The
Mark of the Christian
Francis A. Schaeffer
Foreword
Christians have not always presented a pretty picture to
the world. Too often they have failed to show the beauty
of love, the beauty of Christ, the holiness of God.
And the world has turned away.
Is there then no way to make the world look again —
this time at true Christianity? Must Christians continue
to stand with arms folded, going on in their old sweet ways,
presenting to men a tarnished image of God — a shattered
body of Christ?
Francis A. Schaeffer meets these questions head-on. He is
the founder of L'Abri Fellowship in Switzerland, is the
author of many books, including The God Who Is There and
Escape from Reason. He was, until his death in 1984, a vibrant
example of the kind of love that marks true Christian character.
His love for both those who agreed and those who disagreed
with him continues to be a model for all Christians today.
This small book was originally intended solely as a part
of a longer work — The Church at the End of the 20th
Century. But the message of this essay is so significant
that we feel it should take its place alongside Escape from
Reason, The God Who Is There, Death in the City and The
Church at the End of the 20th Century.
The Mark of the Christian
Through the centuries men have
displayed many different symbols to show that they are Christians.
They have worn marks in the lapels of their coats, hung
chains about their necks, even had special haircuts.
Of course, there is nothing wrong with any of this, if one
feels it is his calling. But there is a much better sign
— a mark that has not been thought up just as a matter
of expediency for use on some special occasion or in some
specific era. It is a universal mark that is to last through
all the ages of the church till Jesus comes back.
What is this mark?
At the close of his ministry, Jesus looks forward to his
death on the cross, the open tomb and the ascension. Knowing
that he is about to leave, Jesus prepares his disciples
for what is to come. It is here that he makes clear what
will be the
distinguishing mark of the Christian:
My children, I will be with you only a little longer. You
will look for me, and just as I told the Jews, so I tell
you now: Where I am going, you cannot come. A new command
I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you
must love one another. By this all men will know that you
are my disciples, if you love one another." (John 13:33-35)
This passage reveals the mark that Jesus gives to label
a Christian not just in one era or in one locality but at
all times and all places until Jesus returns.
Notice that what he says here is not a description of a
fact. It is a command which includes a condition: "A
new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved
you, so you must love one another. By this all men will
know that you are my disciples, if you love one another."
An if is involved. If you obey, you will wear the badge
Christ gave. But since this is a command, it can be violated.
The point is that it is possible to be a Christian without
showing the mark, but if we expect non-Christians to know
that we are Christians, we must show the mark.
Men and Brothers
The command at this point is to love our fellow Christians,
our brothers. But, of course, we must strike a balance and
not forget the other side of Jesus' teaching: We are to
love our fellowmen, to love all men, in fact, as neighbors.
All men bear the image of God. They have value, not because
they are redeemed, but because they are God's creation in
God's image. Modern man, who has rejected this, has no clue
as to who he is, and because of this he can find no real
value for himself or for other men. Hence, he downgrades
the value of other men and produces the horrible thing we
face
today — a sick culture in which men treat men as inhuman,
as machines. As Christians, however, we know the value of
men.
All men are our neighbors, and we are to love them as ourselves.
We are to do this on the basis of creation, even if they
are not redeemed, for all men have value because they are
made in the image of God. Therefore they are to be loved
even at great cost.
This is, of course, the whole point of Jesus' story of the
good Samaritan: Because a man is a man, he is to be loved
at all cost.
So, when Jesus gives the special command to love our Christian
brothers, it does not negate the other command. The two
are not antithetical. We are not to choose between loving
all men as ourselves and loving the Christian in a special
way. The two commands reinforce each other.
If Jesus has commanded so strongly that we love all men
as our neighbors, then how important it is especially to
love our fellow Christians. If we are told to love all men
as our neighbors — as ourselves — then surely,
when it comes to those with whom we have the special bonds
as fellow Christians — having one Father through one
Jesus Christ and being indwelt by one Spirit — we
can understand how overwhelmingly important it is that all
men be able to see an observable love for those with whom
we have these special ties. Paul makes the double obligation
clear in Galatians 6:10: "As we have therefore opportunity,
let us do good unto all men, especially unto them who are
of the household of faith." He does not negate the
command to do good to all men. But it is still not meaningless
to add, "especially unto them who are of the household
of faith." This dual goal should be our Christian mentality,
the set of our minds; we should be consciously thinking
about it and what it means in our one-moment-at-a-time lives.
It should be the attitude that governs our outward observable
actions.
Very often the true Bible-believing Christian, in his emphasis
on two humanities — one lost, one saved — one
still standing in rebellion against God, the other having
returned to God through Christ — has given a picture
of exclusiveness which is ugly.
There are two humanities. That is true. Some men made in
the image of God still stand in rebellion against him; some,
by the grace of God, have cast themselves upon God's solution.
Nonetheless, there is in another very important sense only
one humanity. All men derive from one origin. By creation
all men bear the image of God. In this sense all men are
of one flesh, one blood.
Hence, the exclusiveness of the two humanities is undergirded
by the unity of all men. And Christians are not to love
their believing brothers to the exclusion of their non-believing
fellowmen. That is ugly. We are to have the example of the
good Samaritan consciously in mind at all times.
A Delicate Balance
The first commandment is to love the Lord our God with all
our heart, soul and mind. The second commandment bears the
universal command to love men. Notice that the second commandment
is not just to love Christians. It is far wider than this.
We are to love our neighbor as ourselves.
I Thessalonians 3:12 carries the same double emphasis: "And
the Lord make you to increase and abound in love one toward
another, and toward all men, even as we do toward you."
Here the order is reversed. First of all, we are to have
love one toward another and then toward all men, but that
does not change the double emphasis. Rather, it points up
the delicate balance — a balance that is not in practice
automatically maintained.
In I John 3:11 (written later than the gospel that bears
his name) John says, "For this is the message that
you heard from the beginning, that we should love one another."
Years after Christ's death, John, in writing the epistle,
calls us back to Christ's original command in John 13. Speaking
to the church, John in effect says, "Don't forget this
. . . Don't forget this. This command was given to us by
Christ while he was still on the earth. This is to be your
mark."
For True Christians Only
If we look again at the command in John 13, we will notice
some important things. First of all, this is a command to
have a special love to all true Christians, all born-again
Christians. From the scriptural viewpoint, not all who call
themselves Christians are Christians, and that is especially
true in our generation. The meaning of the word Christian
has been reduced to practically nothing. Surely, there is
no word that has been so devalued unless it is the word
of God itself. Central to semantics is the idea that a word
as a symbol has no meaning until content is put into it.
This is quite correct. Because the word Christian as a symbol
has been made to mean so little, it has come to mean everything
and nothing.
Jesus, however, is talking about loving all true Christians.
And this is a command that has two cutting edges, for it
means that we must both distinguish true Christians from
all pretenders and be sure that we leave no true Christians
outside of our consideration. In other words, mere humanists
and liberal theologians who continue to use the Christian
label or mere church members whose Christian designation
is only a formality are not to be accounted true.
But we must be careful of the opposite error. We must include
everyone who stands in the historic-biblical faith whether
or not he is a member of our own party or our own group.
But even if a man is not among the true Christians, we still
have the responsibility to love him as our neighbor. So
we cannot say, "Now here's somebody that, as far as
I can tell, does not stand among the group of true Christians,
and therefore I don't have to think of him any more; I can
just slough him off." Not at all. He is covered by
the second commandment.
The Standard of Quality
The second thing to notice in these verses in John 13 is
the quality of the love that is to be our standard. We are
to love all Christians "as I," Jesus says, "have
loved you." Now think of both the quality and the quantity
of Jesus' love toward us. Of course, he is infinite and
we are finite; he is God, we are men. Since he is infinite,
our love can never be like his, it can never be an infinite
love.
Nevertheless, the love he exhibited then and exhibits now
is to be our standard. We dare have no lesser standard.
We are to love all true Christians as Christ has loved us.
Now immediately, when we say this, either of two things
can happen. We can just say, "I see! I see!" and
we can make a little flag and write on it, "We Love
All Christians!" You can see us trudging along with
little flags — all rolled up — "We Love
All Christians!" — and at the appropriate moment,
we take off all the rubber bands, unzip the cover, and put
it up. We wave it as we carry it along — "We
Love All Christians!" How ugly!
It can be either this exceedingly ugly thing, as ugly as
anything anyone could imagine, or it can be something as
profound as anyone could imagine. And if it is to be the
latter, it will take a great deal of time, a great deal
of conscious talking and writing about it, a great deal
of thinking and praying about it on the part of the Bible-believing
Christians.
The church is to be a loving church in a dying culture.
How, then, is the dying culture going to consider us? Jesus
says, "By this shall all men know that you are my disciples,
if you have love one to another." In the midst of the
world, in the midst of our present dying culture, Jesus
is giving a right to the world. Upon his authority he gives
the world the right to judge whether you and I are born-again
Christians on the basis of our observable love toward all
Christians.
That's pretty frightening. Jesus turns to the world and
says, "I've something to say to you. On the basis of
my authority, I give you a right: you may judge whether
or not an individual is a Christian on the basis of the
love he shows to all Christians." In other words, if
people come up to us and cast in our teeth the judgment
that we are not Christians because we have not shown love
toward other Christians, we must understand that they are
only exercising a prerogative which Jesus gave them.
And we must not get angry. If people say, "You don't
love other Christians," we must go home, get down on
our knees and ask God whether or not they are right. And
if they are, then they have a right to have said what they
said.
Failure in Love
We must be very careful at this point, however. We may be
true Christians, really born-again Christians, and yet fail
in our love toward other Christians. As a matter of fact,
to be completely realistic, it is stronger than this. There
will be times (and let us say it with tears), there will
be times when we will fail in our love toward each other
as Christians. In a fallen world, where there is no such
thing as perfection until Jesus comes, we know this will
be the case. And, of course, when we fail, we must ask God's
forgiveness. But, Jesus is not here saying that our failure
to love all Christians proves that we are not Christians.
Let each of us see this individually for ourselves. If I
fail in my love toward Christians, it does not prove I am
not a Christian. What Jesus is saying, however, is that,
if I do not have the love I should have toward all other
Christians, the world has the right to make the judgment
that I am not a Christian.
This distinction is imperative. If we fail in our love toward
all Christians, we must not tear our heart out as though
it were proof that we are lost. No one except Christ himself
has ever lived and not failed. If success in love toward
our brothers in Christ were to be the standard of whether
or not a man is a Christian, then there would be no Christians,
because all men have failed. But Jesus gives the world a
piece of litmus paper, a reasonable thermometer: There is
a mark which, if the world does not see, allows them to
conclude, "This man is not a Christian." Of course,
the world may be making a wrong judgment because, if the
man is truly a Christian, as far as the reality goes, they
made a mistake.
It is true that a non-Christian often hides behind what
he sees in Christians and then screams, "Hypocrites!"
when in reality he is a sinner who will not face the claims
of Christ. But that is not what Jesus is talking about here.
Here Jesus is talking about our responsibility as individuals
and as groups to so love all other true Christians that
the world will have no valid reason for saying that we are
not Christians.
The Final Apologetic
But there is something even more sober. And to understand
it we must look at John 17:21, a verse out of the midst
of Christ's high priestly prayer. Jesus prays, "That
all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and
I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may
believe that you have sent me." In this, his high priestly
prayer, Jesus is praying for the oneness of the church,
the oneness that should be found specifically among true
Christians.
Jesus is not praying for a humanistic, romantic oneness
among men in general. Verse 9 makes this clear: "I
pray for them. I am not praying for the world, but for those
you have given me, for they are yours." Jesus here
makes a very careful distinction between those who have
cast themselves upon him in faith and those who still stand
in rebellion. Hence, in the 21st verse, when he prays for
oneness, the "they" he is referring to are the
true Christians.
Notice, however, that verse 21 says, "That they all
may be one . . ." The emphasis, interestingly enough,
is exactly the same as in John 13 — not on a part
of true Christians, but on all Christians — not that
those in certain parties in the church should be one, but
that all born-again Christians should be one.
Now comes the sobering part. Jesus goes on in this 21st
verse to say something that always causes me to cringe.
If as Christians we do not cringe, it seems to me we are
not very sensitive or very honest, because Jesus here gives
us the final apologetic. What is the final apologetic? "That
all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and
I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may
believe that you have sent me." This is the final apologetic.
In John 13 the point was that, if an individual Christian
does not show love toward other true Christians, the world
has a right to judge that he is not a Christian. Here Jesus
is stating something else which is much more cutting, much
more profound: We cannot expect the world to believe that
the Father sent the Son, that Jesus' claims are true, and
that Christianity is true, unless the world sees some reality
of the oneness of true Christians.
Now that is frightening. Should we not feel some emotion
at this point?
Look at it again. Jesus is not saying that Christians should
judge each other (as to their being Christian or not) on
this basis. Please notice this with tremendous care. The
church is to judge whether a man is a Christian on the basis
of his doctrine, the propositional content of his faith,
and then his credible profession of faith. When a man comes
before a local church that is doing its job, he will be
quizzed on the content of what he believes. If, for example,
a church is conducting a heresy trial (the New Testament
indicates there are to be heresy trials in the church of
Christ), the question of heresy will turn on the content
of the man's doctrine. The church has a right to judge,
in fact it is commanded to judge, a man on the content of
what he believes and teaches.
But we cannot expect the world to judge that way, because
the world cares nothing about doctrine. And that is especially
true in the second half of the 20th century when, on the
basis of their epistemology, men no longer believe even
in the possibility of absolute truth. And if we are surrounded
by a world which no longer believes in the concept of truth,
certainly we cannot expect people to have any interest in
whether a man's doctrine is correct or not.
But Jesus did give the mark that will arrest the attention
of the world, even the attention of the modern man who says
he is just a machine. Because every man is made in the image
of God and has, therefore, aspirations for love, there is
something that can be in every geographical climate —
in every point of time — which cannot fail to arrest
his attention.
What is it? The love that true Christians show for each
other and not just for their own party.
Honest Answers, Observable Love
Of course as Christians we must not minimize the need to
give honest answers to honest questions. We should have
an intellectual apologetic. The Bible commands it and Christ
and Paul exemplify it.
In the synagogue, in the marketplace, in homes
and in almost every conceivable kind of situation, Jesus
and Paul discussed Christianity. It is likewise the Christian's
task to be able to give an honest answer to an honest question
and then to give it.
Yet, without true Christians loving one another, Christ
says the world cannot be expected to listen, even when we
give proper answers. Let us be careful, indeed, to spend
a lifetime studying to give honest answers. For years the
orthodox, evangelical church has done this very poorly.
So it is well to spend time learning to answer the questions
of men who are about us. But after we have done our best
to communicate to a lost world, still we must never forget
that the final apologetic which Jesus gives is the observable
love of true Christians for true Christians.
While it is not the central consideration that I am dealing
with at this time, yet the observable love and oneness among
true Christians exhibited before the world must certainly
cross all the lines which divide men. The New Testament
says, "Neither Greek nor barbarian, neither Jew nor
Gentile, neither male nor female."
In the church at Antioch the Christians included Jews and
Gentiles and reached all the way from Herod's foster brother
to the slaves; and the naturally proud Greek Christian Gentiles
of Macedonia showed a practical concern for the material
needs of the Christian Jews in Jerusalem. The observable
and practical love among true Christians that the world
has a right to be able to observe in our day certainly should
cut without reservation across such lines as language, nationalities,
national frontiers, younger and older, colors of skin, levels
of education and economics, accent, line of birth, the class
system in any particular locality, dress, short or long
hair among whites and African and non-African hairdos among
blacks, the wearing of shoes and the non-wearing of shoes,
cultural differentiations and the more traditional and less
traditional forms of worship.
If the world does not see this, it will not believe that
Christ was sent by the Father. People will not believe only
on the basis of the proper answers. The two should not be
placed in antithesis. The world must have the proper answers
to their honest questions, but at the same time, there must
be a oneness in love between all true Christians. This is
what is needed if men are to know that Jesus was sent by
the Father and that Christianity is true.
False Notions Of Unity
Let us be clear, however, about what this oneness is. We
can start by eliminating some false notions. First, the
oneness that Jesus is talking about is not just organizational
oneness. In our generation we have a tremendous push for
ecclesiastical oneness. It is in the air — like German
measles in a time of epidemic — and it is all about
us. Human beings can have all sorts of organizational unity
but exhibit to the world no unity at all.
The classic example is the Roman Catholic Church down through
the ages. The Roman Catholic Church has had a great external
unity — probably the greatest outward organizational
unity that has ever been seen in this world, but there have
been at the same time titanic and hateful power struggles
between different orders within the one church. Today there
is still greater difference between the classical Roman
Catholicism and progressive Roman Catholicism. The Roman
Catholic Church still tries to stand in organizational oneness,
but there is only organizational unity, for here are two
completely different religions, two different concepts of
God, two different concepts of truth. And exactly the same
thing is true in the Protestant ecumenical movement.
There is an attempt to bring people together organizationally
on the basis of Jesus' statement, but there is no real unity,
because two completely different religions — biblical
Christianity and a "Christianity" which is no
Christianity whatsoever — are involved. It is perfectly
possible to have organizational unity, to spend a whole
lifetime of energy on it, and yet to come nowhere near the
realm that Jesus is talking about in John 17.
I do not wish to disparage proper organizational unity on
a proper doctrinal basis. But Jesus is here talking about
something very different, for there can be a great organizational
unity without any oneness at all — even in churches
that have fought for purity.
I believe very strongly in the principle and practice of
the purity of the visible church, but I have seen churches
that have fought for purity and are merely hotbeds of ugliness.
No longer is there any observable, loving, personal relationship
even in their own midst, let alone with other true Christians.
There is a further reason why one cannot interpret this
unity of which Christ speaks as organizational. All Christians
— "That they all may be one" — are
to be one. It is obvious that there can be no organizational
unity which could include all born-again Christians everywhere
in the world. It is just not possible. For example, there
are true, born-again Christians who belong to no organization
at all. And what one organization could include those true
Christians standing isolated from the outside world by persecution?
Obviously organizational unity is not the answer.
There is a second false notion of what this unity involves.
This is the view that evangelical Christians have often
tried to escape under. Too often the evangelical has said,
"Well, of course Jesus is talking here about the mystical
union of the invisible church." And then he lets it
go at that and does not think about it any more —
ever.
In theological terms there are, to be sure, a visible church
and an invisible church. The invisible Church is the real
Church — in a way, the only church that has a right
to be spelled with a capital. Because it is made up of all
those who have thrown themselves upon Christ as Savior,
it is most important. It is Christ's Church. As soon as
I become a Christian, as soon as I throw myself upon Christ,
I become a member of this Church, and there is a mystical
unity binding me to all other members. True. But this is
not what Jesus is talking about in John 13 and John 17,
for we cannot break up this unity no matter what we do.
Thus, to relate Christ's words to the mystical unity of
the invisible Church is to reduce Christ's words to a meaningless
phrase.
Third, he is not talking about our positional unity in Christ.
It is true that there is a positional unity in Christ —
that as soon as we accept Christ as Savior we have one Lord,
one baptism, one birth (the second birth), and we are clothed
with Christ's righteousness. But that is not the point here.
Fourth, we have legal unity in Christ, but he is not talking
about that. There is a beautiful and wonderful legal unity
among all Christians. The Father (the judge of the universe)
forensically declares, on the basis of the finished work
of Christ in space, time and history, that the true moral
guilt of those who cast themselves upon Christ is gone.
In that fact we have a wonderful unity; but that is not
what Jesus is talking about here.
It will not do for the evangelical to try to escape into
the concept of the invisible Church and these other related
unities. To relate these verses in John 13 and 17 merely
to the existence of the invisible Church makes Jesus' statement
a nonsense statement. We make a mockery of what Jesus is
saying unless we understand that he is talking about something
visible.
This is the whole point: The world is going to judge whether
Jesus has been sent by the Father on the basis of something
that is open to observation.
True Oneness
In John 13 and 17, Jesus talks about a real seeable oneness,
a practicing oneness, a practical oneness across all lines,
among all true Christians.
The Christian really has a double task. He has to practice
both God's holiness and God's love. The Christian is to
exhibit that God exists as the infinite-personal God; and
then he is to exhibit simultaneously God's character of
holiness and love. Not his holiness without his love: that
is only harshness. Not his love without his holiness: that
is only compromise. Anything that an individual Christian
or Christian group does that fails to show the simultaneous
balance of the holiness of God and the love of God presents
to a watching world not a demonstration of the God who exists
but a caricature of the God who exists.
According to the Scripture and the teaching of Christ, the
love that is shown is to be exceedingly strong. It is not
just something you mention in words once in a while.
Visible Love
What, then, does this love mean? How can it be made visible?
First, it means a very simple thing: It means that when
I have made a mistake and when I have failed to love my
Christian brother, I go to him and say, "I'm sorry."
That is first.
It may seem a letdown — that the first thing we speak
of should be so simple! But if you think it is easy, you
have never tried to practice it.
In our own groups, in our own close Christian communities,
even in our families, when we have shown lack of love toward
another, we as Christians do not just automatically go and
say we are sorry. On even the very simplest level it is
never very easy.
It may sound simplistic to start with saying we are sorry
and asking forgiveness, but it is not. This is the way of
renewed fellowship, whether it is between a husband and
wife, a parent and child, within a Christian community,
or between groups. When we have shown a lack of love toward
the other, we are called by God to go and say, "I'm
sorry . . . I really am sorry."
If I am not willing to say, "I'm sorry," when
I have wronged somebody else — especially when I have
not loved him — I have not even started to think about
the meaning of a Christian oneness which the world can see.
The world has a right to question whether I am a Christian.
And more than that, let me say it again, if I am not willing
to do this very simple thing, the world has a right to question
whether Jesus was sent from God and whether Christianity
is true.
How well have we consciously practiced this? How often,
in the power of the Holy Spirit, have we gone to Christians
in our own group and said, "I'm sorry"? How much
time have we spent reestablishing contact with those in
other groups, saying to them, "I'm sorry for what I've
done, what I've said, or what I've written"? How frequently
has one group gone to another group with whom it differed
and has said, "We're sorry"? It is so important
that it is, for all practical purposes, a part of the preaching
of the gospel itself. The observable practice of truth and
the observable practice of love go hand in hand with the
proclamation of the good news of Jesus Christ.
I have observed one thing among true Christians in their
differences in many countries: What divides and severs true
Christian groups and Christians — what leaves a bitterness
that can last for 20, 30 or 40 years (or for 50 or 60 years
in a son's memory) — is not the issue of doctrine
or belief which caused the differences in the first place.
Invariably it is lack of love — and the bitter things
that are said by true Christians in the midst of differences.
These stick in the mind like glue. And after time passes
and the differences between the Christians or the groups
appear less than they did, there are still those bitter,
bitter things we said in the midst of what we thought was
a good and sufficient objective discussion. It is these
things — these unloving attitudes and words —
that cause the stench that the world can smell in the church
of Jesus Christ among those who are really true Christians.
If, when we feel we must disagree as true Christians, we
could simply guard our tongues and speak in love, in five
or ten years the bitterness could be gone. Instead of that,
we leave scars — a curse for generations. Not just
a curse in the church, but a curse in the world. Newspaper
headlines bear it in our Christian press, and it boils over
into the secular press at times — Christians saying
such bitter things about other Christians.
The world looks, shrugs its shoulders and turns away. It
has not seen even the beginning of a living church in the
midst of a dying culture. It has not seen the beginning
of what Jesus indicates is the final apologetic —
observable oneness among true Christians who are truly brothers
in Christ. Our sharp tongues, the lack of love between us
— not the necessary statements of differences that
may exist between true Christians — these are what
properly trouble the world.
How different this is from the straightforward and direct
command of Jesus Christ — to show an observable oneness
which may be seen by a watching world!
Forgiveness
But there is more to observable love than saying we are
sorry.
There must also be open forgiveness. And though it's hard
to say, "I'm sorry," it's even harder to forgive.
The Bible, however, makes plain that the world must observe
a forgiving spirit in the midst of God's people.
In the Lord's prayer, Jesus himself teaches us to pray,
"Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who
trespass against us." Now this prayer, we must say
quickly, is not for salvation. It has nothing to do with
being born again, for we are born again on the basis of
the finished work of Christ plus nothing. But it does have
to do with a Christian's existential, moment-by-moment experiential
relationship to God. We need a once-for-all forgiveness
at justification, and we need a moment-by-moment forgiveness
for our sins on the basis of Christ's work in order to be
in open fellowship with God. What the Lord has taught us
to pray in the Lord's prayer should make a Christian very
sober every day of his life: We are asking the Lord to open
to us the experiential realities of fellowship with himself
as we forgive others.
Some Christians say that the Lord's prayer is not for this
present era, but most of us would say it is. And yet at
the same time we hardly think once in a year about our lack
of a forgiving heart in relationship to God's forgiving
us. Many Christians rarely or never seem to connect their
own lack of reality of fellowship with God with their lack
of forgiveness to men, even though they may say the Lord's
prayer in a formal way over and over in their weekly Sunday
worship services.
We must all continually acknowledge that we do not practice
the forgiving heart as we should. And yet the prayer is
"Forgive us our debts, our trespasses, as we forgive
our debtors." We are to have a forgiving spirit even
before the other person expresses regret for his wrong.
The Lord's prayer does not suggest that when the other man
is sorry, then we are to show a oneness by having a forgiving
spirit.
Rather, we are called upon to have a forgiving spirit without
the other man having made the first step. We may still say
that he is wrong, but in the midst of saying that he is
wrong, we must be forgiving.
We are to have this forgiving spirit not only toward Christians
but toward all men. But surely if it is toward all men,
it is important toward Christians.
Such a forgiving spirit registers an attitude of love toward
others. But, even though one can call this an attitude,
true forgiveness is observable. Believe me, you can look
on a man's face and know where he is as far as forgiveness
is concerned. And the world is called on to look upon us
and see whether we have love across the groups, love across
party lines. Do they observe that we say, "I'm sorry,"
and do they observe a forgiving heart? Let me repeat: Our
love will not be perfect, but it must be substantial enough
for the world to be able to observe or it does not fit into
the structure of the verses in John 13 and 17. And if the
world does not observe this among true Christians, the world
has a right to make the two awful judgments which these
verses indicate: That we are not Christians and that Christ
was not sent by the Father.
When Christians Disagree
What happens, then, when we must differ with other brothers
in Christ because of the need also to show forth God's holiness
either in doctrine or in life? In the matter of life, Paul
clearly shows us the balance in I and II Corinthians. The
same thing applies in doctrine as well.
First, in I Corinthians 5:1-5 he scolds the Corinthian church
for allowing a man in the midst of fornication to stay in
the church without discipline. Because of the holiness of
God, because of the need to exhibit this holiness to a watching
world, and because such judgment on the basis of God's revealed
law is right in God's sight, Paul scolds the church for
not disciplining the man.
After they have disciplined him, Paul writes again to them
in II Corinthians 2:6-8 and scolds them because they are
not showing love toward him. These two things must stand
together.
I am thankful that Paul writes this way in his first letter
and his second, for here you see a passage of time. The
Corinthians have taken his advice, they have disciplined
the Christian, and now Paul writes to them, "You're
disciplining him, but why don't you show your love toward
him?" He could have gone on and quoted Jesus in saying,
"Don't you realize that the surrounding pagans of Corinth
have a right to say that Jesus was not sent by the Father
because you are not showing love to this man that you properly
disciplined?"
A very important question arises at this point: How can
we exhibit the oneness Christ commands without sharing in
the other man's mistakes? I would suggest a few ways by
which we can practice and show this oneness even across
the lines where we must differ.
Regret
First, we should never come to such difference with true
Christians without regret and without tears. Sounds simple,
doesn't it? Believe me, evangelicals often have not shown
it. We rush in, being very, very pleased, it would seem
at times, to find other men's mistakes. We build ourselves
up by tearing other men down. This can never show a real
oneness among Christians.
There is only one kind of man who can fight the Lord's battles
in anywhere near the proper way, and that is the man who
by nature is unbelligerent. A belligerent man tends to do
it because he is belligerent; at least it looks that way.
The world must observe that, when we must differ with each
other as true Christians, we do it not because we love the
smell of blood, the smell of the arena, the smell of the
bullfight, but because we must for God's sake. If there
are tears when we must speak, then something beautiful can
be observed.
Second, in proportion to the gravity of what is wrong between
true Christians, it is important consciously to exhibit
a seeable love to the world. Not all differences among Christians
are equal. There are some that are very minor. Others are
overwhelmingly important.
The more serious the wrongness is, the more important it
is to exhibit the holiness of God, to speak out concerning
what is wrong. At the same time, the more serious the differences
become, the more important it becomes that we look to the
Holy Spirit to enable us to show love to the true Christians
with whom we must differ. If it is only a minor difference,
showing love does not take much conscious consideration.
But where the difference becomes really important, it becomes
proportionately more important to speak for God's holiness.
And it becomes increasingly important in that place to show
the world that we still love each other.
Humanly we function in exactly the opposite direction: In
the less important differences we show more love toward
true Christians, but as the difference gets into more important
areas, we tend to show less love. The reverse must be the
case: As the differences among true Christians get greater,
we must consciously love and show a love which has some
manifestation the world may see.
So let us consider this: Is my difference with my brother
in Christ really crucially important? If so, it is doubly
important that I spend time upon my knees asking the Holy
Spirit, asking Christ, to do his work through me and my
group, that I and we might show love even in this larger
difference that we have come to with a brother in Christ
or with another group of true Christians.
Costly Love
Third, we must show a practical demonstration of love in
the midst of the dilemma even when it is costly. The word
love should not be just a banner. In other words, we must
do whatever must be done, at whatever cost, to show this
love. We must not say, "I love you," and then
— bang, bang, bang!
So often people think that Christianity is only something
soft, only a kind of gooey love that loves evil equally
with good. This is not the biblical position. The holiness
of God is to be exhibited simultaneously with love. We must
be careful therefore, not to say that what is wrong is right,
whether it is in the area of doctrine or of life, in our
own group or another. Anywhere what is wrong is wrong, and
we have a responsibility in that situation to say that what
is wrong is wrong. But the observable love must be there
regardless of the cost.
The Bible does not make these things escapable. I Corinthians
6:1-7 reads, If any of you has a dispute with another, dare
he take it before the ungodly for judgment instead of before
the saints? Do you not know that the saints will judge the
world? And if you are to judge the world, are you not competent
to judge trivial cases? Do you not know that we will judge
angels? How much more the things of this life! Therefore,
if you have disputes about such matters, appoint as judges
even men of little account in the church! I say this to
shame you. Is it possible that there is nobody among you
wise enough to judge a dispute between believers? But instead,
one brother goes to law against another — and this
in front of unbelievers! The very fact that you have lawsuits
among you means you have been completely defeated already.
Why not rather be wronged? Why not rather be cheated?
What does this mean? The church is not to let pass what
is wrong; but the Christian should suffer practical, monetary
loss to show the oneness true Christians should have rather
than to go to court against other true Christians, for this
would destroy such an observable oneness before the watching
world. This is costly love, but it is just such practicing
love that can be seen.
Paul is talking about something which is observable, something
that is very real: The Christian is to show such love in
the midst of a necessary difference with his brother that
he is willing to suffer loss — not just monetary loss
(though most Christians seem to forget all love and oneness
when money gets involved) but whatever loss is involved.
Whatever the specifics are, there is to be a practical demonstration
of love appropriate to a particular place. The Bible is
a strong and down-to-earth book.
A fourth way we can show and exhibit love without sharing
in our brother's mistake is to approach the problem with
a desire to solve it, rather than with a desire to win.
We all love to win. In fact, there is nobody who loves to
win more than the theologian. The history of theology is
all too often a long exhibition of a desire to win.
But we should understand that what we are working for in
the midst of our difference is a solution — a solution
that will give God the glory, that will be true to the Bible,
but will exhibit the love of God simultaneously with his
holiness. What is our attitude as we sit down to talk to
our brother or as group meets with group to discuss differences?
A desire to come out on top? To play one-up-manship? If
there is any desire for love whatsoever, every time we discuss
a difference, we will desire a solution and not just that
we can be proven right.
The Difference of Differences
A fifth way in which we can show a practicing, observable
love to the world without sharing in our brother's mistake
is to realize, to keep consciously before us and to help
each other be aware, that it is easy to compromise and to
call what is wrong right, but that it is equally easy to
forget to exhibit our oneness in Christ. This attitude must
be constantly and consciously developed — talked about
and written about in and among our groups and among ourselves
as individuals.
In fact, this must be talked about and written about before
differences arise between true Christians. We have conferences
about everything else. Who has ever heard of a conference
to consider how true Christians can exhibit in practice
a fidelity to the holiness of God and yet simultaneously
exhibit in practice a fidelity to the love of God before
a watching world? Whoever heard of sermons or writings which
carefully present the practice of two principles which at
first seem to work against each other: (1) the principle
of the practice of the purity of the visible church in regard
to doctrine and life and (2) the principle of the practice
of an observable love and oneness among all true Christians?
If there is no careful preaching and writing about these
things, are we so foolish as to think that there will be
anything beautiful in practice when differences between
true Christians must honestly be faced?
Before a watching world an observable love in the midst
of difference will show a difference between Christians'
differences and other men's differences. The world may not
understand what the Christians are disagreeing about, but
they will very quickly understand the difference of our
differences from the world's differences if they see us
having our differences in an open and observable love on
a practical level.
That is different. Can you see why Jesus said this was the
thing that would arrest the attention of the world? You
cannot expect the world to understand doctrinal differences,
especially in our day when the existence of true truth and
absolutes are considered unthinkable even as concepts.
We cannot expect the world to understand that on the basis
of the holiness of God we are having a different kind of
difference because we are dealing with God's absolutes.
But when they see differences among true Christians who
also show an observable unity, this will open the way for
them to consider the truth of Christianity and Christ's
claim that the Father did send the Son.
As a matter of fact, we have a greater possibility of showing
what Jesus is speaking about here in the midst of our differences,
than we do if we are not differing. Obviously we ought not
to go out looking for differences among Christians: There
are enough without looking for more. But even so it is in
the midst of a difference that we have our golden opportunity.
When everything is going well and we are all standing around
in a nice little circle, there is not much to be seen by
the world. But when we come to the place where there is
a real difference and we exhibit uncompromised principles
but at the same time observable love, then there is something
that the world can see, something they can use to judge
that these really are Christians, and that Jesus has indeed
been sent by the Father.
Love In Practice
Let me give two beautiful examples of such observable love.
One happened among the Brethren groups in Germany immediately
after the last war.
In order to control the church, Hitler commanded the union
of all religious groups in Germany, drawing them together
by law. The Brethren divided over this issue. Half accepted
Hitler's dictum and half refused. The ones who submitted,
of course, had a much easier time, but gradually in this
organizational oneness with the liberal groups their own
doctrinal sharpness and spiritual life withered. On the
other hand, the group that stayed out remained spiritually
virile, but there was hardly a family in which someone did
not die in a German concentration camp.
Now can you imagine the emotional tension? The war is over,
and these Christian brothers face each other again. They
had the same doctrine and they had worked together for more
than a generation. Now what is going to happen? One man
remembers that his father died in a concentration camp and
knows that these people over here remained safe. But people
on the other side have deep personal feelings as well.
Then gradually these brothers came to know that this situation
just would not do. A time was appointed when the elders
of the two groups could meet together in a certain quiet
place. I asked the man who told me this, "What did
you do?" And he said, "Well, I'll tell you what
we did. We came together, and we set aside several days
in which each man would search his own heart." Here
was a real difference; the emotions were deeply, deeply
stirred. "My father has gone to the concentration camp;
my mother was dragged away." These things are not just
little pebbles on the beach; they reach into the deep well-springs
of human emotions. But these people understood the command
of Christ at this place, and for several days every man
did nothing except search his own heart concerning his own
failures and the commands of Christ. Then they met together.
I asked the man, "What happened then?"
And he said, "We just were one."
To my mind, this is exactly what Jesus speaks about. The
Father has sent the Son!
Divided But One
The principle we are talking about is universal, applicable
in all times and places. Let me, then, give you a second
illustration — a different practice of the same principle.
I have been waiting for years for a time when two groups
of born-again Christians, who for good reasons find it impossible
to work together, separate without saying bitter things
against each other. I have long longed for two groups who
would continue to show a love to the watching world when
they came to the place where organizational unity seemed
no longer possible between them.
Theoretically, of course, every local church ought to be
able to minister to the whole spectrum of society. But in
practice we must acknowledge that in certain places it becomes
very difficult. The needs of different segments of society
are different.
Recently a problem of this nature arose in a church in a
large city in the Midwest in the United States. A number
of people attuned to the modern age were going to a certain
church, but the pastor gradually concluded that he was not
able to preach and minister to the two groups. Some men
can, but he personally did not find it possible to minister
to the whole spectrum of his congregation — the long-haired
ones and the far-out people they brought, and, at the same
time, the people of the surrounding neighborhood.
The example of observable love I am going to present now
must not be taken as an "of course" situation
in our day. In our generation the lack of love can easily
cut both ways: A middle-class people can all too easily
be snobbish and unloving
against the long-haired Christians, and the long-haired
Christians can be equally snobbish and unloving against
the short-haired Christians.
After trying for a long time to work together, the elders
met and decided that they would make two churches. They
made it very plain that they were not dividing because their
doctrine was different; they were dividing as a matter of
practicability. One member of the old session went to the
new group. They worked under the whole session to make an
orderly transition. Now they have two churches and they
are consciously practicing love toward each other.
Here is a lack of organizational unity that is a true love
and unity which the world may observe. The Father has sent
the Son!
I want to say with all my heart that as we struggle with
the proper preaching of the gospel in the midst of the 20th
century, the importance of observable love must come into
our message. We must not forget the final apologetic. The
world has a right to look upon us as we, as true Christians,
come to practical differences and it should be able to observe
that we do love each other. Our love must have a form that
the world may observe; it must be seeable.
The One True Mark
Let us look again at the biblical texts which so clearly
indicate the mark of the Christian:
A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved
you, so you must love one another. By this all men will
know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.
(John 12:34-35)
That all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in
me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world
may believe that you have sent me. (John 17:21)
What then shall we conclude but that as the Samaritan loved
the wounded man, we as Christians are called upon to love
all men as neighbors, loving them as ourselves. Second,
that we are to love all true Christian brothers in a way
that the world may observe. This means showing love to our
brother in the midst of our differences — great or
small — loving our brothers when it costs us something,
loving them even under times of tremendous emotional tension,
loving them in a way the world can see. In short, we are
to practice and exhibit the holiness of God and the love
of God, for without this we grieve the Holy Spirit.
Love — and the unity it attests to — is the
mark Christ gave Christians to wear before the world. Only
with this mark may the world know that Christians are indeed
Christians and that Jesus was sent by the Father. Francis
A. Schaeffer
"AD
for an APOSTLE"
-by Bryan Hupperts. (Jan 23, 2003).
My Dear
Son,
After reviewing the advertisement copy you intend to place
in the
Jerusalem Post, I feel a few corrections are in order. While
yes,
God is certainly looking for a few good men and women to
serve
as Apostles, your job description is a tad misleading. Allow
me to
bring some apostolic correction.
First, you have written: Be An Apostle of
God, See The World!
Certainly this is true. Apostles have Trans
local ministries and do
travel. I seldom stayed anywhere for more than 6 months
during
my ministry. The arrest warrants were great motivators to
help me
keep moving! However, you neglected to mention that most
of this
world tour will be as a prisoner in chains, seen through
the
peepholes of slave ships, often spent in royal prisons waste
deep
in human excrement fighting the rats for scraps of food.
Describing
the perks of the job as Exotic, while technically true,
is disingenuous.
Next, you wrote: Have God's Power! Do Miracles!
The Marks Of
An Apostle Can Be Yours!
Again, this is all true. However, you neglect
to mention that the
crowds you wow today with divine authority will flog you,
stone you,
and often crucify you the next day. Remember that Jesus
is the
Chief of all Apostles and for heaven's sake, look what happened
to him!
While the marks of an Apostle are, according
to 2 Corinthians
12:12, "Signs and wonders and mighty deeds, wonders,
and
miracles," you deftly failed to mention that the marks
of an Apostle
are also on his back. I wrote in 1 Corinthians 4:9-13, "For
I think
that God has displayed us, the apostles, last, as men condemned
to death; for we have been made a spectacle to the world,
both to
angels and to men. We are fools for Christ's sake, but you
are
wise in Christ! We are weak, but you are strong! You are
distinguished, but we are dishonored! To the present hour
we both
hunger and thirst, and we are poorly clothed, and beaten,
and
homeless. And we labor, working with our own hands. Being
reviled,
we bless; being persecuted, we endure; being defamed, we
entreat.
We have been made as the filth of the world, the offscouring
(scum) of all things until now."
I don't know where anyone gets the idea
we are supposed to be
hopping about in private jets, taking royal cruises with
the latest
CCM musical flavor of the month, and hobnobbing with celebrities.
I was facing beasts at Ephesus, the perils of robbers, the
sword,
stoning, false brethren, shipwrecks, and the always-present
danger
of the heresies of self-appointed Super Apostles! Where
do these
people get off with this? The call to Apostleship is a non-
commutable death decree! Remember the Cross?
Please rework your Apostolic ad copy to
include these words:
condemned to death, spectacles, fools for Christ, weak,
dishonored,
hungry and thirsty, poorly clothed, beaten, homeless, reviled,
persecuted, defamed, filth of the world, and don't forget
the tag line
from my ministry business card, "scum of the earth."
These are
the terms you've left out of your Madison Avenue Apostolic
Ministry Ad.
One of my personal favorite verses penned
by my ever-faithful
traveling companion Luke is Acts 21:32. "He immediately
took
soldiers and centurions, and ran down to them. And when
they
saw the commander and the soldiers, they stopped beating
Paul."
They stopped beating me. Oh, the countless joys of my calling!
You might consider rewording the Retirement
Plan portion as well.
While the eternal aspects of ruling and reigning with Christ
are
truly beyond description, still, that bit about touring
the Coliseum
in Rome hurt. Many of my friends were martyred there, mauled
to
death by beasts, used as lambs for the slaughter in the
gladiator
games, sometimes being tied to posts, set on fire, and used
as
human torches while they died screaming and worshipping
in the flames.
The call to be an Apostle of the Lord Jesus
is a clarion call to
service, hardship, and death. While the truth might not
sell well on
Madison Avenue, it will certainly separate the wolves from
the Shepherds.
Love to all from your favorite ambassador
in chains,
The Apostle Paul.
Feeding
Sheep Or Amusing Goats?
An evil is in the 'professed' camp of the
Lord, so gross in its impudence, that the most shortsighted
Christian can hardly fail to notice it. During the past
few years this evil has developed at an alarming rate. It
has worked like leaven until the whole lump ferments!
The devil has seldom done a more clever
thing, than hinting to the Church that part of their mission
is to provide entertainment for the people, with a view
to winning them. From speaking out the gospel, the Church
has gradually toned down her testimony, then winked at and
excused the frivolities of the day. Then she tolerated them
in her borders. Now she has adopted them under the plea
of reaching the masses!
My first contention is that providing amusement
for the people is nowhere spoken of in the Scriptures as
a function of the Church. If it is a Christian work why
did not Christ speak of it? 'Go into all the world and preach
the gospel to every creature, and provide amusement for
those who do not relish the gospel'.
No such words, however, are to be found. It did not seem
to occur to Him. Where do entertainers come in? The Holy
Spirit is silent concerning them. Were the prophets persecuted
because they amused the people, or because they confronted
them? The 'concert' has no martyr roll.
Again, providing amusement is in direct
antagonism to the teaching and life of Christ and all His
apostles. What was the attitude of the apostolic Church
to the world? "You are the salt of the world",
not the sugar candy; something the world will spit out,
not swallow.
Had Jesus introduced more of the bright
and pleasant elements into His teaching, He would have been
more popular. When "many of His disciples turned back
and no longer followed Him," I do not hear Him say,
'Run after these people, Peter, and tell them we will have
a different style of service tomorrow; something short and
attractive with little preaching. We will have a pleasant
evening for the people. Tell them they will be sure to enjoy
it! Be quick, Peter, we must get the people somehow!'
No! Jesus pitied sinners, sighed and wept
over them, but never sought to amuse them!
In vain will the epistles be searched to
find any trace of the 'gospel of amusement'. Their message
is, "Therefore, come out from them and separate yourselves
from them... Don't touch their filthy things..." Anything
approaching amusement is conspicuous by its absence. They
had boundless confidence in the gospel and employed no other
weapon.
After Peter and John were locked up for
preaching, the Church had a prayer meeting, but they did
not pray, 'Lord, grant unto your servants that by a wise
and discriminating use of innocent recreation we may show
these people how happy we are'.
No! They did not cease from preaching Christ.
They had no time for arranging entertainments. Scattered
by persecution they went everywhere preaching the gospel.
They turned the world upside down; that is the only difference
from today's church.
Lastly, amusement fails to effect the end
desired. Let the heavy laden who found peace through the
concert not keep silent! Let the drunkard to whom the dramatic
entertainment had been God's link in the chain of their
conversion, stand up! There are none to answer! The mission
of amusement produces no converts!
The need of the hour for today's ministry is earnest spirituality
joined with Biblical doctrine, so understood and felt, that
it sets men on fire.
Lord, clear the Church of all the rot and
rubbish the devil has imposed on her, and bring us back
to apostolic methods!
Charles Spurgeon (edited)
A.W.
Tozer's thoughts on worship and entertainment.
Tozer said: "We must have a new reformation.
We must violently break with that irresponsible, amusement-mad,
paganized pseudo-religion which passes today for a faith
in Jesus and is spread all over the world by unspiritual
men employing unscriptural methods to achieve their ends."
Today's religious music within worship is
a disaster, as churches have brought in the Devil's music
sprinkled with the word, "Love" and a minimum
of Gospel words. If we are ever to see revival in our churches,
we need to get back to the "Old Paths" and their
wonderfully Biblical music.
Three
Faces of the Church
- which one are we known for in today?
Taking some license with Stephen Covey's
best selling tome, "Seven Habits of Higly Effective
People", here are three very different, but apt discriptions
of church models that exist today. These lists are not exhaustive...
and they were written with a broad brush strokes, intentionally,
to include a wide variety of church "experiences"
in each category. In fact, I would like to know what would
your lists comprise of? Read Ephesians 4:11-16 to get a
glimpse into the church that glorifies God.
Seven highly effective habits of the Contemporary
Church that almost always guarantee church growth with very
little spiritual impact:
1. Go political, not biblical
2. Go pragmatic, not theological
3. Go psychological, not discipleship
4. Go anthropocentric, not Christocentric
5. Go postmodern, not transcendent
6. Go “share your story”, not “all for
His glory”
7. Go sickness, not sin; go disease not, disobedience
Seven highly effective habits of the Traditional
Church that almost always guarantee church stagnation with
very little spiritual impact:
1. Go traditional, not spiritual
2. Go legalistic, not grace
3. Go corporate, not community
4. Go “count converts”, not “make disciples”
5. Go pastoral/elder ruler, not shepherd/servant leader
6. Go more information, not Christlikeness
7. Go programs, not prayer
Seven highly effective habits of the Biblical
Church that almost always guarantee God’s blessing
and spiritual impact:
1. Go supremacy of God and His glory in worship
2. Go sola fide, sola scriptura, sola gratia, solus Christus,
Soli Deo Gloria
3. Go The Great Commission and the Two Great Commandments
4. Go take care of the poor, the widow and the orphan
5. Go discipline of sin
6. Go pray without ceasing
7. Go equip the saints for the work of the ministry
AS
I SEE IT - Larry Norman
A Joyful Noise
“Make a joyful noise unto the Lord.”
I think that most of us have heard this
Bible verse before.
What does the word “joyful”
connote?
It suggests an overflowing, irrepressible
expression. But what kind of noise is appropriate for utterance
in the presence of God? And how can we best convey joy in
our worship?
Psalm 33 says, “Rejoice in the Lord,
oh you righteous! For praise from the upright is beautiful.”
This seems to imply that God “hears”
the righteousness of our heart, not the execution and demonstration
of our verbal, musical acuity. Not the decibel level.
“Praise the Lord with the harp. Make
melody with an instrument of ten strings. Sing to Him a
new song.”
Mouth harp, stringed harp, six string guitar,
ten string cuatro or charango; whatever instruments might
exist within your culture. Does it matter? Probably much
more important is this; that you “Sing to Him a NEW
song.”
“Play skillfully with a shout of joy.”
“Skillfully”: do your best with
all your heart, soul and might. “With a shout of joy.”
Again the joy which can’t be whispered – it
bubbles up and overflows and explodes into a shout.
"For the Word of the Lord is right,
and all His work is done in truth. He loves righteousness
and justice;
God seeks to find righteousness and justice
in His people. God “hears” our hearts."
FROM YOUR LIPS TO GOD’S EAR:
For a Christian who is attempting to worship
and praise God, what exactly is God hearing us express when
we are in the act of communicating our gratefulness to Him?
If I may offer a suggestion, the Bible doesn’t
say “Make a contrived noise unto the Lord.”
And it doesn’t say “Make a socially acceptable
noise unto the Lord.” And it doesn’t say “Make
a very commercially pleasing noise unto the Lord.”
So if you are trying to “praise”
and “worship” God with one of the more prominent
selections from the Time-Life Series Of PRAISE AND WORSHIP
SONGS (As Advertised On TV) then I’m not really sure
if God is that much interested. In fact, I’m quite
sure He’s already heard those particular songs thousands
of time.
But I think, deductively, that God would
be pleased if you “Sing to Him a NEW song.”
I believe that the song which overflows
from your heart is the song God wants to hear. And it has
never been expressed in that exact way until the moment
you “confess” and declare it and offer it to
Him. It is a new song. It wasn’t contrived by a professional
“praise and worship” writer who cranks out songs
for the publishing division of the record company which
specializes in the distribution of music which conforms
to this very popular genre. The Bible doesn’t say,
“Make a contemporary noise unto the Lord.” Remember,
the NEW song can only come from YOU.
“Well, I don’t really know how
to write a song. It can’t be very good,” you
might think.
But the very fact that you can’t formulate
a structured composition is possibly what God would appreciate
about it the very most. The humble song of the righteous
man is more pleasing than the competent song of the professional
writer who gives God “lip service” ... for a
price.
God is seeking a relationship WITH us, not
a performance FROM us. He wants us to open up the parts
of us which can’t be opened, except by letting go.
He wants to enter into the uncharted, undesignated, unchoreographed
parts of our faith.
ENTER INTO HIS GATES WITH THANKSGIVING:
I don’t believe that God cares about
record sales and popularity and chart position. And I somewhat
wonder if the C.C.L.I. organization (Christian Copyright
Licensing International) – which charges money every
time the church sings a praise and worship song which is
registered by their society – is cause for vexation
in the Heavenlies? After all, if a song is written FOR God,
to worship God, then shouldn’t it be GIVEN to God?
If it’s FOR Him, shouldn’t HE own it?
God doesn’t charge us a fee to worship
Him. Isn’t it enough that the publisher and writer
make money from the CD sales? Do they also have to be paid
every time a congregation sings their song? They also get
paid for the sheet music which choirs use to memorize their
compositions. Isn’t that enough money?
And if the praise and worship staff writer
says “Well, it’s not exactly written FOR Him,
it’s supposed to be TO Him. It’s for people
to use when they sing TO Him” – then what is
its true purpose? Adoration through worship or royalty accrual?
Should the church be forced to pay when
they use music to “Enter into His Gates with Thanksgiving,
and into His Courts with Praise.” Is it wrong to praise
God or worship God in song unless there is payment to a
licensing organization?
As a matter of fact, this idea of paying
on a “per song” basis reminds me of ancient
church history when a prayer was believed to be more speedily
directed to Heaven when accompanied with a lit candle –
and each candle had a price. The people were told that the
prayers ascended more effectively up toward Heaven, carried
by the wispish curl of smoke from the wick and flame.
When Jesus came into the temple and cleansed
it by driving out the “money changers,” the
problem was the same. Only temple money could be used to
buy a sacrifice. Secular money had to be traded in for temple
money. If Ten World Dollars can only buy One Temple Dollar,
then the worshippers are being told that their sacrifices
aren’t good enough unless officially sanctioned by
the church; that their candles aren’t holy enough;
that the New Song which springs from a believer’s
lips is not as spiritual as an official praise and worship
song, seen via the overhead projectors.
Am I making any sense? I find that words
are sometimes so ineffectual. Let me ask you a different
question. What would you think of a contemporary culture
where one person was chosen as “the winner”
for the BEST PRAYER OF THE YEAR Award?
“And now this highly coveted prize
for The Best Prayer Of The Year goes to Ronnie Repettis.
Ronnie, that was a GREAT prayer. It has warmed the hearts
of people all over the world. It’s made such an impression
upon the pop culture that it was featured on the Time Life
CNN Aol.com website download called ‘WOW, THAT’S
WHAT I CALL PRAYER.’ Ronnie, this must be your proudest
moment...I mean...your humblest moment.”
“Well, thanks, everyone. I really appreciate this
award. I’d like to mention a few names here...I wasn’t
sure if I was going to pick up this award again this year
but...I didn’t want to forget anyone so I wrote all
of the names down. First of all...I’d like to thank
my support team, all the staff at Intercession Publications,
all the undocumented factory workers in the print house
who have been listed as voting members of the Academy...and
of course, my wife and kids for really inspiring me to write
down this prayer. And I just want to say to any of you kids
out there who might be having a flagpole prayer meeting
at school in the morning, or who might even just be praying
before your big test....you never know when you might get
the inspiration for that special prayer...and then, if you
pay your dues and work hard at it...you’ll be up here
someday, encouraging others.”
BEST PRAYER:
I guess that sounds preposterous. But in
actuality, there have been “hit” prayers, written
down and recited by others, centuries after the original
author has passed away. Top Ten Hit Prayers. How about the
Serenity Prayer, (“God, grant me the serenity to accept
the things I cannot change...”) the Prayer of St.
Francis ("O Lord, make me an instrument of Thy Peace!
Where there is hatred, let me sow love...”), The Irish
Prayer (“May the road rise up to meet you, May the
wind be ever at your back...And until we meet again, May
God hold you in the hollow of his hand.”) and of course
the famous bedtime prayer, “Now I lay me down to sleep.”
And while we mortals DO give out Grammies
and Dove Awards and other graven images for Best New Artist,
Best Album Of The Year and now even for Best Praise and
Worship Album, we certainly don’t yet give out awards
for Best Prayers. In fact most of the written “prayers”
which are read at political forums, national holiday events,
inaugurations and state funerals have one thing in common.
Most seem, at least to me, dreadfully boring, formally rigid
and only vaguely sincere.
Let us consider the nature of prayer. When
you worship God, does your prayer have to be “memorable”?
Does it have to be quoted by others, circulated on the Internet,
printed on posters and wall plaques for God to take note
of?
No. Of course not. The Bible says that when
we pray, God inclines His ear toward us. He hears the prayer
of our heart. God inclines His ear toward those who pray
with sincerity.
PRESERVING THE MOMENT:
What about trying to freeze-dry “worship”
or “praise”? If someone is feeling inspired
to worship God, and they are suddenly struck with an awareness
of how powerful their prayer seems to be, should they stop
addressing it to God so they can run and get a notebook?
Should they start writing it down to distill
it and “capture it” for other people who maybe
aren’t as “gifted” at worshipping God
with such great sincerity and clarity? Should they carry
a portable cassette recorder when they spontaneously worship
and praise God so that their inspiration can later be shared
with others? No. That is not what worship is for. Your praise
and worship is not for the multitudes, it is for YOU. You
benefit from your time spent with God.
What does God consider to be a beautiful
prayer?
“For praise from the upright is beautiful.”
God rejoices in our uprightness, in our
righteousness. He is glad for us when we carry out our lives
in a right way. He is more interested in us than in what
we say.
Micah 6:6 says: “With what shall I
come before the Lord and bow myself before the high God.
Shall I come before Him with burnt offerings, with calves
a year old? Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams,
ten thousand rivers of oil? Shall I give my first-born for
my transgressions; the fruit of my body for the sin of my
soul?"
And then Micah answers his own questions
with this: "He has shown you, oh man, what is good.
And what does the Lord require of you but to do justly,
to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.”
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