means yielding every place we can when our fellow humans push, as sinners do. Nobody is suggesting you must tolerate every threat and attack, but you must prepare your heart to withhold violent defense when God requires you wait for His hand. Absorb all you can. In the Law of Moses, this is reflected by the principle of "delivered into your hand" (Exodus 21:12-13). There are times the interests of the Kingdom mean someone else gets hurt or dies, but we should assume that's not typical. Surely, dear reader, you can think of obvious examples, such as defending your family, etc. Otherwise, let it go.
Most of all do not seek revenge (v. 19). This is so bluntly stated, there is no way around it. In the heat of battle, trust the Lord to show you what to do. Once it's past, it's passed. There may indeed be a compelling reason to file suit for recovery, but you had better spend some solid time in prayer with God because your loss is His loss, and His to decide whether it matters. Your entire net worth in this world is at His disposal, and you must accept up front He may well dispose of it all. Simply getting back at someone, in an on-going battle against an enemy is not God's way. It matters not at all who is right, but what is right in the Kingdom. Many of us will struggle over the manhood issue, but that's the world's way. Christian manhood is not stooping to the sinner's level.
Instead, be prepared in advance to keep on treating your enemies as if they were any other person in need (v. 20). The promise is the Lord uses such to change hearts. Would it not be far greater to win a soul to the Kingdom, and gain a new brother in Christ, than simply to get your just due? Our victory is not in getting even, but in overcoming their puny effort to provoke and cause us sorrow (v. 21).
Thus, the explanation in chapter 13 reminds you there is a system in place which is God's provision for sinners' justice, such as it may be possible on this earth. Sure, file a police report if you are victim of a crime, but otherwise stay out of it. If the police get the fools, fine. If not, it's not your problem. You are responsible for forgiving sinners for the simple reason they are sinners. You should expect them to sin. If they are fellow believers, the church stands to hear your complaint, and don't you dare take it to a civil court (1 Corinthians 6:1-11). The only other consideration is whether a professing Christian commits such an egregious sin, you are required by Scripture to regard them as lost. Thus, we are back to where we were before: Forgive them, pray for their salvation, but otherwise try to move past it. Commit that one to Satan for correction.
In John's Revelation, "The Beast" is rightly associated with any human government, but especially those which rule over large areas and large populations.
The biblical model of proper human government splits defense and enforcement on the one hand, from more mundane daily human concerns on the other hand. Thus, your government would have both a warlord and a council of chiefs. There is no provision for a central government over massive collections of humanity. That's because the assumptions are no ruler of any type should hold sway over more than his own kind of people. That's not strictly defined, but a "nation" is pretty well understood to be a rather homogeneous ethnic group, and any significant presence of some other ethnic group deserves their own chief in the ruling council. The choice of chief is mostly hereditary, but assumes a certain amount of demonstrated ability. The average male is assumed to be reasonably competent, but some are simply better. Over mundane human needs, the social concerns outside emergencies, family and blood relations are the best protection, and diversity is a threat to human survival. It's fine to make peace across ethnic boundaries, and have cultural exchange, and biblical assumptions include a peaceful and loving co-existence, but living among your own kind is the very best lifestyle for the bulk of humanity. On the balance sheets of history, the dangers of being clannish are minuscule compared to the dangers of cosmopolitan mixing.
I make no apology for how backward that may sound to modern ears, especially Western ears. Feel free to give it all the ugly labels you like, but this is God's way. Western civilization is great for hard sciences, but it really stinks as a means to understanding life. As long as we can sensibly differentiate between Western inductive analysis about tangibles, and Eastern deductive analysis about ultimate truth, we are doing fine. However, we must never forget Western Civilization is a bigger threat to Christian faith than just about any Eastern culture. Thus, where the Bible speaks to, or makes assumptions about, human society, it is revealed as absolute truth, and we are obliged by our mere existence to accommodate that. A long and careful examination of Scripture shows modern democratic theory is baloney, based on a hopelessly flawed understanding of fallen human nature.
However, the greatest threat to human life and safety in this fallen world is centralized government of any kind. As a primary example, I will note the absolute truth no government exists without corruption. Give people power, and some of them inevitably dip their hands into the stream of organizational revenue for personal use. Even in the very best church organizations, at one time or another someone embezzled, and it most certainly will happen again. When power over larger and larger groups is concentrated into fewer hands, the corruption increases in scale and depth, and humanity will suffer needlessly. The greatest hope of tyrants is each man isolated from his neighbor, unable to unite against the tyranny. Even better is having each citizen alienated from himself. Anyone who is fully self-aware and self-reliant is a problem for oppressors. A country filled with shallow-minded children is much easier to rule and milk.
Thus, by its very nature, Christian faith is the greatest threat to all oppression. First, it demands of the individual more than mere rote observance of behavioral rules. Christ requires you to join with Him in keeping an eye on your very motivations and thought processes. He requires you to examine the very depth of human nature so you can properly reveal Him in daily becoming more like Him, and less like the rest of unregenerate humanity. Second, Christian faith demands we bond together across all human boundaries with a kinship which transcends mere DNA. Our "clan" is not one of blood kin, but of faith kin. This is utterly impossible without the presence of the Holy Spirit. Knowing intellectually man should be able to do this is no help when taking down the wall of human sin nature. No man, no device, no method of human design can do this. People cannot be reconditioned to offer much more than lip-service and an eternally guilty conscience for a failure which is unavoidable. Only the very real presence of the Holy Spirit can empower such love.
Fellow Christian, you who are truly regenerate in the Lord, we together are the one greatest threat to every human government. We are a far lesser threat to a tribal leadership among our own kind (one kind by Christ's blood, not by human blood), but a threat nonetheless to any lust for rule. When our hearts are on obeying the King of Heaven, no earthly king can threaten us sufficiently to force obedience to sin. If we do not realize human government inevitably runs to sin, we do not yet understand the Word. Serve Jesus first, and you will be the most free of all humanity, regardless of laws, restraints, even chains.
One of the things which made it easiest for me to step back from the Southern Baptist institutional church was their Dispensationalist heresy. While there is no official position required by the Baptist Faith and Message, there is a common assumption you must believe in Dispensationalism in order to be a Baptist. I don't recall exactly when I realized I could no longer follow that lie, but it has been quite some years ago. I adopted the original historical viewpoint of Baptists, which is also Reformed viewpoint, most commonly referred to as Amillennialism.
You've probably seen the long shelf of books covering the typical Protestant studies of Last Things or eschatology. Most are some brand of Pre-Millennial, Pre-Tribulation, something or other. The broad nickname for it is "Dispensationalism." I am often amused at how much it takes to explain that position compared to the Reformed version. You won't find massive libraries on Reformation eschatology because it's really so very simple. Indeed, the only reason there is much at all about it is to discuss the perceived flaws in the other systems.
Reformed eschatology can be summarized like this: Jesus will come back someday, rather suddenly. He will draw us all into the air, calling up the dead believers first. Once we are assembled with Him, He will remake Heaven and Earth. He will descend with us to this new place and Eternity will have begun in the New Jerusalem (1 Thessalonians 4:13-5:3). That's it. Noteworthy is Reformed folks insist there is only one Second Coming. When He returns, He returns; none of this business of returning twice.
The foundation for understanding a biblical eschatology is understanding the covenants in Scripture. For the longest time I was teaching the Reformed position on covenants without knowing it. At this point, it would be impossible to recall the source of my understanding, because it was internalized long ago. It has been my thinking longer than I can remember. Let's look at them one more time:
Obviously, there's no room here for Dispensationalism. While Charles Alexander engages in a bit of hyperbole, he clearly enunciates the critical point of contention:
The error has taken different forms in our time, but springs from the same Judaistic root whose fundamental ground is that Jewish privilege and priority are perpetual and that the New Testament Church at best is only a makeshift arrangement of providence to tide over the time until the resources of a baffled and well-nigh impotent Godhead are assembled in sufficient force to compel at last a Jewish solution of the problem of redemption.
Alexander draws his argument chiefly from Galatians. Being a Jew is of no significance after the Cross. They rejected the fulfillment of their Mosaic Covenant in the Messiah. Their advantages are quite limited to such as having a better background for understanding spiritual things, and being by covenant first offered this Grace. Otherwise, they are just another bunch of lost souls in need of grace. That they rejected the Messiah does not make them more despicable, for we all deserve eternal wrath. Naturally, the modern Nation of Israel bears absolutely no relation to Scripture, except as an accident of history.
One of the biggest hurdles to breaking the spell of Dispensationalism is Matthew 24-25. Jesus prophesied Herod's Temple would be destroyed, to the point no two stones would remain vertically arranged. The Twelve asked two questions:
Jesus begins by answering the question unasked: What bad things come with serving in the Kingdom? This is addressed to avoid confusing that answer with those for the other two questions. He warns in verses 4-14 what events do not mark His Return: "See that you are not troubled; for all these things must come to pass" (v. 6). Verse 7 is a known prophetic phrase (Haggai 2:22) reminding them not to be concerned with the rising or passing of any human government, nor any natural disasters. That's simply the background noise of fallen human existence: "All these things are the beginnings of sorrows." The next few verses (9-14) are just the typical reaction of the world to people possessed of a single-minded commitment to a Kingdom not of this world. The Final Day will come after the gospel has reached all the world; the words do not necessarily imply immediately following that accomplishment, nor is it precisely defined what that means. It serves more to say, "It's a long way off. You need to be more concerned with your mission."
The specific prophecy of the Temple destruction we now know came true in AD70. In this (vv. 15-22), Jesus warns them to flee the city when they see the Romans violating the Temple grounds, no longer honoring the prohibition they supported while ruling the Jews by keeping non-Jews out. Some of those living at the time would need to heed this advice, and leave town, or face being caught up in the slaughter. That it was indeed a major holocaust is not in dispute. Because Christians would certainly be still in the city, Jesus promised the Father would make it quick.
For the sake of long-term Christian teaching, Jesus warns His return will not be secret. Many evil and deranged folks would claim to be Him, but it won't be like that at all. It would be something so obvious, no human could miss it. When He Returns, there won't be any confusion whatsoever what is happening (23-28). Verse 29 is a standard prophetic statement, not to be taken literally. Indeed, it was widely known even then: On the heels of any major disaster comes a "dark ages." Again, these aren't signs of the End, but just the nature of fallen human existence.
Then Jesus turns to the second question (vv. 30-31). He describes some unmistakable earmarks of His Return, something different from the previous discussion. Every eye will see Him and recognize Him as God, and angels will be visibly present. He cautions them to fix this in their minds (v. 32-33), to make sure they can tell the real deal as surely as they can discern the change of the seasons. The Second Coming is a distinct event, with no warning whatsoever. All these other signs mean other things. Then returning to His discussion of the Temple Destruction, He warns they would live to see it (v. 34), so heed the signs of this one event which is clearly forecast by signs. He reinforces that warning by mentioning His words are The Word (v. 35).
However, the Second Coming will not have any warning signs (v. 36). The Son Himself was not entrusted to know, so it's not possible for Him to tell. It compares to the Flood in that no one (except Noah) knew it was coming (vv. 37-39). It came suddenly. Using terms commonly understood to depict a sudden coming of judgment and wrath, Jesus describes a couple of scenes depicting victims snatched up by arresting soldiers (40-41). The ones taken are the guilty, and any other meaning was unknown the Jews of that time. This will not be a convenient moment for anyone.
He launches finally into a call for faithfulness (vv. 42ff through ch. 25). The whole point of all this is there will be no signs. You cannot possibly predict by any digging and extracting details to establish a sequence. Get ready now, by obeying to the fullest extent. You can't know. You can't even guess. Don't try, because it's a waste of Kingdom resources.
Thus, Jesus answers the first question plainly, but warns them not to associate the second question with the same event. His mention of the Destruction of Jerusalem was quite consistent with His message of what really matters in the Kingdom: getting away from the ancient Covenant of Moses, getting away from the focus of One Place on earth (John 4:23). It would never again matter, because that covenant was about the be finished, fulfilled, completed, with no unfinished business. Every day He had tried to help break the spell of false understanding of His Disciples, teaching them the Temple would soon be just a pile of rubble. The old ritual framework would be dead, and being a Jew would mean nothing. Only those who walked His path would find God's favor.
A part of the Reformed position on John's Revelation is to see a pattern in what John describes. Having already been imprisoned for his apostolic activities, John saw the hand of persecution was only going to get worse. Thus, the primary purpose of the book was to warn his fellow believers, and explain the need to cling so tightly to the Risen Christ they could view the coming tribulation with a sense of detachment. At the same time, John describes the pattern of fallen human government, and the pattern of how God operates in the midst of that.
Thus, while we should certainly expect a final Harlot Church riding on the back of civil government, we should hardly be surprised when she shows up at numerous points in history, in the time between the publication of his Revelation and Second Coming. We should hardly be surprised when Satan seduces the Church, drawing her into a foolish alliance with civil government. We should hardly be surprised when Satan raises up men and women to very powerful places to serve him. We should hardly be surprised there are numerous anti-christs throughout human history.
In every generation of believers suffering some form of tribulation, many are seized by the assumption they are in the End Times. It takes only a quick check of Christian literature through the ages to see that. The current generation is no different. There are great piles of books seeking to prove how this must be the final period, and struggle through massive efforts to find hidden clues in Scripture to prove it. This, when Jesus pointedly said you cannot predict His Return by reading current events. It will most certainly be a complete surprise to everyone alive when it happens; the operative term often translated "soon" would be better understood as "suddenly."
That we are indeed facing a time of tribulation is indisputable. We most certainly do have a Harlot Church with the current wedding of politics and organized religion. We have several humans exhibiting traits of the Antichrist, fooling even the Elect. From this sham wedding will come a harsh and difficult time on everyone who does not bow the knee to Antichrist. There are numerous pointless wars, and rumors of more to come; we have massive natural disasters, and they come in clusters; we have a decline of civilization and every man withdraws into the self. But we haven't really seen anything, yet. It's about to get really rough, and soon.
We are again in John's audience. Yes, John's Revelation of Jesus Christ is for our time. I seriously doubt this is the Final End, but that hardly matters. The plan is the same for every period of tribulation. Indeed, it's the same whether we believe we are in tribulation or not. We are to detach ourselves from this life, this world, and all it's passions, desires, dreams, hopes, etc. The only thing of any real importance is to lift up Jesus, to reveal Him by glorifying Him. Sure, the time of trouble is here, just outside the door. It's never been far away in the first place. That's the nature of this fallen world.
By no means could I hope to debate with anyone. What's presented here is nothing more than an explanation. Take it before the Lord; if He does not change your convictions, keep what you have. A very practical application of Reformed Theology is seeing no need to go to war with brothers and sisters in the faith. I teach and explain, but what you do with it is between you and the Lord. The most I can do is obey the command to limit pulling in the harness together with those whose convictions put them at conflict with my calling. Fellowship and worship may be largely unaffected. To the degree we can walk together, we must.
It was not easy for me to break my commitment to mainstream ecclesiology to seek an unjaundiced view of serving together with other believers. I should have done it long ago, but I kept trying to make it work. Finally, I realized I had already moved too far away from the mainstream path. Further, that path itself was moving farther in the wrong direction. Some of what follows is a matter of "we don't agree." Some of it is obviously more like "you're wrong, and you need to change." As always, I make no apology for my convictions, since I did not create them.
More than one theologian has recently suggested the richest field for spiritual harvest is the Evangelical churches of America. It's not there are so many outsiders visiting churches; there really aren't, for the most part. What they mean is far too many churches are dumbing down the gospel, and millions who believe they are saved are not.
This is more than just sniping and nit-picking between disparate theological backgrounds. However, that is precisely the objection raised by the targets of this implied accusation. What follows is Scripture. Reject it at your eternal peril. The gospel is not a mixed bouquet of different flowers from which you can choose your favorites. It has well-established elements, basic landmarks which, if any are missed, it's not the gospel. There are many ways to outline it, and serious students of the Word will recognize when something is missing:
That's pretty much bare-bones. You'll notice there's not much in there about success in contemporary society. Indeed, the opposite is assumed. If by chance a very large segment of those who share your cultural setting are on the same path to New Life in Christ, you still won't have great and easy success, but it's a little less traumatic. Jesus Himself warned finding a good spiritual consensus in any society was highly unlikely. He also warned most of the world would always be on the highway to Hell.
When a religious institution takes the focus off the desperate need of fallen humanity, the eternal doom of sin, and absolute necessity of the Cross to cancel that doom, whatever they're offering can't be called the gospel. What they do can't be called Christianity ("following Christ"). What they build can't be called a church. Of course, they always do call it those things, and so a great many are confused about those terms. Far too many ministries today aren't sharing the gospel, they are selling a moralistic brand of modern culture as a path to success in this world by it's own measures. What they offer is rightly called "conversion" as a term in psychology. However, it is not regeneration. It is not the thing Jesus described in John 3 as "born again." All the sincerity in the world won't change that.
It's possible the men and women who lead these institutions are genuinely confused, don't really know any better. I would suggest a great many are simply lacking in themselves a true regeneration. Say what you will about the Market-Driven Model of church management (Purpose-Driven, Seeker Sensitive, etc.), but in the majority of its manifestations, human sin is simply not mentioned at any point. Damnation is never discussed, and having a tough life is certainly the opposite of what they teach or expect.
As I've said before, I really don't care how you wrap it. Music style, clothing styles, facilities, technology, etc., are all externals. Pick what best fits your divine calling from God. However, if you leave out any part of what I've outlined above, I'll be first in line to condemn what you are doing as contrary to Scripture. The results of what you are doing will make your congregation a bunch of happy, fulfilled, successful... lost souls. That makes your church my mission field.
This is about the Calvinist version of the flower, the acronym T.U.L.I.P. For those who aren't sure what that means, let me quote the Wikipedia article on the Calvinist-Arminian debate:
Quinquarticular Controversy refers to the theological Calvinist-Arminian controversy that was addressed by Dutch Reformed churches at the Synod of Dort in 1618-1619. Quinquarticular (which means, "having to do with five points") refers to points of contention raised by the Arminian party in its publication of five articles of Remonstrance in 1610 and rejected by the Synod in the Canons of Dort, the essence of which is commonly referred to as the Five Points of Calvinism....
After the death of Arminius, his followers penned a petition... called a "Remonstrance," which highlighted five aspects of their theology: (1) election was conditional on faith; (2) Christ's atonement was unlimited in extent; (3) total depravity; (4) prevenient and resistible grace; and (5) the possibility of apostasy.
While not a perfect record of the history of that controversy, it is accurate enough. I note here the article mentions the political wrangling where this debate took place under the Dutch government of that day. Essentially, the final conference where this was decided was not a free debate, but a stacked deck. Thus, Calvinists missed a rich opportunity to assert proper biblical arguments.
Here's the Calvinist TULIP:
T -- Total Depravity of humanity: Humans can do nothing to save themselves, nor even want to be saved. There is no controversy here, really.
U -- Unconditional Election: God elects based on His own pleasure, and no one has any choice or input in any way.
L -- Limited Atonement: The Blood of Christ on the Cross applied only to the sins of those who were predestined to be saved.
I -- Irresistible Grace: No one who is elect can choose to reject God's grace.
P -- Perseverance of the Saints: Since we don't save ourselves, we can't lose ourselves by anything we do.
There are several problems here. First, this was a reaction to Arminian claims, which were presented as a list of five points, with only the T not in dispute. This essentially allows the other side to frame the debate, which hands them some victory already. Second, it's a good bet neither Calvin nor Arminius would have signed off 100% on the arguments attributed to them. Third, much of the dispute was entangled in politics, which makes both sides wrong in that sense. Realize this reliance on government force is an unconsidered assumption held over from when the Roman Church was a quasi-government, a huge sin. Still, it cheapens the whole thing when men can't trust God to defend His truth without forcing things at the point of a sword.
The greater error is using the Western analytical framework as the base assumption. One more time: Scripture is an Eastern mystical product, and it's teachings assume that framework. It's not so much the disputants applied inductive logic, but assumed the logical frame of reference rooted in the it. Scripture is about the organic, narrative explanation, often largely symbolic in language, because the Truth defies human understanding in the first place. We are permitted by grace, via the presence of the Holy Spirit, to grasp a relational understanding of God's will for us. Any hint of objectivity introduced does violence to the essence of Spirit. The whole debate shows a determination on both sides to extract hard, precise and objectified principles.
My claim to the label "Reformed" simplifies things for those who don't know me well, but close friends realize that's not precisely accurate. Further, to be "Calvinist" here is used in the broadest sense of the term: a reflection of Calvin's teaching. Such theological terminology can only approximate things from this author's viewpoint, since the truth in Scripture is tied directly to a less precise use of human language. As a net result, there will seldom be in my writing a reference to the TULIP acronym. To answer directly to that: T and P are bluntly stated in Scripture; however, U and I are more a matter of logical derivatives of God's sovereignty, and are somewhat beside the point. L is even farther removed from direct biblical statements, completely beside the point. Yes, I have read the Bible references used to promote each point, and a natural reading of Scripture from the Eastern perspective is the basis for my critique. In keeping with that Eastern framework, the terms used here are fuzzy.
I am not interested in debate, so don't bother. That's a Western obsession, too, and does no good for either of us.
It's pretty rare I drink any sort of alcoholic beverage. The reasons have little to do with the oddball obsession in the English-speaking world with alcohol. It has more to do with matters of taste and expense. I like European brews just fine, and I've had some really interesting wines there. Most of the stuff made in the US is simply nasty. Even when the makers know what they're doing, idiotic regulations ruin it. It's really hard to get the good stuff here, but even when you do, you still have to deal with the peculiar weirdness infecting our Anglo-American conscience.
That weirdness has a long history. During the Industrial Revolution, which started in England, mining coal became a major element in the national economy. Steam power (along with metal working) consumed vast quantities of the stuff. It was all about replacing muscle power with machinery. The one part of the process most labor intensive still was the actual mining of coal. Finding so much of it in places far from urban labor pools, mining companies built whole towns to house their workers. Such towns were miserable warrens, lacking all the amenities associated with older villages and towns.
Given alcohol abuse has always been a major problem in the lower classes, a means of escaping the ills of life, it's no surprise they took to gin with a vengeance. It was potent and very cheap, and devastated the working classes of cities where it was sold. Where the working classes were clustered unmixed in coal towns, the social mix magnified an already bad trend.
Colliding with this was the rise of numerous Christian sects unaffiliated with the Church of England. While there were a few Calvinist groups, it seems the Arminian groups were far more numerous. These religious groups wasted no time coming into mining towns and poor neighborhoods as with any other mission field. Most of this activity was Arminian, and some were simply theologically liberal. We note this is also around the time of the birth of Sociology as an academic discipline, which further removed the miraculous element of God's power. Blaming almost all the misery on alcoholism, there arose a powerful strain of prohibitionism in these religious groups. While we rightly have visions of the Salvation Army leading the way, this condemnation of alcohol as an inherently moral issue bled over into the Baptists and other Calvinist groups.
Thus, we have in 1732 the State of Georgia founded as a place to send those filling English debtors' prisons so they could start a new life, and the royal charter for the colony prohibited alcohol. While those debtors and prisoners never materialized, it is noteworthy respectable English, and therefore American, Protestant opinion held alcohol as a sin in itself. This idea has spread wherever English influence has.
However, for the most of the world, this idea is silly, even among Evangelical Protestants. We are left with a peculiarly Anglo-American neurosis, in which every effort is made to find Scripture passages to support what is "so obviously a teaching from God," of course. Sorry, but the Bible depicts only the abuse of alcohol as evil, just as one might abuse every other thing in God's Creation. Consider one critical fact from biblical history: storing the juice of grapes for more than a couple of days without refrigeration is impossible without fermentation. You can either ferment it on purpose and make wine, or you can let it ferment wildly and become poisonous. Here's another: Drinking any significant quantity of plain grape juice leads inevitably to diarrhea in most humans. Alcoholic wine usually does not. Thus, Bible stories make no sense if "wine" meant unfermented grape juice.
I note in my association with Baptists, I played by the rules while serving in churches. I never taught it was a sin, simply didn't comment on it. This past year (2006) has seen the issue rise again to the forefront in the SBC. While many voices for sanity are trying to shed this legalistic requirement -- which in effect adds to Scripture a prohibition it doesn't support -- there are many in leadership seeking to make the enforcement more harsh. Thus, it's not just a matter of assuming you agree; denominational leaders, even pastors of many churches, will be required to sign a statement including a provision they agree with the customary doctrine or be fired. Look for this to get uglier before it calms down again.
When John the Baptist appeared in the lower Jordan Valley, prophesying the need for repentance, he employed ritual washing as a means of public awareness. While no one can prove John was a member of the Essene Community, it was obvious he was a disciple of similar austerity and concern for returning to holiness and purity. I doubt anyone was confused about whether getting wet did much for the soul, but it had been for quite some time a ceremony symbolizing a commitment to seek a clear conscience.
There remains a major struggle over whether the term in Scripture is defined as sprinkling, pouring or full submersion. Jesus commanded we should practice the ritual, and the New Testament church clearly used it to signify someone committing to follow Christ. For those who emphasize the symbolism of the Holy Spirit descending upon the individual, it makes sense to insist on pouring or sprinkling. There's not much doubt the Essenes practiced immersion, requiring those involved to get themselves into the water. Whether they then dunked their heads under or poured it over the top is hard to pin down. The Greek word bapto (βαπτο) itself quite obviously requires submersion, as it is a nautical term for a sinking ship -- "whelmed."
I'm not sure it matters much between pouring and dunking, but I would insist on getting completely wet. Sprinkling a few drops is almost certainly derived sometime much later. It seems to have begun around the time of Constantine's ascension to the Imperial Roman throne in 306 AD. That so many older Reformation-based churches adhere to it reflects their having no reason to depart from Roman practice. This is also true of the practice of baptizing children and infants. We have no record of the practice in the New Testament except a few occasions of adults. Insisting baptism is an extension of the Old Covenant practice of circumcision is hard to prove. Such an argument risks the necessity of echoing too many details from Mosaic Law, and this is rejected outright.
Thus, my house church will call for either submersion and/or pouring sufficient to be completely wet. The ritual is not about joining an organization, but a public notice one claims to be a citizen of the Kingdom of God. Only those able to make such a claim will be permitted. Readiness normally requires the witness of another, established believer, symbolized by helping the new believer get wet -- either by doing the pouring or by lowering them down under the water.
The blood of believers flows mingled with that of the Savior in the celebration of His death. How sad it is something so simple has caused such controversy. I won't propose here to set aside all the debates and produce a definitive answer, only describe the answer I would use in my house church.
Call it what you wish -- Communion or Lord's Supper -- but the ritual meal in churches is extracted from the Jewish Passover observance. The evening before Jesus was arrested in the Garden of Gethsemane, He met with His disciples in a second floor private room. We understand this was the first time they celebrated in quite this fashion, and the Twelve still labored under visions of an earthly Messiah kicking out the Romans. They had just been arguing over which of them would be His right-hand man once He assumed an earthly throne. I can't imagine how He tolerated this in the face of His own agony. This was the Final Passover Meal, as after this it would have no meaning. Thus, Jesus selected the last two elements, normally representing future promises, as the beginning of the New Covenant. He was the future hope symbolized by those elements, and thus gave them a new meaning for a new future hope in His Return.
Taking the matzo set aside earlier, Jesus identified it with His body. Specifically, He described it as the sacrifice of His life, the substance of who He was and what He had taught, the incarnation and living will of Jehovah. The Cup of Blessing became the symbol of His blood shed for sins. The disciples realized He was calling Himself the Passover Lamb, and were trying to process the idea of His sacrifice. They were too busy trying to sort out the symbolism to hear Him bluntly saying He was about to die. Later, even after some forty days with them in His resurrected body, they were still asking if He was about to restore the independent kingdom status to the Nation of Israel. It took the coming of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost to make possible the full impact of what He had promised: His Kingdom could not be confined to this world, nor even this thing called "time."
Paul later reprimands the Corinthian church for having become so worldly in their observance of something totally symbolic and other-worldly. During the early years of the New Testament Church, folks would celebrate the New Passover with a continuation of the ritual meal, calling it a "Love Feast," sort of a potluck in ancient terms. Afterward, they would reenact the ritual Jesus instituted that night in Jerusalem. In Corinth, the wealthy would have leisure to gather early and pig out so as not to share with the later arriving lower classes, who worked until sundown. Some of the rich would have had time to get drunk by then. This was the same old Corinthian culture carried over into church. By the time they got around to the ritual, it was hardly in honor of the Lord Jesus. To correct this idiocy, Paul rehashed the story, then told them to drop the Love Feast, since they were incapable of doing it righteously. Until Paul could come in person to really straighten things out, it was best they simply hold the ritual observance at worship. Thus, Paul did not actually do away with the Love Feast, but ordered the Corinthians to set it aside for a time.
In our practice today, it would probably be a good idea to consider having a Love Feast -- everyone bringing food as an offering of love to Jesus Christ, then sharing equally with those who can't bring as much. However, this only works when the local body can overcome the Corinthian selfishness so common in many Western churches today. Afterward, it hardly matters what sort of bread is used, as long as it is bread. Nor would I see a demand for wine from grapes, but just about any appropriate local fruit juice. So in places like rural Indiana, why not cornbread and apple cider? Getting hung up on such details is legalism, but there's nothing wrong with sticking to matzo and wine. The ground of meaning under all this has moved, and it is no longer a detailed ritual provided in a written law. While there is nothing wrong with hearkening back to the Hebrew source, it is no less reverent to shake free of that by isolating the ritual to its new meaning.
Something I consider essential is using a common cup and a single loaf, as it were. In this, the symbolism of the Old Testament is too important, for it's not a serving, but a mere taste. It is a taste of shared food showing a promise shared by all who wait longingly for Him. As I've said elsewhere, it's wise to avoid having a congregation so large you can't reasonably share a common cup and loaf. Further, Paul makes it clear if there is no actual communion of hearts, there is no Communion Service. This business of "worthiness" was never a question of the worthy people; they are never worthy, nor can they be. It is the worthy manner which matters, wherein we all take a moment to remember our unworthiness, and solemnly celebrate His death, and look forward to His Return.
The Western Church has failed. She has moved so very far from her birth as the New Testament Church, the two would hardly recognize each other. Can we recover what has been so long lost?
Why? Why must churches continually craft programs and advertising to provoke and cajole their members just to show up half-way regularly? Why must it take weeks of pumping them up, planning all the details in advance, and handing them on a silver platter some one-day-per-year mission activity?
Thus the congregation is spoon-fed for years and never learns to feed itself. The fact is that we are delivering babies who never intend to grow, enrolling students who never intend to graduate, enlisting soldiers who never intend to fight, and registering racers who never intend to run. Our motto has become "There he is Lord, send him!" The Ship of Zion is no longer manned by a volunteer crew working for sheer love of the Captain, but is steered by a pilot and an assistant pilot, while the remainder are paying passengers who are going along for the ride and complaining as they go. Many congregations are made up of half-converted individuals who think that when Jesus said we were to be childlike, he meant "childish" and they have to be petted and pampered to even keep them coming, much less to minister to others. [from "The Priesthood of All Believers" by Karl Ketcherside]
The system draws them in, but from the start primes them to take the path of passivity. There are plenty there who don't belong, not really. To keep that bunch moving, we use lots of worldly means. In so doing, we cripple the real believers, those who would really move on their own if we let them. Unfortunately, they tend to move in ways which don't fit in the program, and certainly not in the budget. God forbid it should break their dependency on the clergy!
We seek a church filled with movers, self-propelled by the Holy Spirit living in them. By grace they come into the Kingdom, a miracle of God's hand. By grace they continue in His calling, for it remains a miracle of God's hand. We don't promote, provoke, cajole, etc. We inform and build up that which exists, because no man can create it. We allow complete freedom to decide, "I will serve Him." We seek the house church type of congregation.
Nothing in the preceding pages should signal a proposal we reject everything about mainstream churches. Much good takes place there. Organizations can work, and do so with far better results than we now see. The problem is we tend to consider poorly how to prevent the organization becoming the central concern, as if faithful to Jesus was defined solely as faithful to the organization. Was there not a Reformation over just such a false idea?
It is widely acknowledged the current typical structure is too deeply wedded to a passing cultural-political ecology. What we normally think of as Evangelical Protestant churches and denominations today have passed their heyday. Nor should we suppose the Emergent movement is anything more than a temporary fix. It may well extend her life for awhile, but she is a terminal patient. Western civilization itself is about to suffer a major shock, and it's become painfully apparent "church" is entirely too dependent on it.
Yet, we would be foolish to expect the witness of Christ to fade with it. The Body of Christ has lived through worse trials. What comes next we cannot guess, but we can be sure the Kingdom will have a witness. What "church" means, what it looks like and how it tends to operate, will certainly be different. We should never mistake the method for the mission. Any ministry which clasps to that truth, embraces and weds to it now, should expect to pass through the fire nicely.
Let us dream just a moment, and pretend some current organization wakes up. Perhaps the realization sinks in that all the trappings are just that, trappings and nothing more. What would you expect to see in a church awakened? Unlike others who have embraced the house church model, this writer will not dismiss having professionally trained called servants, but would demand they realize they are servants. Nor do we here reject ownership of real estate or facilities, but demand a flexibility not now practiced anywhere. Perhaps better would be leasing or renting. Certainly there must be a rejection of any contract with any government, if at all possible. Naturally, this envisions an end to the monster churches, but those have never been a good idea.
Saying more on these lines would only further alienate those deeply committed to the status quo. The point is made. Easier by far it would be to start a wholly new work, and let God make of it what He will, but that may be neither possible nor desirable in all cases. Let us examine some of the possibilities. Should it all come to naught, the exercise would hardly be a waste of time. To think on these things puts us far ahead of those whose faith may well die when the Hand of God moves in judgment over the West.
It would be easy to write whole volumes on what I alone see as theological failures in Southern Baptist churches. Many of my arguments aren't original. A primary example is the failure to remain close enough to the Reformed roots of theological identity. Without apology, I decry Arminian theology in all it's manifestations. Further, I have often pointed to a massive wave of Synergist teaching, regardless whether it is a conscious rejection of Monergism.
Those who teach synergism believe that salvation is a cooperative effort between God and man.... Most people, based on their own perceptions, assume synergism to be true. They assume that though God made it possible for people to be saved, it was something in them, apart from any special work of grace, that caused them to "accept Christ" as they say. That's what it seems like. We must gain our theology from the Bible, not from our interpretations of our own experience. The Bible does not teach synergism, but that salvation is an act of God. [from "Rejecting Synergism and Returning to Monergism" by Bob DeWaay]
Most of the membership have been trained to think Synergist. It's tied to Dispensationalism, which has already been addressed. The point is, the list of errors is long, with many souls sharing much of it.
Rather, the greatest theological mistake was made long ago, long before English was used to discuss Christ. At the very base of most errors was the adoption of Western philosophical structure. Surely many would recognize the old debate about inductive versus deductive thinking. It's not a matter of superiority, but application. In things temporal, inductive reasoning helps greatly. It serves well making sense of the material world. Computers, anyone? Not possible without inductive reasoning. The greatest disaster was using it to enhance theological understanding. The human mind is fully adaptable, capable of shifting between Eastern and Western logical constructs. For things eternal in nature, deduction is the only approach. All one need and can know about things of the Spirit are revealed, coming down from above, an assumption many have forgotten. Actually, this mistake began before Jesus was born.
Jesus fought often against a view of Moses drawn from the Western mindset adopted by the Jewish establishment. If you examine many of His public debates from that awareness, you see it forms a major part of most conflicts. This adoption of Western logic by the Jews, rooted in their commercial dealings in Alexandria, Egypt, particularly in rabbinical colleges there, was the primary source of the Talmud and all its errors. Scholars have found ample references to the Pharisaical notion the Talmud was more authoritative than the Torah (Matthew 15:1-9). The bigger problem was the rejection of the emphasis on spiritual truth as viewed from the Eastern mindset. It is this latter viewpoint which undergirds the whole Old Testament, and is the one best route to understanding Jesus Himself.
It's not as if to say God thinks in Hebrew. Rather, Hebrew culture tends to reflect how God thinks. Seeing we can't even trust most modern Jewish scholars to properly promote this, it calls us to work a little harder digging up the bones of ancient Semitic thought. Here's an odd thing: modern Arabs come closer to an Old Testament mindset than modern Jews. If we understand either one of the two - Arabs or Semitic thought - the other makes much more sense. Not in the sense we need to act more like modern Arabs, but we need to recognize the fundamental assumptions about the world are rather similar. To have the mind of Christ includes very much being more Ancient Hebraic. To read Scripture with a Western-Analytical mind means often missing the point. (See the Appendix for more on this topic.)
Virtually everything else we could say about the failure of the modern Western church begins here.
With a fresh foundation of Semitic understanding, we are in a much better place to build up a church on the New Testament model. This takes planning, not planting. Nowhere in the Word do we see mention of the concept of intentionally planting a new work in the modern sense. Indeed, that may be the very worst way to go about it. Keeping an eye on the Eastern viewpoint, we must examine how the Early Church did it.
During the First Century and shortly after, churches arose simply because Christians went somewhere and made converts. Very few went out on a mission journey; most went because persecution drove them out of Jerusalem, or because they were seeking a new market for their regular work or business, or some other reason. When they went, they took the gospel message with them. Generally, they started with fellow Jews first, but quickly included Gentiles. A church arose because these believers met together according to the Old Testament norm of synagogue. Even when missionaries went abroad to start churches, we note the method was not to begin by constructing a facility, but to make converts from among Jews first. Whether that worked or not, they eventually did make converts of local Gentiles, then went about finding either a local sponsor or engaging in some trade to fund the work of establishment and pay their way. Eventually they would accept funds from previously grown churches, but never demanded it. They allowed God to select the funding mechanism.
There are, of course, some parts of the ancient methods which will not work today. In the West, it's almost certain standing in the central plaza and preaching is just about pointless. The reason should be obvious: The public square is no longer "the public square." That is, people do not typically gather or pass through the main city square because that's not where news and goods are exchanged any more. In the New Testament, when that was not an option for whatever reason, converts were made simply by ordinary daily contact while going about the business of living. That was always the bottom line in spreading the gospel message. In the process of doing whatever you do to earn an income, or whatever means you have to occupy your time, share the gospel, first by living it. Just the normal routine human activity, based on an eternal perspective, will cause you to stand out in the world. People are going to ask, and you will have to explain that weirdness. This is the method which hasn't changed throughout history.
Thus, we don't plant churches, especially not using the tools of modern market analysis and demographics studies. That leads to a narrow selection of prosperous and growing communities, which leads in turn to prosperous growing churches filled with one small segment of the population, folks who never leave their comfort zone because they assume it's right and proper to demand the church bend to their cultural bias. Simply go where you go, in full faith God is in charge of the strategy. Live by the other-worldly focus of the Kingdom of Heaven, and He will surely draw to that those He has elected to salvation among the people you encounter. Every time you and one other believer meet, you are the church. If you then intentionally meet for fellowship in the Spirit, you have a congregational worship service. If you add teaching, it's just a regular church meeting, regardless of the hour or day of the week. Add more to the meeting in someone's home, and you have house church.
There is nothing in Scripture keeping anyone from baptizing new believers, nor serving communion. No clergy required. If you get enough families together and can afford it, you can set aside one member to become your full time elder. There is plenty of Scripture describing the qualifications. You can even send him out to get advanced professional training, as long as you realize a degree no longer means much - if it ever did - in terms of spiritual qualifications to serve and lead. Academic rigor is not limited to certified, high-priced institutions of higher learning. Indeed, seminaries are fast becoming the place where denominational hierarchy instill their own peculiar brand of corruption in the process of weeding out people who march to a different drummer. The proper biblical model is established scholars of the Word taking on disciples, who then take their learning and disciple others. We note in passing: seniority in the Bible, in the sense of who has served longest and most faithfully, was at a premium. Energetic innovators were generally expected to gain some proper discipline -- be a disciple -- before leading. Meanwhile, there's nothing in the Bible forcing you to hire a professional. A church is led by the Holy Spirit, working through whomever He pleases, and with the agreement of the members.
Membership in any body is nothing more than a mark of acceptance from the others. This is more about adoption of a family member than it is some fair and objective procedure. You can't take a glimpse into the Lamb's Book of Life to see if they are listed; you can only work to discern if their fruit qualifies them for inclusion. That fruit is best manifested not in holiness so much as growth. That is, regardless how mighty your spiritual gifts, there's always room for improvement. That's the same for evangelism: Our greatest power to show His glory is the change in us over time. It should be obvious there are ways to convey conditional inclusion until such time as the new family member has proven too valuable to lose, not because of some measurable performance, but because they show the miracle power of love and devotion of Christ regardless of ability to actually perform. The basis for inclusion is the evidence of that miracle of regeneration, the spiritual DNA you can't deny.
We thus return to the very root of the whole thing: It's a miracle of God. Any other basis and you don't have church. It's a miracle of God's grace we are included in His Kingdom, a miracle of His Spirit to lead us to any new location, a miracle of His power to live the gospel and draw whomever He elects, a miracle of loving fellowship between His children wherever they are, and a miracle bonding of service in faith which creates a church. No need for marketing plans, demographic surveys, and economic factoring. Go where you go in your daily life for Him. There's no need for heavy investment in real estate or facilities. Just meet where you can as He provides. There's no use for membership procedures, lists, budgets, staffing and committees. It's just a family, growing by heavenly adoption.
Now that's a real New Testament church!
The wise old preacher told me, "In every congregation, you've got a lot of people who don't do much of anything. They are members, but it doesn't seem they are actually born-again. There are a bunch more who do stuff, but try to avoid decision making. They are faithful, but want no part of keeping discipline. They'll try to go with the flow on voting and such. You have pastor them, too." This is wrong. Not that they should not be pastored, but we should not settle for that. It's wrong on several levels.
First, we have here a reflection of the false model of church structure. This situation assumes a business model, not the proper biblical concept of the family. Too often a pastor refers to his "church family" when it means nothing more than a CEO referring to his "corporate family" -- words to justify requiring an organizational devotion. A church has business aspects, but its basic identity is not as a business. Membership guidelines should reflect courtship and marriage, not contract negotiations. It is scripturally impossible to treat each new member the same regarding entrance, because each carries their own baggage, needs, and gifts. We have in our churches too hastily drawn in each candidate in the drive for numbers.
Second, he assumes it rests on human power to run a church. A proper biblical church is saved by grace, and must continue in grace. While we acknowledge the factors of psychology and group dynamics, we defy them to have the last word. Those behavioral sciences are tools to diagnose spiritual problems, to which the real solution is the Spirit, which may or may not include using standard behavioral remedies. We do not accept the human norms for a divine operation. We do not sit down and calculate an acceptable level of loss, of carrying a certain amount of dead weight, and focusing on simple "smooth operation." If all you want is organizational tranquility, try a graveyard. People living and growing in Christ is messy, all the way to the top.
Third, this all puts the organization in the center, rather than the individual believer. While we might say good words about individual needs, we don't act on them. We've been conditioned to think quite backwards, because seeking the health of the group should take us through the lives of every individual. The group is not, and should not be, some homogeneous thing, but a collection of unique individuals. Adding or removing any one person changes the character of the group. If we follow the concept of courtship and family, no one can possibly be left to their own devices with some unspoken requirement to fit themselves into the group. We don't sell our faith as a standard package offered to all candidates. Evangelism is enticing new members by the greatness of our love for them; discipleship is continuing that courtship by pulling them ever closer, and more deeply involved in the family.
Fourth, we assume too much a tightly limited involvement, as if church was just one more thing people do. It's not about scheduling a few hours of each week for something added to a busy life. The Kingdom of God is central to a person's being, or they have no part at all in it. Faith in Christ is not a selection of minor adjustments to your normal routine, born on a sales pitch offering a better way to do those routine activities. It is a complete disruption of the routine, consuming it and subsuming it wholly under a new and all-encompassing regime. We offer the one thing in life these people really need, regardless whether they are conscious of that need when we encounter them. It may require shedding everything they felt mattered up to that point.
Everyone can do evangelism, because everyone knows how to fall in love. Winning souls is more about winning hearts. Perhaps some would say it's too easy for sinners to mistake what we are offering. Yes, it's more dangerous than the standard soul-winning approach, but "danger" is one of the primary adjectives of a life following Jesus. Part of this risk is due to the Western twisted cultural view of love, and we are all about redeeming human misunderstandings. Everyone has an almost instinctive grasp of proper boundaries. Our primary struggle is not against lack of intellectual knowledge about evangelism, nor against the inertia overcome by behavioral conditioning. Even lunatics could be successful with that standard. Our primary struggle is getting people to understand the very nature of sacrificial love, of healing their emotional injuries so they can reach out from their very inner nature. We depend too much on the imagery of soldiers, but have forgotten the chief weapon is the Word of God, a phrase referring to a Divine Person, who personifies love.
When should you consider a commitment to the gospel Ministry? When you can't do anything else.
We are talking about living a life of faith. That's commanded for everyone in Christ, but for those whose calling and vocation is the Word itself, they must lead in exemplifying that faith life. They must have already placed themselves in a vulnerable position, failed plenty, stumbled through the dazed understanding and misunderstanding of God's will in a life and calling He reserves for those who must serve Him in ways few know.
The highly competent, always-got-it-right successful "ministers" are mere hucksters. You don't see the Apostle Paul claiming that sort of life. He spoke openly of his "thorn in the flesh" which today would keep him from that upper rung of Professional Christian success. Instead, he spoke of having all the bad experiences of stonings, shipwrecks, diseases, etc. This man, the pinnacle of faith and obedience after Jesus, the one human representative God chose to bridge the gap between a small, Jewish sect, to a world-wide faith of Gentiles, too - he never forgot he was fallen and failing. All he did was the work of God's grace in spite of his humanity. Worldly success, TV shows and custom tailored suits all mean you've compromised, and you don't follow Jesus very closely.
This is not a profession, with a guild structure conferring privileges, or a union guaranteeing wages and a minimal level of comfort and public respect. The true saints of God hardly pay attention to such things. They don't ask the crowds to come to them for a serving of Gospel Truth, in a comfortable setting where everyone can show off their new "do." They are taking the gospel to people who probably wouldn't show up at such places, but instead are found in places where sin is rampant. They take the gospel to Hell armed with a water pistol, backed up by a legion of angels, because that's how God works.
The rest is just man doing what man does for worldly things. Just let me carry Paul's spare pair of sandals to the next stoning, so I can be blessed by a few cuts and bruises in pursuit of the Kingdom. Mortification is the one forgotten doctrine in our world.
Let me attempt to explain why switching to the house church model is such a good idea. It's important to realize I don't reject the idea of working with or on a regular church staff. Rather, I intend to work as if the one best way of doing church is the house church concept. As much as possible, I intend to implement that concept wherever I serve.
Whenever a move of God in your life places you outside the mainstream, you face a lot of questions from those who love you, and those whom you love -- that should cover just about everyone, since we are sent to a fallen world with the love of Jesus. More importantly, it addresses the motive for receiving and answering questions (1 Peter 3:13-17).
When we announced our decision to begin a new ministry, we were immediately asked by many, "Why a house church?" The root of the matter is this comes after some years of consideration, soul searching, prayer, study, and all the other stuff we do carrying out Jesus' advice to "count the cost." Indeed, I've already done similar work. With the weight of all that behind me, I can confidently assert I am being obedient to the Lord. Right away, those who suffer some insecurity in their spiritual walk will see this move as some sort of poke at them for not doing the same. I can't help that; you stand before God with your own conscience. Most certainly my choice signals I am willing to ask you at least consider my reasons as possibly applying to you in your own calling. Nothing would please me more than see a great move in the same direction world wide among Christians, and especially here in the US.
In previous writings, I've made it clear the evangelical churches are too tightly wound into the politics of this world. We demand tax breaks and engage directly in secular politics, even though we pretend the rules are rather strict. This has served as an invitation for reciprocation, the meddling hand of the government, and we believe the secular state has crossed the line. Not some easily identified, universally recognized point of departure, but the collective events of the recent past together show we can no longer believe in the system. What was once a more or less benign secular human institution is now decidedly hostile to the Kingdom. What we had not realized in the past is quite how unsurprising this should be to us.
Human civil government is required by the Covenant of Noah. Those of us serving the Kingdom of God -- in this world but not of it -- have at best an uneasy truce with such government. A constitution may be founded on principles we espouse from the Word, but it takes only a slight shift in personnel for those principles to be forgotten. Word your constitutions and laws as you wish, but someone determined to ignore God's mandates will find a way. The dominance of principled Christian actors in government is a thin hedge, indeed. A truly Christian government, once instituted, would fail quickly, because those governed will never be so dominantly righteous sin won't break forth in rebellion within the first generation.
The truth is, while the government is indeed evil, it was instituted by God as such so that it may effectively prosecute evildoers. An inherently good-doing government is impotent against the individual who does not have God and does not care to live in His righteousness. Caesar is assigned the duty of mitigating the violence that that man or woman will do. ["The Incorporated Church" by David Beck]
The very act of trying to weed out sinners from its population requires a government to wield the sword on our behalf.
No problem? Wait until you find yourself at odds with the majority, and declared persona non grata. It's easy to say Christians of good conscience will disagree, as will inevitably happen, but who gets to decide when you no longer qualify as "Christian"? If you've never faced the wrath of a professing believer who finds your uniqueness offensive, you've lived a very sheltered life, indeed. Do you want the power of the State behind their convictions? Neither do I.
So we have this thing in the US called "separation of church and state," presumably connected to the 1st Amendment. Parties on both sides of that separation argue over whether and how that rubric applies, but recent history indicates we are better off with a generally secular government paying no attention to churches either way - neither hindering nor giving much weight to their opinions. That we American Evangelicals feel a collective sense of loss from the latter half of that equation, that we sense a surging cultural tide against previous assumptions in our favor, does not justify engaging the democratic process as a solid "Christian" political front. Sinners will sin; throughout human history every culture has peaked only to slide down the other side. You are surprised the sinners demand more liberty to openly sin than we like?
Try suppressing them and they will see your efforts as an intrusion, and use all political weapons at their disposal to silence you. Use their methods -- fight fire with fire -- and you are no different. You lose your claim to the moral high ground. Oppose them morally and you will eventually lose, because they cheat. Get over it. Meanwhile, as they gain ground, don't in the least be surprised to see the sword of government turned against you in revenge. Having once engaged in agreements with the government, via the likes of 501(c)(3), you are bound by the contract. That the policy of government has changed does not let you out of that contract, because it was never promised to favor Christian faith in perpetuity.
For me and my house, it's already gone too far. We have opted out of the contract by starting a work which ignores the state. I am altogether certain the day will come when such peaceful opting out will no longer be acceptable to the state. Until then, we make the most of this opportunity.
Time to roll your eyes and talk about tinfoil hats. That's okay, as my favorite t-shirt exclaims, "I am the wretch the song refers to." You aren't supposed to take me seriously unless the Lord moves in your heart. For those whom the Lord moves, read on.
I won't divulge the details because this is not about me. There are no grounds for boasting. However, it is pertinent to note I have served in a federal role, with a significant security clearance. That role put me in a position to read guidelines and directives which, though not in themselves state secrets, were certainly not routine traffic. Some of it made me weep. I went into that job with the best noble intentions, only to find the whole thing was a giant lie, a matrix of deception at different levels. What makes this paragraph relevant is my knowing for myself, beyond all doubt: The US is intentionally becoming a police state.
Unlike many underground Patriots, there is nothing here of screaming, wringing hands, or a call to arms. You may choose to plan armed resistance; it could be you are certain the Lord calls you to that. It is a darksome path, leading to a mad and surreal land, so count the cost. The only call to arms here is based on Ephesians 6:
Finally, my brothers, be strong in the Lord and in the power of His might. Put on the whole armor of God so that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the world's rulers, of the darkness of this age, against spiritual wickedness in high places. Therefore take to yourselves the whole armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand. (vv. 10-13)
Holding a Reformed, Amillennial eschatology does not mean we ignore the references to Armageddon, but we know it's merely a symbol of the human penchant for warfare. Not only between nations, it includes warfare between governments and their own people. There's nothing new there; have you not read where Saul chased David all over southern Judah? The nature of government is to control, and further to increase control, to include the very mind of man, if possible. The freedom of a Christian conscience was the sticking point in the Reformation, the essence of the political upheaval. A ruler, whether civil or ecclesiastical, cannot command the convictions God alone places in a soul reborn. The very existence of the regenerate soul threatens Satan's hold over this world.
In the Reformation, asserting the human conscience was a fresh, revolutionary idea. Today we take it for granted. So much so I must warn readers those changes in federal guidelines I mentioned above came more than a decade prior to 9-11. The powers that be know this is not something which can be done overnight, so they are taking their time, bit by bit. Professional police journals spoke of a return to Community Policing in the '80s, a revival of the "beat cop." This was meant to fail, as the excuse needed for the ubiquitous surveillance and intrusive information gathering we see now. Indeed, so certain were the elite minds behind this, they laid the foundations for a cultural shift at the turn of the previous century. In plain sight, but in the dreary, turgid prose of government publications, this plan called for a radical shift in education in 1905. Instead of building the intellect, the goal was conditioning for a new kind of slavery.
Yes, those who stand for election today, as do those who stand in the classrooms across America, are mere patsies for a secretive cabal, whose souls are owned and steered by the "spiritual wickedness in high places." This is not something unique to America, nor this time in history. Such powers have always been around, and Paul hardly bothered to mention them except to note we need not fear them, for we have the service and armor of much higher power. Realizing the very spiritual nature of this evil, we are hardly surprised when churches are also subverted to one degree or another. Does your church have a US flag in the auditorium? My parents probably remember when it was considered inappropriate, an intrusion of the state into God's affairs. And let me assure you, the introduction of Dispensationalism via Scofield's Bible notes, a wholly novel viewpoint in Christian history, was sponsored and advertised heavily by the same man who sought to personally manipulate three presidents -- Samuel Untermeyer. Scofield was a crook, a very crafty scoundrel with a brilliant marketing idea, and a man easily bought. Many in the pulpit today serve more the purposes of the secular state than the Heavenly Kingdom.
You see a great boasting of private education among Evangelicals. Homeschooling is a good thing! Why not the home church? I assure you tighter regulations are coming soon, but until they do, let us prepare the way. Historical research indicates those already poor were hardly affected by the Great Depression of 1930s. It could not touch them, for they had nothing to lose. Learn, Church, learn the lessons of history. Civilizations rise and fall, an endless cycle repeated until the Lord comes back, and ours today is on the decline. Is your congregation so deeply invested in this world you cannot imagine operating out of a backpack? That day will come, and I am certain in our lifetime. When His judging hand sweeps across the land, will He find your doorposts swathed in the Blood of the Lamb, or will you be caught in the courts of Pharaoh?
My household is packed and ready.
There's more than one kind of freedom. In this case, it's freedom from unnecessary rules. Make all the noise you like about welcoming anybody into your church house, the door is always wider at the house church. That's not a matter of superiority; it's a choice of mission fields. I can bring a Bible study to homes where I'll find people who wouldn't be caught dead in a mainstream church facility. If you've ever read materials from the old Lay Renewal Movement, you'll recognize that reluctance as a primary motive for having ministries outside the facility. There's a psychological barrier for sinners, and you can't wipe it away with advertising.
No dress code, no membership requirements, no forms to fill out, no schedules -- to some degree those things are necessary for a mainstream organized church. They are death to the house church. We have no use for tax exemptions, staff, budgets, or committees. All offerings are private gifts, and accountability is personal, between you and the Lord. No one passes a plate or basket.
The whole thing requires utter reliance on God to move in people's hearts. This is the practical side of Calvinism, again. Our convictions require a hands-off approach in first place. We don't convince sinners to come to Christ; the Holy Spirit does that. We simply explain the gospel message, answer questions, and wait on God to move. The convicting power of the Holy Spirit is sufficient for both sinners needing salvation, and believers needing a closer walk with Christ.
That we must take the message to them remains the command of Christ, the Great Commission. No where does the Bible say we are to persuade sinners to repent, but we are to expose them to the Truth. That means first we must live the truth. However, even our best witness is not our holiness, but the improvements we exhibit as the Lord leads us closer to Him daily. The primary Fruit of the Spirit we know about, but the power of the Lord is demonstrated by the differences others see in the growing quality of that fruit.
A critical part of that is a willingness to let anybody host a Bible study, if the Lord moves them. If I can stand to be in that house, that yard, that garage -- wherever -- with those people, they'll get the Word of God. If they can't take it, that's not my problem. They won't invite me back, but they got it at least once.
They won't be able to reject the message for the sake of rudeness, because I am bound by His Spirit to walk in love. I'm also bound to be direct and honest. Somewhere in that definition I can find a way to gently show the Love of Christ without being pushy. I have nothing to sell, no vested interest, no need for numbers, just a free serving of Living Water for anyone who realizes their thirst. If that means periods when nobody asks, it won't mean closing the ministry. There's nothing to lose, because I have nothing except that Truth.
Organizational Theory is incredibly boring. If you can stay awake through the classes, you can learn an awful lot, though. For example, as an organized group grows larger, natural human variations become a bigger problem. It's not additive, but geometric, insofar as any sense of quantitative analysis is possible. We tend to measure such things by counting the increased number of man hours required to put out the little fires of human conflict.
We notice a great many other things, especially viewed through a biblical lens. On the one hand, God's grace is greater than all our sin. Our foibles cannot get in the way of His divine plan, but they will hinder our perception of His glory as He operates sovereignly in our lives. We know from Scripture our greatest joy comes from truth revealed in us. Against this, we have added complications to seeing His glory when the size of our fellowship group grows. The natural human conflict arising from our fallen state can grab so much focus, we fail to see God's hand, and we miss out on the joy of His glory.
In adding more people to our churches, we ostensibly seek to share that glory experience. We are commanded to work with others in the Kingdom. The nature of our combined witness is the miracle of love binding together fallen humans who would otherwise -- in the flesh -- have no reason to notice each other, and perhaps many fleshly reasons to hate. The disparity of personalities, backgrounds, orientations, all pull us apart. They also serve to strengthen the glory of God. In a sense, it gives Him more options to involve us in His glory. It also increases the likelihood of including someone whose weaknesses are quite destructive. We must of necessity include people who will surely act contrary to the Kingdom values, who will use and abuse the organization for personal gain, or worse.
Thus, it's no surprise organizing even such a divine activity as worship and service of Christ means having rules and procedures in place to minimize such things. However, those same preventive measures inevitably serve to limit human variation. Either the member adapts, and becomes more like the group, or is excluded. In yet another perverse turn, it is this homogeneity which most empowers the abusers, should they ever gain control. We call this "corruption," and some of us life-long servants of Christ have seen too much of it.
Making a choice to keep things small and informal does mean forsaking certain opportunities. For those of us who have been deeply and frequently scarred by organizational abuses and failures, we gain the opportunity to break away from further abuse. Assuming we aren't seeking cultic control, we lose control over the variations, but have no need for it. For those of us who cannot serve Christ in the narrower strictures of larger, more formally organized bodies, house churches are an open door to reach others who cannot seem to fit in the mainstream church structure.
It is completely unnecessary for us oddballs to sneer at the formal institutions, any more than the reverse. We have seen where your mainstream church becomes, among other things, a breeding ground for preparing a few more of us. People who try it, give it their best effort in God's power, and find it doesn't work, often join us in a state fully prepared and highly sensitive to the needs of a segment of the fallen world unreachable to organized religion.
For these blessings, we thank you mainstream churches, even as we thank the Lord.
The final point is actually the other edge of the sword's blade, the other half of the previous point: People love you; organizations and institutions do not. Indeed, the latter love only themselves. That is, insofar as an impersonal entity can love anything.
We have learned long ago when a revolution reaches the final stages, it is institutionalized, it is the establishment. It is no longer a revolt. A revolt is passion, a drive to change. Once it has succeeded, it stands to preserve those changes. The faith community during the First Century AD was a revolt. It was the final realization this world is not worthy of our focus of energy. It is something to be escaped, and until then, to be disrupted by eruptions of Eternity expressed in human lives.
When you organize and institutionalize, that becomes the end in itself. We so easily forget the organization is a mere tool, to be cast aside when it no longer serves the purpose. To go a step further with institutionalizing the organization, you have killed the purpose. Jesus Christ died for you out of a divine love too deep for any other expression. Organized religion loves only itself. It uses people as the tools to keep itself alive and growing.
That a great deal of love and grace can be found within the halls of institutional religion shows only the possibilities of love under any circumstance. True loving hearts are what makes that work, not the organization within which they operate. If the organization does, indeed, serve the greater purpose of love, then things are in proper order. However, it is absolutely unavoidable on this earth that the organization's existence will take a bite out of that love.
The bigger the organization, the bigger the bite. Organizing means depersonalizing to some degree. So it must be. Organization is the enemy of the Holy Spirit, but can still serve some useful purpose, offer some gains otherwise not available. So we cannot kill the organization, because we otherwise cannot have more than one person involved at a time. Perhaps we should remind ourselves the secret is in the design of the organization.
If your organizing is in the Western mode, it is by definition unbiblical. Let us not forget Scripture is an Eastern product. Western civilization is by no means Christian. It is a result of essentially two blended cultures -- Latin and Teutonic -- with a bit of Christian flavoring. That Christian flavoring itself is derived, not from the original source. Thus, the Christian element is more of an add-on, something more affected by the other influences than vice versa. A biblical organization is by definition more Eastern (in the sense of Near Eastern).
The primary model of biblical organization is the family. As a model, our first line of departure from the thing itself is obvious: the lack of genuine shared DNA. That is, we need not be blood kin to organize as a family. Roles can be assigned on some other basis. This is where the Lord takes over as Father and Founder, by the Blood of His Son, which flows in spirits and souls, not in veins. Recall the previous allusion to loving in Christ those whom, in the flesh, we may have great reason not to love at all. In Him, we love the unlovable, because the love of Christ is more invasive and more contagious than any other force man can imagine.
The Western model of organization removes the personal intentionally. It seeks some mythical equality and fairness, raising that to the level of godhead. When the Word says "God is no respecter of persons," it is not about fairness, but about His knowing truly what's behind the human facade. It's inherently unfair God made me less than perfect in body when so many others are relatively normal. It's inherently unfair God calls me to serve in a way which guarantees poverty, when so many others of His children are wealthy. It's inherently unfair, too, I have the skill and intellect to write things people want to read, when others can't type or spell. Well, you are reading this, aren't you? And what makes you so special in the Kingdom you have a the ability to read English when millions of Christians do not? If you want fairness and egalitarianism, you don't want God.
However, if you seek the familial love of God, you'll find yourself driven to treat others with grace commensurate to their varied needs. You won't program that love and grace, with memorized evangelism spiels carefully crafted to appeal to that segment of the population most likely to convert easily -- at least psychologically -- and most likely to attend regularly, and most likely to give generously. Instead, you'll simply love all comers, all who pass through your personal space, whatever God tells you that may be. You'll live His truth, to include speaking words of truth when the time comes, and concern yourself not at all with results. For you, the giving is the thing which makes you alive.
It should be obvious at this point, house church is all about creating a family of grace. The institutional church simply cannot work that way; it has to be "de-institutionalized." That is, to the degree the institutional church matters to you, love and grace do not. If you could convince everyone within the organization it can be torn down and disposed of at the slightest provocation... well, you just try that and see what happens. The knee-jerk reactions of horrified looks will answer the question.
The mainstream church is more about the organization and facilities than about the people.
Throughout history, Christian leaders have found themselves in the midst of a major crisis which forced them to take charge of far more than they ever expected: having to govern a community in a time of emergency, rebuilding from a disaster. Most of the time, they have done well enough, but made huge mistakes due to false assumptions. While the nature of their errors were not obvious to them at the time, future generations in what they built paid a high price for the unwise initial choices. Can we establish a theology, a biblical wisdom, of how to carry the community through the initial phases of rebuilding?
Were I not convinced of an apocalyptic future bearing down on us, I might not bother with this. In a modern Western civilization, there's little room for discussing building a community from the ground up. All the little enclaves seeking to avoid the sin of the world, to create their paradise on earth, are completely contrary to Scripture. We are not of this world, but we are surely in it as salt and light. It's hard to evangelize those you avoid. Rather, we consider here a situation which may be thrust upon us, where the world we know is radically changed. Consider this otherwise an academic exercise.
Imagine you have built a community of faith on the Word. You are the elder of this body of faith. The situation comes in which you are required to build also a community in the other sense. That is, there is no civil government in effect offering more than a bare emergency response, if that. Frankly, that is the ideal, for in human history the only reason to hand wide-ranging powers to any man is for defense against a very real and looming threat. People threatened will obey instinctively a command structure, but in peace it has little use. This is so well established, we see every government throughout history, wishing to expand power, has manufactured a threat environment if one does not exist. In our imaginary situation, we find no government able to play this game, and holding no real control over daily affairs of life.
Such a power vacuum is an invitation to all manner of evil, but you have a church, a community of faith in the midst of this chaos. It would be hard not to bring order from chaos. As elder, all eyes will turn to you. What will you do? There is a biblical model, but it has limits. Wise is the elder who realizes, "This, too, shall pass." Yours is the task of redemption, and some limited governing is merely a by-product, a service provided for so long as it is needed. In prayer, study, and preparation of the heart, a Christian elder will know when to act.
The primary element of organization remains the family, clan and tribe. As before, this is not about blood ties and DNA, but about function. Further, it is wholly unlikely you will deal only with fellow Christians. Even as you know before it happens, believers will fail and fall, even so you must expect and allow some fallen behavior among sinners. Nor is it simply a matter of reacting only to real harm, for believers are burdened with a responsibility to absorb some harm in the sense of material loss, emotional tension and even physical injury. Concrete example today: Imagine a semi-rural setting, and my neighbor gets married, celebrating far into the night with loud music. I can afford to give one sleepless night as a wedding gift to my neighbor, but I am rightly less tolerant if he does it every week. He is my brother, and there must be some giving on each side. Calling him "brother" is not just a label of convenience, but a marker of the flavor of all dealings. Of all the various models dreamed up and used by mankind, this is the very best.
The wise and loving elder, as community leader, cannot simply dismiss the difference between believer and sinner. We do not throw all the pearls of Christian wisdom to swine, but we must seek exemplary honesty. Were your church witness fairly consistent in times past, this would be no great hurdle. Otherwise, there will be a struggle to remove the impression of unreasonable favoritism. It requires a strong hand and consistent teaching for your congregation to recognize this is not about robotic rules, but a living growing thing. We are dealing with people, and in Western society, the word "fairness" is often used as a crowbar to force an entry to privileges rightly denied. It's easy for the fallen to assume familial Christian love equates to material advantage; this is not precisely true, but it may look that way to them. There will likely be no simple answer to the questions sure to arise.
That there must, indeed, be a difference in treatment is obvious from the Bible. Surprising to most people is the demands we should place on each other are stricter. There is a higher expectation, and the presence of the Holy Spirit drives the soul to seek it. This is the mark of who is a member of the Heavenly Family, for people do not seek such discipline in the flesh. That is, they do not seek a discipline of the soul, which results in changed conduct; they seek a discipline of conduct alone. The appeal to a believer for changed conduct is through the soul. The appeal to the lost is some other thing: civility, fairness, common peace, nobility, etc. It is entirely possible some will have a mere pretense to regeneration. Many will merely believe they are born again, as we find filling the pews in all Evangelical churches today where Decision Theology is preached. These are mere psychological conversions. Many will fake it because they hope to gain something. Most outside the Kingdom will deny the difference, or downplay it as mere choice. The flavors of trouble will run the gamut.
The primary area of contention is community discipline. Keeping peace is the main challenge, as people will naturally tend to work at all the basic necessities of life, but in doing so may disregard things which make for peace. In Scripture, there is an assumption basic human needs are separate from defense needs. Keeping peace externally and internally is a job for the troops, for civil government. That is their primary function, and in this they rightly command full authority. Thus, wherever the military rules, one finds the implied threat of harm for those considering resistance. All else is under the purview of the community leadership, little of which requires exercising coercion. The very real danger is when community leadership so quickly turns to the troops for enforcement, instead of working in the hearts and minds of the people. The former is convenient, requiring little effort, and is typical of civil leaders who are fallen. It breeds the coercive welfare state so repugnant to everyone who isn't in the driver's seat. Wise Christian elders will use the troops after all else has failed.
The proper means of offering assistance for survival is voluntary gifts. There is no exception, and no excuse for compelling charity at the point of a sword. The sword is for collecting taxes to support the troops and the defense mission; no other use for taxes is permitted in Scripture. You would hardly be surprised if the military demands become lavish, but forced contribution cannot flow to any other purpose. Believers will inevitably give voluntarily to community need, as will many decent lost people.
Folks who have absorbed civilization tend to let it go only reluctantly. There are predators, and they make the best troops, with encouragement to take plunder from outside predators. Keeping them under the iron discipline of a noble-minded commander is the standard. Given the typical distribution of human personalities in a community of at least one hundred persons, there will always be a few comparatively eager to fight. Take care of the defenders, but keep them busy on the battlements, lest they prey on those who feed them. In a real emergency, even believers are permitted to shed blood, but they should avoid the task in favor of those lacking Christian sensibilities. The Elect are better conditioned by the Holy Spirit to extend resources for help and healing.
It's worth noting what has come before is primarily theology, with examples thrown in to demonstrate. Actually doing leadership requires first a calling, then a bit of study, at two levels. One is the psychology level, and you can learn some of that in places offering Christian Leadership training. Two, you need to understand from the objective level using statistical data, as in the Social Sciences (History, Political Science, Economics, Geography, Psychology and Anthropology). Good instructors and authors will warn you, there are no hard fast rules, because they understand there are exceptions. That is, as with anything in the field of Social Sciences, what is generally true on a broad scale is never precisely accurate.
Without some understanding of the Social Sciences, leadership is a heavy load of stumbling and correcting. The larger the responsibility, the greater your need for knowledge. However, God can and will use anyone who answers the call. He will cover a multitude of sins, and you should ever trust Him for everything He doesn't place in your hand. At the same time, you shall not fling a challenge in the face of God (Luke 4:12), seeking to force His hand to bail you out of a mess you created. If you know now you are called to lead, you should have already been studying.
The balance point is coun