Monday, January 31, 2022

What You Should Know about Jesus’ Love Commands


When Jesus gave us the Great Commandment, the Golden Rule, and the New Commandment, he did not give us any exceptions to those commands. He did not say anything like “if you no longer feel any interest in someone and no longer feel friendly toward them, you don’t have to love them.” He said nothing of the sort.

While Jesus’ command to love one another was given to his disciples, his commands to love God, to love our neighbors as ourselves, to love our enemies and to do good to them, and to treat others exactly as we would wish to be treated, he gave not just to his disciples but to the crowd that had come to hear him. They are not just for his followers. They are for everybody.

Wait a minute! Did you say everybody?

When God made Jesus Lord of all, God did not make him just Lord of his followers. God made Jesus Lord of ALL! So even if we choose no longer to be one of his disciples, we would not be free to disobey him.

We, as Jesus’ disciples, however, are expected to obey him. Indeed, as Jesus’ pointed to his original disciples’ attention, we show our love for Jesus by obeying his commands, by following the directions which he has given us.

While we may choose to give the cold shoulder to a fellow Christian, to not speak to them and to avoid them, we are no longer obeying Jesus when we make that choice. Jesus commands us to love one another. We are not loving a fellow Christ when we show an unfriendly attitude toward them and intentionally ignore them or show no interest in them. We are not loving a fellow Christian when we adopt an attitude of indifference toward them—an attitude of not caring about them or being interested in them.

Loving one another, loving our brothers and sisters in Christ, involves not only a particular attitude toward them but also particular behavior toward them. When we love a fellow Christian, we take an interest in them. We worry about them. We are friendly toward them, and we talk to them. We are kind to them. We are generous, helpful, and think about their feelings. We care about them. After all, they are family. They are our brother or sister in Christ.

We don’t snuggle with them. We don’t share spit and other body fluids with them. We may give them a hug or a pat on the back—with their permission.

We do not follow them everywhere they go and camp on their doorstep. We may show hospitality to one other in each other’s homes. We may visit them when they are sick. We may give them a phone call or shoot them a text. We maintain open communication with one another: we are able to share thoughts and feelings with each other without fear of any bad effects. We enjoy each other’s company.

One of the reasons that Jesus emphasizes pursuing reconciliation with a brother or sister is that we cannot love them and obey his command if we are not friendly with them and keep apart from them, if there are hard feelings between us and them. Jesus goes as far as saying that restoring friendly relations with a brother or sister is more important than fulfilling our religious obligations.

Loving one another means looking for the good in each other. We ditch the negativity bias. It is a tendency to see people in a bad light and to believe the worst about them. They may not have done anything evil or immoral, but we choose to see them that way. Rather than making allowances for them, we imagine their behavior is far worse that it is. We make all kinds of assumptions about them, and we do not consider the possibility that our assumptions are wrong.

The negativity bias can strongly influence how we come to an opinion about a situation, what we believe about it. We may not recognize the extent to which it influences our thinking.

One of the reasons that we are influenced by the negativity bias is the tendency to see everything in black and white. We do not take a nuanced view. People are either all good or all bad.

If we ditch the negativity bias, we may, for example, discover that what we believe was unacceptable behavior in a fellow Christian were attempts by that individual to deal with an unfamiliar situation, a situation with which they had no experience in dealing.

The negativity bias tends to be triggered when we are angry or annoyed by someone, have grown tired of them and have found someone more exciting, interesting, and fun, or are confronted with a difficult situation with which we would prefer not to deal.

When we love one another, we do not focus on each other’s negative qualities. Rather we focus on each other’s positive qualities. We take responsibility for our own contribution to a difficult situation rather than trying to shift the blame to someone else.

What about giving a fellow Christian space if they ask for it? Here is what psychologists and psychiatrists recommend.

1. The person requesting space from another person needs to define what they mean by space. It needs to be clear to both parties.

2. It needs to be remembered that being asked to give someone space can be a painful experience.

3. The person to whom you are giving space needs to know that you are giving them space because you care about them.

4. There needs to be a time frame. Without a timeframe, the person who is being asked to give someone space is left hanging, creating anxiety.

Asking for space indefinitely is the same as breaking off a relationship which has particular implications for Christians. We cannot use a request for space to let someone down gently because we no longer want any kind of relationship with them. As Christians we are “in relationship” with each other for the duration of our life here on earth and for all eternity. We are bound to Jesus and each other by the Holy Spirit. Both parties need to understand that.

Giving someone space does not free either party from the obligation to love one another as Christ loved us or to love each other as ourselves. Even if one or both parties cease to be followers of Jesus, they are bound to love each other as they love themselves and to treat each other exactly as they would want to be treated themselves. Jesus’ love commands continue to affect them regardless of whether they own his lordship over their lives.

5. If you are the person who is giving someone space offer them your help and let them know that you are there for them. However, do not crowd them.

6. Except in a genuine emergency the person who is giving someone space should limit contacts to what has been agreed upon.

7. How much time someone is given space depends on what happened. The parameters for deciding the length of time for Christians are determined by Jesus’ teaching, particularly his stress upon giving priority to restoring friendly relations with a brother or sister over our religious obligations. By brother or sister Jesus does not mean a natural sibling. He is referring to a fellow human being or a fellow Christian.

8. It is also recommended that the space given be structured. This ensures that both parties are on the same page. It can also mitigate the effects of giving someone space upon the person giving them space and reduces anxiety.

We need to remember what the apostle Paul wrote the church at Corinth. Hurt done to one member of the Body of Christ affects the whole Body of Christ. If two members of Christ’s Body experiences an impaired relationship, it will have bad effects on the entire Body.
For example, two members of the choir might have a disagreement, leading to one or both choir members not attending choir rehearsals or singing on Sunday morning. As a consequence, the Body of Christ is denied their gifts. Members of the choir may take sides, causing a split in the choir, further denying a church of its members’ gifts. An impaired relationship between two church members can keep one or both of them from exercising the spiritual gifts that they brought with them to the church, and which are God’s gift to the church.

We need to keep in mind that being polite to someone on Sunday mornings and other occasions but maintaining an unfriendly attitude toward them outside of church is not what Jesus meant when he instructed the first disciples to love one another as he loved them, not even by a stretch of the imagination. Friendliness is a part of loving our fellow Christians.

Friendliness, however, does not mean that we need to be joined at the hip to our fellow Christians, to monopolize each other’s time, to overstep each other’s boundaries, to be on the phone or texting them all of the time, and to give them no breathing room. It does mean that we are pleasant and kind to each other and act in a way that shows we like people and want them to like and trust us.

It's Monday: '7 Encouraging Trends of Global Christianity in 2022' and More


I sorted through a number of articles and came up with four--the first about some positive trends we need to take not of, second about a contributing factor to Christian nationalism, a third about what is happening in the United Methodist Church, and fourth about small groups can get involved in evangelism.

7 Encouraging Trends of Global Christianity in 2022
The deadly dogmatism of Christian nationalism
Debate about church future heats up
4 Ways to Involve Your Small Groups in the Great Commission

Saturday, January 29, 2022

Saturday Lagniappe: '5 Faulty Assumptions about the Future Church' and More


5 Faulty Assumptions about the Future Church
Carey Niewhof identifies 5 faulty assumptions that church leaders are making about the church in 2022 and beyond.

Gov. DeSantis, Let My Ministry Serve Migrant Kids
In preventing care for unaccompanied minors, Florida's governor is interfering with US law and religious freedoms.

It’s a TikTok World
There are two dynamics fueling the popularity of TikTok’s content: It is short, and it is visual.

Don’t Blame the Pandemic for Low Church Attendance
Church attendance has been declining since the pandemic. But has the pandemic simply exacerbated a trend we hadn’t noticed?

Ten Low- or No-Cost Ways to Improve Your Church’s Hospitality
This article is a must read. Most churches need to improve their hospitality. Eveb churches that are doing a good job could improve.

Does God Really Feel?
Yes, God does have emotions.

5 Major Concerns About the State of the Bible in the U.S.
As well as revealing some encouraging trnds, research reveals some troubling trends that should concern church leaders.

Bible Word Search: 8 Fun Learning Resources for Kids
Check out these Bible word search options for kids.

How to Grow in Intimacy with God
We can know God better.

You May Not Know What to Pray, but the Holy Spirit Does
What does it mean that the Spirit groans in us? Paul uses this word “groan” to mirror what creation is doing, and it reveals a couple of things about the Holy Spirit.

7 Tips for Fighting Distraction in Prayer
One thing I have learned when something distracts me while I am praying is to pray about whatever is distracting me.

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (January 30, 2022) Is Now Online

  


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

When God chose to become the God of the people of Israel and to make them his people, God did not give the cold shoulder to the rest of humanity. God did not show an unfriendly attitude toward the other people on the earth. He did not intentionally ignore them or show no interest in them as we sometimes do toward those whom Jesus taught us to love. He did keep a secret from the people of Israel, a secret that he revealed when Jesus walked the earth. Can you guess what that secret was?

The Scripture reading for this Sunday is Luke 4:21-30 Jesus’ words infuriate the people of Nazareth who attempt to kill him.

The homily is titled “Good News Indeed.”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/01/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_29.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Friday, January 28, 2022

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (January 29, 2022) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Agape, the kind of love which Christians are expected to love others and one another is love with a difference. Quite a difference in fact.

The Scripture reading for this Saturday evening is 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 Let Love Be Your Guide.

The homily is titled “Love with a Difference.”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/01/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_28.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

It 's Friday: '10 Church Poisons That Will Kill a Church' and More


Here are the links to nine articles which may interest readers. The article on church poisons explains the different ways that we can kill our own churches. I was involved for three years in a small Anglican church which made a series of decisions over the years, which led to its demise. 

10 Church Poisons That Will Kill Any Church
9 Things I’ve Learned About Leadership From My Family
7 Dangers of "Undisciple Believers" + Prosperity
5 Actions to Take Before You Publically Read Scripture
7 Steps in Dealing with Cliques
A Simple Game-Changing Practice for Your Small Group
From Providing Self-Care to Receiving Soul Care
5 Warnings for Your Social Media Talk
8 Ways to Strengthen Evangelism in Your Church

Wednesday, January 26, 2022

It's Wednesday: '7 Ways We Make People Feel Unwelcome At Our Church' and More


Since I found ten articles that I thought readers migh find interesting, I decided to try something different. I decided to just list the titles of the articles and provide links to them.

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (January 26, 2022) Is Now Online

 

All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

How are we made right with God? By our own efforts? By faith in Jesus Christ?

The Scripture reading for this Wednesday evening’s service is Galatians 4: 11-21 Paul Shows That Peter Was Wrong.

The homily is titled “God Can Do Anything.”

The link to this evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/01/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_26.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab. If a song begins partway through the video, move the slider back to the beginning of the video.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Familiarity Blindness in your Church: 7 Ways to Cure It


Familiarity blindness is a malady that infects us all. It happens when we become so familiar with something that we no longer consciously see it. In fact, the brain does this all the time so it doesn’t have to work as hard. If you drive to church or work the same route each time, you no longer pay attention to familiar buildings, signs, and other landmarks along the way. Although our eyes still see them, they’ve become so familiar that the brain doesn’t pay conscious attention to them. However, when something is out of place on your drive, a detour, for example, you immediately pay attention. Familiarity blindness is common in many churches today. In this post I give 7 ways to cure it. Read More

Small Groups are a Leadership Development Factory


If you need more leaders and even people just to help in your church, you are in good company these days. With low attendance numbers dragging on into the third year since COVID began, the leadership deficit in most churches is bigger than it’s ever been. Small groups are a great catalyst for growing leaders. Read More

Also See:
5 Toxic Small Group Ministry Moves

Monday, January 24, 2022

It's Monday: 'Six Reasons Your Church Welcome Ministry Is More Important Than Ever' and More


The church welcome ministry (or whatever your church calls it) has always been important. But the ministry is more important today than it’s ever been.

Joining Others on Their Journey
Radical hospitality is showing up where people already are with a posture of openness and blessing toward them.

The Group Most Likely to Still Be Missing From Your Church
Many who chose to stop attending services did so due to health-related concerns amid the pandemic, but research suggests that other reasons may have also played a role for some.

3 Things God Will Never Do with Your Sin
Consider for a moment how we “deal” with others. We keep fresh in our minds their injustices toward us. We nurture the memory of their faults and failings. We never let them forget what they did and we often make sure others are mindful of it as well.

Miracles Are Outlasting the Arguments Against Them
New Testament scholar Craig Keener investigates contemporary accounts of “signs and wonders,” while suggesting that many grounds for skepticism are behind the times.

Three Practical Ways to Engage in Online Peacemaking
How reflecting the servant attitude of Christ in our online engagement makes us effective ambassadors.

Sunday, January 23, 2022

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (January 23, 2022) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

There are dozens of self-improvement articles on the internet. Many of them offer good advice. But they are missing one important piece of advice—the need to have Jesus in your life. 

What about all those Christians who have messed-up lives? They may not be a great advertisement for Jesus but at the same time the pathway to being a better person is not one of instant transformation. When we have Jesus in our lives, we have a new relationship with God and that relationship is key to becoming our better selves.

The Scripture reading for this Sunday is Luke 4: 14-21 Jesus Begins His Work in Galilee; He Goes to His Hometown

The homily is titled “An Act of God’s Kindness.”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/01/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_23.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

f an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Saturday, January 22, 2022

What Does It Mean to Be the Body of Christ?

When preparing a homily on today’s reading (1 Cor. 12:12-31) from Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians, it is tempting to focus on the spiritual gifts due to their popularity in some Christian circles. But if we do, we will be missing an important idea that Paul develops in today’ reading. A summation of this idea can be formed from several key verses in the passage.

"A person has only one body, but it has many parts. Christ is like that too. God put the parts in the body as he wanted them. He made a place for each one. God wanted the different parts to care the same for each other. If one part of the body suffers, then all the other parts suffer with it. Or if one part is honored, then all the other parts share its honor. All of you together are the body of Christ. Each one of you is a part of that body."

This particular Christian belief is known as the doctrine of the Body of Christ. The local congregation of the faithful is like a human body. It is a single body made up of parts like our bodies. Each member of that congregation is one of its parts. God puts us in a particular congregation as he wants us. God wants us to care for each other exactly like we care for everyone else. We are not to treat anyone better than everyone else, nor are we to treat anyone worse than everyone else. It does not matter if we were not present when the congregation welcomed a new member and made a commitment to nurture them in the Christian faith and life and to include them in the congregation’s care. God expects us to care for them. We cannot avoid them or ignore them because we have taken a dislike to them or caring for others is not one of our strengths.

Christians who were forced to take care of themselves as a child and are very independent may struggle with caring for others. They may not be able to share someone else’s feelings or experiences by imagining what it would be like to be in that person’s situation. They may not be able to understand the feelings of others nor feel any desire to help them. However, they can develop the ability to imagine how someone else feels and become more empathetic.

This concept may be a difficult one to grasp in our culture which emphasizes the individual, independence, and self-sufficiency. We repeatedly hear the message that we are not responsible for others, only for ourselves. Jesus and the apostle, however, take a different view; we are interdependent, that is, we depend on each other. We help each other. We look after each other.

As Paul points to our attention, our lives are intertwined with the lives of the other members of the congregation. What we do to someone else affects the whole body. What happens to one of us affects all of us. When we do something bad or hurtful, the entire congregation suffers the consequences one way or another. We may damage the public image of our congregation. Our congregation may acquire a reputation of being unfriendly and unkind. When we do something kind or good, the entire congregation benefits. Our congregation may receive praise and approval from the community. The members of our congregation feel good about their church and themselves.. Our congregation’s public image gets a boost.

Bad blood between two members of a congregation can spread to other members of the congregation and eventually disrupt the life and ministry of a church. Reconciliation between two members can lead to restored friendly relations between other members. We cannot underestimate the impact our words and actions may have upon the rest of the congregation.

We must be careful about becoming out of misplaced sympathy an enabler, someone who allows or makes it possible for another person to behave in a way that damages that person. We may not have all the facts. Things are not always what they seem.
 
We need to be cautious about becoming involved in a relationship in which we contribute to someone else’s problem because we have a strong emotional need ourselves.
 
For example, we do not help anxious people to deal with their anxiety by making it possible for them to avoid anxiety-triggering situations. They need to deal with their anxiety in situations that trigger anxiety for them. Helping them to avoid these situations reinforces an existing unhealthy behavior pattern of behavior. It will actually make their anxiety worse.
 
If they are not facing any risk of physical injury or severe and lasting emotional shock and pain caused by an extremely upsetting experience, they should be encouraged to cope with the anxiety. The anxiety that they are feeling may be disproportionate to the circumstances and unrelated to the facts or events that make the situation the way it is.
 
Removing the anxiety trigger is not the solution. Working through longstanding and unreasonable feelings of anxiety about a particular feature of themselves or a particular set of circumstances is the solution.

The spiritual health of a local congregation of the faithful is tied to the spiritual health of the individual members of the congregation, just as the physical health of a human body is tied to the physical health of its individual parts. The spiritual health of the individual members of a congregation is tied to their physical, psychological, and emotional health. If we want our congregation to be healthy as possible, we need to be attentive to state of each individual member’s health.

We need to keep two things in mind. Because a person is functioning, exhibiting what we consider normal behavior and doing what is expected of them, and is not complaining of any kind of distress, does not mean that they are in tiptop condition health-wise. They may not recognize their physical and behavioral health problems, or they may be hiding them. The environment in which they are function may enable them not to experience any distress.

A second thing to remember is that what clinicians called “presenting problem” or “chief complaint” is the initial symptom that causes an individual member of a congregation to turn to the pastor or some other church leader for help. To the clinician it is the initial piece of information that they will use in an evaluation.

Pastors and other church leaders should treat the concerns that an individual member of the congregation shares with them in the same way. They may discover on further investigation that the individual in question is accurately reporting a situation, or they are misinterpreting someone else’s word and actions.
 
Pastors and other church leaders may uncover additional information that sheds a different light on what that individual is defining as the problem.
 
For example, they may discover that the individual who came to them with the problem is wrongly imagining that someone else is feeling an emotion or desire where in fact they are the one who feels this way.

They also need to be aware of what is known as the negativity bias. This is the tendency to take a negative view of other people, to give more credence to negative information about them than to positive information, to exaggerate in our minds the seriousness of an individual’s negative qualities, and even to add imaginary details to the someone’s account of what happened. We look for the worst in other people, and not the best in them. The negativity bias can prejudice our opinion of someone and our assessment of the situation.

At the same time pastors and other church leaders will want to give someone who comes to them with a problem the benefit of the doubt and not to dismiss their concerns out of hand. It is helpful to keep in mind what Paul wrote the Corinthians about God wanting the different parts of the body to care for each other the same. In practice, pastors and other church leaders will need to do their best to be impartial, judging or considering the matter fairly without letting their own feelings or sympathies to influence them. This may be difficult when one of the parties involved may be a newcomer to the congregation and the other party is longtime member of the congregation whom they have know for a while.

Something to remember is that we may not know someone as well as we may think. What we may know is their persona, or social image, the particular type of character that a person seems to have and that is often different from their real or private character. This does not mean that they are secretly bad people who are deceiving us. Rather they may have personal qualities or character traits that they prefer to keep from the view of others out of the fear that others may reject them. They therefore will project what they consider their most desirable qualities, the qualities which they believe will please other people and which they want most people to notice about them.

In writing the church at Corinth about God wanting the different parts of the body to care for each other, Paul is echoing the new commandment that Jesus gave to the disciples—the commandment to love one another as he loved them. This is evident from the section of Paul’s letter that follows today’s reading. It is the way of life that Paul tells the Corinthians is better than the spiritual gifts. In that section Paul describes the kind of love that Christians should show other people and their brothers and sisters in Christ.

Faction Friendships


In his recent insightful article on the Gospel Coalition, Pastor Jeremy Linneman argues that (in America at least) people’s already-weak friendships have been diminished and replaced by screen time and ‘faction friendships’ (friendships based on social-political alignment and little else) which have pushed both the society and the church to further polarization.

My own experience as a Pastor suggests that this is not just happening in America. Too many Christians, on both sides of the controversies occasioned by covid, have retreated into their own tribe, making someone’s view of covid, lockdowns or facemasks the shibboleth of orthodoxy. Too many Christians have strained out gnats and swallowed camels—taking strong stands over covid protocols as if fundamental doctrines like the deity of Christ or justification were at stake, while ignoring the crystal clear and far weightier commands like our duty to love one another and consider others more important than ourselves.

And so we have Christians who will not speak to another Christian if he is wearing a facemask—or unless he is wearing a facemask. There are Christians who are suddenly hailing as heroes those with whom they have very little in common on any other issue, but because they are ‘sound’ on the covid question that’s all that matters. Read More

What’s New in Evangelical Views on Abortion? The Age Gap


Between 2016 and 2020, younger white evangelicals started to shift away from pro-life positions while older ones solidified their stances.

Abortion holds a unique place in the realm of American public opinion.

While views on issues like same-sex marriage and marijuana legalization have shifted dramatically over the last ten years, people tend to hold on to their positions on abortion. In my upcoming book, 20 Myths about Religion and Politics in America, I spend a chapter explaining how abortion opinion is basically unchanged over the last four decades.

Evangelicals have been the religious group with the strongest views against abortion, and across generations, they’ve held to their pro-life stances. As recently as 2016, the age gap between younger and older generations on the issue was small and substantially insignificant.

But data from 2020 has begun to show a different trend. Younger white evangelicals have become more permissive of abortion, while older ones have moved in the opposite direction. Read More

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (January 22, 2022) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Beginning this Saturday I will be using a simpler format for All Hallows Evening Prayer. I will also be posting the homily separately as well as with the service. This is for anyone who might wish to read the homily by itself.

The Scripture reading for this Saturday evening is 1 Corinthians 12: 12-31 The Body of Christ.

The homily is titled “What Does It Mean to Be the Body of Christ?”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/01/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_22.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Friday, January 21, 2022

It's Friday: 'Every Church Is a Culture – What Is Yours?" and More


Every Church Is a Culture – What Is Yours?
"There is no un-enculturated person anywhere in the world. No one is unrelated or un-embedded. We’re all shaped by our interactions with others, and that shaping becomes the culture in which we relate to each other."

MacGyver and the Local Church
There are two important lessons that we can learn from the 1958 and 2016 TV series, "MacGyver."

How to Church Shop Like the First Christians
In an age of virtual worship services, some things should stay the same.

Thabiti Anyabwile Has Strong Words for Pastors Who Create ‘Made up Controversies’
On Thursday, pastor and author Thabiti Anyabwile fired back at fellow evangelical leaders who stirred controversy about him on Twitter.

Three Quick Ways to Ruin Your Church’s Online Reputation
What should you avoid when trying to protect your church’s online reputation? What are the areas that can turn into missteps and then later turn into disasters? Here are three quick ways to ruin your church’s online reputation if you’re not careful.

Great Questions Lead to Great Conversations
I’ve used “S.P.E.A.K.” as an acronym to help me make my conversations go beneath the surface. You can use these questions with anyone you meet—no matter how much money, power, or popularity the other person has, this tool will help you go deeper and be more personal....

4 Ways to Navigate Minefield Conversations
Difficult conversations often feel like trying to get through that mine-laced countryside without killing oneself....

Here’s Who Stopped Going to Church During the Pandemic
Recent research paints a grim picture for local congregations. But it also highlights opportunities
.

Thursday, January 20, 2022

It's Thursday: '9 Things You Should Know About Religious Freedom in America' and More


9 Things You Should Know About Religious Freedom in America
This past Sunday (January 16), the United States observed National Religious Freedom Day 2022. Here are nine things you should know about religious freedom in America since the time of the nation’s founding.

Pastors Who Lack Close Friends: 5 Reasons Why
Barna Research discovered that 61% of pastors are lonely and have few close friends. The loneliest people in churches are often pastors. Why is this so?

By Steps and Degrees: A Short Introduction to Preparatory Grace
"preparatory grace is a gracious but non-saving work of God which prepares sinners, in a means consistent with human nature, for saving faith."

Youth Ministry Is Being Reshaped by These 10 Important Trends
What will youth ministry look like in the years to come?More studies of young people and their faith exist today than every before. Despite this wealth of information, our methods haven’t significantly changed since contemporary youth ministry began in the 1950s and ’60s. That will change in the coming years.

Children’s Ministry: An Investment That Will Outlive You
One of the awesome things about children's ministry is this - the investment you make will outlive you.

Small Group Earthquake Plans
If we’ve learned anything from the pandemic, it’s that we don’t know what’s next. So, your plans and preparations need to be like buildings made for an earthquake.

Appealing to Caesar
Have you ever thought about how you are to view and leverage your earthly citizenship?

Critical Evangelism Theory
“When we pursue diversity and dismantle racism in the name of Jesus Christ, we can inspire a Spirit-empowered disciple-making movement.”

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

It's Wednesday: '8 Reasons Pastorless Churches Should Consider an Interrim Pastor' and More

Pastorless churches can get accustomed to having no pastor and can adopt unhealthy attitudes and practices.

How the Stand and Greet Time Disappeared in Churches (And How to Replace It)
The passing of the peace in liturgical churches is NOT a stand and greet time. The peace is a gesture of reconciliation exchanged in preparation for sharing the elements of the Holy Communion.

When Aslan Wept
"While it is within God’s power to remove our suffering and make us feel better again, sometimes He does not. We can only trust that He’s grieving alongside us while working things out behind the scenes for our good and His glory."

How To Understand And Dispel The Fear Of Witchcraft
Witchcraft is not confined to the African subcontinent. While it is a strong influence in Africa, it is also practiced elsewhere in the world, including the United States and Canada.

5 Things Christians Fear (but Shouldn’t)
Here are 5 things that we as Christians should not fear but do.

Never Underestimate the Value of Ordinary, Brief, Christian Conversations
The Holy Spirit can use these conversations to build up the Body of Christ.

Christians Are Going Back to Church—But Maybe Not the Same One
While watching livestreamed services, churchgoers may find a different church more attractive than the church that they were attending. They may also find a different church safer or closer to home than the one they have been attending.

Where Protestants and Catholics Go When They Leave Their Churches
"The major denominational families that had the lowest amount of defections were the traditional mainline traditions, while nondenominational Christianity—almost always considered to be evangelical—had the greatest amount of defections."

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (January 19, 2022) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

The appropriate posture for prayer does come up from time to time. Do we kneel, stand, or crouch? Do we keep our eyes open, or do we close them? Does it really matter?

The Scripture reading for this Wednesday evening’s service is Galatians 2: 1-10 Years later I met church leaders in Jerusalem: no criticism of my gospel was made.

The homily is titled “Our Postures in Prayer: Do They Matter?.”

The link to this evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/01/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_19.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab. If a song begins partway through the video, move the slider back to the beginning of the video.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Let Love Guide Us in the New Year: Reciprocity


Honeysuckle symbolizes the bonds of love.

Jesus’ commandment to love one another carries with it the expectation that his disciples will show reciprocity toward each other when feeling and expressing love for each other. They will help each other by behaving in the same way or by giving each other similar advantages. Regrettably this may not always happen.
 
Some Christians will feel and express love for their fellow Christians more easily than others. This lack of reciprocity, however, should not keep us from loving our brothers and sisters in Christ.
 
Mutually loving each other, loving each other in the same way, while it is highly desirable, may prove difficult to achieve. Different people have different capacities for giving and receiving love.
 
As Christians we are expected to grow in our ability to love each other, but for some of us it may be harder to do than for others. We all have different experiences, and these experiences can affect our ability to give and receive love.
 
The important thing is that each of us works toward loving our brothers and sisters in Christ more.
On the other hand, our love for our fellow human beings may be one-sided. They may be entirely unresponsive to our love for them. Whatever may be their response, we love them anyway.
 
Loving our neighbor and loving our enemy do not carry with them the expectation that our neighbor and our enemy will love us back. “We love because God loves us,” wrote the apostle John.
How do we love one another? How do we love others?
 
Some of the ways that we love one another, and we love others is that we are patient with them. We are friendly, generous, helpful, and caring about them. We give thought to their feelings. We try to understand their feelings and to put ourselves in their place.
 
We are sympathetic toward them, and we offer them encouragement and support. We compliment and praise them. We have a kind word for them. We are honest and truthful with them, and we don’t try to deceive them. We look for the strengths and good qualities in them.
 
We don’t intentionally try to harm them. We don’t deliberately cause them embarrassment or make trouble for them. We treat them with kindness and care. We give them the benefit of the doubt and we trust them.
 
We go out of our way for them. We forgive them and we don’t hold anything against them. When we do something bad to them, we make it up to them if we can.
 
We keep open channels of communication with them. We listen to them. We mend broken fences with them whenever possible.
 
You may think of other ways that we as Christians show love or one another and show love for others.

3 Simple Ways to Flatten Your Neighbor


The title of this article intrigued me. What did Trevin Wax mean by flattening your neighbor? Read the article and you will find out. Trevin reminds us that Jesus taught us to love our neighbors as ourselves, not flatten them. Read the article

For Such a Time as This?


I like what Kurt Bubna say in this article about how the followers of Jesus are to be different. He hits the nail on the head. If you follow Jesus, you are to be different--no two ways about it! Read the article

The Power of the Ordinary Moments


Skylar Spradlin makes a good point in this article. God does not always work through the splashy. He more often works through the ordinary. Yet a lot of folks expect God to work through the splashy and are disappointed when he does not. It does not enter their minds that he works through the ordinary. Read the article

Monday, January 17, 2022

Will Few Be Saved?

 

How do we reconcile Jesus seemingly contradictory statements that "few will be saved" and "many will be saved." Manny Lucas offers one solution to this problem. See article. It is very tempting to take Jesus' "few will be saved" satements and build a theology around them, which limits that few to people like ourselves, members of our "tribe." 

All the Reasons Why Kids Shouldn’t Go to Church


For most of the history of the Christian Church children have been included in the local church's gatherings on Sundays. They have not been relegated to their own separate gatherings. During the last century it became the practice to segregate children from the adults in the local church. This practice, however, was found to be responsible for a lack of faith and a high dropout rate among teenagers. Children who had been worshiping in their own separate gatherings were unable to make the transition to the larger church gathering when they reached the age at which they were expected to make that transition. They dropped out of church altogether or they migrated to a church that offered a worship experience similar to the one to which they had become accustomed when they worshiped in their own separate gatherings. It is the second decade of the 21st century and teenagers are still walking away from the church and concerned Christians like Christina Membree are still advocating for the integration of children in the local church's larger gatherings. See article. When will the penny drop?

What's Up with Evangelicals?


The article "9 in 10 Evangelicals Don’t Think Sermons Are Too Long" provides research that supports the claim that "evangelical churchgoers are pretty happy with how things are going at their churches." The article, "12 Lies American Evangelicals Believe" paints a different picture, not of dissatisfaction but of widely-held error. One is prompted to wonder what pastors are teaching in the so-called "in-depth teaching," of which evangelicals are reported to want more in the first article. It has been recognized for a number of years that lives of many evangelicals do not differ from the lives of non-church going Americans except for their churchgoing habits, fondness for contemporary Christian and praise and worship music, and their proclivity to socialize only with other evangelicals. The second article suggests that they are not removed from non-churchgoing Americans in their beliefs.

Saturday, January 15, 2022

Let Love Guide Us in the New Year: Love Perseveres, Trusts, Hopes, and Endures


Honeysuckle symbolizes the bonds of love.

In his last two verses of his description of the nature of agape, or Christ love, in his first letter to the Corinthians the apostle Paul lists several positive qualities or characteristics. The first of these qualities or characteristics is that love never gives up on people. It perseveres. It continues making an effort in a determined way, even when it is difficult or takes a long time. It does not quit. It does not stop in the face of difficulties. It endures whatever the circumstances are. It will experience and bear the difficulties, the unpleasantness, and the pain. It does not look for an excuse to not love someone and having found an excuse stops loving them.

This quality or characteristic sets agape, or Christian love, apart from the other types of love. It does not abandon someone because they are unresponsive. They do not react in a quick or positive way to the love shown them. In his teaching Jesus encouraged his disciples to be generous in their giving and to not expect anything in return for their generosity. Agape, or Christian love, is the same way. It is not offered in the hopes that it will be reciprocated. It is given freely without any strings attached. Christians, when they are genuinely love others as Jesus taught, are imitating God in their love. They are showing that they are children of God.

The love that we show to others or to our fellow Christians may be spurned by them. They may refuse to accept it for a variety of reasons. For example, they may confuse it with carnal love, love that is related to the physical feelings or wants of the body. This does not mean that we stop loving them. They may come in time to recognize it for what it is. They may not. We have no control over how they chose to respond. As we saw in an earlier article, agape, or Christian love, is not about benefiting from our expression of that love. It does not try to manipulate or control the person at whom it is directed. If it is refused or rejected, we do not go looking for someone else to love. We persevere. We do not move on to someone who is easier to love and who is responsive to our love.

A second positive quality or characteristic that Paul lists is that agape, or Christian love, never loses faith. It never stops trusting. There is no end to its trust. It maintains its great trust and confidence in God, its strong belief in God. It believes what Jesus taught and believes that in loving others unreservedly, completely, without any doubts or feelings of being uncertain, whether neighbors, enemies, or brothers and sisters in Christ, it is doing the right thing. It is doing the will of God. It believes that God puts people in the life of a disciple of Jesus to be loved. Loving them is one of the purposes that God gives the Christian the will and power to achieve.

When we trust someone, we believe that they are good and honest and will not harm us. When we trust God, we believe same thing. We believe that God is good. We believe that he tells the truth, is trustworthy, and is not likely to lie to us. We also believe that God will not harm us. He is kind and helpful. Based on our trust in him, we do what Jesus taught, believing that God has in mind our best interests and the best interests of those whom we love.

A third positive quality or characteristic that Paul is that agape, or Christian love, is always hopeful. It never loses hope. Its hope never fades.

When we hope, we want something to happen or to be true, and we usually have a good reason to think that it might. We have a confident feeling about what will happen in the future. We believe that something good will happen in the future. We feel that something which we desire can be had or will happen.

A fourth positive quality or characteristic that Paul list is that agape, or Christian love, will endure through every circumstance. It never fails, It will never end. It is eternal. It will outlast everything else.

When we compare these qualities and characteristics of agape, or Christian love, with God's love, we cannot miss the similarity between this type of love and God’s love. God is unwavering in his love for us. Agape, or Christian love, embodies God’s faithfulness. Like God’s love, agape, or Christian love, is true. It is sincere and loyal and continues to be so in difficult situations.

Sexual and romantic love fade. Passions cool. Hormones subside. A partner or spouse may go in search of someone new, someone more exciting. But agape, or Christian love, is, I believe, infused with God’s love and it does not disappear. It not only lasts a lifetime but also for all eternity.

12 Disruptive Church Trends That Will Rule 2022 (and the Post-Pandemic Era)


Having been through two excruciating years as a church leader, what can you expect in 2022?

As you can see by the sheer number of trends (the most I’ve ever covered in my annual trends series), 2022 is shaping up to be a pivotal year.

A new reality will emerge, and it will be different than we think. Read More

Baptism: God’s Work Upon Us


A number of years ago I was invited to speak at a Pentecostal seminary in Germany and make the best case I could for infant baptism, which was, as you might well imagine, not just unfaithful but downright unintelligible to my audience. The fact that I represented Lutheranism did not make my task any easier, since they were acutely aware of the historic Lutheran church’s dislike of “free churches” — though I can’t say that, as an American, I felt much inclined to admire state Protestantism politically or theologically anyway.

But by this time I had learned a thing or two about voluntary or “believer’s baptism” in the churches that espouse it, so I began my talk by asking how many of the people present had been baptized in water. All of them raised their hands. Hardly surprising.

Then I asked how many had been baptized in water twice. Result: fully half of the crowd of over 100 students raised their hands.

Then I asked how many had been baptized in water three times. Four or five people raised their hands.

Four times? Just one person — who promptly explained it was because she’d “been living in America at the time.” So much for my illusion that escaping the state church/free church tension solves sacramental problems. Read More

The Difficult Habit of Quiet


The habit of quiet may be harder today than ever before. Don’t get me wrong: it’s always been hard. The rise and spread of technology, however, tends to crowd out quiet even more.

Now that we can carry the whole wide and wild world in our pockets, it’s that much harder to keep the world at bay. Our phones always promise another update to see, image to like, website to visit, game to play, text to read, stream to watch, forecast to monitor, podcast to download, headline to scan, article to skim, score to check, price to compare. That kind of access, and semblance of control, can begin to make quiet moments feel like wasted ones. Who could sit and be still while so much life rushes by? Even if we don’t immediately pick up our phones, we’re often still held captive by them, wondering what new they might hold — what we might be missing.

As hard as quiet might be to come by, however, it’s still a life-saving, soul-strengthening habit for any human soul. The God who made this wide and wild world, and who molded our finite and fragile frames, says of us, “In quietness and in trust shall be your strength” (Isaiah 30:15). In days filled with noise, do you still find time to be this kind of strong? Or has stress and distraction slowly eroded your spiritual health?

How often do you stop to be quiet? Read More

Friday, January 14, 2022

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (January 16, 2022) Is Now Online

 

All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

A wedding. A miraculous sign. Water turned into wine. Jesu' glory revealed. But does it fill us with awe as did those who were present? As it did those who those who first heard John's Gospel? 

The Scripture reading for this Sunday is John 2:1-11 The Wedding at Cana.

The homily is titled “Through the Eyes of Child.”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/01/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_14.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

f an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.