Where did the Church Go?

  
This morning, I encountered a surprising statistic. “Most members of the Churches of Christ live outside the United States.”[1] The article went on to report, “Churches of Christ in America make up slightly less than half of its worldwide membership. There are more than 1,000,000 members of the Churches of Christ in Africa, roughly 1,000,000 in India, and 50,000 in Central and South America. Total worldwide membership is over 3,000,000, with around 1,300,00 in the U.S.”
 
I have worked for years with the Church in Korea and have often pointed out there are more Christians per capita in Korea than in America! South Korea, statistically, is a more Christian nation than the United States! I am preparing to return this fall to Singapore to work with SIBI – the Sunset International Bible Institute. They are training young men and women to preach in India, China, and Southeast Asia. They are doing a great job, and the Church continues to grow!
 
On the other hand, the Pew Research Center on Religion and Public Life recently reported:
 
The religious landscape of the United States continues to change at a rapid clip. In Pew Research Center telephone surveys conducted in 2018 and 2019, 65% of American adults describe themselves as Christians when asked about their religion, down 12 percentage points over the past decade. Meanwhile, the religiously unaffiliated share of the population, consisting of people who describe their religious identity as atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular,” now stands at 26%, up from 17% in 2009.[2]
 
I’ve heard many people lament the decline of Christianity in America – and that may be true – but the Lord’s Church worldwide is growing. Maybe it’s time for them to send some missionaries back to us! 

  
[1] https://www.christianity.com/church/denominations/churches-of-christ-10-things-to-know-about-their-history-and-beliefs.html
[2] https://www.pewforum.org/2019/10/17/in-u-s-decline-of-christianity-continues-at-rapid-pace/

A Really Bad Day

Yesterday, I complained I was having a bad day, but today I learned the story of Constantin Reliu, a Rumanian cook who has been working in Turkey for the past twenty years. The Turks deported him back to Rumania for having expired papers in January 2018, but when he arrived, he learned he was officially dead. It seems Constantin and his wife separated over her infidelity. He went back to Turkey, and she had him declared dead. Sadly, when he returned to Rumania, he tried to have his death certificate reversed, but discovered the time for filing an appeal had expired. He was dead on a technicality.

Officials measured the distance between his pupils and compared it to his passport. It was a match. They took his fingerprints, and they too were a match, but it was all to no avail. Constantin was dead. They had the death certificate to prove it. NBC News reported:

He has since been living a legalistic nightmare of trying to prove to authorities that he is, in fact, alive. He faced a major setback Thursday when a court in the northeastern city of Vaslui refused to overturn his death certificate because his request was filed “too late.” The decision, the court said, is final.[1]

63-year-old Constantin is unable to work. (Who would hire a dead man?) He is unable to return to Turkey. (They won’t admit a dead person.) He is in legal limbo, and his ex-wife has disappeared somewhere in Italy, perhaps with her lover.

I suppose my bad day wasn’t nearly as bad as Constantin’s! 

I will rejoice in the Lord; 
I will take joy in the God of my salvation. 
      God, the Lord, is my strength; 
he makes my feet like the deer’s; 
he makes me tread on my high places (Habakkuk 3:18 – 19).


[1] Downloaded from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/dead-man-balking-court-rejects-romanian-man-claim-he-fact-n857436

Working with the Spirit

Sanctification in Hebrew has two meanings. First, it can describe a shining, as when, after Moses met the Lord on the mountain, his face shone from the encounter. (Think about Jesus being transfigured.) Second, sanctification can mean a cutting, as in separating or setting aside.

There is one reason, and one reason only, why we should all be sanctified and holy, and it is this: not that we may be happy, nor that we may get rid of our problems, but because God is holy, because we are God’s people and because Christ has died for us and purchased us. We do not belong to ourselves. We have no right to live a sinful life.[1]

It is easy to discuss justification and sanctification as two completely different activities. Justification is the forgiveness of sins. It is the new birth. Peter calls on the people of Jerusalem “Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit,” (Acts 2:38).

Are we sinless when we come up out of the water? Yes, absolutely! Does that mean we never sin after that? Of course not. The Apostle John warned, “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:8 – 9). That’s where the work of the Holy Spirit comes in. He is the power for real change. When Paul told the Philippians to “work out your own salvation,” he also told them, “It is God who works in you.”

What would it be like to receive John’s baptism without the Holy Spirit? What was missing from their lives? Paul noticed the difference in the Ephesian disciples (Acts 19:2). Isn’t that what we do functionally when we don’t grow in the Spirit?

So how do we grow in the Spirit? Think about these observations:

  1. The Spirit inspired the Bible (that requires us to read it).
  2. The Spirit instructs us (that requires us to listen).
  3. The Spirit brings us to God through interpreting our prayers, (but that requires us to pray!)
  4. The Spirit leads us (that requires us to obey).
  5. The Spirit produces fruit in our life (that requires us to grow).
  6. The Spirit comforts us (that requires us to be honest).

[1] Lloyd-Jones, D. M. (1997). God the Holy Spirit (p. 204). Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books.

Learning to Listen

Question: How do I know the Holy Spirit is really working in my life? Does he speak to me in my dreams or do I get a tingling feeling when I am making a decision? How can I be sure I’m listening to his guidance? — Eutychus

The whole concept of Charismatic gifts and the working of the Holy Spirit today is quite complicated. While I believe the Spirit is working on our life, I believe he is so subtle we best catch glimpses of him in our “rearview mirror.” It’s so humbling to look back and see what he has done and believe I didn’t see it at the time. 

For example, Jan and I came to San Diego quite “by accident.” We were sailing to Mexico and parts beyond when the fuel filters on our boat clogged up stranding us here. What was intended to be a two-week layover for repairs became a whole new life. Who would have thought that was the work of Holy Spirit but now I’m convinced God had a hand in it!

On the other hand, I tend to be much more skeptical when people tell me “God told me to do this or that.” If God made the decisions for us, where would our growth and testing be? For example, when a child is given a math exam, what good would it be if the teacher stood by his side and whispered, “The hypotenuse of a right triangle is equal to the square root of the sum of the squares of the two other sides”? Instead, a good teacher might tell him to “relax, breathe deep and remember what we studied on Tuesday” but a good teacher won’t take the work away from the student.

So where is the Holy Spirit in all this? He is preparing us for the test! He is the Good Teacher and, if we have been faithfully studying the Word of God under his tutelage, when the time of testing comes upon us, we will be ready! To prove my point, do you remember reading Matthew 4:1? “Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.” Did you see that? “… by the Spirit …” Jesus was led into the wilderness to be tempted (Also read Mark 1:12; Luke 4:1). This was the time of testing but Jesus had been listening to the Spirit before that, during the time of preparation. And so, when Jesus was tempted by Satan, when he was tested, Jesus knew the answers. He quoted the Scriptures and made the right choices. He was prepared by listening to the Spirit teaching and so should we! 

So how do I know the Holy Spirit is speaking today? By seeing his subtle hand in my past, by trusting in his help today as I study God’s Word, and by passing the tests along the way with the Spirit’s help.

Mnason of Cyprus

After these days, we got ready and went up to Jerusalem. And some of the disciples from Caesarea went with us, bringing us to the house of Mnason of Cyprus, an early disciple, with whom we should lodge (Acts 21:15 – 16).

The Apostle Paul and his friends stayed with Mnason of Cyprus. Do you remember, Paul’s first missionary partner was Barnabas? That’s the name the apostles gave him because he was such an encourager. His actual name was “Joseph the Levite,” and he was also from the island of Cyprus (Acts 4:36). Certainly, Mnason and Barnabas, both Cyprites, were friends. They shared their faith and the same spirit of encouragement.

This is the only place Mnason is mentioned in the New Testament, and we can be inspired by two of his qualities. First, he was “an early disciple.” Does that mean he was there on the day of Pentecost for the coming of the Holy Spirit and the birthday of the Church? It’s possible. Some traditions say he was one of the seventy missionaries that Jesus chose some time earlier, but that’s just speculation. There is something refreshing about the enthusiasm of a new convert, but there is something comforting about a well-matured saint.

The thing that stands out about Mnason was his willingness to invite Paul’s Gentile companions to stay under his roof. Mnason’s Jewish neighbors (and many Christians at that time) would have been horrified to entertain Gentiles – even Christian Gentiles. Just a chapter later, the great Jerusalem riot and Paul’s arrest were caused just by the rumor that the apostle had invited a Gentile to visit the Temple (Acts 21:27 – 28). Mnason was a courageous believer!

By combining these two qualities – his years of faithful service and his hospitality – there is one more lesson to be learned. Sometimes, as we grow older, we leave the work of the church to younger members. Mnason could have left it to others to provide Paul’s company with hospitality, but he didn’t. Service should be as natural to senior saints as singing is to worship.

Hot Coals!

I didn’t expect yesterday’s devotional about “charcoal” to generate much discussion, but I was surprised. I concluded the article with a reference to Romans 12:20.
 
To the contrary, “if your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink; for by so doing you will heap burning coals on his head” (Romans 12:20, ESV).
 
Paul is quoting from Proverbs 25:21 – 22. The “coals” are probably charcoal, but what does the apostle mean? I often find it helpful to refer to the United Bible Societies’ helps for translators’ series of books. The focus of these commentaries is to aid scholars who are translating the Bible into different languages.
 
The imagery of the last clause in this verse is difficult, though all translations seem to prefer to retain the imagery rather than to change the metaphor into a non-metaphor. For by doing this you will heap burning coals on his head is perhaps best taken in the sense of “for by doing this you will make him ashamed.”[1]
 
What is especially interesting is how Paul doesn’t quote the entire verse from Proverbs. He leaves off the last phrase.
 
“… for you will heap burning coals on his head, and the LORD will reward you” (Proverbs 25:22).
 
The apostle isn’t trying to motivate Christians to earn God’s reward by treating their enemies kindly. Instead, as Jewett and Kotansky explain:
 
There is a new motivation in a love ethic resting on God’s love for the undeserving, developed in earlier sections of Romans. There is no guarantee that giving food and drink will necessarily make a friend out of an enemy or that such actions will always produce the conversion of enemies, thus freeing them from the prospect of divine wrath; it is particularly unlikely that Paul hopes such deeds will increase the inevitability of wrath against those who refuse to respond positively. The actions of kindness to enemies flow from the transformed community (12:1–2), set right by the power of the gospel concerning God’s love for the ungodly. This involves being motivated by “genuine love” (12:9), and is consistent with “hospitality to strangers” (12:13). This verse therefore illustrates what might be involved in being “at peace with all persons” (12:18*)[2]
 
In other words, kindness is the best revenge. Invite them for barbeque!


[1] Newman, B. M., & Nida, E. A. (1973). A handbook on Paul’s letter to the Romans (p. 243). New York: United Bible Societies.
[2] Jewett, R., & Kotansky, R. D. (2006). Romans: A commentary. (E. J. Epp, Ed.) (p. 778). Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press.
 

It’s Barbeque Season

The sound of lawnmowers fills the air, and people across America are cleaning up their grills in preparation for the Barbeque Season. People in Kansas take their barbeque seriously. Some are devotees of convenience and rely on propane. Others prefer pellet stoves (“even heat”), while still others are committed to that ancient medium, charcoal.

Jesus himself grilled fish and bread on a charcoal fire, John 21:9 (anthrakia, ἀνθρακιά), but what is charcoal and how was it made? The Smoked BBQ source explains:

On a basic level, charcoal is produced by burning wood or other organic matter in a low oxygen environment. Doing so removes water and other volatile elements, allowing the finished product, the charcoal, to burn at high temperatures with very little smoke.[1]

In small batches, charcoal can be made in either a pit or a pile. The wood is stacked, leaving a central “chimney” filled with highly flammable material. The stack is then covered with wet leaves, and dirt is packed around the outside. Once the central core is burning, it too is covered, so oxygen is excluded. The fire smolders for several days. The lump charcoal is then ready for use. Archaeologists believe people have been making charcoal for over 6,000 years.

Brisket, burgers, chicken, hot dogs, sausages, and fish all have their tasty place over a barbeque. Around 400 B.C., Creophylus of Ephesus tells us the fishermen in Asia Minor, as Jesus did later, preferred charcoal to grill their fish. The heat was even and produced little smoke.

I am always impressed by how little details in the Bible reinforce the stories. Hardwood makes the best charcoal, and Jesus, as a carpenter, would have had a ready supply. Is it possible that in addition to creating objects from wood, Jesus also produced charcoal from the scraps? This detail from John 21 gives the story the touch of an eyewitness.

I’m getting hungry as I write this article, but before we close, the Apostle Paul gives us something else to think about:

If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all. Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.” To the contrary, “if your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink; for by so doing, you will heap burning coals on his head.” Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good (Romans 12:18 – 21).

And barbeque with charcoal!

[1] https://www.smokedbbqsource.com/how-to-make-charcoal/

The Lesson of the Cat

There is a great urban legend about two young men in college trying to impress their dates. One of the men borrowed his father’s fancy Lincoln for the occasion, and the other made reservations at the fanciest restaurant in town. The young men had scrimped and saved for this very special date, and everything was going well until the driver accidentally ran over a cat.

The girls were frantic and insisted they find the owner of this poor, dead pussycat. The boys were stuck between a rock and a hard place. They absolutely had to make the reservation, but they also wanted to do what’s right. Fortunately, one of the young men had a brilliant idea. “Why don’t we take the cat with us, and after dinner, we can find the owner?”

Reluctantly, the girls agreed, and the young man put the unfortunate cat into a Macy’s shopping sack, lovingly wrapped in tissue paper, and put it in the trunk of his father’s car. When they arrived at the restaurant, the young man wisely didn’t want to stink up dad’s Lincoln, so he put the sack on top of the trunk, and they all went inside and were seated by the window.

As dinner progressed, they noticed an obviously very wealthy woman walking by their car. She spied the bag, looked left, and looked right and deftly snatched the sack and carried it inside. The waiter seated her and took her order. She kept glancing down at her newly stolen treasure, curious to know what she had purloined. Finally, she couldn’t contain herself. As her salad arrived, she serendipitously pried open the bag, spied the dead cat, and screamed before she fainted face-first into her bleu cheese dressing.

The waiter rushed to her side and helped her up. She saw the bag again and passed out once more. The paramedics quickly arrived, strapped her onto a gurney, and wheeled her to the waiting ambulance. They carefully collected her purse and shopping bag and placed them by her side for the duration of the ride to the emergency room. Sadly, every time she regained consciousness on the way, she saw the sack, was reminded of her immorality and passed out again.

All of our actions have consequences. The book of Revelation concludes: “And I heard a voice from heaven saying, “Write this: Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on.” “Blessed indeed,” says the Spirit, “that they may rest from their labors, for their deeds follow them!” (Revelation 14:13)

What deeds will follow you into glory?

Depth Perception

She was only a 90-lb schoolteacher, but she signed up for a one-day rock climbing course in Berchtesgaden, where I was teaching. Generally speaking, women are much better climbers than men, at least in the beginning. They seem to have a better sense of balance and don’t try to muscle their way up a cliff as men do. I have my students begin by climbing sideways along a cliff face just a foot or two off the ground. It takes the same holds and techniques to move sideways as it does to climb up, and the results of a fall aren’t nearly as severe.

She was an amazing acrobat and could cling to the tiniest holds with ease. Finally, after they learned the rope work, it came time to scale their first face. It was a little less than a hundred feet high, with a big pine tree growing on the top. I climbed first and then anchored the rope to this massive tree. I sat on the cliff’s edge and slowly took in the rope as the students climbed up. It was perfect. If a student did slip and fall, they couldn’t fall anywhere. The rope ran tautly to me on top. There was no slack, but heights can add a whole new dimension to the equation.

She began well. As long as she was only a few feet off the ground, she was fine, but as she climbed higher and higher, I could tell she was becoming more and more afraid. With only ten feet to go, she could climb no higher. Panic filled her eyes. It was honestly easier than anything she had done earlier in the day. She looked at me and pleaded. “I’m going to fall! I’m going to fall!” I held the rope tightly and tried to reassure her. “I’m going to die!”

“No, no. You’re fine. You can do it! I have you,” I said.

Then it happened. She closed her eyes and let go. I could see it in her face. In her mind, she was hurtling towards the rocks below. Her body was slowly turning as the ground reached up to meet her. At any moment, her short life would be over. Why was she so foolish as to sign up for climbing lessons? Why couldn’t she be content to teach her students in the safety of her classroom? “Why? Why? Why?”

Finally, she opened her eyes, and I smiled at her. She hadn’t gone anywhere. The rope held, and I winked. She looked around embarrassed and quickly scrambled to the top.

I think life can be like that. We build barriers in our minds. We focus on the obstacles and not the opportunities. God is good! Our Father loves us, and the Holy Spirit empowers us. Jesus has shown us the way. It is only left for us to follow. The Apostle Paul wrote:

“I can do all things through him who strengthens me” (Philippians 4:13). We can’t do it by ourselves, but “through him who strengthens me.”

The Apostle with a Big Heart: Judas Thaddaeus

The lists of the names of the apostles can become confusing. Many apostles have two (or more) names. For example, Simon is also called Peter, and Levi is also called Matthew. The Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke) include Bartholomew, while John calls him Nathanael. So also, Matthew and Mark list Thaddaeus, but Luke (and Acts) records Judas, the son of James. Judas was a very popular name in the days of the New Testament. One of the brothers of Jesus was called Judas, and two of the apostles are named Judas – Judas son of James, and Judas Iscariot. The Apostle John distinguished “Judas (not Iscariot)” (John 14:22). Since the name Judas in English is associated with the man who betrayed Jesus, English Bibles tend to change the Greek word, Judas, to Jude for everyone who isn’t Judas Iscariot, but that is only common in English and French Bibles.

Who was Judas Thaddaeus, the apostle? From the Bible, we don’t know much. He is always one of the last four apostles and associated with Simon the Zealot in tradition so that he may have shared Simon’s revolutionary tendencies. On the other hand, Luke called him “Thaddaeus,” a nickname that means “big or courageous hearted.” During the Last Supper, when Jesus said, “And he who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him and manifest myself to him,” Judas asked, “Lord, how is it that you will manifest yourself to us, and not to the world?” The answer is comforting:

“If anyone loves me, he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him.”

In other words, our obedience develops our understanding.

Beyond the pages of Scripture, legends abound. Tradition holds he was a vegetarian. A fourteenth-century writer, Nicephorus Callistus, claimed Judas was the bridegroom in Cana who ran out of wine. Legend claims his father was Clopas. He probably was a farmer and may have come from Caesarea Philippi north of Galilee, but there is no way to be sure of any of that. He was likely beheaded in Beirut, but definitive answers will have to wait.

Finally, in Catholicism, Jude is honored as the patron saint of lost causes. They reason that few people asked for Jude’s help in prayer because they didn’t want to call on Judas Iscariot by accident. As a result of being ignored, Jude is especially eager to help those who call on him!

The New Testament teaches that we are all saints – from the greatest apostles to the humblest disciple. Jesus answers all of our prayers, but we can look to the heroes of faith, like the courageous-hearted Jude, as examples to follow.