Where has this been all my life? There have been times when I look back at my life and wonder, “When did I truly come to know God? When did Christianity stop being a religion that I practice and become a way of life?” Recently as I taught Sunday school I have lamented, “I am so tire of ‘Christianity’ as we know it!” There is so much more that God has for us than what we have been fed by the modern American church. Please hear me correctly; I love the “Church of God, the Body of Christ.” We need the Church! The Church is Christ Bride; He loves it and gave His life for it. But it is time for Christians to start being more like the Bereans who “received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so.” (Acts 17:11) The church is where we go to be edified and equipped so that we can go out and put to practice the things that we have learned. It is not a restaurant where we go to get our nourishment; we should be getting our nourishment daily as we chew on the Bread of life and abide in the Vine. The church has a role to play in our walk with Christ but church is not our walk with Christ.
Whoa, I am starting to get a little wound
up here and this is not even what I intended to share! Let me get to the issue
that God laid on my heart this morning. Here is the opening paragraph from
yesterday’s My Utmost for His Highest (I was a day behind in my reading…)
TAKE THE INITIATIVE
“. . . add to your
faith virtue . . . .” 2 Peter 1:5
Add means that we have
to do something. We are in danger of
forgetting that we cannot do what God does, and that God will not do what we
can do. We cannot save nor sanctify ourselves—God does that. But God will
not give us good habits or character, and He will not force us to walk
correctly before Him. We have to do all that ourselves. We must “work out” our
“own salvation” which God has worked in us (Philippians 2:12). Add means that we
must get into the habit of doing things, and in the initial stages that is
difficult. To take the initiative is to make a beginning—to instruct yourself
in the way you must go.(Emphasis added)
Chambers, Oswald
(2010-10-22). My Utmost for His Highest, Updated Edition (p. 131). Discovery
House Publishers. Kindle Edition.
There are so many directions that I can take this devotional;
God pointed me to a number of topics to meditate on. The most obvious is in
what I choose to do with my life. This was my post from Face Book this morning:
“ y
deepest meditation may surprise you though; it is a direction that is not so
obvious.
As I said earlier in this post, God has been challenging me
in basic theology and doctrine. One of the most basic doctrines is the teaching
on salvation. How does a sinner truly become a child of God? Sovereignty of
God, free will of man, predestination, election, choice; there is so much
confusion.
I can’t say that I even begin to understand how, in the
gospel of John, Jesus seems to contradict himself. In John 3:16, he makes
salvation sound like it is our choice, “…Whosoever believes…shall have
everlasting life.” Does my choice to
believe make me a “whosoever”? If so; it is my choice, my decision, my work;
that brings me eternal life. Yet in John 6:44, Jesus says, “…no one can come to
me unless the Father who sent me draws them to me.” God draws them doesn’t
sound like a choice to me; it sounds like something that God does. Verse 47
again says, “…anyone who believes has eternal life;” sounds like man’s choice. And Jesus sums up this sermon in verse 63
saying, “The Spirit alone gives eternal life. Human effort accomplishes nothing.”
It is God’s work, not mine, that gives eternal life.
Getting a head ache yet? I haven’t even begun to scratch the
surface of all that Scripture says on this one subject and it is the most
foundational issue of our Christian life! Churches have argued for years over
the controversy of election, predestination, and free will. So what is an
average Christian, a “layperson” as they say, supposed to do if the “experts” can’t
even agree?
This gets to the heart of what I believe that God has been
chipping away at in my life; trying desperately to get me to understand. I believe
He desires that I stop resting on what the church says, what Christian authors
write, what my parents tell me, what my friends say, and the “we have always
done it this way mentality;” and begin to go to Him and base my faith on what
He tells me. God wants to personally speak to me, instruct me, teach me and
train me. Why else has He indwelt me with His Spirit and given me His word? He
has invited me to a personal relationship with Him.
The church is the
meeting of people who have a personal relationship with Christ, where they
gather for encouragement and edification to deepen their personal walk with
Christ. The church, its activities, its teaching, and even its fellowship
cannot replace the personal walk without becoming simple “religion”.
Again as I said earlier, I am tired of “Christianity” as I
have always known it. I am tired of trying to figure it all out. I tired of
trying to get it just right. Pray this prayer, believe these facts, do these
things, the list goes on. I’m tired of churches arguing with each other,
sometimes over the silliest things. I’m tired of denominations and sects. I’m
tired of militant Christians who are no more Christ like than militant Muslims,
militant feminists, militant homosexual, and militant anyone I’ve missed.
Christ has not called us to be militant but to be Christ like! “Let this mind
be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus…” Philippians 2:4-8. Read the
passage, and for the matter the context, and it may surprise you what having
the “mind of Christ” truly looks like!
So in childlike faith I choose to accept what God’s Word
teaches, even though I don’t completely understand it. God says, “All have
sinned;” I believe that. God says that “No one seeks after God,” I believe it.
God says, “By faith you are save through grace;” I believe that. God says, “Whosoever
believes shall have everlasting life;” I believe that as well. I can’t answer
or explain the election, predestination, freewill argument; but I don’t get
hung up on it anymore either. I have come to the place that I just accept there
are some things that only God can do and has done for me and there are things
that I can and must do that He won’t do for me. Salvation, Justification, Sanctification,
Glorification those are all things that I can leave up to God because I can’t
do anything about them. Choosing to believe when the Spirit cries within me “Abba
Father,” is up to me. Choosing to believe the Spirit when He “bears witness
with my spirit that I am a child of God” is my part. It is God’s role to
conform me to the image of His Son; it is my role to put off the old man and
put on the new! Christ is the vine which supplies all I need for life and fruit
bearing. My job is to abide in Him and
allow Him to flow through me to produce the fruit He desires. I have spent too
much of my life arguing, trying to figure it out, and working to make it real.
I am ready to admit that I don’t know but God does. I accept that God has made
me His child and I accept that I am responsible to live like it.
“We are in danger of forgetting that we cannot do what God does, and
that God will not do what we can do.” I accept by faith God’s gift of Grace. I am
thankful that He has made me His “Masterpiece” and I humbly submit to do the good things He planned for me long ago. (Ephesians
2:8-10)
Well said!
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