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Tuesday, July 26

I Am Beginning to Like Driscoll More and More
by
Tim
on Tue 26 Jul 2005 05:27 AM PDT
Mark Driscoll is the pastor of Mars Hill Church and founder of Acts 29, a church-planting network. Mars Hill is a church around 3000 in the Seattle area. Driscoll's book regarding Reformission (the subtitle is 'reaching out without selling out'), which is about reaching and changing the present culture with the powerful gospel of God regarding Jesus the king.
As I have read his book, I find myself agreeing with many points. Below is just one regarding churches and felt needs and consumerism.
Mark Driscoll, Radical Reformission, p. 171
“The assumption that everyone is a customer to be marketed to is a great pitfall for those who proclaim the gospel, because we tend to cast God as a product, and as mainstream a product as possible. After all, scriptural teaching about the curse, death as the wages of sin, the flooding of the earth, the killing of Egyptian babies, the slaughter of perverts in Sodom and Gomorrah, and the fiery torments of hell is a tough sell even for the best of marketing firms.
Yet today everything from sex to Jesus is pimped, since some preachers have traded in prophecy for pandering. Meanwhile, people have become so seasoned from the years of direct mail, online pop-ups ads, commercials, and the endless parade of advertising on everything from billboards to ball caps that they tend to view the church as just another business and the preacher as yet another huckster.
Businesses of all sorts shamelessly pander to felt needs, and customers love the benefits they reap from fierce competition. People often take the same approach to God when they ‘shop’ for a new church that emphasizes their felt needs and offers more amenities for them to consume. They expect God and his church to play their game by assessing their self needs, marketing to them with a good pitch from a winsome salesman, and providing spiritual goods and services that beat the competition down the street, whether it’s a self-help guru or another religion or church. Churches that buy into this worship of humanity are prone to fashion their churches after malls, complete with departments or ministries for each family member in an effort to keep the shoppers happy.”
Monday, July 25

A Funny Blog
by
Tim
on Mon 25 Jul 2005 11:27 AM PDT
Some things are just so true! Check this out!
http://crummychurchsigns.blogspot.com/
HT: Nehring
Thursday, July 21

Harry Potter and All That
by
Tim
on Thu 21 Jul 2005 10:16 AM PDT
A nice article talking about the virtues of the Potter movement. Sorry, Jeff, you may want to start reading them.
Friday, July 15

I have started another blog
by
Tim
on Fri 15 Jul 2005 01:04 PM PDT
In an effort to
foster more talking about the sermons at Faith Community Church, where
I am one of the pastors, I have created a blog entitled Table
Talk. You can find it here,
and you can read about what I am trying to do. Right now it is a
temporary blog, an experiment to see if we get some good discussion
going on the four-week series I will preach beginning on July
23-24. Tell your friends and others you know at Faith Community.

Your Hearts are Far From Me
by
Tim
on Fri 15 Jul 2005 12:37 PM PDT
One of the laments of preachers around Christmas time is that people should
not simply go through the formalism and the materialism of Christmas, but that
they should remember ‘the reason for the season’. What this presupposes, is that participation
in some elements of Christmas festivities does not mean full participation in
the worship of our redeeming God, who gave Jesus to die and live for the sake
of the elect.
This same distinction is found in Isaiah 29.13 when the Lord says, “…[T]his
people draw near with their mouth and honor me with their lips, while their
hearts are far from me… (ESV). What we
find here is that simple participation in worship to YHWH is not true
worship. That is, one could go to the
temple, participate in the sacrifices, etc., and though there is participation,
true worship does not take place. In
other words participation in the elements of worship, without a heart devoted
to the Lord is not worship.
What this means, it seems to me, is that we need to make this allowance
consistent in other areas of life. For
example, with Halloween, some argue that participation in the festivities of
this day means that one is participating in the whole of it. Thus, it is reasoned, if you go get free
candy from homes, then you are participating in some form of occultism. But as we see in Isaiah, and as we preach
against at Christmas, participation in some elements of a holiday or a service
does not entail full participation. This,
it seems to me, is what stands behind Paul’s discussion of food sacrificed to idols
(1 Cor 8-10). Also, this is what would
make the difference between Paul forbidding Christians to be circumcised in his
letter to the Galatians and Paul having Timothy circumcised for mission to the
Jews.
What do you think? Is this
distinction justified? Are there areas
other than Halloween, where this distinction is true? Music?
Harry Potter? Movies? Alcohol?
Monday, July 11

What Kind of Church Are You?
by
Tim
on Mon 11 Jul 2005 12:46 PM PDT
Scott Thomas describes the differences between the missional, evangelical, and institutional church.
The Missional Church:1. Sent by God as missionaries in their own culture (Mt. 4:19). 2. Exists to take Christ to the lost: Go to the world (Mt. 28:18-20). 3. Members are personally engaged in their communities (Acts 16:20; 17:6). 4. Submerged into its culture like Christ (Luke 7:34). 5. Main focus is training and equipping others to be missionaries (Eph. 4:11-16). 6. Dependent upon Holy Spirit to use individuals as agents for evangelizing (Acts 1:8). 7. Develops relationships with the lost on purpose (Matt. 5:13-16). 8. Relationships are the means to influence others in their journey toward Christ (John 1512-17; 1 John 4:19-21). 9. The goal is to help others find Jesus in their own way and timing (1 Cor. 9:20-23). 10. Participants are affected in every way through a calling by God to be an agent for the gospel (Acts 4:13, 31-35). 11. Faith is practiced in community - groups of people together (Acts 2:42-45; Phil. 1:27). 12. Worship is unpredictable, spontaneous, Spirit-directed and messy (John 4:23-24).
The Evangelical Church: 1. Has a program of missions alongside numerous activities of the church. 2. Exists as a place for the lost to find Christ: Come to the Church. 3. Members are supportive of mission efforts. 4. Separated from its culture as a holy quest. 5. Main focus is supporting mission works - mainly overseas. 6. Dependent upon altar call and big events as its main tool for evangelization. 7. Knows a few lost people and prays for their salvation. 8. Uses marketing techniques & business principles to draw people to a corporate gathering. 9. The goal is to produce salvation results. 10. Participants conform to man-made standards through guilt and pressure. Change is through self-will, not Spirit. 11. Faith is practiced at the church building during prescribed gathering times. 12. Worship is structured, predictable and orderly.
The Institutional Church: 1. Sends money to missionaries in foreign countries if it is convenient. 2. Exists for the members of the church: Join the Church. 3. Members expect pastors to bring in the lost and unchurched. 4. Has become a sub-culture of Christians living in a parallel universe. 5. Main focus is supporting church activities to attract new families. 6. Dependent upon pastors and staff to evangelize the lost. 7. Stays away from the lost; has very few dealings with those outside the church. 8. Uses tradition, denomination and family ties to attract and keep members. 9. The goal is to increase attendance. 10. Participants compartmentalize their religion and their lives - generally facades of religious adherence. 11. Faith is a routine activity that is private and personal. 12. Worship is ritualistic.
Read the whole article about Missional Church here.
Wednesday, July 6

Live8 Again
by
Tim
on Wed 06 Jul 2005 01:18 PM PDT
"Ahead of this week's G8 conference in Scotland, the world's richest nations forgave billions in debt to the world's poorest. Great news, right? Not necessarily. Decades of Western aid have done little to ease suffering in Africa -- indeed the situation is worse than ever. Is it time for the West to rethink its aid strategy?" Read the full article here.
(HT: Burton)
Tuesday, July 5

I Preached This Weekend
by
Tim
on Tue 05 Jul 2005 12:52 PM PDT
I Preached this weekend on James 5.1-6. If you would like to listen you can get it here.

Live 8 and stuff
by
Tim
on Tue 05 Jul 2005 11:41 AM PDT
Burton writes,
There is no charity in compulsion. Since taxation is compulsory, my government's giving my money to anyone in need, whether here or abroad is not love. It is not love on my part, nor is it love on the part of the people who advocate such policies, because they do not bear the sacrifice. To even suggest it is an insult to an a mockery of the true generosity that comes from Christ-changed heart. Many Christians who approach political matters from the left are enthusiastic about harnessing the state to help the poor. Can we make people fulfill their obligations to the poor by passing a law? Think about that in other contexts. Why not pass a law to make people repent?
I think all his posts on Live 8 stuff is great. Check it out here.
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