Archive for the God-thoughts Category
evangelism in the city
| May 7th, 2007Every week or so I receive an email newsletter from Evangelicals for Social Action with stories and articles dealing with Christ in our culture, holistic ministry, public policy, and caring for creation. In their most recent newsletter was an article titled “Evangelism in the City” written by Lesslie Newbigin, the internationally known British missionary, pastor, apologist, and theologian. Lesslie, when faced with the question of how to share the gospel in the context of an inner-city in the West, responded with this:
How can this strange story of God made flesh, of a crucified Savior, of resurrection and new creation become credible for those whose entire mental training has conditioned them to believe that the real world is the world which can be satisfactorily explained and managed without the hypothesis of God? I know of only one clue to the answering of that question, only one real hermeneutic of the gospel: a congregation which believes it.
Does that sound too simplistic? I don’t believe it is. Evangelism is not some kind of technique by means of which people are persuaded to change their minds and think like us. Evangelism is the telling of good news, but what changes people’s minds and converts their wills is always a mysterious work of the sovereign Holy Spirit, and we are not permitted to know more than a little of his secret working. But - and this is the point - the Holy Spirit is present in the believing congregation both gathered for praise and the offering up of spiritual sacrifice, and scattered throughout the community to bear the love of God into every secular happening and meeting. It is they who scatter the seeds of hope around, and even if the greater part falls on barren ground, there will be a few that begin to germinate, to create at least a questioning and a seeking, and perhaps to lead someone to inquire about the source from which these germs of hope came. Although it may seem simplistic, I most deeply believe that it is fundamental to recognize that what brings men and women and children to know Jesus as Lord and Savior is always the mysterious work of the Holy spirit, always beyond our understanding or control, always the result of a presence, a reality which both draws and challenges - the reality who is in fact the living God himself. And God’s presence is promised and granted in the midst of the believing, worshipping, celebrating, caring congregation. There is no other hermeneutic of the gospel.
After reading that, I’ve been wondering how this would relate to a church in the suburbs, where people don’t live as close together in neighborhoods as the city, where people often drive 10 minutes to buy their food or clothing or for entertainment, where everyone has a fence around their yard. What might this look like in the context in which I live?
some thoughts on “being” and “doing”
| April 17th, 2007 Being results in Doing.
Being does not equal Doing.
Doing cannot and should not define Being.
Being and Doing are intertwined, interconnected.
Being without Doing results in a dead faith.
Doing without Being results in performance-based salvation.
Being fleshed out in Doing represents the Gospel.
Jesus was before He did.
Who I am must be founded in who Christ is in me.
What I do must reflect the life Christ desires me to live.
embodying Christ right where we live
| February 22nd, 2007Another thought-provoking post from inward/outward:
The church founded by Jesus is intended to be the embodiment, the incarnation, of who he is so that he might be seen, discovered, known, experienced in the local corporate life of those who have been invaded by him. I emphasize the word local. What would a true expression of Christ?’s body look like today, in the neighborhoods where we live, if it really embodied the essence of Jesus lived out corporately?
I think the central question for those of us who are in Christ and are eager to obey his ?follow me? is how to be authentic church in the 21st century. How can we learn from our unfaithfulness to God?’s covenant in the past? How can we embody, incarnate, become the local expression of Christ?’s body now?
shane claiborne: an ordinary radical sharing his story of following Jesus
| February 5th, 2007 Shane Claiborne is Christian radical who is helping form a new way of life, living among the poor in Philadelphia in an intentional Christian community called The Simple Way. He wrote a book called “The Irresistible Revolution,” a book that is one of my new favorites. I found this video of him speaking to a youth group in Maryland. His message is about 50 minutes long and in it he shares many stories from his life and how God has, as he says, wrecked his life. Take the time to listen to it, and if you are challenged by what you hear, go read his book.