Wednesday, 20 March 2013
Tuesday, 19 March 2013
The Church, God’s Own People Part 2 They devoted themselves to Discipleship
The Church, God’s Own People
Part 2 They devoted themselves to Discipleship.
Acts 2:41 -47 New American Standard Bible
41 So then, those who had received his word were
baptized; and that day there were added about three thousand souls. 42 They
were continually devoting themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to
fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. 43 Everyone kept feeling a
sense of awe; and many wonders and signs were taking place through the
apostles. 44 And all those who had believed were together and had all things in
common; 45 and they began selling their property and possessions and were sharing
them with all, as anyone might have need. 46 Day by day continuing with one
mind in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, they were taking
their meals together with gladness and sincerity of heart, 47 praising God and
having favour with all the people. And the Lord was adding to their number day
by day those who were being saved.
Throughout the last 2,000 years of Church
History, we have had countless
models, missions, strategies, programs and systems that are/were supposed to make us more effective and efficient in
the ways we do, be and are the Church,
some of these have been more fruitful than others, I’ve been a Christian for
over 30 years and have seen these ideas
both working and failing, we have tried so many things and if we’re honest have
any of them worked as we hoped, dreamed and expected?
For many years we have built man-made structures
and systems that are no longer relevant to us the Church, these things have
served their purpose and in many ways have outlived their purposes.
I thought a
lot in recent days about the Mission and Vision of/for the Church is our
Mission and Vision the same as the Mission of the Church and the Vision of the
Church that Jesus and the early disciples had?
The first question we had to ask ourselves is what
our Lord Jesus’s Mission and Vision of the Church is? For that we must examine
Scripture, many have called these verses the Great Commission.
Matthew
28:18-20
New American Standard Bible (NASB)
18 And Jesus came up and spoke to them,
saying, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. 19 [a]Go
therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them
in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching
them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you [b]always,
even to the end of the age.
Quite simply our Lord’s Mission and Vision for His
Church is found in Scripture, what the Bible teaches us about the Church should
be our first point of reference and our
last point of reference, indeed our only point of reference not the latest
podcast, prophecy, program, project or plan nor indeed our traditions or
history, it’s time that we no longer
relied on anything that isn’t found in Scripture and see a restoration of New Testament
Christianity, not on man made
systems and strategies, it’s time to change and now is the time to change!
I’m not saying we should ignore what Godly Men
& Women have written for and about the Church but we should only read books
etc. that have a strong and exclusive grounding
in the Bible.
We have tried many things to increase our
Churches, and see people born again, lives transformed, hope restored and
renewed, but can we say with total honesty, that what we tried has worked or has sometimes worked for a certain time and/or situation, yes we keep trying these trusted
old and not so old methods and despite our best efforts they’ve failed or haven’t
been as fruitful, the Bible speaks of old and new wineskins
Matthew
9:17
New American Standard Bible
17 Nor do people put new wine into old
wineskins; otherwise the wineskins burst, and the wine pours out and the
wineskins are ruined; but they put new wine into fresh wineskins, and both are
preserved.”
I believe that the old wineskins
speak of our old ways of doing things, and the new wineskins speaks of the
Biblical ways of both doing and being the Church.
For many years our model of
Church has been called Attractional Church and recent years a new model has
been promoted the Incarnational church or Missional Church.
I’m going to be controversial
I believe the Church needs to both Attractional and Incarnational! We need to
bring people in and send people out, I'm not going to promote or invent a new
way of us being and doing Church, I will say it’s time we return to our roots or
go back to basics, we need to be a Church of Disciples, A Church were our growth strategy
is based on Discipleship, our Mission is his Great Commission our Vision is His
Vision.
In my next post, I will continue
with Discipleship and give a Biblical example of what a Church based on
Discipleship will look like?
Yours in His Grace
Blair Humphreys
Southport, Merseyside, UK
Rooftops - Jesus Culture (lyric video)
From the Rooftops with Lyrics, because if you're like me you forget them
Monday, 18 March 2013
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship
“The community of the saints is not an "ideal" community consisting of perfect and sinless men and women, where there is no need of further repentance. No, it is a community which proves that it is worthy of the gospel of forgiveness by constantly and sincerely proclaiming God's forgiveness...Sanctification means driving out the world from the Church as well as separating the Church from the world. But the purpose of such discipline is not to establish a community of the perfect, but a community consisting of men who really live under the forgiving mercy of God.”
―
―
Saturday, 16 March 2013
I was wondering… about playing against type
http://blog.christianconnection.co.uk/i-was-wondering-about-playing-against-type/
*
I made a decision, some time ago not to re-post other people's blog's but this
caught my attention, so I'm reposting it.*
I
was wondering… about playing against type
I
had a type. It changed occasionally (OK, regularly), sometimes depending on the
last film I had seen or whoever I had just passed in the street. But there was
always someone – a hypothetical someone – who ticked all the boxes. An
invisible standard, lurking in my subconscious, by which all potential suitors
would be measured. I just had to wait for him to glide majestically into view.
And
then I passed 30.
Maybe
you’re there already; maybe the magical milestone is still to come, but
whichever side of the big 3-0 you happen to reside, there’s something you might
have noticed. Although I didn’t look dramatically different – well, apart from
a sudden love for support tights and elasticated waists, obviously – once word
was out perceptions changed. Have you seen ‘Bride Wars’? I won’t judge you if
you say yes. Thanks to my hairy, tattooed brother (yes really) I have, and a
concept from it stuck in my mind. In summary: 30 is the last age a man will go
out with a woman of his own age; after that, he always goes younger. A woman
over 30, therefore, should expect the attentions of older men, not men the same
age, who would only be interested in younger women.
Hmm.
Thankfully God didn’t write ‘Bride Wars’.
And
yet it seemed some people enthusiastically bought into this notion. I was
suddenly suggested as the perfect companion for significantly older men. In one
case, I was solemnly assured, because the gentleman in question had “never
grown up” (hopefully not one of those chaps fond of wearing nappies). I was
also told if I could hang on for a few more years I could catch the
second-time-rounders back on the ‘market’, or even bide my time, staring
intently from a distance without introduction, for some poor chaps to recover from
tragically being widowed. None of it seemed terribly romantic. Slightly
alarming, yes. Sinister? Just a little. A pre-defined role as a companion to
the heartbroken (or Peter Pan) and I – and maybe they -didn’t get much say in
what happened next. So much for having a type. I was already being typecast.
But
then I looked around at couples I knew and saw a lot more variety. Differences
in age, culture, race, education, height, weight and background. Men older than
women but also (gasp!) women older than men. One couple born on the same day in
the same year now excited about becoming grandparents. Couples who met at youth
group and university and church but also couples who met on blind dates, by
chance in nightclubs, even on trains. Unexpected matches in which both
flourished. Where types didn’t apply, because something deeper had kicked in.
So
when long-time single friends* announced they had found love with older,
divorced single parents despite having devoted years to hooking super-hot,
younger, uncomplicated matches it made me wonder. On paper (or online) it can
seem so straightforward. This is what I want. Don’t even talk to me if you
don’t fit. The delightfully misused ‘God will give me the desires of my heart’
wheeled out to justify preferences, but unless we’re perfect (except me,
obviously) we need to broaden our horizons. Let character, sense of humour,
inspiring conversation, kindness, even differences and challenges, draw us to
others. Prepare to be surprised. See what we might be missing. Say goodbye to
types and hello to possibilities.
*Male
and female. Did you guess?
Written
by Vicky Walker Posted in: Dating,
Singleness
About
Vicky Walker
Vicky
Walker is a writer and speaker, among other things. Her book ‘Do I have to be
good all the time?’ about life, love and awkward moments is available now from
www.vickywalker.info
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