ACTS 2 v 42/47
During the past years of Christian ministry I have met many people and made friends from Churches in the Chester Diocese, and numerous Churches around Bedford.
For 17 years I edited a Church
magazine in which I included a Bible study. Now that the
opportunity for preaching has largely ceased, I am taking advantage of modern
technology, and using this blog with the hope I can maintain some contact with
those friends and perhaps make some new ones.
I watched a programme on the BBC
News channel, which talked about the ‘exodus from the
Church’. Comment was made that the Roman Catholic Church had lost
half of its membership, and was still falling and Churches right
across Europe were losing thousands of people. People were
said to have little belief in God, and there was no place in their lives for
the Church.
It is true of course that many
people have left the Roman Church ,but it could have pointed out many thousands
still attend, and now that Billy Graham has died, there is no other man or
woman on the planet who can attract such crowds as the Pope.
People are also falling away from
the Churches, and one can understand in many cases why this is
so. But let us be fair there are many Churches which are full of
people. Near my home, a Church has had to include an extra service
on Sundays because they could not accommodate the numbers attending. This inevitably
suggests that in some Churches something is being done which is not in
others. I have to confess I have been to services and come away
wondering why would anyone want to attend.
Turn with me to Acts Chapter 2
and verses 42/47
These are dark days for the
Church in this country. We live in a post-Christian
age, an age where there is no common Christian consensus. At
one time there was a more common understanding of Christian teaching. Today,
there is a condition that might be described as rank ignorance, and are
biblically illiterate.
We live in a society which
largely rejects God, and regards Church and Christianity as totally irrelevant
to their lives. The world sees the Church standing for values it no
longer considers acceptable.
So let us look at the model of a
Christian Church, as seen in Scripture in that first Christian Church, which
was able to attract so many followers, and see how it differs from the Church
of the present time, and see also if we can learn from that Church how to make
our message more acceptable in a hostile climate.
First it was a Bible based
Church.
They were devoted to the Apostles
teaching, it captivated them. Those early Christians listened to the
Apostles, who in turn had been taught by our Lord. They heard all
that the Lord had given and laid down, as the faith should be lived
out. It was about Jesus, who He was, what He came to
do, how to obey Him and about His second coming to judge
the world. In other words, the whole Christian faith.
Notice when it says ‘devoted’
themselves, this means they were committed, no half- heartedness. The wonderful
thing is that we too can follow that same Apostolic teaching, it is written
down for us in the New Testament, and it is God’s way of providing for His
people to be trained.
They met for fellowship.
Secondly they were
devoted to each other in church, or, as verse 42 puts it, they were devoted to
the fellowship. They knew that when they committed themselves to
Jesus, they also committed themselves to Jesus’ people. We share a relationship to God
and to each other, based on a common spiritual life. God put us with a variety
of people we may not ordinarily like, but God expects us to grow
together. We are to care for one another, and when others need
encouragement and support, we are to give it.
This is why we need to come,
to learn the Bible from readings and sermons; praying together for our
needs and the world; praising God as we sing together. Sharing
the bread and wine in Holy Communion, as we remember what God has done for
us in Jesus Christ.
Thirdly, they were a committed
Church.
They met
regularly. There are those for whom the Church is a second
choice. There are times in all our lives, when personal situations
arise which call for our attention, but for some Church will take second place
in their list of priorities, something which Jesus Himself condemned. The
church is not optional. Jesus established the church. He did not merely
establish individual Christian living, he established corporate faith.
The New Testament assumes that
people who are believers are connected to a local church, where they live out
that faith. Individual and independent Christianity is nowhere to be found on
the pages of Scripture. So the church is not man’s invention, but God’s.
Because Christ instituted the church, we should know what it is and how we
should function in it.
It can be so easy to go with the
flow and give up, which is why the Bible urges Christians to be together. Each
year hundreds of people give up worship. There many reasons,
pressures of the world ridicule from friends, family trouble, a bad
experience at a church, all of which are expressly good reasons for going
to church.
Then in verse 47.
“The Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.” They were an
evangelising Church.
Having seen how that early Church
responded under apostolic teaching, we need to consider how the Church now in
this critical time responds with its teaching of the Scriptures.
It is a matter of concern that
some preachers are ready to stray from Biblical teaching, and consider we
should re-interpret the Bible to meet modern ideas of morality. This
suggests that God has got it wrong, and He should be prepared to adjust to the
age. They are spreading a false gospel, and send out a wrong
message. God set out in Scripture in clear terms what is expected of us,
and all should be proclaiming the same message
For years, first the Labour party
and then the Conservatives, spent years in the political wilderness because
they sent out mixed messages, and no one knew for certain what they really
stood for. The Church by not adhering to Scripture is doing the
same, leaving people confused as to what we really believe and offer.
There is a reluctance by clergy
to speak out for fear of being labelled as a bigot or being
discriminatory. Can you imagine Jesus, Paul or Peter, being afraid to
speak out? There would be no Church if they had.
It is true to say
Christian preachers tend to modify teaching of traditional values to appeal to
contemporary thinking, and for fear of offending one of the many discrimination
laws, promoted equally vigorously by vociferous minorities, so falling foul of
the law, which is not enforced against other faiths with the same enthusiasm as
against Christian preachers.
All this causes a problem for
parish priests, and especially for visiting preachers. We face a
problem, and none more so than those of us who want to be true to Scripture,
when not everyone is prepared to accept what is written. I heard one
Vicar preach that she didn’t think the Bible should be taken too literally. Have
you ever heard a Muslim cleric deny or challenge any words in the Koran? Is it
any wonder people fail to respond?
It is hard to quote the Bible
without someone saying ‘Oh you shouldn’t say that.’ The Bible
states, ‘salvation is found in no other name under heaven except Jesus
Christ’. The Bible states’ Jesus said no one can come to the Father except
through me’, yet many preachers are dodging quoting this. If we
avoid telling these verses, how are people ever to come to know the gospel?
This tells us our faith is not
like other faiths which someone has made up, but rather comes from
God. Furthermore, it was given with the understanding that nothing
needs to be added, amended or subtracted from. Anyone who does so is
a false teacher. God will not ignore false teaching, and will
pass judgement on such people
Whilst I have always admired
Charles Wesley, I have recently had to study the life of Charles extensively in
order to conduct a service in his honour, and that admiration has
grown. If he were alive today he would have much to say at the way
the Church has failed to proclaim the message he left,
that salvation was through Christ
alone,
the value of a
person’s life was measured by their faith,
and
the doctrine of heaven and hell.
How often have you heard a sermon
on those subjects?
Today, no less than in any other
age, it is intense biblical integrity that is needed. Fearless courage and
conviction, to stand for the truth --that Jesus Christ is the only name
that saves.
In effect there are three options
open to preachers
One is to
avoid all contentious issues.
2
To go with the flow.
3
To be true to Scripture.
We all want to
please and satisfy our audience, I can’t imagine anyone wanting to cause offence. But
if preachers are to be true to their calling, and preach with integrity and
honour, there are times when I suppose some people may be upset. If, sadly,
that happens, there must be doubt in the mind about the way they are
living.
We now have, for instance,
changed our outlook on morals and ethics to adopt that of society. We have gone
along with the incredulous acceptance that marriage, (that is between man and woman)
is no longer the bedrock of society, but is no more acceptable than any other
relationships.
If ever the Word of God was
needed it is never more so than now. It calls for people to turn
back to God who is ready and able to meet the needs of everyone who turns to
Him. The message we have for the world is centred upon the person of
Jesus Christ, and provides for a stable and well balanced society.
May God bless the Word He gave to
us. Be at Church on Sunday.
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