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03.02.2010
Revolutionizing the Church
If we’re going to fulfill the mission that Jesus gave us as the church, we must become revolutionaries and start a worldwide revolution by revolutionizing the church.
The world is changing…exponentially. It’s moving further and further away from what it really needs…God, truth, forgiveness, purpose, and hope. In a word, it needs redemption. But, in order for the people in and of this world to find what they need, those who have it must wake them up to it. And, therein lies the problem.
A world that is going through revolutionary changes can’t be reached, convinced, or woken up by a church where everything remains the same. Of course, I’m not talking about the truth itself. Truth never changes. But, I am talking about the way the church engages the world with the truth. To wake up a world going through revolutionary changes requires that the church is revolutionary itself.
While I know this sounds foreign to a lot of Christians and church leaders, the reality is that this is exactly what God has called us to be and do. In fact, it should come naturally for genuine Christ followers because…Jesus was a revolutionary.
A simple reading of the Sermon on the Mount makes this clear. He entered a world that was turned inward and focused on keeping God and His promises for the few. He started a revolution that turned God’s people outward and focused on sharing God and His promises with the many. He entered a world that viewed power and prosperity as a means of being served. He started a revolution that viewed them as a means of serving others.
Of course, the early church followed in Jesus’ footsteps. It became a revolutionary force focused outward and bent on serving others. This picture is beautifully painted in Acts 2:41-47.
Sadly, the majority of those who claimed to be “God’s people” rejected the revolution of Jesus and the early church. They preferred keeping God and His promises to themselves. They chose to see God as being in the world to serve them rather than them in the world to serve Him and those He loved. As a result, they put Jesus on a cross and persecuted His Church. They did this because they had lost God in the predictability of their practices. Over time, their traditions had replaced God and His truth. Jesus made this clear in Matthew 15:1-3.
Though we are 2000 years removed from these events, we have to realize that the same thing is going on today. Many of those who claim to be “Christ followers” have lost Jesus in the predictability of their practices. They have turned inward and see their faith as being for the few. They are seeking to keep the church serving their interests and preferences rather than making sure that it is serving God’s purposes.
What the church today needs is what Jesus came to bring…a revolution. (In my next post, I’ll address more of what this looks like.)
Thoughts?
Comments
4 Comments
AMEN!!!!!
Lynn Kelley Soss
March 2, 2010 1:47 pm
Pastor,Your 1st sentence in your post & the last sentence say’s it all…WHAT ARE WE WAITING FOR ?
bob burnside
March 2, 2010 2:06 pm
Thanks for your inspiration and enthusiasm! ‘To wake up a world going through revolutionary changes, requires that the church is revolutionary itself’ This is not a formula or a contrivance to keep us the same in a different way..but a living experience that requires faith and trust as well as courage=real change=real service to the living and life giving God who truly changes the world when we are truly changed by his Son.
Jerry
March 2, 2010 6:10 pm
Yes, it’s so true, Brad! I agree with and am witnessing the world moving along at light-speed, farther and farther away from God’s Truth and promises. So many have made the decision not to believe, despite God’s revelation of His Son and proof of His Deity through the way He lived and things He did including His many miracles while here on earth – so much so that the end result will find them not being ABLE to believe (John 12:37-41). This is a cause for concern and urgency for all the Church. As you said, a revolution is needed so, like Jesus started, the Church will turn outward and focus on sharing God and His promises with the many who need God’s redemption. I believe, we as Christians should not retreat from association with the world (1 Corinthians 9:19-23) but should engage it in the Truth via the means that it can understand. I agree that our traditions should not replace God and His Truth, which can exclude others. We should emulate the early Church which focused on serving and including all.
I am encouraged by you, posting this blog, Brad, and sharing your thoughts here and through the conferences you’re attending and teaching at. I pray that Churches will embrace the revolution you speak of so “that by all possible means I (they) might save some” (1 Corinthians 9:23).
Looking forward to your picture of the “revolutionized” Church in your next post!
cherilans
March 2, 2010 6:49 pm