Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Sacred Cows and Other Things We Like to Milk (Pt.1)

OK, I should be writing a paper tonight about how to witness to Hindus and Muslims for my class at the cost of some needed sleep, but instead I am going to start this series of posts and pay for it in the morning....why you ask?.....I have no idea, but here it goes:

In the event that you are wandering by my blog for the first time....let me clarify, as a preface, for you that I am a "to the bone" committed student to orthodox exegesis in regards to the principals of the Scripture...my paraphrase: "Don't jack with The Book, or God will jack you up!" But I am tired of many things that I see that are not scriptural based, but traditionally based, and held to the same level and reverence as if they were born in the scripture themselves and serve as a standard for faith and practice. Well, guess what? Many are not. It is not that I consider myself to be any sort of scholar or authority, but I do know that those who do not know history are destined to repeat it. And in the past God pronounced His severest judgements on those who knew their traditions, but did not know Him or His Word. So over the course of several post under this title I will be revealing the orgin of many of the traditions that we hold so tightly to that our knuckles turn white, but have absolutely no foundation in Scripture. Don't shoot the messenger! If you get bent at some of the things I am writing about, please don't hold it against me. God's work is so much bigger than the things we hold to dogmatically....isn't that great news!?! And for heaven's sake, don't take my word for any of it...search it out yourself....be noble like the Bereans.

One last disclaimer, if you understand the origin of what I am sharing and at the conclusions have no qualm with the practice...that's cool. Most of these things I'm addressing are not bad. I don't have a problem with many of them either...that is until people put them on the same plane as something authoritative. I like what Augustine said, "In the essential unity, in the non-essentials liberty, but in all things charity" So I hope you find these history lessons informative and challenging to "old" views. Here it goes...

SACRED COW #1 - Our Worship and Practice Closely Resembles the Early Church
There are two pivotal moments in church history: 323-327A.D. and October 31, 1571 and we are going to be referring to both in many posts to come. Out of those two points in time have flowed the vast majority of the practices of present-day Christianity. I did not say its theology, but its practice. VERY IMPORTANT DISTINCTION!
So what was the early church like? Well you have read about the persecution that began in Jerusalem beginning with Saul in the books of Acts. The persecution was assumed also by the Romans and carried on with Nero. It was bad! To give you an example, the Roman historian Tacticus wrote that Nero would bind Christians, paint them in tar and hang them from poles in the streets of Rome. If that wasn't bad enough, it was disturbing for the citizens to hear them in agony, so they began the practice of sewing their lips shut. At night, Nero would have the bodies of the living victims, set on fire and the streets of Rome were lit with burning of Christians. Why was this done? Simply because they worshipped the risen Christ.
During the next 250 years the early church experienced tremendous growth, but in the midst of tremendous periods of persecution.
The climax came on February 23, 303. On that date Emperor Diocletian, signed the first general edict against Christians. The edict mandated that all copies of the scriptures be burned, that all Christian worship be banned, all meeting places closed, and all leaders rounded up and be forced to recant. The torture and bloodshed were so bad that even the Romans were sickened and repulsed. The result was the it left the church without leaders, setting the stage for 313AD, but that will be in the next post.
So to dispel the first sacred cow, unless you sit in the pew of your church with the thought that at any moment a dispatch of Roman Centurions is going to bust down the plate glass door of your foyer to haul you off for lunch with a lion, you probably do not possess the same mindset. If you are sitting in a building architectually designed for your comfort, you are not in a similar place Finally, if your commitment is not one of total heartfelt devotion in your worship; if you are not committed to doing everything you can to encourage and ensure those around you stay strong in their faith through the battles in the coming week; if you aren't singing that hymn or chorus as if your life depended on it; if you're not clinging to every word of the message from the scripture without facing the reality and making a choice that you will do what it says at the cost of your own life; and if you're not surrounded by a group of people who feel and live the exact same way, what you are a part of is a far cry from anything that resembles the early church, so please don't say it or act like it.
Embrace the mission He has for you in this age He has called you to and be real! Love Jesus and make him the center of your affection not traditions and not religion. Sacred Cow #1 down, bring in the next one...





















3 comments:

Cherie said...

What I have experienced with Jesus is nothing like what the people of the 1st. centry church experienced, but I am aware that there ARE believers faced with very similar trials today in our world. I pray for their bold witness and enduring faith through tests that I can not imagine facing.
If God should ever allow me or my children live in a society where our freedom to worship and share Christ is revoked, then I pray for the Holy Spirit to empower us to be fearless witnesses and be unrecanting of His Lordship over our lives. I pray this prayer for my children and grandchildren even now as I see the tides of change in our country.

Anonymous said...

I agree Buddy and Cheri. We in the American church just don't understand what trials and struggles really are. The Church truly grows when it is persecuted (I believe it has something to do with God using/allowing persecution to trim off the dead, ungrowing branches, leaving only the fresh, green, healthy, growing branches.)
This is the reason the Church in Asia and Africa is truly growing and expanding while the European Church is apathetic and irrelevent and the American Church is asleep in its comforting social acceptance. Instead of being the sender of missionaries America is increasingly becoming the target of missionary work.

Anonymous said...

Re: John's comment: "Instead of being the sender of missionaries America is increasingly becoming the target of missionary work."

This is probably true. There certainly is a need for missional works in America. Does anyone know of any other Christian countries that are targeting America?