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Attempts at Honesty

Reflections on the interplay of the Bible and Culture

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Home 2019 Archives for August 2019

Archives for August 2019

The Evangel in Evangelism

Posted on August 15, 2019 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

Great Evangelical Recession

Jesus Christ’s gospel (the “evangel” from which our movement gets its name) embeds in its command to “go and make disciples” the measurement of the movement’s health. By Christ’s own words, this is the simplest gauge we use to measure success or failure. Are we making disciples? Not just convincing converts, but making disciples?

Not just filling the seats in auditoriums, but training the souls of transformed individuals? Are we valuing the quality of our discipleship more than the quantity of our attendance? Jesus’ words and life reveal that evangel-followers can know whether they are succeeding or failing by this: whether new growing disciples are being made or not.

John Dickerson – The Great Evangelical Recession

I am encouraged by this affirmation of the importance of quality of the disciples over the quantity of them.

The problem is that it is much easier to assess quantity and more difficult to assess quality. But the difficulty does not relieve us of the responsibility to have this priority.

Filed Under: Quotation

On the value of good preaching

Posted on August 14, 2019 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

I recently ran across a post by Albert Mohler entitled The Urgency of Peaching that I found helpful. I found it helpful because it speaks to a concern that I have had for a while about what is considered acceptable in many churches with regard to preaching.

Those of us who run in reformed circles claim to believe that each of us carries the ongoing effect of the sin of our first parents. We are not as bad as we might be, but sin taints everything we do, think and say.

Furthermore, we know that we are often blind to our own need of transformation. Preachers should keep this in mind as we think about selecting a Bible passage for our sermon.

I am suspicious of those who think of topics which they would like to address and then go in search of a portion of the Bible that they can use as a springboard for their opinion on the subject.

There is value in taking a passage of Scripture and exploring what it says. There is danger is determining what we would like to say and finding Scripture to support it. I find that there is way too much of the latter coming from pulpits in American churches.

The difference between these two types of preaching is this. In the former, the preacher subjects himself to the text. He then seeks to understand and proclaim what the passage says. The preacher allows Scripture to be the judge of what is to be heard.

In the latter, the preacher (knowingly or unknowingly) places himself above the text and proclaims what he wants the congregation to hear or what he thinks they should hear. The preacher then makes himself out to be the judge of what is to be heard.

We can find many stories which illustrate this difference in the Old Testament. One of my favorites is that of Micaiah in 1 Kings 22. There we see the prophet Micaiah, who spoke the truth to Ahab, compared to the prophet Zedekiah, who spoke what Ahab wanted to hear.

If we really believe that the Bible is God’s verbal revelation to men and women, then we should take seriously the call to be subject to it through the ministry of preaching. This is as true for the person in the pulpit as for the person in the pew.

As a result of this thought process, I feel strongly that the best approach is to take a book of the Bible and preach through it line by line, and word by word. The beauty of this approach is that the preacher is not picking what he wants to say, but saying what the text demands him to say.

When you go to the doctor do you want him to tell you what you want to hear, or do you want him to tell you the truth? If your goal is to be healthy, you need to hear the truth even if it is disturbing so that corrective action can be taken if needed.

In the same way, we should expect our preacher to communicate to himself and to us the diagnosis that God makes upon our condition and the corrective action that God prescribes. We don’t need or want the preacher to interfere with this process by filtering out the inconvenient or disturbing bits.

Our spiritual health depends on this.

Filed Under: Commentary

Weary of the pressure to be “Woke”

Posted on August 13, 2019 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

The first time I heard the word “woke” used with regard to racial and political issues was in the Eric Mason book, Woke Church. As an encouragement to be mindful of racial and economic tensions within the church and address them, I found the book quite helpful.

But if the idea of being woke is to shift the church’s primary focus onto racial or social issues, I have a problem.

My concern is that the church is not called to focus on the hot button social issue of the day. We are called to preach the gospel along with all the ramifications of what it looks like when we live out the gospel.

Those in the church who call us to be “woke” seem to see themselves as modern day prophets calling the church to reform. But the prophets of old did not call Israel to follow a new message, they called them to live out the message they had already received.

The problem with jumping on social issue bandwagons is that most of the people driving the wagons over simplify the problem and don’t address the core issue. As Christians, we know that core issue is sin. Social issues result from a broken relationship with God and the sin that results from that break.

Christians must keep in mind that the gospel speaks to the disease behind the social issues. The gospel addresses the evil that resides in your breast and mine.

Jesus taught us that the two great commands are to love God with our entire being and love our neighbor as good or better than we love ourselves (see Matthew 22:34-40). I argue that we can not fulfill either of these commands apart from the work of God in our hearts that begins when we come into relationship with Jesus. Jesus himself said, “apart from me you can do nothing” (John 15:5).

The Gospel is the message that Christ died to break the curse of sin that has us in bondage. The meaning of the Cross is that we can all (regardless of gender, race or economic status) find peace with God through the work of Jesus.

As church leaders, can we truly partner with social justice warriors that have a very different motivation for their activism? Will those warriors allow us to address the core issue of sin? Or, will they only allow us to march along in silence?

We are called to make disciples (see Matthew 28:19-20). We know from Jesus’ example that part of the disciple making process is to address real needs, both physical and spiritual. God wants us to look after those who are helpless and in need of support.

Looking after those who need help does not prove how good we are. Looking good is not a proper motivation. But when we love our neighbors, that love can remove barriers which prevent us from sharing the gospel. Again, we are called to make disciples, that is our mission.

I get weary of the call to be woke because in the end, it doesn’t matter how woke we are. It doesn’t matter whether we are liked and accepted by the social warriors of the day. It only matters if we fulfill our mission to make disciples.

That is how we will be judged by the one who gave us that mission.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection

Humble and Contrite?

Posted on August 6, 2019 Written by Mark McIntyre 2 Comments

This morning I read the last few chapters in Isaiah and these words stood out from them:

“But this is the one to whom I will look: he who is humble and contrite in spirit and trembles at my word.”

Isaiah 66:2b, ESV

When I look at the church growth experts and review their strategies for building megachurches, I don’t see a lot of humility and contrition. Instead, I see a lot of words about “vision casting”, marketing plans, branding and worship service dynamics. We have pastors that act more like CEO’s rather than shepherds of their people. We have church leaders who frame a vision and then build a team of like-minded supporters rather than allowing disparate gifts to operate for the good of the church body.

Too much of what is written about building and managing a church could be equally relevant for managing any publicly traded company. Just scrub out the nominal references to God and the Bible and substitute more politically correct jargon and you’re good to go for a press release or employee pep rally.

I have served in leadership at a couple of large churches and we never began a meeting with prayers of repentance nor did we spend time pleading with God to provide wisdom and leading for the congregation. Usually the meeting proceeded with the nuts and bolts of following the growth plan after a nominal prayer asking God’s blessing and perhaps a short devotional. I am saddened by this and repent of my passivity in participating in it.

Perhaps I am becoming a curmudgeon. But I wonder if we have made the American church into something that God does not intend it to be. Do we cause God to weep when he sees the gap between what we are and what we should be? I’m pretty sure that God is not impressed by the big buildings, multiple campuses and large budgets.

I don’t think that we can place too much stress on Jesus’ statement about the responsibility for building the church. It is his; he claimed the responsibility and the resurrection proves that he has the power to do it.

If Jesus will build it and if Jesus has the power to do it, maybe we should spending more time in prayer asking him how he wants us to participate in that building than we do in creating our own strategies.

We might get to a better destination if we let him steer.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection

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