Tag: Church

  • No matter who you are or how spiritual you are, your view of God is incomplete.

    No matter how much you know, what you know about God is only a portion of the full picture.

    We like to think that what we currently know is all there is to be known. 

    At least, until we learn something new.

    Then, once we realize that we weren’t 100% right, we think that by adding what we knew before to what we now know, we can now be 100% right again.

    But we’re always missing at least some portion of truth. 

    Think back to the things you believed to be true a decade ago. You only had part of the picture. (And it’s still true today.)

    So how could we think that we alone could see the full picture of God?

    Paul, talking about the resurrection, says, “Now I know in part; then I shall know fully…” (1 Corinthians 13:12)

    What we believe to be true about God is only a portion of the picture of who God really is in all his fullness.

    In fact, it’s impossible to fully know God strictly from your own personal perspective.

    He’s too big for any one person to understand.

    Paul said that the Church makes up the fullness of Christ. (Ephesians 1:22-23)

    In other words…

    Christ is fully known only through the Church collectively.

    Different parts of the body of Christ come together to create a whole picture.

    You can’t know God fully outside of community in God’s church.

    Ephesians 3 goes more in depth about how God’s purpose is to use the variety of believers within the body of Christ to showcase God’s glory to the world.

    Paul calls it the “manifold wisdom of God” which just means “many diverse manifestations.”

    In Ephesians 2, Paul also talks about how believers are like stones being built together on the cornerstone of Jesus into a dwelling place for God. 

    Each of us fits together to create the environment where God is fully known.

    Here’s another way to put it:

    Our view and knowledge of God is limited by our unity within the Body of Christ.

    In Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, he’s talking to a diverse group of Christians in a large, thriving city.

    The church was brand new and there were many types of people with many different types of beliefs. 

    And here’s what he says to them:

    He prays that they would be rooted and established in love, which can only exist in community.

    Then he prays that they would have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge. 

    This, he says, will lead them to being filled with the fullness of God.

    Notice the order.

    The fullness of God – the full knowledge of him that goes beyond what we can personally understand – is only experienced together with all the Lord’s people, rooted in love for one another.

    Jesus was once asked what’s the greatest commandment in God’s Law. 

    He said that the first and greatest commandment is to love God. 

    But then he says something interesting. 

    He says that there’s a second commandment that is like the first, and that is to love your neighbor as yourself. (Matthew 22:37-40) 

    The phrase Jesus used when he said that the second commandment “is like” the first commandment is a word in Greek that means the same as or of equal rank.

    When you put Paul’s teaching in the context of what Jesus taught about loving others, the picture becomes much clearer…

    The only way we truly come to know God in all his fullness is within the context of community with other believers.

    In isolation, our view of God is always slightly incomplete.

    There’s a portion of God’s character that you can only experience through other believers.

    Of course, the friction of someone else’s view of God rubbing against our view of God is really uncomfortable.

    But in that friction, we get to wrestle with the parts of God we didn’t previously know.

    Unity drives God’s blessings according to Psalm 133, and unity is how the world comes to know Jesus, according to John 17.

    So when people frustrate you, remember that you both need each other to see the full picture and know God fully.

    And without the other, you’ll both miss out on what you’re intended to get.

  • Christianity is declining in America.

    And that might not be a bad thing, because it’s not the real issue.

    Maybe what’s fading is the shiny replica of the Church that we’ve created.

    The American church that’s been publicized is one built on polished sermons and impressive stages. It’s been more concerned with attendance than service. It’s been more concerned with comfort than breakthrough.

    Maybe the world doesn’t hate Jesus as much as we think. Maybe they just haven’t seen much of him lately.

    What they’ve seen in America over the last 50 years is mostly is a cheap replica – just close enough to fool the untrained eye.

    And they’re not wrong to feel let down.

    Evil will always push back against truth. That’s to be expected.

    But we’re not fighting against evil people. We’re fighting spiritual deception. (Ephesians 6:12)

    And how do we overcome deception?

    But Jesus said we would be known by our fruit. (Matthew 7:16)

    If we’re led by the Spirit (Romans 8:14), that means we should be known for:

    • Love
    • Joy
    • Peace
    • Patience (Long-suffering)
    • Kindness
    • Goodness
    • Faithfulness
    • Gentleness
    • Self-control

    And yet statistically, the attributes American Christians are least known for are care, friendliness, generosity, encouragement, and hope.

    Peter said we should be ready to give a reason for our hope. Of course, that means we have to first live like people with hope.

    People aren’t necessarily walking away from God.

    They’re walking away from the off-brand version of Him we’ve presented that looks like false hope.

    There are still plenty of people in the world who are hungry for the gospel.

    We’ve just made the gospel about something other than the gospel.

    Jesus never said to build churches. He said to make disciples.

    Likewise, the early Church looked very different than what we’ve built in America.

    • They shared everything they had willingly. We get mad if anyone talks about money in church.
    • They met together every day. We show up twice a month when it’s convenient.
    • They broke bread in their homes and centered their lives around communion. We go to a small group every couple weeks and sip juice from plastic cups once a quarter.
    • They prayed constantly. We say formulaic, surface level prayers and only in the transitions in the service.
    • They were known for their conviction and love for one another. We’re known for condemnation.
    • They were united. We’re divided in every way imaginable.
    • People noticed them and they grew. People are noticing us and we’re shrinking.

    The difference is stark.

    Maybe we need to stop asking how to get people back into church and start asking how to get the Church back into people.

    The world is tired of the show…and good for them.

    They want hope. They want to be healed and made whole. They want to encounter something real.

    Yes, Jesus said that the truth that will set them free…and we love hammering the truth…but…

    The full context of His statement is:

    “If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” (John 8:31-32)

    Truth comes through discipleship. It comes from living out the teaching of Jesus in our lives. THEN the truth will set us free.

    Truth is only discerned through the Spirit. (1 Corinthians 2:14)

    Which means…

    The world needs to see the Spirit in us before they can discern what we’re saying.

    Which means…

    We have to transform before we can insist on a broken world transforming (see plank and log, Matthew 7:5).

    And here’s the uncomfortable truth:

    If they can’t see the Spirit in us, then maybe there aren’t as many people deserting God as we think.

    Maybe we’re the ones who have gone missing.