Tuesday, 20 August 2013
MATTHEW BARRETT|12:01 AM CT Dear Pastor, Bring Your Bible to Church
I
enjoy using an iPad. It is, in my opinion, one of the most impressive devices
yet invented. In one light-weight, travel-sized tablet the user has everything
at his fingertips. That includes not only the typical social media apps that
every user has on his smartphone, but also countless tools that have
characterized the laptop or even the home television.
And
yet I am finding that cutting-edge, 21st-century technology is subtly but
quickly changing important, even indispensable aspects of Christianity. Consider
just one example: the ever-growing tendency to substitute a physical, visible
Bible (remember . . . the ones where you lick your finger and turn the pages)
with a tablet in the pulpit.
To
clarify, I am not against pastors using a tablet in the pulpit for, say, sermon
notes. Rather, I'm concerned about replacing the physical Bible with a tablet
in the pulpit. As the pastor enters the pulpit to bring the Word of God to the
people of God, no hard copy of the Bible is to be found in his hand, gracing the
top of the podium, visible to the entire congregation as the book at the center
of attention. Instead, the congregation sees a tablet. While this may seem
harmless enough, I believe there are several potential dangers this subtle
shift generates.
Different
Message
First,
the tablet as a replacement for a hardcopy of the Bible sends an entirely
different message to the congregation. Yes, this tablet contains the digital
text of the Bible, but visually that tablet represents so much more. It is an
icon of social media and a buffet of endless entertainment. Ask my children.
The sight of an iPad screams instant access to Sesame Street on Netflix. For
the adult, the tablet is an immediate window into his or her social life. As
advertised, the iPad is ESPN Magazine, a Visa card statement, decorating ideas
on Pinterest, hotel reservations in Hawaii, the latest college football scores,
Adele on iTunes, directions to the nearest Starbucks, instant tracking of the
stock market, and, oh yes, the Bible, alongside thousands of your favorite
e-books.
In
contrast, how simple, and yet profound, is a hardcopy of the Bible, perhaps
leather-bound and worn from constant use. Carried by Pastor Steve into the
pulpit, this large, even cumbersome book, reveals he is ready to bring to the
people a message from God himself. In short, a print copy of the Scriptures in
the pulpit represents something far more focused and narrow: a visible symbol
of God speaking to his people, the master Shepherd feeding his flock.
Biblical
Illiteracy in the Pew
Second,
the tablet may, oddly enough, unintentionally and indirectly encourage biblical
illiteracy in the pew. This no doubt sounds shocking. After all, how could a
tablet that provides us with gobs of biblical research tools, a digital manuscript
of the Scriptures, and countless other resources create a culture of biblical
illiteracy? One of the severe limitations of a digital text, as you sit there
with your iPhone or smartphone, is the unnecessary task of passing by books of
the Bible as you find the sermon text. When the preacher says, "Turn in
your Bibles to . . . ," the layperson simply clicks on a link or enters
the text into a search box. As a result, I am increasingly discovering as a
professor at a Christian university that students do not know where books in
the Bible are located, let alone how the storyline of redemptive history
develops. Many laypeople do not possess the ability to see the text in its
context. Consequently, these old-fashioned, basic, Bible-learning skills are being
lost.
Even
secular scholars, such as Nicholas Carr (The Shallows) and Mark Bauerlein (The
Dumbest Generation), get this when it comes to reading a book digitally. As
John Bombaro explains, these authors, and many others, conclude that we have
adopted a "truncated approach to texts, with no peripheral vision of what
the next page holds or orientation to the linear progression of the entire
text," which only "trains the mind's learning plasticity to think in
pragmatic, detached, fragmented ways." Therefore, when it comes to
Scripture, we have lost by abandoning the printed text a "linear
progression to the total story," since "digital texts militate
against a big-picture perspective and comprehension of the whole story of the
Bible."
Flesh
and Blood
Third,
the tablet may undermine the spatio-temporal nature of church. When a member
stands before the congregation, reading the sermon text from a tablet, there is
something missing, something lifeless at play. Again, John Bombaro observes,
"Digital texts are ephemeral; they are ontologically diminished."
There's no "there" there, Bombaro laments.
Surely
this should rub us wrong, as physical beings who gather together as an assembly
in a tangible place. We see with our own eyes a standing, breathing minister preach
about a God who is, yes, invisible, but is really with us as Lord of space and
time. This God has made himself known by sending his own Son in flesh and
blood.
Visual
Reminder
Fourth,
when the spatio-temporal nature of Scripture is replaced with a digital, even
ephemeral, cyberspace text, there is an awkward inconsistency at play given the
physicality of baptism and the Lord's Supper. In the lineage of the
Reformation, evangelicals have long affirmed at least three marks of the church
and means of grace: the proclamation of God's Word, baptism, and the Lord's
Supper. Why not perform a baptism in private or take the Lord's Supper alone?
There is an essential corporate dimension to these somatic means of grace, as
the church witnesses the gospel in the waters of baptism and together partakes
of the flesh and blood of Christ represented in the elements. The materiality
of these means visually remind us that we are accountable to this gospel and to
one another.
Likewise
with God's Word. The Scriptures, preached and read, teach us, reprove us, and
train us in righteousness so that we are equipped for every good work (2 Tim.
3:16-17). If baptism and the Lord's table become lifeless when we disintegrate
their materiality, do we not risk a similar danger when we remove the
spatio-temporal presence of the Word of God for the people of God? And should
an unbeliever walk in for the first time, would he know that we are a people of
the book?
Nonverbal
Communication
Fifth,
when the smartphone or iPad (or name your mobile device) replaces a hardcopy of
Scripture, something is missing in our nonverbal communication to unbelieving
onlookers. When you walk to church, sit down on a bus, or discipline one
another at a coffee shop, a hard copy of the Bible sends a loud and bold
message to the nearest passersby about your identity as a Christ follower. It
says, "Yes, I am a Christian and I believe this book is the Word of God
telling us who we are and how we should live."
If
you don't believe me, take a physical copy of the Bible with you on your next
plane flight, and when you sit down next to your neighbors place the Bible on
your lap for all to see. Notice the reactions; you might as well have shared
your social security number with the whole plane. Typically, for the person on
your left just the sight of the text makes them uncomfortable, defensive, and
reclusive. But for the person on your right, it may instantaneously create a
conversation that leads to the gospel. My point is simple: if we, as
Christians, abandon the physical text in our own assembly, what is lost when
this text does not warm our hands in front of a lost and dying world?
No
doubt, my warning touches an uncomfortable and irritable nerve. To insult our
use of technology is one of the seven deadly sins in the 21st century.
Technology infiltrates and saturates everything we do, and therefore defines
everything we are, for better or worse. But is this subtle shift changing the
way we read the Scriptures? Is it ever-so-quietly removing the visual
centerpiece of the local assembly? I think so. And while I never imagined I
would have to say this, I close with the following admonition: Dear pastor,
bring your Bible to church.
Matthew
Barrett (PhD, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) is assistant professor
of Christian studies at California Baptist University (OPS), as well as the
founder and executive editor of Credo Magazine. He is the author of Salvation
by Grace: The Case for Effectual Calling and Regeneration (forthcoming,
P&R) and co-editor of Four Views on the Historical Adam (forthcoming,
Zondervan). He also edited Whomever He Wills: A Surprising Display of Sovereign
Mercy.
Ordinary Christians in the Hands of the Extra –Ordinary God. Part 2:
Ephesians 3:10 -12 and 16 – 21 NIVUK
So that
through the church the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known to the
rulers and authorities in the heavenly places. 11 This was according to the
eternal purpose that he has realized in Christ Jesus our Lord, 12 in whom we
have boldness and access with confidence through our faith in him…………… 16 that
according to the riches of his glory he may grant you to be strengthened with
power through his Spirit in your inner being, 17 so that Christ may dwell in your hearts
through faith—that you, being rooted and grounded in love,18 may have strength
to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and
depth, 19 and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, that you may
be filled with all the fullness of God. 20 Now to him who is able to do far
more abundantly than all that we ask or think according to the power at work
within us, 21 to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all
generations, for ever and ever. Amen
I grew up in the South Wales Valleys, were the
common themes for many were Chapel, Rugby and the Colliery, the threads that
would often hold those communities together would be those mentioned above, the
hymns of the Chapel such as Guide me, O Though Great Jehovah would be sung with
at least equal gusto on a Saturday Afternoon watching the Rugby.
In many ways, our lives would have been
influenced and affected by the strong religious traditions of something best
described as chapel culture, when we spoke of the church, we would often have
of thought of the Anglican Church with their vicars etc., to many people from a
chapel background the church was a strange place that could be described it’s
church, but not as we know it!.
The traditions of Chapel Culture would be at
least influenced by protecting and promoting Welsh Language and Culture, and to
distinguish it against the English Language and Culture. I would say that in
the Village where the Church I was raised in, half the Chapels would speak
Welsh in all their services. I love Wales, its Language, Culture and its People
but there aren’t The Lord who died for my sins and the sins of the entire
World, and rose again in Victory and is coming back for us when He comes to
reign and rule and establish His Kingdom in its full splendour and glory.
We have made idols of so many things in the
Church, whether that be our traditions, heritage and our national or cultural
identities, our churches have become monuments to past moves of God, or to the
men who God raised up to move his Church forward. The Church has become known to what we’re
against rather than what we for, we fight battles and wars with society rather
than supporting and encouraging society, yes there are anti-Christian
influences and challenges facing us today, with the prospect of Gay Marriage
and the attempts of our politicians to force change in the legal definition of
marriage.
When people think of Church they think of a
dying religion and something that is part of the establishment. We should stand
against the enemy, the devil but our weapons aren’t the weapons or the
strategies of the world, see 2 Corinthians 10:3-5 .We try to convict the people
we meet whose lives aren’t in accordance with scripture of their sin but we
aren’t the Holy Spirit who convicts the world of sin and shows them God’s
righteousness see John 16:-8-11 instead we’ve alienated those He sent us to
show His Love and Compassion to.
When Jesus walked the streets of the lands of
Bible Times, he wasn’t part of the
establishment, whether than was the political or the religious establishment,
Jesus is God’s ultimate revolutionary, he isn’t some kind of Jewish Che
Guevara, he was and is the Son of God, who came as baby, lived a normal life, then for the last
3 years of his life, bought God’s message of transformation, hope, redemption,
salvation, deliverance and peace to those he meet regardless of their sexuality,
disability, cultural or ethnic background, he raised up normal men and
women, that were often the lowest and sometimes the most despised people in
society, like his ancestor King David, who’s mighty men came from those in
debt, distress or the discontented, see 2 Samuel 22:3, he died an agonising
death on the cross, of all the tens of thousands than were crucified by the
Roman and other empires, only one death made a difference, Jesus took the
entire sin of the entire world from that day until he day He returns, and died
as the sacrifice for not only the sins of the church, but the sins of those yet
to know Him. He arose Victorious from the tomb, and entered Heaven after
preparing His early disciples and sending the Holy Spirit see John 20 so that
His Church may go forward and see people saved, lives transformed, hope
restored and renewed and salvation bought to the ends of the earth.
Today, we the Church like David’s Mighty Men
and the early Disciples are God’s Mighty Men and Women of Faith, who have been
tasked by our Saviour and Lord to advance His Kingdom and His Church into our
streets, neighbourhoods, communities, regions, nations and the nations of the
world.
When God commissioned the Prophet Isaiah in Isaiah
6:8 see here for context. Isaiah 6:8-9 8 And I heard the voice of the Lord
saying, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” Then I said, “Here am I!
Send me.” 9 And he said, “Go, and say to this people:
Throughout the History of the Church, God has
called and commissioned Ordinary People just like You and Me, he’s not called the seemingly best equipped
or seemingly the most talented or indeed the best gifted, when God sent the
Prophet Samuel to anoint Israel’s next King he sent him to the home of Jesse in
Bethlehem, and when he looked at Jesse’s Sons he saw some great and talented
warriors but they weren’t God’s choice see
1 Samuel 16:5-13, God is calling the Ordinary People to rise up for Him
see 1 Corinthians 26-29 but let us not be like the Prophet Jonah, who when God
called him to Nineveh went in the opposite direction!
Today God is calling again Whom shall I send, and who will go for us,
will we say Here am I send Me, and will we ready to Go to those who sends us
and where He sends us ?
Yours in His Grace
Blair Humphreys
Monday, 19 August 2013
Ordinary Christians in the Hands of the Extra-Ordinary God. Part 1:
Ephesians 3:10-12 &; 20 &; 21 ESVUK
10 so that through the Church the manifold
wisdom of God might now be made known to the rulers and authorities in the
heavenly places 11. This was according
to the eternal purpose that he has realized in Christ Jesus our Lord 12, in
whom we have boldness and access with confidence through our faith in
him…………………20 Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we
ask or think, according to the power at work within us 21, to him be glory in
the Church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever.
Amen.
I love the Church, I think it’s amazing; I love
Jesus more and more each day and love looking at, reading and studying His
written Word the Bible. and I love being a part of His amazing Church, When you
think about it That the Church belongs to Jesus and His written Word the Bible
explains to us how to live our lives as Christians who are the people who make
up the Church, it can revolutionise your love for the Church and our Saviour.
I was raised in a Christian Home and both my
dad and my late mum, with my late grandparents give me a love for Scripture,
the Church and our Lord and Saviour Jesus, I was * saved or * born again or *
accepted Jesus as my Lord and Saviour (*depends on your theological viewpoint!)
when I was 11 in a Children’s Meeting, Easter Monday 1981.
I was raised in a little church in Resolven,
which is near Neath, South Wales now called The Resolven Community Church,
which is part of a larger grouping also called the Apostolic Church which are
part of the Pentecostal Movement here in the UK the others are The Assemblies
of God and Elim, both of which are a real blessing to know. I spent the first 13 years of the Christian
Life within The Apostolic Church I thank the Lord for the privilege of being
raised in that denomination and the grounding and foundation I had there, and
the friends I have there today.
Those who know me know I love reading and one
of the things I love reading about is the Church. I devour books at the best of
times, but I’m always drawn to books about the Church. I’ve been inspired by
many godly writers such as Alan Roxburgh, Neil Cole, Floyd McClung, Bill
Johnson and Kris Vallotton amongst others and have been challenged by what God
has said through them. I’ve also been
inspired by some great Church Leaders like Keri Jones, Arnallt Morgan, Mark
Davies, Roger Aubrey, Mick Walford, Mike & John Sutton-Smith, Geoff Grice
and Steve Smith who have through the last 20 years have inspired and challenged
me to go on with the things of God, and go deeper with God. I would like this opportunity to say thank
you and to Arnallt diolch yn fawr.
When you think about it, there are various models
of Church and different perspectives on what the Church are, and what it should
or could be. My Spiritual grounding and heritage has been and still is the
Pentecostal/Charismatic/ Restoration stream/s which are part of the broader
Evangelical Spectrum although I admire and respect those whose Christian path
has been or is different from mine.
My background is of someone growing up in the
Welsh Valleys, although I now live in the North West of England, when I think
of my younger days that Church more or often or not was somewhere we went,
rather than something we are part of. I
thought of a Physical Building rather than a Spiritual Building, Yes Physical
Buildings are important but they serve the Spiritual Building, by the way
that’s you and me.
There are countless ways or models of doing and
being the Church such as Missional church, Simple church etc. ,etc. there are
large churches, small churches, medium churches, full churches, half full
churches, empty churches, traditional churches, free churches, Baptist
churches, Anglican churches, Pentecostal churches the list can go on and
on If you look in your Telephone
Directory or search online, how many churches are listed in your City, Town or
Village ?, * Note I use the word Church to describe the Church in general and
the word church to describe churches, that is in the local church or the church
grouping You or I are part of, and isn’t meant to diminish any one church or
group of churches *
I don’t believe that there should only be model
or type of church, I believe that each model or type of church is equally valid
and has an important and relevant part to play in our role to Evangelise those
who yet don’t know the Lord, The Lord has called us to work alongside in a
sense of co-operation not to compete against each other in attracting
unbelievers those who yet don’t know the Lord or have a relationship with Him.
I believe that different models or ways of
doing and being the church can reach different types of people. For one person
may feel comfortable in for example a more traditional type of church and for
another person may feel more comfortable in a more lively church, then someone
else may like a more simple way of doing church for example in a smaller
setting, then someone may feel more comfortable being amongst a crowd.
Our Lord, Saviour & Redeemer Jesus Christ
says in Matthew 16:18b ESVUK.
“I will build my church, and the gates of
hell[b] shall not prevail against it.”
The Apostle Paul, says in Ephesians 4:1-7 ESVUK
I
therefore, a prisoner for the Lord, urge you to walk in a manner worthy of the
calling to which you have been called, 2 with all humility and gentleness, with
patience, bearing with one another in love, 3 eager to maintain the unity of
the Spirit in the bond of peace.4 There is one body and one Spirit—just as you
were called to the one hope that belongs to your call— 5 one Lord, one faith, one baptism, 6 one God and Father of all, who is over all
and through all and in all. 7 But grace was given to each one of us according
to the measure of Christ's gift
Our Lord, Saviour and Redeemer give his life
for One Church and He’s coming back for One Church, regardless of what part of the Church You or
I belong to we are One Church.
In part 2 onwards I will look in more depth
into the Book of Ephesians mostly and other books of the Bible to see what it
means to be the Church and how we go about being The Church, I’m hoping to
expand in more depth at a later point Ordinary Christians in the Hands of the
Extra –Ordinary God.
Yours in His Grace
Blair Humphreys
Southport, Merseyside, England
Saturday, 17 August 2013
People are Strange, the Doors
I
was watching an episode of the American Crime Drama, “ Cold Case” earlier today
and at the end of the programme, they played this song and for no particular
reason, I’ve decided to post it to my
blog
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