Wednesday 22 August 2018

Doing it right?

"The hour has come when true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people".  John 4:23.

How do we create an environment amongst God's people that is causing them to die due to their being wrong with God?
The answer is when we 'do' church and especially worship in a way that is actually contrary to God's will.

Sadly, this happens all too often.

There are numerous examples of this in the scriptures, but let me focus in on one that involved a man who knew what it was to revel in the love of God - king David.

Now David knew what is was like to be lost in the joy of salvation. There's that very famous and public incident where, dressed only in an ephod (a short petticoat), he danced and leapt before the Lord will all his might, and caught the full acidic sting of the rebuke of his wife, Michael as a result (though she was the one who was judged - see 2 Samuel 6:13 onwards).

Now, all of this was perfectly fine because we read how David was very careful - on this occasion - to do all that was required (6:13) to bring the ark of God into Jerusalem, but the whole enterprise had begun very differently.

The first part of this same chapter tells us how the very same David had sought to transport the same ark into the city not as it was instructed it should be moved - by the priests carrying it, but by placing it in a cart, which had resulted in the instant death of one of his servants (see verses 1-7). The ark had then stayed where it was for months, and the incident had brought about a rift between David and God (verse 8).

Did you see the difference? Joy in God's presence was perfectly normal and right when things were done according to what God asks of us, but what happens when we have lots of niceties that we deem to be OK, but in effect are contrary or distracting to what He has asked of us?

"Modern" styles of doing things, especially worship, are not new. As in this story, there are plenty of examples where we devise our own 'free' styles of doing things, and these become what defines us rather than those truths and methods of drawing close to God that have been approved and provided. It isn't that we cannot be joyful before God and with each other (how dreadful would that be!), but we need to understand what happens when the methods (abandoned worship, prosperity teaching, prophecy and miracles) become the core of what we're doing rather than hearing God speak in His Word and Sacraments.

That's what this story teaches us.
Uzzah, David's friend died because of being involved in the wrong techniques to approach God. Over the last five decades, I've experienced and witnessed all manner of forms of 'worship' that have lead to the spiritual death (being burnt out to Christianity) of hundreds - the churches that they said were 'so alive' a few decades ago are gone.

David recognizes his folly. He returns to God, does what should be done, and once more encounters the sheer marvel of God's goodness as a result.

Pastor and Theologian Mike Horton notes:

"When the style of our music is upbeat and loud and ascending in enthusiasm, we miss the range of biblical teaching about God, ourselves, and the Christian life.
An over-realized eschatology (we can have it all now) has caused much of contemporary worship to get stuck in 'victory' and 'blessing' mode and this downplays the reality of ongoing sin, trails and dissapointment, as well as the attributes of God which are more disturbing to us. This cannot help but produce, at best, weak and immature Christians who will not stand in times of trial or testing".


This is so very true. Much of the church in the West has suffered in our times because it has focused on secondary things (blessings) rather than the character and work of the one who bestows such things.

Genuine worship is always marked by truth - about God, ourselves, and how Christ alone deals with our sin so we can, by His life and righteousness, draw near. That's why means like confession, baptism, the Lord's Supper, and expository preaching, always have to be at the heart of our worship if it is to be true and meaningful, not merely a play on our emotions.

We have been called to something profound as those brought near by the blood of Jesus. Let us not, in folly, squander what has cost so much.

Wednesday 15 August 2018

Too earthy to be of heavenly worth?

"For in Him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell and through Him to reconcile himself to all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of His Cross".

Colossians 1:19,20.

I was reading a piece today about the need for us to 'do' and to 'be' church well. When we make it too casual or too regimented, we miss the point, which apparently is to transport us via word and sacrament into the heavens.

Worship, ministry, service, fellowship - apparently, it's meant to be where we're taken to somewhere far, far, away, so unsearchable, unspeakable things become a vehicle that heralds us to the transcendent.

Now, I have no objections whatsoever to hymns and texts or entire sermons that remind us of the majesty and unreachable heights of the holiness and glory of the God who reigns above all, but I also have an observation.

When we read passages like the one I've quoted above, then we're reminded of something equally as shocking but so wonderfully true.

When Adam was cowering in the fig leaves, it wasn't just the thought of God's majesty that terrified him - it was the thought of trying to simply be, devoid of any of the care, splendor, freedom and goodness that had been bestowed so richly but lost so totally when he'd been poisoned by a lie. The problem wasn't that he had never trod some etherial realm (actually, Eden was the only 'paradise' that was required) - it was that he and Eve had lost sight of the radiance of what was all around them. Slighting the goodness of what was, they had sold out for the crass cackle of an empty allure.

If we think church is about escaping the body for some spiritual 'experience', however devotional we deem this, we're in danger of missing a far greater truth - the one Paul and others express so well.

What brought the first steps of recovery for Adam was God walking in the garden, looking for him. It's when the Lord steps into our stone - cold dead state that heaven is revealed.

It's not a mistake that redemption comes through Christ being 'God with us' - touching our deadness through the common - Word, Water, Bread and Wine. Allowing us to fellowship with Him through these, because He was here.

God is in Christ - the Christ who has come amongst (to, for) us - as reconciler, redeemer, saviour.

There's a danger when God 'escapes' us by being somewhere else. Church, spirituality, godliness, and everything that entails, becomes something uncoupled from what and where we are most of the time... In truth, that easily leaves us like Adam, back amongst the fig leaves. That leaves us wondering why try and be 'church' at all. If all we are is a company of wretched beggars, naked save for another's love, what makes us think for a moment that we can presume we can calmly reside before the throne of blinding holiness? 
Is there an account of anyone (of us) in scripture who did?

The truth, of course, is that Heaven surrounds us, but most of the time, we fail to see just how close it really is. What we do glimpse, mercifully, on occasion, is the tender mercies given to us in Jesus Christ - and that is exactly as it should be.

There's a reason that Christianity is so good, so truly merciful, and, when realized, so shocking. It's because God is in the material - flesh and blood, time and space, and it's there that He's deeply at work.

The author of the article does get one thing absolutely right. It's when, as he notes, the magnificent happens in the mundane that God is truly with us and glorified. When the treasure is evident amidst the earthen vessels (us), we worship and feed upon the love of God in Christ, present among us, in a manner that truly is good.

So, this week, come, without your pretenses and gnostic notions - come and taste the sweetness and satisfying grace of God with us in His beloved Son, who truly, by His giving of Himself, sets us free.

Sunday 5 August 2018

Saying (and living) it

"I testify again to every man who accepts circumcision (justification by the law) that he is obligated to the whole law. You who are severed from Christ, you who would be justified by such law, you have fallen away from grace. For through the Spirit, by faith, we ourselves eagerly await for the hope of righteousness. For in Christ Jesus there is neither circumcised not uncircumcised, but only faith working through love".

Galatians 5:3-6.

Don't you hear that, it's often asked - Paul is telling us that 'externals' really truly don't matter now - all that is gone. It's what we do 'inwardly' by loving that really counts - so, if we're loving people, however we behave (live) outwardly, that's fine. Christianity, then, boils down to 'all you need is love'.

Is that what Paul is saying?
What about when our 'external' behavior causes us to align ourselves with one group at the expense of being discriminatory against another? Wouldn't Paul be the first to say that has to stop? Certainly - that's one of the reasons he wrote this particular letter. A band of people had arisen teaching that if you weren't Jewish, you had to ceremonially become Jewish and then live by Jewish customs to really be a Christian.
Paul says that's bad theology, but his reason for doing so is because of the nature of Christianity itself.

Because of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, and not out of our own deeds, we have been made truly free to live in a manner that is as different to trying to keep the law as night is to day. 

For Paul, genuinely loving someone means directing them to the true parameters and ramifications of the saving work of God in His Son, and that entails boldly affirming the faith which justifies us by grace, without the seeking to live by the burden of self-imposing the law.

By such grace, Paul himself had come to understand that though previously obsessed with the Jewish law, it was only by trusting in Christ and His giving of Himself for us that he could become justified before God (Galatians 2).  He therefore admonishes us to trust and live purely on that basis (Galatians 3), that we might truly be those adopted into God's saving work (Galatians 4).

So, if we are a community living by that faith, then that is what we will convey in our life together. Formerly, we were enslaved to 'externals' of our own devising or by those imposed by others (religion), but that has ended, and we need to be people who see further than what was. The problem for us is when teachings encroach which seek to re-direct us from the validity of the Gospel to give credence to practices via notions which effectively sever us from truth working by love. The Galatians were duped by a message that sounded right, making them 'more' than they assumed they had been, but that was the lie, leading them into error. Thankfully, Paul was there to say refrain from such folly.

So, what about us?
How do we weigh up and determine what is being advocated regarding what we need to say and do today?

We certainly should seek to engage with all with honesty and love with respect to the truth in the good news, but we always need to do so in the clarity of what that message is and why certain 'externals' (teachings and practices) are contrary to that, making clear that life in God is weening us away from the merely living to or by the things of the flesh (Galatians 5). It is that which allows us to walk with our burdens and share these with each other (Galatians 6) and know the true uncoupling from what's bad by God making us anew.

So, there are things which should distinguish us as the community of God's children.

First is our understanding of the nature of the gospel (the indicatives) - the life given to us by God in Christ.

We come to see that because of who and what we are, both in ourselves and in the race we belong to, we are sinners because, by nature, we are sinful (Paul's getting us to face up to this in Romans 5-7, after spelling out what's true of us all in Romans 1-3, is crucial).  Salvation comes to us by what God has done in the life, death and resurrection of Christ being made ours (Romans 6), changing us into becoming Gods people (Romans 8). This is because God's wrath against our unrighteousness and ungodliness (Romans 1:18) has been replaced by the righteousness evidenced in the propitiation of the blood of Jesus Christ, which allows Him to justify those who were under such wrath (3:21-26). Christ's death and resurrection brought a complete victory over sin and the death it brought upon us (2 Corinthians 5:21). This allows us to share in God's astonishing mercy and the sure and certain hope of eternal life in a redeemed and renewed creation (Romans 8).


Second is our recognizing the ramifications of this gospel (the imperatives) - that we seek to live in accordance with the freedom (righteousness) that is ours.

This is where Paul seeks to point the Galatians once he has clarified the Gospel itself.
He urges them to avoid the manner of life they had lived prior to being freed - the various impurities that we naturally are inclined to follow - in favor of being those things which God is seeking to encourage amongst us (Galatians 5:13-24). This clearly isn't easy (6:1-5), but life together makes it possible if the 'law' (truth) of Christ (see verse 14) is what reigns over us.

As for the Galatians, there are 'externals' aplenty which buffer us today to 'love' without the manner of understanding (and therefore, freedom) Paul lays out, but we need, if we're going to live and serve well, to listen carefully to what's said here. 

The cost if we don't could be everything of eternal value.