World Changers!

The world we now live in is going through a lot of changes.  We’re seeing it economically, socially, politically, and even religiously, just to name a few.  These changes are coming about as a result of political corruption and political agendas, various people groups claiming and demanding their rights at the expense of others, the overflow of violence and ideologies bleeding over into other cultures and societies that don’t share in their way of life, as well as the desire of various religious groups seeking ways to be more appealing and acceptable in the eyes of society.  Much of what we are seeing is a reflection of the overall perceptions of people where what is evil is now considered good, and what is good is now considered evil.

 

When I think of world changers, I think of something written by a physician in the first century named Luke.  In Acts 17:6, Luke quotes the statement made by some about the Apostle Paul and Silas, as well as other Christians, when they dragged Jason and others before the rulers of the city; “These who have turned the world upside down have come here too.”  What a statement that is, validating the ministry and influence of the Apostles and Christians on the world at that time.  They apparently had a tremendous impact on communities wherever they went, an impact that couldn’t be ignored.

 

Several years ago I had the privilege of sharing a message to graduating students, and the message I shared focused on the above passage.  In the days we now live in, I believe many, especially youth and young adults, are looking for a cause not only to live for, but one that is worth dying for, and when they find it they will be effective in impacting the world around themselves for that cause.  That is how we need to view and live our lives for Christ and the Gospel.  Are we willing not only to live for Jesus, but are we also willing to die giving ourselves for Him and to Him?

 

So, how do we change and impact the world around us for Christ?  While there are many different opinions out there on how Christians and churches are to accomplish that, I wonder what we can learn from Scripture and 2,000 years of history.  Do you want, as I do, to impact and turn the world around you upside down for Jesus?  Please know that as I write this I’m also talking to myself, looking at how I fall short in this area and what I need to do to change that in my life.

 

“These who have turned the world upside down have come here too.”  What were these men doing to illicit such a charge against themselves?  They were simply living a life blameless before God and man, boldly proclaiming whenever they could the good news of Jesus, manifesting signs and wonders to support and confirm the message they were proclaiming, all along with a strong conviction to give their lives for the furtherance of the gospel even if it meant death.  That is all we really read about in the Book of Acts and the rest of the New Testament.  Is this the model we must follow if we are to impact and transform our communities for Christ, or should we consider a different approach more in line with current culture and society?

 

While I couldn’t put a name on it until recently, I’ve seen over the past several years a push by some churches that have sought to impact and transform their communities through community involvement and works.  Yes, one way of outreach to the community is through community involvement and works, but to seek to impact and transform a community in this manner is like “getting the cart before the horse”.  Often times I’ve heard it said that the harvest field is outside the four walls of the church, but it seems like the majority of the time the community outreaches some employ are simply ways to entice people to come to church, and not so much pointing them to the cross where there is salvation, hope, and healing for them.  It’s almost as if they are trying to move the harvest field they talk about back into the four walls of the church instead of reaching them where they are at.  I’m reminded of a powerful movie that stars Gavin MacLeod, one that you should see if you haven’t already.  In the movie, Time Changer, it takes a look at how the push for morality apart from the name of Jesus deteriorates over time, and that we can never leave Jesus out of the equation.  In the same manner, community involvement without the proclaiming of Jesus and the good news of the gospel will become a community minded church with a very weak message of salvation to the very ones they seek to reach.

 

I mentioned the phrase “getting the cart before the horse”, and this is what I mean by that.  The approach of some churches is to impact a community through community involvement and works, expecting people to come to church and receive salvation when they do.  However, this is the opposite approach we see God used both in the Bible and the great revivals of the last 2,000 years.  The approach we see God using is what I described a couple paragraphs earlier.  When the early church took the approach as I described a couple paragraphs earlier, people were not only getting saved, but they were getting transformed by the power of the Holy Spirit, and as a result the communities were being transformed and turned upside down for Christ.  The transformation of the communities came as a result of lives being transformed by the Gospel and the power of the Holy Spirit, and not the other way around.

 

When we look at the great revivals of the past, we see the same thing happening.  The focus was to reach the lost with the Gospel of Jesus, calling sinners to repentance with signs and wonders confirming the message, and where they experienced the transforming power of the Holy Spirit.  It was then that bars and saloons were shut down, gambling halls closed their doors, and places of prostitution were put out of business.  In one revival, the Welsh Revival, it was reported that the work animals had to be retrained in regards to the commands they were given, commands that were once made up of obscenities and profanities were replaced with more appropriate and wholesome commands.

 

The focus of the early church and the great revivals of the past was not to impact and transform a community, but instead to point sinners to the cross for salvation, which as a result impacted and transformed communities.

 

The approach by some in recent years is to use what is referred to as a “missional” approach.  In this approach the idea is to be community minded, involved in community events and practical works.  They seek to live and reach out to people in the way that they think Jesus did; through community involvement, practical works, not holding people accountable for sin that is clearly identified as such in the Bible, being tolerant of other people’s beliefs, and being as appealing and attractive as possible to society and culture.  Several years ago a well-known pastor put together a guide for churches seeking to attract people to their church.  In this guide he pointed out that churches needed to do away with anything that might deter people from coming to their church, or that might make people feel uncomfortable for being there.  Some of the things he mentioned was to eliminate from the premises any crosses, to avoid any singing, preaching or teaching about the cross or the blood of Christ, and to definitely not mention or deal with sin or the repentance of it in any way.  This approach has the form of godliness but denies the power of God as the Apostle Paul told Timothy would be present in the last days (2 Timothy 3:1-9)

 

In regards to Jesus, the apostles and the early church, I’m not sure how they come up with how they lived to support their approach.  Where do we see in Scripture that their ministry was made up of community involvement and practical works?  Yes, we read of Jesus’ illustrated sermon washing the disciple’s feet on one occasion, but that is the only time that we see or hear of Him doing anything practical, so to speak.  And we can see from the disciple’s response that doing anything practical like this was not something they ever saw Him do before.  What Jesus was trying to convey to them was a mindset like He had (Philippians 2:5-11), willing to do whatever the Father asked of them to do no matter how low or hard it was.  If Jesus was wanting them to do practical works as a primary means of ministry and reaching the lost, then they apparently missed the point as we can see in Acts 6:1-7 they focused their attention on prayer and the ministry of the Word, giving to specially appointed disciples the responsibility of meeting the necessary practical works.

 

We also read in John 10:32 that Jesus did many good works that He had shown from the Father.  And in Acts 10:38 we read how that Jesus was anointed by the Father with the Holy Spirit and with power, doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil.  Yes, Jesus did many good works; healing the sick, raising the dead, opening blind eyes and deaf ears, casting out demons, feeding thousands, changing water to wine, calming the winds and the waves, walking on water, talking to the forbidden and forgiving the judged.  To say that the good works mentioned in these passages were practical works ignores the context in which they were written, and it’s inconsistent with what we read regarding Jesus, the Apostles, and the early church.  Not only that, but Jesus also tells us in John 14:12 that not only will we do the works that He did, but greater works we will also do because He will go to the Father.  Each of these passages refers to the spiritual, signs and wonders, and not the practical works as some would like us to believe.

 

What am I trying to say?  If we are to see a community impacted and transformed for Christ, then it needs to start with living lives blameless before God and man, boldly proclaiming the good news of the Gospel, manifesting signs and wonders to confirm the message being given, and a strong conviction to give our lives completely to Him and the furtherance of the Gospel, even if it means to our death.  Community involvement and practical works, though good and a form of outreach to the lost, will never reach and transform a community if that is our mindset and focus apart from what we see in Jesus, the Apostles, the early church, and in the great revivals of the past.

 

If you want to be a world changer, to see your community impacted and transformed for Christ, then it has to start with prayer.  While prayer for the needs of others is great and important, prayer for the lost and the manifesting of the power of His Holy Spirit in our lives to reach the lost needs to become our hearts cry.  If we are to impact our community, then we need to make sure we are living blameless before God and man.  If we are to see souls saved and lives transformed, then we need to have more boldness to proclaim Christ to those we come in contact with, seizing the opportunities that God gives us to this end.  If we are to see lives reached and communities set ablaze for Christ, then we need to become instruments God uses to manifest the power of the Holy Spirit in signs and wonders to confirm the message.  Jesus said for those that believe signs and wonders will follow (Mark 16:15-18), and again He said we would be baptized with the power to be witnesses to Him (Acts 1:8).

 

Be a world changer for Christ!  I want to be a world changer for Jesus, and my prayer is that He will make me more of one for Him in my life.  What about you????

 

John Johansson (Pastor John)

 [thrive_leads id=’457′]

Reflections

The presidential primaries are nearly complete and we have a pretty good idea of who the main candidates will be for the November elections.  That is if one doesn’t get indicted and arrested for various charges, and the other one doesn’t fall victim to a potential war within the party seeking someone else to represent them.  One of these two candidates is believed to be a liar and a traitor to the United States of America, and the other candidate is believed to be a liar, a prejudiced, racial, and immoral person with deceptive and unethical business practices that could possibly involve fraud.  No wonder people are frustrated and disappointed with the selection of candidates to vote for, at least candidates that have a legitimate chance of winning.

 

Someone recently mentioned how bad this election process, including the campaigning, has been leading up to the November elections, and a thought crossed my mind.  We want prayer regarding the upcoming elections, and that God will raise up someone who will represent Him and fight for Biblical values, but this election is a reflection of our society and how far from God it has gone.  If that is the case, then it only stands to reason that this election will have nothing to do with Jesus or Biblical values since this country has effectively pushed Him out of everything else.  Our society has been actively working to remove even the mention of Jesus’ name wherever they can, and have in turn been pushing policies and agendas that clearly contradict the Bible with an attitude best described as “spitting in the face of God”.  What arrogance and pride we as a country have embraced, and then we wonder why this election process is in the shape it’s in.

 

One of the things that has been going on that I find so funny in a not-so-funny way, and it’s only getting worse and building in intensity, is how each of the two truly remaining candidates, both proven to be frequent liars, are attacking the other candidate for their lying and deceptive ways.  That’s what you call, “the pot calling the kettle black”.  We see this behavior within our society practically everywhere we look.  For some reason people can find ways to justify and rationalize their behavior and lifestyle, but when they come across someone else basically doing the same thing they are quick to judge and be critical of them.  We live with the idea that we’re exempt from having to live by any standard of values or morals, yet we are quick to nail someone else who doesn’t live up to the standards we think we’re exempt from.  Does that fit the definition of “double-standards”?  It’s bad enough when our society works that way, but when it’s in the church that’s a really bad thing.

 

I remember growing up and hearing people complain about hypocrites in the church, using that as their excuse for not going to church or giving their lives to Jesus.  Perhaps you’ve heard the same stories?  Someone could be in church praising and worshipping Jesus every Sunday, but every Friday night they could be seen in a strip club partying it up and frequently sharing “dirty” jokes to others throughout the week.  Or the one where someone doesn’t want to hire the services of a Christian or Christian company because they have seen or heard of their deceptive and unethical business practices.  And we wonder why society is the way it is?  Where are the ambassadors of Christ who are not only representing Him to the world around us, but upholding Biblical standards showing people there is a better way of life in Christ than what they are seeing in the world around them?

 

It seems to be more and more commonplace for us to hear of ministers that will preach very adamantly against one or more specific sins, only to find out later that they have been secretly doing the very things they have preached so strongly against.  This isn’t the case with all ministers, or even the majority of them, but nonetheless it is out there.  This sort of thing causes people to be cynical of ministers, grouping all ministers into the same hypocrisy of the others.  The Apostle Peter tells us in 1 Peter 4:17 that judgment begins in the house of God, and if He needs to He will expose the sins of the unrepentant child of God in order to bring them back into right standing with Him.  This applies to all Christians, whether or not they are ministers.  Hypocrisy is rampant within church circles.  It’s not an issue of Christians, especially fairly new Christians, learning over time what it means to be children of God and how we’re to live in a way that honors God and accurately represents Him to the world around us.  The issue is more around those who know, either from reading and studying the Bible or hearing the truth of the Gospel be proclaimed, choose to discount what they know to be the truth to continue living in sin.  No matter how you want to justify or rationalize it away, even to the point of grasping a form of teaching that claims through grace it’s okay to continue in that sin, it still falls within rebellion against God and can have very significant consequences on one’s relationship with God and their eternal destination.  How can we be critical of others hypocritical behavior and lifestyles is we are living hypocritical lives ourselves?  Does that mean we have to be perfect?  No, but it’s both how we deal with that sin in our lives and our attitude about it that makes the difference.  Do we humbly approach the throne of grace with repentant hearts, which includes turning from that sin, or do we just try to justify and rationalize why we are going to continue in it?  Perhaps we try to justify it citing the negative aspects of turning from the sin, at least the negative aspects in the natural realm while discounting the negative aspects of continued rebellion against a holy God, our Father?

 

Are we living lives of hypocrisy, being critical of the behaviors and lifestyles of others while discounting, as though we’re exempt, the same behaviors and sin in our own lives?  Are we the “pot calling the kettle black”?  This should not be the case.

 

Reflections.  What we are seeing in this election process is a reflection of our society, and in some cases the hypocrisy within the church.  Before we get upset about what we’re seeing in the campaigning for this election, lets first take a step back and take a good hard look at how it’s a mere reflection of our society, and perhaps our own life.  Let’s be careful we’re not “the pot calling the kettle black” if we’re living with compromise in our life as a Christian.  And if we are living a compromising life contrary to Scripture, Biblical values and morals, and to the heart and nature of God, then it’s time to repent of such and turn from it.  Otherwise, what we are seeing in the world around us, and politically, is merely a reflection of where our heart is in relationship to Christ.

 

Reflections.

 

John Johansson (Pastor John)

[thrive_leads id=’457′]

Verified by ExactMetrics