Archive for August, 2012

I know that in every movement there are buzz words which always end up being used so much that I almost barf when I hear them. The funny thing is that I am not even sure “missional” is a real word (Microsoft Word spell check doesn’t seem to think so, which of course is always right! Thanks Bill!) Basically, when people use that word today, they mean that the church should get up off the pew, head out into the streets, and do something to make this world better. It is not necessarily direct evangelism, but the thought is that if we are out there doing “good deeds”, that is the best witness of Jesus. From picking up trash to providing clean water, emerging churches are rolling up the sleeves on their Old Navy shirts and digging in. Sometimes I feel more like I am in Green Peace than serving the King of Peace.

You know what is coming next. We must look BEHIND what we see on the surface of the Emerging Conversation so that we don’t miss a key piece of our time in church history. In the Seeker movement, many churches’ goal was to create a place where non Christians felt comfortable coming to a service. Polls were used to ascertain in what way that could be done best. The Emerging church says that instead of trying to get people to come to us, we should go out to them, where they are. It is more than that though, in that there is a strong push to live out a “kingdom” lifestyle in the here and now. The traditional church is accused of only caring for people’s eternal state, and downplaying any significance of our lives before heaven.

Though Jesus clearly talked quite a bit about salvation and the eternal destination of man (for example Matthew 25), Jesus’ teaching on His kingdom clearly placed an importance on how we live our lives now. Even more importantly, His miracles showed His care for improving people’s lives here on earth.  Some people say that Jesus never started a soup kitchen, but how about the miraculous feedings? Mark 8:1-3 says, “In those days, when again a great crowd had gathered, and they had nothing to eat, he called his disciples to him and said to them, “I have compassion on the crowd, because they have been with me now three days and have nothing to eat. And if I send them away hungry to their homes, they will faint on the way. And some of them have come from far away.” This passage shows the essence of mercy ministries such as feeding programs and aid to countries with famine.

How about the healing miracles of Jesus? Matthew 4:23 says, “And he went throughout all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and healing every disease and every affliction among the people.” He could have just focused on proclaiming the gospel and providing eternal salvation only, but He healed people, immediately improving their quality of life. Christian missions has often been in the forefront of developing clinics, hospitals, and teaching medical knowledge because these people understood that the mission of Christ was both eternal and immediate.

Paul seems to catch this “kingdom lifestyle” teaching, as he often repeats the importance of “good deeds”. In Titus 2:11-14 , Paul connects his theology of salvation with the good deeds of a believer. “For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people, training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright, and godly lives in the present age, waiting for our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ, who gave himself for us to redeem us from all lawlessness and to purify for himself a people for his own possession who are zealous for good works.”

Of course, eternal salvation and forgiveness of sins is the MAIN Gospel benefit and goal of Jesus, and Scripture clearly teaches an eternal perspective. However, even if I complain about the over usage of the word “missional”, I can’t argue with placing more emphasis on the church reaching out into their communities, countries, and the world with mercy ministries. What does it profit a church if they have the coolest college age ministry ever, yet ignore the cries of the hungry and homeless around them? When we serve, we do it clearly as believers, not trying to blend in with Earth loving hippies or Starbucks drinking post modern activists. We do so because Jesus brought reformation to His people who had forgotten their God’s love for the “orphan, the widow, and the children”. So, let’s go be mercyministrysional (patent pending on this new church word).

The maze is a bit odd. I have to admit that out of all the creative, interactive, Emerging worship ideas, this one takes the cake. It doesn’t make it any better when they call it a labyrinth. You walk along the path to different stations, candles and incense everywhere, and trippy monk music fills the background. If I just experienced this for the first time, I might think I was in some New Age meeting and later we would hear how to tap “our inner self” to “actualize our god self”. Many Emerging churches don’t stop with worship, but keep going with their new teaching styles. Imagine sitting in couches, surrounding the speaker in a circle, where you all “discover the truth of Scriptures together”. I keep thinking about my Bible school where there was always that “guy” who dragged class out for hours just to hear himself talk.

We must again look BEHIND all the new worship and teaching models to understand something crucial for our generation of church history. The bottom line is that people feel that church has largely become a spectator sport, where the “professional” church leaders do all the speaking, and Joe layperson sits there like he is watching a performance. We have all these educational studies now about the need for interaction and individual thought to create true learning, yet we don’t see these applied in most services today. Not all Emerging churches agree on HOW interactive this service should be. The simple, organic church meeting is almost entirely interactive, with no pastor or worship leader at all. Others use interaction in worship and teaching, but still have worship leaders and pastors who direct and prepare the core of the service.

It is hard to argue that there are ample Scriptures which point to the body being involved when the church gathers. Both 1 Corinthians 14:26 and Ephesians 5:18-19 seem to point that direction. “When you come together, each of you has a hymn,or a word of instruction, a revelation, a tongue or an interpretation. Everything must be done so that the church may be built up.” “Instead, be filled with the Spirit, speaking to one another with psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit. Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord” The point that Paul is making is that when the church meets, it needs the whole body to encourage each other and share their gifts. In fact, he spends most of 1 Corinthians 12 building the body analogy to drive this point home.

This doesn’t mean that there weren’t parts of the service that were not interactive. Paul also says that the service needs to have both teaching from the elders and order (which often comes from planning and leadership). 1 Corinthians 14:33, “For God is not a God of disorder but of peace —as in all the congregations of the Lord’s people.” 1 Timothy 5:17, “The elders who direct the affairs of the church well are worthy of double honor, especially those whose work is preaching and teaching.” The New Testament service wasn’t a free for all, where everything was spontaneous and interactive. Paul believed in the importance of sound doctrine being taught, and this requires study, preparation, and gifting.

I grew up in a charismatic church (others might use the word Pentecostal), where for many years we had under 100 people total in our congregation. Our worship was led by teams of church members, but every week had interaction from different members. People would share a prophetic word, vision, or revelation that God had given them. There was order as an elder or the pastor directed this along with the worship leader. The worship team itself was mostly made up of “laypeople” so that too was interactive. Even though we didn’t use mazes, poetry readings, or art, we still knew that worship had to be interactive and participatory if we wanted to hear all that God wanted to share with us. Who knew each week who God would speak through?

I will have to admit that I have never been in an interactive sermon. I don’t think the old “turn to your neighbor and say….” really counts as interactive. I am a Bible teacher by call and experience, not a preacher, so it is always odd to me not to have interaction when I preach. I am so used to posing questions and having discussion, that I often leave preaching feeling unsatisfied. What I mean is that the interaction shows me as a teacher that people are learning (or not!), following with me, and guiding the teaching occasionally to a great area of need that they have. I train new teachers 0n all the interactive teaching methods I know, but then toss them out the window for preaching. I realize in churches with hundreds of members, interactive teaching seems not possible, but I believe we have to look at this issue as a church.

So, I don’t think you should run out and fire your church leadership, abandon your normal liturgies, and have a 100% interactive service. I do think though that the Emerging conversation has a valid point here, that we aren’t going to a show. Coffee bars in our churches are one thing, but if we start serving popcorn and slushies, then we may have a problem. Our churches reach full potential when the whole body is involved. That doesn’t mean everyone gets to teach or lead worship, but it does mean that we need to pull apart how we do church and seek to create space for involvement and interaction. Otherwise, there will be no reason to go to church in person when you can sit in your chair at home and watch the live stream on the internet. No, I am not recommending that!

The Trek. Journey. Expedition. Imagio Dei. Solomon’s Porch. Mars Hill. If your church doesn’t have a cool name today, you might as well lock up the doors and call it quits. Seriously though, if you were thinking about naming your new church “First Baptist” or “Parkville Methodist”, you might want to rethink that decision. Emerging churches, for the most part, have chosen “non traditional” names that express their mission statement more than their location or denomination. Often, you are left scratching your head at exactly what their name means (especially when they chose Latin names, tre chic). People have been in emerging churches for months before realizing that they are actually in a Assemblies of God or Baptist church!

To continue our series on the Emerging Church, we must look BEHIND all the names to see what the movement is expressing, so that we don’t miss something key for church development. A common complaint about the Seeker and mega church model is that is more about form than it is about the function of the church. Change was needed, but these models only changed musical styles, preaching strategies, and the look of the church. Coffee bars and trendy bookstores can’t be what Jesus had in mind for His reformation. The names these new churches have chosen represent their desire to address the functional changes needed, putting the focus on the gift instead of the gift wrapping. At first glance, you would assume that these hip names are continuing the marketing strategies of the church, but in reality, they are distancing themselves from that.

Most people use Jesus’ conversation with the woman at the well to talk about how Jesus brought reform to worship. While it is true that worship is mentioned, the core of the issue is more in line with the function over form argument. The woman wants to know if the Jews in Jerusalem have the correct form of worship, or if she can continue in her Samaritan’s traditions and location. The Jews had the Second Temple, Levitical priests, and their worship was located on Mount Zion. The Samaritans had their own temple on Mount Gerizim, had created their own priesthood, and carried out sacrifices in their own way. Jesus as always gives much more than a simple answer to her question in John 4:21-24.

“Woman,” Jesus replied, “believe me, a time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem. You Samaritans worship what you do not know; we worship what we do know, for salvation is from the Jews. Yet a time is coming and has now come when the true worshipers will worship the Father in the Spirit and in truth, for they are the kind of worshipers the Father seeks.God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in the Spirit and in truth.” The place and form of worship was not what was important here, it was how they worshiped. Led by the Holy Spirit and grounded in the truth was the key for worship, not just in the New Covenant, but the Old as well. Both the Jews and the Samaritans had lost sight of this.

What does this have to do with function over form? My conclusion is that if we as the church are worshiping in Spirit and truth, then you will see that evidenced in how we live our lives both inside and outside of our church meetings. The church functions as a body of encouragement and fellowship if we are living in the Spirit and applying the truth of God’s Word (1 Corinthians 12 – 14). Empowered and guided by the Spirit, we can not help but to share the witness of Jesus as the early church did after Pentecost (Acts 1 -2). You can change from Gerizim to Jerusalem, use Jewish or Samaritan music, or even create a new position of leadership, and still not address WHAT the church is supposed to actually do when they gather and go out into the world.

I realize that the context of this discussion is deeper when you consider how the Samaritans were disobeying many Old Testament laws in their worship (building another temple, creating own priesthood, syncretism with idolatry), which makes it even more impactful how Jesus steers His reformation. He wasn’t interested in making worship more “Jewish” or “Samaritan”, He was wanting a “race-less” church that was more well known for their adherence to the truth and fruit of the Spirit. The Emerging church is trying for the most part to cut through to that question, and not just respond to the latest poll findings. A cool church name looks great on a coffee mug and t-shirt, but if it doesn’t represent a body of believers actively building each other up and reaching out to the lost, it is just another form gimmick. I am still working on my own idea for a church name, but can’t get beyond “Bunch of Jesus People”. Pretty cool, huh?

You definitely get the feeling that some people don’t like going to church. Just taking a stroll through some of the Emerging Church book titles gives you that nagging feeling. “Unchristian”,  “They like Jesus but not the Church”, “Lord, Save us from your Followers”, and “A New Kind of Christian”. After reading through many of the most popular Emerging Church books, I could pretty much guess what the first few chapters were going to be (especially if it was the author’s first book on the issue). Chapter 1: Why I don’t like to go to church. Of course, it takes many paths and gets more complicated, but the core is that these people love Jesus, yet struggled with their church experience. Are they just disgruntled, self-centered Christians, or is there something more to this?

Clearly with the traction that their books have gotten, there is the something BEHIND the movement that we need to see. There will always be people who complain about the church and leave it to start their own thing. That is not what we are witnessing in our generation. What we are witnessing is a large movement away from the traditional, mainstream, historic churches. It didn’t start with the Emerging guys either, but rather with the whole “non denominational” trend beginning with the Jesus Movement of the 1970’s. It is funny that we think of churches like Calvary Chapel and Four Square as “established” denominations, when in reality, they are relatively new expressions of Christians leaving denominations. The next wave hit with the Seeker church (sometimes known as the mega church model) when even more people left their old Baptist, Methodist, Episcopalian, or Lutheran home. The Emerging church is simply another stage of the larger exodus away from the historic denominations.

This isn’t just a theory, but statistics will back that there is a radical change happening in our generation of church history.  Mainline Protestant denominations continue to decline, according to the 2012 Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches. The United Methodist Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Presbyterian Church USA, and the United Church of Christ, all reported decreases in membership in 2011. For several years now, the Southern Baptist Convention, a conservative evangelical denomination, also lost members. Who is growing? (other than Mormons) The non denominational, evangelical church (in these churches who have over 1,000 people, the growth rate was around 83%!!!) It isn’t that these people are walking away from God, but they are walking away from their “old” churches to new ones. Why?

There is no single answer, yet the voice of the Emerging Church writers accurately captures the dominant reason: people don’t “like” going to their old church. This could be because of the music, the lack of community involvement, legalism, fire and brimstone preaching, lack of women in leadership, boring services, etc… You can’t make everyone happy in a church, and we shouldn’t be trying to anyway. We should be staying faithful to the Bible and Jesus’ heart for the church. BUT, when this many people walk away, there is something these churches were not seeing. As we talk through the issues of the Emerging Church, we will have to ask ourselves the question: are the older churches hanging on to dead, lifeless tradition just like the Jews of Jesus day, or is our materialistic, me centered, post modern generation creating a church to fit their needs, not God’s?

All I know is this, people in Acts sure appeared to “like” being a part of the church. Acts 2:46, “Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts.” Seriously, every day they wanted to meet? I see people struggling to go just for one hour on Sunday. Acts 4:22, “All the believers were one in heart and mind. No one claimed that any of their possessions was their own, but they shared everything they had.” Wow! I see pastors begging for people to tithe to keep the church from going under. Acts 11:26, “So for a whole year Barnabas and Saul met with the church and taught great numbers of people. The disciples were called Christians first at Antioch.” A whole year? great numbers? proud to be called followers of Christ? Now that sounds like people who “liked” going to church.

I know, I know, once again I am weighing in on a subject that has been talked about and beaten to death. Views on the Emerging movement range from those who see the Emerging Church as the salvation of the church, to those who see it as the front man of all that is wrong with postmodern culture. It seemed for a while that if you didn’t have black, pseudo-cool glasses, semi-shabby dress, a church that met in a warehouse (or pub or coffee house), and weren’t writing about how the church needed to change or die, that you weren’t “in” (whatever “in” really means, probably having a million hit website, best selling book, and getting quoted a lot as in “Sean Ellis a true prophet of our times”.)

Why discuss it now? again? My fear is that it will be labeled as a passing fad or “stage” in our church history like the Toronto blessing or intimacy movement. Whether or not you agreed with books that were popular in the Emerging crowd is irrelevant. We all need to understand what was BEHIND the discussion and why those certain topics were considered “hot”. Underneath the authentic diary style diatribes lays the seeds and need for a new reformation of the church. As the reformers themselves said, “Reformed and always reforming”, though it sounds much better in Latin.  “Ecclesia Reformata, Semper Reformanda” Don’t I seem smarter already?

The concept of bringing reformation to our faith is not new. As many books have keyed on, Jesus was the ultimate reformer. He established the model of not simply accepting tradition for tradition’s sake, and asking penetrating questions to reveal where man had hijacked the faith from God’s intent. In Mark 2, Jesus was challenged by some people who noticed that John’s disciples were observing traditional fasts while His were not. Jesus reply in 2:21-22 is telling, “No one sews a patch of unshrunk cloth on an old garment. Otherwise, the new piece will pull away from the old, making the tear worse. And no one pours new wine into old wineskins. Otherwise, the wine will burst the skins, and both the wine and the wineskins will be ruined. No, they pour new wine into new wineskins.”

Jesus was making sure that they didn’t see what He was bringing as “Judaism” as they knew it; not even high powered Judaism. Some elements of the old covenant were coming to an end (sacrifices, priesthood), and Jesus was preparing them for radical change. However, when you think about it, Jesus affirmed many of the aspects of old covenant law and Judaistic life. The two great commandments were STILL to be the two great commandments (Matt. 22:36-40). Many who call Christianity a revolution don’t understand how true Old Testament Judaism was the foundation and foreshadow of all that Jesus came to do. I would argue that Jesus came to reform the Jews, not revolutionize them.

This is never more clear than in Mark 7:8, “You have let go of the commands of God and are holding on to human traditions.” There was nothing wrong with God’s commands, it was that they had replaced them with their own rules and traditions. The Protestant Reformation sought to do the same by cutting through the traditions of the Catholic church that had replaced the Gospel and God’s Word. Of course, what Jesus did was much more than a reformation in that He provided forgiveness of sins and was the fulfillment of God’s Redemptive History. Yet, in the day to day life of followers of God, much of what He said was simply echoed by Luther, Calvin, and others 1,500 years later.

I believe that the Emerging Movement was part of a wake up call from God that we need to continue to live out “reformed, and always reforming”. The Seeker Movement, Toronto Blessing, Intimacy teaching, and now the Emerging Discussion are all signs of the desire to see some of our “tradition” be challenged and changed where it has strayed from the heart of God. Reformation is messy, let’s face it. There were some very weird teachings that came during the Protestant Reformation, yes, even from some of our beloved forefathers like Luther and Calvin. Perhaps you don’t feel that any of the recent movements I mentioned were “all good”, but I challenge you to ask why they took hold and what they might tell us about the whole time in church history. In Jesus day as well as the reformers, most of the established leadership were not happy about asking tough questions about why we do what we do and believe what we believe.

The next few posts will look at what I believe the Emerging Movement showed us about this time of reformation. My goal isn’t necessarily to evaluate the movement or discuss the merits of all the teaching that came out of it. Instead, I hope to explore the causes behind the issues so that we can see we cannot simply dismiss this as a fad in church history. I won’t make any dire predictions to urge you to read on like “and if we don’t discover the causes of dissatisfaction, we are dooming the church today to a continued slow death!” as that would be just a cheap (but sometimes effective) parlor trick. Rather, I will ask you the question, do you want to be part of the Next Reformation?

I like how we take something in the Bible, turn it into a catchy phrase and teaching, and then it takes on a whole life of its own. Take for example tent making. I wonder sometimes what Paul would think if he heard all the chatter in the church and missions about “tent making”. It is a good thing that Paul wasn’t a sanitation specialist! Then, we would all be saying, “I am going to (name of country here) to do church planting, but I think doing poop removal is the best way to do that.” or “I don’t think that missionaries or pastors should live off church support, instead they should be poop removing.” Tent making even sounds cool, although I am not sure if all the scars and calluses on Paul’s hands would agree with that. Most likely, it was a family business, and Paul didn’t think much about doing it. It was just what he did to earn money.

From my last post, a discussion started about whether all ministers of the Gospel (either domestic or abroad) should be “tent makers”, or at least bi-vocational (fancy word for doing ministry and paying job at the same time). I have heard three benefits from doing ministry this way: 1) opens a new door for ministry to the unchurched. Many will never venture into a church, so by working in the community, you can reach them with the Gospel in their sphere; 2) the church isn’t as burdened trying to raise so much money to pay salaries or support missionaries. That money can be spent on social projects and mercy ministries; 3) the Bible teaches this, and Jesus never wanted a paid clergy. People who aren’t relying the church’s money don’t see ministry as a “job”, and it erases the clergy/layperson separation.

We have already established Scriptures in the last post that I believe validates both missionaries and teaching elders being supported financially by the church. As Paul said in 1 Corinthians and 1 Timothy, this “right” comes with Old Testament precedent in the Levitical system. From Acts and Paul’s letters, it appears that not all ministers of the Gospel used this “right”. 1 Corinthians 9:4-6 says, “Don’t we have the right to food and drink? Don’t we have the right to take a believing wife along with us, as do the other apostles and the Lord’s brothers and Cephas? Or is it only I and Barnabas who lack the right to not work for a living?” Paul isn’t condemning Jesus’ brothers and Cephas (Peter) for living on church support, he is simply establishing that he does have the same right as them, again so that he can explain later why he forgoes that right.

Acts 18:1-3 shows how Paul’s vocation helped him establish a relationship with two of his most trusted co-workers. “After this, Paul left Athens and went to Corinth. There he met a Jew named Aquila, a native of Pontus, who had recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla, because Claudius had ordered all Jews to leave Rome. Paul went to see them, and because he was a tentmaker as they were, he stayed and worked with them.” Aquila and Priscilla go on to help Paul plant the church in both Corinth and Ephesus, finally ending up planting a house church in Rome (Romans 16:3). God used Paul’s vocation to put him into connection with people that would be key to the spread of the Gospel. Would he have met them without his tent making? How many others ended up as Christians and then missionaries just like them because Paul met them while doing business?

Even though Paul normally worked for his finances, I mentioned in the last post that he did receive occasional church support. Philippians 4:15-16, “Moreover, as you Philippians know, in the early days of your acquaintance with the gospel, when I set out from Macedonia, not one church shared with me in the matter of giving and receiving, except you only; for even when I was in Thessalonica, you sent me aid more than once when I was in need.” Why was Paul in need? We don’t know exactly, but it could be that since he was traveling so much, he didn’t have the opportunity to make tents. Either he didn’t have relationship, customers, or he merely stopped making tents during this season of travel and church planting. It could be that from the beginning of his 2nd missionary journey until he arrives in Corinth, he didn’t make tents. That would explain his need, and how blessed he was to have the gift from the church in Philippi. The Philippian church alone funded his church planting endeavors in Thessalonica.

From these passages, I would conclude two things: 1) God calls some people, or they make their own decision, to do tent making while doing missions or ministry even though they have the right to be church supported. 2) Even some tent makers have seasons where due to God’s call or circumstances, they must stop their second vocation and rely fully on church support to do ministry. Paul did tent making because he believed it would remove a stumbling block to people receiving the Gospel. He never says that God told him to do tent making! (see 1 Cor. 9:12,15-18) In today’s context, each missionary and minister must look at their situation and make decisions just like Paul did. Perhaps they will decide that where they are ministering, it would also be helpful to do tent making. Others will be like Peter and Jesus’ brothers, and have no problems with receiving their right of church support.

A whole separate discussion is how tent making relates to business as missions/ministry. I don’t believe Paul did tent making so that he could reach the tent making community. It was a means to an end, to make money to travel and plant churches, which had the SIDE benefit of reaching people like Aquila and Priscilla. This is different from people who feel God calling them to a sphere in business, and tent making is done with the primary reason to reach those who work in that industry. Also, Paul didn’t do tent making to get into closed or restricted nations. Some today teach English or start businesses so that they can have visas to get into nations that don’t allow for missionary visas. While valid, I think this is also not the correct use of the term tent making if based on Paul’s life.

The bottom line is for me is Paul’s heart for missions and ministry. His passion was to reach the lost with the Gospel of Jesus, and used all means necessary to do so (all Biblically correct means!). Instead of figuring out who should shell out the money and who should work, I believe our focus should be like Paul’s, on the lost and what we need to do to reach them. I will then end this post and discussion in the exact way that Paul ended it in 1 Corinthians 9:22-23, “To the weak I became weak, to win the weak. I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.  I do all this for the sake of the gospel, that I may share in its blessings.” Amen, brother!

A friend recently wrote me and asked me about 1 Timothy 5:8. He is a missionary who is married and has a child. His wife’s parents are also missionaries, and his parents are in the ministry as well and are fully supportive of what he does. However, in a recent conversation, someone told him that he isn’t obeying this verse by being a missionary. My friend has to raise his own support to do missions, and many months are very tight financially for him and his family. He even works a part time job to provide additional income while doing a full time ministry! Is my friend being irresponsible by living this kind of faith based lifestyle? Should he “grow up” and get a job, or at least do a ministry that comes with a salary, health insurance, and retirement benefits?

First, we have to deal with this verse in 1 Timothy, “But if anyone does not provide for his relatives, and especially for members of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.” The context of this passage is NOT about missionaries or people who do church or missions related ministry full time. Paul is actually in the process of giving Timothy instructions on which widows the church should be helping. Going back to Acts 6:1-6, we know the early church collected offerings or food, and then distributed them to widows in the church who had need. Paul wanted to define who is a “widow in need”, so there wouldn’t be arguments or unnecessary uses of church resources.

The verse that was quoted to my friend is actually about widows being supported by their family rather than the church. Paul’s reasoning is that the church’s resources are limited, AND it should be the family who primarily takes care of each other (clearly, Paul wouldn’t have been a good American Democrat!). So, he is saying that anyone who has a widow in his family, but doesn’t help her and instead just thinks the church will care for her, is a horrible witness for Jesus. Even unbelievers care for their own family widows Paul says. Even though this verse isn’t about people in full time ministry, Paul does talk about this in other places.

1 Corinthians 9: 13-14 says, “ Don’t you know that those who serve in the temple get their food from the temple, and that those who serve at the altar share in what is offered on the altar?  In the same way, the Lord has commanded that those who preach the gospel should receive their living from the gospel.” In this chapter, Paul is explaining why he personally has forgone this right in order to remove any stumbling blocks from his missions audience. He doesn’t want people thinking that he is like a traveling Greek teacher, who is only in it for the money and fame. Therefore, Paul did tent making and only occasionally accepted offerings from churches (see Philip. 4:14-19).  He says directly here that he has the right according to Scripture, citing the example of the Levites and priests who didn’t have “other jobs”, and were fully supported by the tithe of Israel. In the same way, Paul says full time ministers should be fully supported by those they minster to.

I have read in many “simple church” books lately that paid clergy is a mistake and is unbiblical. They reason we waste thousands of God’s dollars every year that we don’t need to. They state that only “traveling apostles/church planters” should be supported, but no one else. I am guessing they mean missionaries are in, but everyone else (pastors, worship leaders) are out. One of the books even quoted Paul’s statement in 1 Timothy 5:17, but conveniently left verse 18 out, “ The elders who direct the affairs of the church well are worthy of double honor, especially those whose work is preaching and teaching.  For Scripture says, “Do not muzzle an ox while it is treading out the grain,” and “The worker deserves his wages.” Clearly, Paul means more than simply “honoring” teaching/preaching elders, as honor doesn’t feed the ox! The Levites and priests weren’t traveling preachers, as they had responsibility over certain locations and duties, and they were still supported in the Old Testament.

We aren’t going to cover who should be on salary in a church (way too many positions), but I think it is safe to conclude that God has commanded most people to work full time to support their family and church ministries (like missions). 1 Thessalonians 4:11-12, “You should mind your own business and work with your hands, just as we told you,  so that your daily life may win the respect of outsiders and so that you will not be dependent on anybody.” However, there are some who God calls to do preaching/teaching (church planting and missions) full time, and they have Scriptural basis to live on raised support.

My conclusion to my friend is that he has been called to a different life, and God has promised to take care of his family, just like He took care of the Levites and their families. Of course, it is going to be hard to have faith when financial hardships hit, and he may never have a fat retirement fund. His call is no more special or deserving of praise than someone’s call who doesn’t live on financial support. Romans 12:6, “We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us.” Those on support should pray for their supporters’ jobs and their influence in that sphere of life. Those with paying jobs should pray that God provides fully for those in missions and ministry. Together, we will all work together to see the Kingdom of God expand!

Sometimes, you can just feel a few “heretic” emails coming your way. I know this post title will ruffle a few people’s feathers. I get why people use “worship” in talking about doing everyday tasks. First, there are many Christians out there like me with no musical talent whatsoever. I have at least 4 different levels of monotone, and I often have to lip sync in worship because I can’t go that high or that low. Telling me I can worship while doing housework, for example, makes me feel like I can be a better worshiper of God. Let’s face reality, it also makes it easier to motivate people to do a better job at chores they view as “non spiritual”. The problem is that the Bible simply doesn’t support using the word “worship” this way.

I know, I know, you will quote Romans 12:1 to me, “I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.” To some people, they see this verse as Paul creating a new category of worship, called “spiritual worship”. The example of spiritual worship then is offering your life to God, which then opens the door for a wider meaning. If offering our lives is worship, then it is the heart of honoring and revering God that matters, not the action. You can therefore honor and pay respect to God by scrubbing toilets with all your heart, serving the poor, or preaching the Gospel. Worship loses it’s attachment to any specific actions, and now becomes possible in all areas of a believer’s life.

First of all, the context of this passage in Romans can’t be overlooked. Paul has been attempting to bring the Jewish and Gentile Christians back into unity in the church of Rome. The first 11 chapters lay the theological reasons for unity, as they are all one body in Christ. Now in chapter 12, Paul turns to the application, or walking out of this unity. One of the areas of contention is about worship, as evidenced in chapter 14. The Jews are meeting on Saturday to worship, while the Gentiles are meeting on other days. The Jews are still following the food laws, while the Gentiles do not worry about ceremonial uncleanliness. This verse about worship in 12:1 is addressing this issue.

The Jews no longer have to follow the sacrificial laws of the old covenant to worship God. Some of the Jews may be saying that they are “the chosen” because of the old covenant and laws they follow. Paul has rejected this as salvation is by faith, but here he is redefining sacrifice, not worship per se. Even though they don’t sacrifice animals, they can offer up their lives as a sacrifice to God. It is the same line of reasoning in Hebrews 13:15, “Through him then let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God, that is, the fruit of lips that acknowledge his name.” In Hebrews, it isn’t your life, but praise that is used as a replacement for animal sacrifice. The point in both verses is showing that though the old covenant is dead, the concept of sacrifice is still there through praise and offering our lives. Neither is attempting to completely change the normal actions associated with worship.

Second, by digging into the Greek, we can see that not all translators even agree that the word “worship” should be used in Romans 12:1. It is not the typical Greek word “proskuneo” which is closest to the Old Testament “shachah”. It is the Greek word “latreia” which is closer to the Hebrew word “abad”. Therefore, many English translations use the words “acceptable service” not “spiritual worship”. Remember from our post on the meaning of worship that both bowing down and service are part of the meaning of Biblical “worship”, but many times the words are translated as “service”  if the context fits. Since Bible scholars don’t even agree on the translation, should we be building whole teachings that stand or fall on one disputed translation??? No.

I can find no Old Testament passages where worship is used in the way I hear today. It is never “all that you do for God with a heart of respect and honor” but was something that involved a more defined area of actions. These actions involved sacrifice of animals, singing Psalms, bowing down, prayer, festivals, and in general paying homage. In the New Testament, there are over 70 references to worship, and these are the only two I can find where you could try to stretch them to make it apply to other actions. You can’t take 2 passages and overlook the 99% where worship is used in the same traditional way as the OT usages (of which there are over 100 of them, none of them “spiritualizing” worship).

You may ask at this point why I care about this. I care because if you are looking for verses about all we do, you could easily use 1 Corinthians 10:31, “So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God.” or Colossians 3:17, “And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.” Both of these show how we can give God glory and thanks in all we do, by doing it with the right attitude. We don’t need to change the meaning of worship to use these to motivate ourselves and others in all areas of our lives. Second, I simply feel that we cause worship to lose something by applying it to all things. It was meant to be something sacred and special, where our actions of prayer, singing, bowing down, and paying homage were purposeful and in a time set aside for it. Sometimes I feel if worship is everything, then it becomes nothing.

If I ever start complaining too much about worship today, all I need to do is reread Leviticus. I don’t know about you, but I would be so busy following all the worship laws that I wouldn’t have time to do much else. Why? Two words: sacrificial system. If I had to head down to the tabernacle or temple every time I had a sin described in Leviticus, I would be buying sheep by the Costco super value size packs. As I stood in line waiting to offer my sin sacrifice, I would probably sin some more as I had bad thoughts about the old person in line in front of me taking way too long to transfer his guilt over to that goat. I would then just end up getting back in line again. I wonder if they had frequent sacrifice miles?

What Leviticus is trying to impress upon us is what an unholy person has to do to worship a holy God. How does a person stained with sin and guilt approach the throne of God (the mercy seat), enter His dwelling (tabernacle), and offer praise and thanksgiving? There must be a penalty and judgment for the sin, and unless the worshiper wanted to die personally, he needed to bring a substitution to offer in his place. God isn’t being mean or making people simply jump through hoops, it is the consequence of our rebellion against Him starting in Genesis 3. We have only ourselves to blame for the complicated ceremonial procedures. Consider how even the design and rules of worship communicate how small the access is to God.

Only Hebrew men are allowed to come into the inner court of God. Only Hebrew men over 25 and of the tribe of Levi have a chance to go any further. Only those of the specific line of Aaron, inside the tribe of Levi,  have a chance to go into the holy place. Only one day a year, on the day of atonement in Lev. 16, does just one man, the high priest, have a chance to enter the holy of holies.  If he fails to follow the exact letter of the law, the other priests will end up pulling him out dead on the end of a rope. From the opening of the outer tent wall, to the holy place, to the holy of holies, the entry way to God is smaller and less accessible. The bronze laver reminded them that they need to be purified to approach God. The altar was a daily reminder of their unworthiness and sin as they worshiped God.

The author of Hebrews understood well how blessed he was to be living in the new covenant of Jesus. Hebrews 10:19-23 says, “  Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain, that is, through his flesh, and since we have a great priest over the house of God,  let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water.” Imagine how a Jew might feel understanding the significance of what Jesus did. For over 1,400 years, his people have been in the old covenant, following the hundreds of laws governing worship. Even with those laws, there was a constant reminder of their separation from God. Most Jews would never see the Holy Place, and almost none would ever see where God dwelt in the holy of holies.

They couldn’t even eat without thinking through the laws of Leviticus. Slip up and have that pulled pork sandwich, and you can’t go in and worship until you have offered a sacrifice of cleansing. Get that tattoo of Dagon your girlfriend talks you into, busted again, no worship until it is dealt with. Leviticus 11 – 15 lists all the ways a person could become unclean and be barred from worship. Now, these Messianic Jews realize that Jesus has opened a new way. One in which He is the sacrifice, and they no longer need to kill sheep after sheep to approach God. He declares all foods clean to the apostle Peter, and you can finally have the pork ribs after church. Yet, the real shocker is that Jesus has opened the way for the average person to access the very throne of grace. It went from only one person once a year to all who have faith in Jesus and are covered by His sacrifice on the cross!

I will be honest with you here (does that mean I haven’t been honest in the rest of this post?). I will sing hymns with or without music, wear robes, eat tasteless wafers, sit in uncomfortable wooden pews, stand up or sit down, raise my hands or cross myself, play the guitar or organ, do that same chorus over and over that just goes, “La, la, la, la, la”, read responsively or sing prophetically, and all that stuff we do in worship today and STILL be eternally grateful for what Jesus has done for us to allow us access to God in our worship through Him instead of the sacrificial system and old covenant laws. It just puts things in perspective for me. Hebrews 4:14-16 says, “ Since then we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold fast our confession.  For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin. Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need.” Amen.

Reality check on worship

Posted: August 5, 2012 in The Church, worship

Reality check: what would our worship look like without revelation from God? We would be cutting ourselves and using our blood to satisfy and connect with gods. Sex would be a common form of worship, and most women who worked in religion would be glorified prostitutes. We would have to “dress” our god every day, and feed him with our offerings.  Our service would basically turn into a drunken orgy with “prophets” yelling and dancing around, channeling the spirit of the gods. If we were truly devout, we might even offer our first born child as a holocaust to the gods, burning them alive.

We are kidding ourselves if we think that we would have progressed on our own to a more “civilized” concept of God and worship. There is a reason that God said in Leviticus 18:3-4, “You shall not do as they do in the land of Egypt, where you lived, and you shall not do as they do in the land of Canaan, to which I am bringing you. You shall not walk in their statutes. You shall follow my rules and keep my statutes and walk in them. I am the Lord your God.” I wasn’t going for shock value when I was describing horrific means of worship above. That is ACTUALLY the way the Canaanites and surrounding nations worshiped their gods when the Israelites were moving into the Promised Land. That is ACTUALLY the way that Abram and his forefathers worshiped before God rescued him. Joshua 24:2, ““This is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: ‘Long ago your ancestors, including Terah the father of Abraham and Nahor, lived beyond the Euphrates River and worshiped (Hebrew=abad, or served) other gods.

God rescued Abraham from idol worship just as He rescued the Israelites from such ugly worship in His divine revelation. If we don’t understand this, we will have two problems. First, we won’t understand why God follows the simplicity of Abraham’s worship with the codified,  ceremonial laws about worship in the old covenant. It would seem confusing why God adds so many rules and stipulations to worship, if you don’t understand Egyptian and Canaanite worship. Second, we modern day Christians won’t have a true appreciation of what God has done for us, to save us from sacrificing our own children in service to a false god. We haven’t even gotten to how appreciative we should be for Jesus rescuing us from old covenant worship!

Have you ever wondered about odd laws in Leviticus such as 17:10, ““‘I will set my face against any Israelite or any foreigner residing among them who eats blood, and I will cut them off from the people. ” or 18:19, ““‘Do not approach a woman to have sexual relations during the uncleanness of her monthly period.”, or 19:27, ““‘Do not cut the hair at the sides of your head or clip off the edges of your beard.” or 17:7, “They must no longer offer any of their sacrifices to the goat idols to whom they prostitute themselves. This is to be a lasting ordinance for them and for the generations to come.’” All of these laws were safeguards to keep the Israelites from worshiping God like the surrounding, pagan nations worshiped their own gods. It is appropriate at this time to say “Ewwwww…. yuck!” or “Thank you God!”

We need to be so aware of the fact that unless God had made this known to us, we would all still be worshiping God (or gods) this way. Any of you who are reading this from an idolatrous nations know the truth of what I am saying, or if you have visited a nation where there is a majority worshiping false gods, you may have gained a whole new appreciation of your church’s worship times. Often, as we fight about worship styles, musical tastes, hymns or modern songs, we lose sight of the bigger picture of what God has rescued us from, organ or no organ. Reading through Exodus to Deuteronomy should refresh our memories. Stories like the golden calf highlight how man thinks worship should be.

Before we get too proud, we should remember that even after God made these things known to Israel, they STILL kept worshiping in this way. Judges 2:10-12, “After that whole generation had been gathered to their ancestors, another generation grew up who knew neither the Lord nor what he had done for Israel. Then the Israelites did evil in the eyes of the Lord and served the Baals. They forsook the Lord, the God of their ancestors, who had brought them out of Egypt. They followed and worshiped (Hebrew = shachah) various gods of the peoples around them.” I don’t want to forget or ignore what God has done for us. I am glad that I can worship together with my first born son, rather than be offering him as my worship.