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Attempts at Honesty

Reflections on the interplay of the Bible and Culture

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Home Archives for 2017

Archives for 2017

Inward vs. Outward Focus

Posted on March 10, 2017 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

FocusChurches can have an inward focus (all about nurturing the members) and/or an outward focus (all about reaching those outside the church). It is my belief that in a healthy church, these two should both be present.

I have been to churches that were so focused on body life that they became ingrown and unfriendly to outsiders. I have been in others that were so focused on bringing in outsiders that there was no plan to bring members into spiritual maturity. Either extreme must be avoided.

I understand that it is difficult to find a balance between reaching outsiders and ministering to insiders. But I am convinced that we need to do both and we need to do both well. The goal that the Apostle Paul gives us in Ephesians 4:13 is that “all attain to the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to a mature man, to the measure of the stature which belongs to the fullness of Christ.”

While we cannot lose sight of reaching out, neither can we lose sight of Christ’s demand of leaders to build up their flock, and to that end, leaders must participate in the “equipping of the saints for the work of service, to the building up of the body of Christ.” (Eph. 4:12) It is my hope that as churches look to grow in reach and consequently grow in numbers that we do not lose sight of the need to grow deeper in Christ.

After a wind storm there is plenty of evidence of what happens to a large tree with shallow roots. That shallow rooted tree becomes firewood because the roots cannot keep the tree upright.

Those of us in church need to reach out to our communities. But, we must also have a strategy and a plan to bring that community to maturity in Christ.

It is not an either/or proposition. Jesus called us to the process of making disciples. Making disciples entails more than just getting more people through the doors of the church.

In the book DiscipleShift, the authors ask their readers to assess the disciple making process in their churches:

“. . . attendance, busyness, construction, finances, and programs are not real indications of success. The core question of effectiveness — the question that ultimately matters — is whether the people who are getting saved are being conformed to the likeness of Christ. Are we making mature disciples of Jesus who are not only able to withstand the culture but are also making disciples of Jesus themselves?”

Are we making disciples that are also making disciples?

Filed Under: Discipleship

Clowney on spiritual decay

Posted on March 8, 2017 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

In reading the opening chapter in The Church by Edmund Clowney, I encountered this paragraph:

“To be sure, if the church rather than Christ becomes the centre of our devotion, spiritual decay has begun. A doctrine of the church that does not centre on Christ is self-defeating and false. But Jesus said to the disciples who confessed him, ‘I will build my church. To ignore his purpose is to deny his lordship. The good news of Christ’s coming includes the good news of what he came to do: to join us to himself and to one another as his body, the new people of God.”

I have been in churches that had a particular end times scenario as their primary focus. I have been in churches that were focused on growth in numbers. I have been in churches that got side tracked by a building program. All of these churches lost their focus on Christ as our primary need and our only hope.

As Clowney points out, when this happens it is a sign of spiritual decay. It is a sign that the leaders of those churches lost sight of their true purpose.

But more importantly, those leaders lost sight of whose responsibility it is to build the church. They  usurped the authority and responsibility of Jesus Christ to build his church his way. When the focus is on “denominational distinctives” or a large building, a subtle form idolatry has crept into the church.

Focusing on denominational distinctives smacks of a marketing strategy to build a brand identity. But Jesus didn’t say that he wants or needs marketing strategists to build his church. He calls his leaders shepherds, not generals.

Jesus told us that he would build the church and all we needed to do was be faithful to him.

We are faithful to him by living out our calling to lives of integrity. We are faithful to him by following his command to make disciples. We are faithful to him by following his example of proclaiming the gospel in a way that is completely gracious and completely truthful.

Jesus will build his church and anything that we do that is not prompted by him or endorsed by him is a sign of spiritual decay as Edmond Clowney reminds us.

Filed Under: Church Leadership Tagged With: decay, decline

What is sinful about man’s fallen condition?

Posted on February 27, 2017 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

Question 18Question 18 asks, “What is sinful about man’s fallen condition?”

I actually prefer the original answer to this one which is, “The sinfulness of that estate whereinto man fell, consists in the guilt of Adam’ s first sin, the want of original righteousness, and the corruption of his whole nature, which is commonly called Original Sin; together with all actual transgressions which proceed from it.”

Malcolm Muggeridge has written, “The depravity of man is at once the most empirically verifiable reality but at the same time the most intellectually resisted fact.” One does not have to work very hard to find evidence that something is very broken in the world. If we are honest with ourselves, we have to admit that there is something very broken inside of us.

The Christian explanation is that what is wrong with the world is that men (and women) start out broken because we have inherited a sin nature from our first parents. In other words, we are born in a state of rebellion against God and it is only an act of God’s grace that can overcome this state.

Yes, I realize that this is not a popular idea. We would all like to believe that men are basically good and that given the right conditions, they will do the right thing and life will be lovely. But history does not bear this out. I just heard on the news yesterday that in the City of Philadelphia, deaths from opioid overdose have quadrupled in the last few years. While our culture is moving further toward personal freedom, it seems that this freedom is not bringing the intended result. Despair seems to be on the increase.

This answer does not teach us that all men are as bad as they could be. There are many people who are loving, kind upstanding citizens who don’t believe in God or identify themselves as Christians. The idea of the depravity of man does not deny that men retain some desire to pursue good ends.

Nor does it teach us that those who come to believe in Jesus Christ will no longer struggle with a sin nature. The Apostle Paul has a lot to say about this in Romans 7.

What this idea does teach us is that we are in need of a Savior to do for us what we cannot do for ourselves. A proper understanding of original sin reveals that while we do things that look good on the outside, we do them for all the wrong reasons. If the proper goal of life is to glorify God and enjoy him forever, then everything must be done with that motivation. The problem is that we can do good things for selfish reasons.

I am constantly reminded that Christianity is not a moral code of behavior. It is not a set of rules to be obeyed. Christianity at its center is trusting in Jesus Christ to do for us what we could not do for ourselves. It is trusting that Christ’s righteous life is accepted by God on our behalf (See 2 Cor. 5:21).

Filed Under: Discipleship

What I’ve been doing instead of blogging

Posted on February 25, 2017 Written by Mark McIntyre 1 Comment

PCA LogoThose who regularly read this blog have probably realized that over the last year, posts have been rather sporadic. I took a long break between Memorial Day and Labor Day and haven’t posted very regularly since coming back to it in September.

I thought I would take a few minutes to tell you what has been consuming my time.

A couple of years ago, I became convinced that I should pursue licensure to preach in the Presbyterian Church of America (PCA), the domination to which I currently belong. The reasons for pursuing this were two. First, it was an opportunity to sharpen both my knowledge of the Bible and my theological understanding. And secondly, it would qualify me to be “on the bench” for the PCA churches in our area, some of which are small church plants that do not have multiple elders who are qualified to fill the pulpit.

The PCA has adopted the Westminster Confession of Faith along with the two Westminster Catechisms as the definitive statements of their belief. These were documents to which I had no exposure prior to moving forward toward licensure. And, while I have a graduate degree in Biblical Studies, that degree was obtained more than 25 years ago, so I was more than a little rusty in my knowledge and it took a lot of time and effort to gain the required familiarity with these documents to pass the licensure examinations. This preparation consumed the time that I would otherwise have invested in posting to this blog.

I am happy to say that last Saturday, February 18, the final step in the process was completed. I am now officially licensed by the Eastern Pennsylvania Presbytery to preach in the churches of the PCA. I am relieved that the process is over and am excited to see what opportunities present themselves to preach. I am also happy to be able to spend some time writing for Attempts at Honesty.

Before starting this process, I would have told you that I am really bad at memorization. I envy those who can read something a couple of times and regurgitate it word for word with little effort. My brain is not like that. But, I did find out that even though it requires a lot of effort on my part, I can indeed memorize and have memorized about half of the Westminster Shorter Catechism.

If you are convinced that you cannot memorize Bible verses or anything else, I encourage you to not give up. The effort will be rewarded by the quick recall of what you have memorized.

Filed Under: Commentary Tagged With: licensure, PCA, preach

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