The Gospel

Friday, February 8, 2019

GENERATIONS X,Y, Z AND THE OTHERS -WJ Schroer




We often use phrases or words that we don’t fully understand. Sometimes we even use words or phrases the meanings of which we are totally clueless. As people with a passion for words and language, that is generally not viewed as a desirable trait. Yet, the plain fact is we can’t have a detailed understanding of every word or phrase…particularly when the word belongs to the jargon of a larger body of knowledge.

However, when that jargon is in use as often and frequently as the phrases“Gen X” or “Baby Boomer”, it seems especially important we have some reasonably good idea of what these terms actually mean. Although these phrases, as jargon, stem from the larger discipline of demographics, and are used most frequently by market researchers, the fact is everybody uses these words and phrases. In effect, these cue words or phrases for the subcomponents of society demarcated by age are not only useful but are generally the language used by non-demographers and society as a whole when discussing the current spectrum of population cohorts.

Our goal, this month, then, is to provide a primer on the identification and description of the population cohorts in America as currently widely (but not universally) agreed upon by demographers and market researchers.

A generation is a group of people born around the same time and raised around the same place. People in this “birth cohort” exhibit similar characteristics, preferences, and values over their lifetimes

The Depression Era

Born: 1912-1921
Coming of Age: 1930-1939
Age in 2019: 98 to 107
Current Population: 11-12 million (and declining rapidly)
Depression era individuals tend to be conservative, compulsive savers,
maintain low debt and use more secure financial products like CDs versus stocks. These individuals tend to feel a responsibility to leave a legacy to their children. Tend to be patriotic, oriented toward work before pleasure, respect for authority, have a sense of moral obligation.

World War II

Born: 1922 to 1927
Coming of Age: 1940-1945
Age in 2019: 92-97
Current Population: 11 million (in quickening decline)
People in this cohort shared in a common goal of defeating the Axis
powers. There was an accepted sense of “deferment” among this group,
contrasted with the emphasis on “me” in more recent (i.e. Gen X)
cohorts.

Post-War Cohort
Born: 1928-1945
Coming of Age: 1946-1963
Age in 2019: 74 to 91
Current Population: 41 million (declining)
This generation had significant opportunities in jobs and education as the War ended and a post-war economic boom struck America. However, the growth in Cold War tensions, the potential for nuclear war and other never before seen threats led to levels of discomfort and uncertainty throughout the generation. Members of this group
value security, comfort, and familiar, known activities and environments.

Boomers I or The Baby Boomers

Born: 1946-1954
Coming of Age: 1963-1972
Age in 2019: 65-73
Current Population: 33 million
For a long time the Baby Boomers were defined as those born between 1945 and 1964. That would make the generation huge (71 million) and encompass people who were 20 years apart in age. It didn’t compute to have those born in 1964 compared with those born in 1946. Life experiences were completely different. Attitudes, behaviors and society were vastly different. In effect, all the elements that help to define a cohort were violated by the broad span of years originally included in the concept of the Baby Boomers. The first Boomer segment is bounded by the Kennedy and Martin Luther King assassinations, the Civil Rights movements and the Vietnam War. Boomers I were in or protested the War. Boomers 2 or the Jones Generation missed the whole thing.
Boomers I had good economic opportunities and were largely optimistic about the potential for America and their own lives, the Vietnam War notwithstanding.

Boomers II or Generation Jones

Born: 1955-1965
Coming of Age: 1973-1983
Age in 2019: 54 to 64
Current Population: 49 million
This first post-Watergate generation lost much of its trust in government and optimistic views the Boomers I maintained. Economic struggles including the oil embargo of 1979 reinforced a sense of “I’m out for me” and narcissism and a focus on self-help and skepticism over media and institutions is representative of attitudes of this cohort. While Boomers I had Vietnam, Boomers II had AIDS as part of their rites of passage. The youngest members of the Boomer II generation in fact did not have the benefits of the Boomer I class as many of the best jobs, opportunities, housing etc. were taken by the larger and earlier group. Both Gen X and Boomer II s suffer from this long shadow cast by Boomers I.

Generation X

Born: 1966-1976
Coming of Age: 1988-1994
Age in 2019: 43 to 53
Current Population: 41 million
Sometimes referred to as the “lost” generation, this was the first
generation of “latchkey” kids, exposed to lots of daycare and divorce. Known as the generation with the lowest voting participation rate of any generation, Gen Xers were quoted by Newsweek as “the generation that dropped out without ever turning on the news or tuning in to the social issues around them.”  Gen X is often characterized by high levels of skepticism, “what’s in it for me” attitudes and a reputation for some of the worst music to ever gain popularity. Now, moving into adulthood William Morrow (Generations) cited the childhood divorce of many Gen Xers as “one of the most decisive experiences influencing how Gen Xers will shape their own families”. Gen Xers are arguably the best educated generation with 29% obtaining a bachelor’s degree or higher (6% higher than the previous cohort). And, with that education and a growing maturity they are starting to form families with a higher level of caution and pragmatism than their parents demonstrated. Concerns run high over avoiding broken homes, kids growing up without a parent around and financial planning.

Generation Y, Echo Boomers or Millennials

Born: 1977-1994
Coming of Age: 1998-2006
Age in 2019: 25 to 37
Current Population: 71 million
The largest cohort since the Baby Boomers, their high numbers reflect their births as that of their parent generation. The last of the Boomer Is and most of the Boomer II s. Gen Y kids are known as incredibly sophisticated, technology wise, immune to most traditional marketing and sales pitches…as they not only grew up with it all, they’ve seen it all and been exposed to it all since early childhood. Gen Y members are much more racially and ethnically diverse and they are much more segmented as an audience aided by the rapid expansion in Cable TV channels, satellite radio, the Internet, e-zines, etc. Gen Y are less brand loyal and the speed of the Internet has led the cohort to be similarly flexible and changing in its fashion, style consciousness and where and how it is communicated with. Gen Y kids often raised in dual income or single parent families have been more involved in family purchases…everything from groceries to new cars. One in nine Gen Yers has a credit card co-signed by a parent.

Generation Z or IGEN

Born: 1995-2012
Coming of Age: 2013-2030
Age in 2019: 7-24
Current Population: 23 million and growing rapidly
While we don’t know much about Gen Z yet…we know a lot about the environment they are growing up in. This highly diverse environment will make the grade schools of the next generation the most diverse ever. Higher levels of technology will make significant inroads in academics allowing for customized instruction, data mining of student histories to enable pinpoint diagnostics and remediation or accelerated achievement opportunities. Gen Z kids will grow up with a highly sophisticated media and computer environment and will be more Internet savvy and expert than their Gen Y forerunners. More to come on Gen Z…stay tuned.

Half of Millennial Christians Say It’s Wrong to Evangelize - Kate Shellnutt



Millennials used to be the group that churches and ministries were angling to evangelize. Now, all grown up and poised to overtake Baby Boomers as the largest generation, they’re the ones doing the evangelizing.

But new research from Barna Group and the creators of the Alpha course offers some disappointing news regarding the 20-somethings and 30-somethings now on deck to carry on the faith: nearly half (47%) of practicing Christian millennials—churchgoers who consider religion an important part of their lives—believe that evangelism is wrong.At least they should be.
They’re more than twice as likely as their parents and grandparents—Boomers and Elders, respectively—to say that it’s “wrong to share one’s personal beliefs with someone of a different faith in hopes that they will one day share the same faith.”
While this statistic could easily bolster stereotypes of a lazy, distracted, and increasingly unaffiliated generation, the minority of millennials who have stayed active in their churches also show higher markers of commitment in other areas, as well as a savvier sense of the religious pluralism and diversity they were raised around.
The recent Barna release found that, despite the reticence around the practice, millennials consider themselves good evangelists and still see themselves as representatives for their faith.
Nearly all practicing Christian millennials (96%) said witnessing for Jesus is part of being a Christian, and they were more likely than any other generation to say they were gifted at sharing their faith (73%).
And Barna previously found that millennials who identify as born-again were the most likely age group to share their faith—and that their evangelism habits were growing while other generations’ were dropping. In 2013, two-thirds of millennials said they had presented the gospel to someone within the past year, compared to half of born-again Christians in general.
Additionally, practicing Christian millennials have the strongest beliefs in the Bible and read it more than any other generation: 87 percent do so multiple times a week, according to a 2016 Barna survey on behalf of the American Bible Society (ABS).
So what’s behind their beliefs that evangelism is “wrong”?
Barna president David Kinnaman points to the rising cultural expectation against judging personal choices. Practicing Christian millennials were twice as likely as Gen X and four times as likely as Boomers and Elders to agree with the statement, “If someone disagrees with you, it means they’re judging you.”
“Cultivating deep, steady, resilient Christian conviction is difficult in a world of ‘you do you’ and ‘don’t criticize anyone’s life choices’ and emotivism, the feelings-first priority that our culture makes a way of life,” Kinnaman said. “As much as ever, evangelism isn’t just about saving the unsaved, but reminding ourselves that this stuff matters, that the Bible is trustworthy, and that Jesus changes everything.”
Several evangelicals’ reactions to the Barna release pointed to the need for better Christian formation for younger churchgoers.
“I’m a Millennial, and this is pure evidence of the failure of the church to prepare youths to understand faith/speak out,” tweeted author Billy Hallowell. “Beyond that, it’s also a result of the cultural crisis of secularism bombarding us at every turn.”
“You can’t pin the belief that evangelism is wrong on Facebook, distraction, disenchantment, or recession,” wrote Samuel James, a writer at First Things, on Twitter. “The data here strongly suggests that Christian millennials are being catechized by their colleges, not churches.”
In her book Reciprocal Church, Sharon Galgay Ketcham, a practical theologian at Gordon College, challenged Christian elders to give younger generations a chance to actively engage their faith in the church context rather than receive the traditions “passed on” to them. Two-thirds of churchgoing Christians will stop attending at some point in the years after turning 18—some returning regularly, some occasionally, and some not at all.
The rise of the religiously unaffiliated “nones,” now roughly a quarter of the population, has taken away the expectation for younger generations to identify as Christian just for the sake of it. Without the pull of “cultural Christianity,” leaders see the millennials who do stay involved in their churches as particularly committed and faithful.
“Though the Christian population of this generation is likely no higher than 15 percent, these young people may well turn the world upside down with their commitments and causes,” wrote LifeWay Christian Resources CEO Thom S. Rainer and son Jess R. Rainer in their book, The Millennials. “Millennial Christians are not content with business-as-usual churches. To the contrary, they will connect with churches on if those churches are wiling to sell out for the sake of the gospel.”
Millennial leaders have begun assuming the mantle at major churches and ministries. More than two dozen millennials now hold senior pastor positions at congregations with more than 1,000 attendees, with some megachurch pastors as young as 32, according to Leadership Network.
But evangelism remains a sticking point among a 21st-century crowd which sees tent revivals and tracts as a thing of the past. “Evangelism is often presented as an old school, out-of-style idea with little value or relevance in our fast-paced, urban world,” wrote Hannah Gronowski, the founder and director of Generation Distinct, for The Exchange last year.
Younger folks are tempted to believe instead, “if we just live good enough lives, we can forgo the conversation entirely, and people around us will almost magically come to know Jesus through our good actions and selfless character,” she said. “This style of evangelism is becoming more and more prevalent in a culture constantly looking for the fast track and simple fix.”

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Evangelism 101 - Todd McCauley


It's that time again, time to read through the New Testament. I absolutely love reading about the life of Christ.  I now find myself in John chapter three. Jesus and a few of his followers accompanied Him to Jerusalem to attend the annual Passover celebration (cf. John 2:13ff). John 3:1-2 states that a Pharisee named Nicodemus, a Ruler of the Jews came to Jesus at night. When Nick (let's call him Nick) meets Jesus he begins to lavish on the Christ compliments, "Rabbi (i.e. Teacher) we know that You are a teacher come from God; for no one can do these signs that You do unless God is with him".  Jesus responds in an interesting way, instead of Him entertaining the compliments which many of us WOULD do, he cuts to the chase and addresses the question that Nick doesn't ask with his lips but is in his heart. "Nicodemus, unless you are born again, you CAN NOT see the Kingdom of God".

The rest of John 3 then records Jesus's evangelistic conversation with this LOST Pharisee (Jewish religious leader).  This Chapter as well as John Chapter 4 reminds me of our own evangelistic responsibility.  Let me write this as plainly as possible, EVANGELISM ought to be one of our highest priorities as followers of Christ.  You say, "I know that Todd, I just find evangelism difficult and awkward". Also, "If I'm being honest, it scares the living be-jeebies out of me", and "Yes, evangelism intimidates the heck out of me".  You know what?  I get it. Evangelism is NOT the most comfortable activity.  But, be that as it may, it is NOT an activity that we can ignore or put on the back burner because of how it makes us feel.  Here is the good news, Jesus promised us that when we obediently engage in Disciple-Making (of which Evangelism is part) He promises to give us everything we need to be successful (cf. Matt 28:18-20).

Evangelism is NOT something that you should OVER THINK, it's something that you just do and trust God for the results. Our job is NOT to put people in Heaven, Our Job is NOT to make or force people to believe. Our job is NOT to argue people into believing, or Scare people into believing, Our job is NOT to manipulate or TRICK people into praying a prayer, our job is NOT to get people to join the church.  Our Job is to simply share the GOOD NEWS.  Our job is simply that of seed planting (cf. John 4:35-38).

I want to give you a simple four-step process for sharing your faith effectively.


Step one: PRE-EVANGELISM (Here is where you ask the two Diagnostic questions. These questions help you determine where a person is spiritual)


1. If you died today, where would you go?

2.  Suppose you were to die today and you stand before God and He asks you, "Why should I let you into MY Heaven", how would you answer?





Step Two: PERMISSION (Ask for Permission to continue the discussion)


"May I talk to you about someone who changed my life and is STILL in the life-changing business?


(At this point he/she will tell you "Yes or No".  If they answer "No" then you shake their hand and move on.  If they say "Yes" then you're free to proceed to Step Three)





Step Three: PRESENTATION (This step utilizes the excellent tool called, "The Four Spiritual Laws" a little yellow Gospel Booklet produced by Campus Crusade for Christ.  Just start with the cover of the booklet and begin reading it to him/her.  "Have you ever heard of the 4 spiritual laws"?  Toward the end of the booklet you will read and ask this important question, "Does this prayer express the desire of your heart? If it does, I invite you to pray this prayer right now, and Christ will come into your life, as He promised.  The person will answer either "Yes or No".  If "No" then close the conversation and leave them the booklet with your contact info.  If  "Yes" then pray with them to receive Christ).








Step Four:  POST-EVANGELISM (Another name for Post-Evangelism is Follow-up. Follow-up means that we don't leave people hanging.  Receiving Christ is just the first step in a life-long journey.  Read to him/her the remainder of the booklet that read, "Now that you have received Christ".  Write your contact info on the back of the Booklet and contact them within

48 hours.  Listen, Discipleship is meant to be a TEAM sport, so get your church involved in helping this new convert grow).












I told you this process would be simple.  The toughest thing facing you right now is your own fear and insecurity. Go for it.  Jesus said in John 4:35, "Behold, I say to you, lift up your eyes and look at the fields, for they are ALREADY white (i.e., ready) for harvest". Jesus has got you back.


Soli Deo Gloria

Todd





The Feast of Unleavened Bread... Wait - Isn't it Passover? by Mia Kashat

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The Feast of Unleavened Bread is a feast that is generally mistaken for Passover. Passover however is only one 24 hour period while Feast of Unleavened Bread lasts for seven days.
On the evening after Passover God told the Hebrew people exiting Egypt not to allow their bread to rise, but to grab everything and leave. The ancient peoples used to gather yeast on grape leaves to leaven their bread if they needed to speed up the process, but God said "Don't even let any leavening touch the dough. Just bake it and go."
In their haste they grabbed the necessities and fled toward the land God was preparing for them.
God then told them that in the future they were to commemorate this feast by getting all yeast out of the house for seven days.
On a normal Passover eve a family that celebrates the Biblical feasts will leave a bit of bread in their home in hidden places for the children to find. The children will search out the yeasty creations till they "eradicate" the yeast from the house. The family then takes what is found and burns it outside.
If you are trying to clean your house of all yeast you will realize just how tediously impossible that idea is, on your own. No matter how I sweep or dust, yeast is in the air , hence how it lands on grape leaves, it always finds it's way back into the home.
God even told us what the yeast represented. Yeast represents sin.
When you put a little yeast in flour and water it grows – multiplies with each warm second they remain together. For anyone who has worked with whole wheat, they can attest to the fact they once the yeast is added, there is no way to get it back out.
Because of our ancestors, Adam and Eve, sin had the chance to enter the originally perfect world. We are now born into a sinful world and no matter what we do growing up, there isn't a thing we can do to get all of the sin out of us. We may be able to convince other humans we are "squeaky-clean", but not God. He knows our born-in-sin-nature, completely.
So as we clean out our homes of the yeast and eat Matzo, yeastless bread, we are reminded that it is a hopeless case. Just like our inability to clean out the junk in our souls/spirits. We need someone perfect to do it for us.
Matzo has a special way it is made now. It has stripes that look like bruises and is pierced thru. The Rabbi's reason for this is to make the bread cook fast, from start to finish in 18 minutes actually. Eighteen minutes is supposedly the amount of time it takes to prepare and cook it in a manor that will keep all yeast out. What they don't seem to realize is that they have created the perfect symbolism that God initiated long ago.
Jesus was beaten and bruised and pierced for our sins. He was and is the only sinless person on this planet and His body is represented by the matzo. Even in modern day Judaism they can't get away from God's plan of redemption.
We need Jesus' atoning blood to cleanse us of those sins. We have to let Him come in to live inside of us, in the form of the Holy Spirit, where He can slowly find all that yeast and "burn it up". He burns up the sin just like the families burn up the left-over yeast before these two feasts.
We need God to live this "yeastless" lifestyle. But even then it will be a daily process, because yeast/sin permeates this world.
This feast is the perfect celebration of our Savior whose body was broken for our sins. Come celebrate Him with me.

Monday, January 28, 2019

10 Ways to Read the Bible


Would you like to get more from your Bible reading and study time? Perhaps you’re new to the Bible and not sure where to begin? Perhaps you’ve been reading the Word for years yet still not comfortable with studying God’s Word for yourself. It all begins with learning to really read the Scriptures.
There are three basic steps to studying God’s Word.
  • Observation —what does the text say?
  • Interpretation—what does the text mean?
  • Application—how does it work?
Although many of us may be familiar with these steps, the tendency can be to quickly read a passage of Scripture and then jump right to application—tell me what to “do”! Perhaps we employ the “skimmer” method, skimming the passage looking for the “good stuff” that can help make sense of our situation.
In order to accurately interpret and apply the Bible, we must first do the hard work of observing—training ourselves to “see” what the text says.
“Before you understand you have to see.” —Howard Hendricks
Here are ten reading strategies you can use when studying the Bible to help you to slow down and spend more time observing so that you can rightly interpret and then apply the timeless truth contained in the passage.
TEN BIBLE READING STRATEGIES
# 1 Read Patiently:
  • Be patient with the text.
  • Be patient with yourself.
# 2 Read Prayerfully:
  • Pray before, during, and after reading.
  • When you’re stuck on a passage, having trouble understanding it, stop and pray.
  • Pray the Scriptures for yourself and for others.
# 3 Read Repeatedly:
  • Read it over and over and over and over…
  • And just when you’re tired of it, read it again.
# 4 Read Imaginatively:
  • Vary the Bible translation you normally read. Consider reading a paraphrase.
  • Read it aloud.
  • Listen to an audio version passage. The You Version and Dwell Bible apps will read a text to you.
  • Rewrite the passage in your own words.
# 5 Read Thoughtfully:
  • Look for the structure of the passage. How has the author organized the content of the text?
  • Print out the text and use to mark up as you read looking for repeated words/phrases, contrasts and comparisons, linking words/phrases, verbs, cause and effect and lists in the text.
  • Ask questions of the text.
  • Think about the text throughout your day.
# 6 Read Purposefully:
  • Look for the aim of the author. Every word contributes to the intended meaning. Structure (above) helps us see intent.
  • Look for keywords and repeated words/phrases.
  • Look for the purpose expressed through literary style: key people, key places, key events, key times and key ideas.
  • Look for the purpose expressed through the grammar (more on this in future posts).
# 7 Read Acquisitively:
  • Look for creative ways to retain what you’ve read and “make the passage your own”.
  • Write a paraphrase.
  • Draw the passage.
  • Outline the passage.
  • Story the passage. (More on Storying a Bible passage, here.)
# 8 Read Selectively:
  • Ask the “Big Six” questions and answer from the text.
  • Who—Who are the people in the text? What is said about the person or people? What does the person say?
  • What—What is happening in the text? What are the events? What happens to the characters? What is the argument or point being made?
  • When—When did the events in the text take place? When did they occur in relation to other events in Scripture? When was the writer writing?
  • Where—Where is the narrative taking place? Where are the people in the story? Where are they coming from? Where are they going? Where is the writer? Where were the original readers of this text? If there is a journey taking place, trace it on a map.
  • Why—Why is this included? Why is it placed here? Why does this follow that? Why does this person say that? There are an infinity of “why” questions.
  • Wherefore (So What?)—What difference would it make if I were to apply this truth to my life?
# 9 Read Telescopically:
  • How do the parts relate to the whole of the passage?
  • How does this book fit into the Old or New Testament?
  • How does the book fit into the whole story of the Bible?
  • Pay attention to context.
  • Look at the historical context.
# 10 Read Meditatively:
  • Ponder, reflect, and think about text throughout the day.
  • There’s a close connection between meditating on truth and applying it (Joshua 1:8, Proverbs 23:7, Psalm 1:1-2, Psalm 119:97
  • Allow the truth to filter and percolate through your mind and into your life.
Don’t allow the list to overwhelm you! Try using just one new strategy at a time. Over time you will find your observation skills honed and you’ll find you’re “seeing” more in the text that you thought possible! Over time, you will find these strategies becoming habits in your Bible reading. Consider keeping a notebook or journal and recording your observations as you employ each reading strategy.
Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your law. —Psalm 119:18 ESV
(Adapted from Living by the Book, Howard Hendricks)
This post first appeared on the blog, susancady.com, ©2018.

Sunday, January 20, 2019

"I signed the Nashville Statement - Albert Mohler Jr.

This past week (Aug of 2017) I was part of an effort that put America’s theological and moral fault lines fully in view. I was a signer of something called the Nashville Statement, a document adopted by a group of evangelical Christians seeking to reaffirm traditional Christian values on sexuality.

Within hours, the vitriol in response to our document showed why such clarification is necessary.

One of the most intense lines of criticism was that we, signers of the document, dismiss the pain and suffering of those who live outside those historic Biblical sexual norms. That we weren’t acknowledging the rejection they feel in the church and were making their sins appear more significant than our own.

To be clear: Christians understand the brokenness of the world. We signers know ourselves, like all humanity, to be broken by sin. We have no right to face the world from a claim of moral superiority. We know and confess that Christians have often failed to speak the truth in love.

In releasing the Nashville Statement, we in fact are acting out of love and concern for people who are increasingly confused about what God has clarified in Holy Scripture.

Evangelical Christians believe that God has spoken in the Bible, and that obedience to what he has spoken is both true and essential for human wholeness, freedom, and fulfillment — for human flourishing.

We fully understand that our culture is increasingly influenced by the promise that human flourishing can come by what is styled as sexual liberation and the overthrowing of historic Christianity’s witness to God’s purpose in making us as sexual beings — even making us as male and female.

The statement was carefully written. Love of neighbor requires us to speak clearly and very specifically to the truths affirmed and the errors denied in the document.

It would be much easier to be quiet, to let the moral revolution proceed unanswered, and to seek some kind of refuge in silence or ambiguity. For the sake of same-sex attracted people and others, we did not believe we could remain silent — or unclear — and be faithful.

The backlash to the document shows why it is so needed: While the Christian church has held to a normative understanding of biblical sexuality for over two millennia, we now face challenges to biblical teaching that require an unprecedented level of specificity. It affirmed what would have been universally acknowledged as the historic Christian faith without question or controversy until just the last several years.

We understand that we live in an increasingly post-Christian world, and that a vast revolution in sexual morality is now fundamentally reshaping the landscape. Churches and pastors, Christian institutions and individual Christians, are now under intense pressure to adopt this new sexual morality, along with its redefinition of marriage and gender.

The “Nashville Statement,” like many other doctrinal declarations common to Christian history, seeks to summarize, clarify, and affirm what Holy Scripture reveals. In this case, we find ourselves clarifying what no previous generation of Christians has been called upon to clarify. We must now clarify and specify what the Bible teaches about human sexuality, marriage, and what it means to be made male and female.

The Nashville Statement affirms God’s design for marriage as “a covenantal, sexual, procreative, lifelong union of one man and one woman.” Those are the very purposes of marriage affirmed, for example, in the historic Book of Common Prayer. Chastity outside of marriage and fidelity within marriage are affirmed as the clear teaching of the Bible. We deny that God designed marriage “to be a homosexual, polygamous, or polyamorous relationship.” The Christian church — in all of its major branches — has joined in this denial for 2,000 years.

We affirm that God created Adam and Eve as the first human beings, as the statement says, “in his own image, equal before God as persons, and distinct as male and female.” Further, we affirm that God calls his human creatures “to accept the God-ordained link between one’s biological sex and one’s self-conception as male or female.”

The statement denies that same-sex attraction “is part of the natural goodness of God’s original creation, or that it puts a person outside the hope of the gospel.”

Pastors, parents, and individual Christians are asking for clear answers to what they see as new questions. We have attempted to provide them. Churches and Christian institutions have asked for a statement to which they can point for reference and affirmation. We have sought to assist them.

Many of the responses to the “Nashville Statement” have underlined the urgency and the necessity of the document. One response, offered as the “Denver Statement,” released by a church in Colorado, specifically affirms “that the glorious variety of gender and sexual expression is a reflection of God’s original creation design and are aspects of human flourishing.”

That affirmation is certainly in keeping with the moral revolution, but intellectual honesty requires the admission that it cannot be squared with the Bible’s account of creation. The “Denver Statement” denies “that sexual attraction for the same sex is outside the natural goodness of God’s original creation.” That fits the new sexual morality quite well, but runs counter to the consistent teaching of Scripture in both the Old and New Testaments.

Several of the responses have been quite candid in celebrating the overthrow of two thousand years of Christian moral teaching. Fair enough, but such a celebration acknowledges a severe break with historic Christianity. The “Denver Statement” makes this point clearly: “Christians at the dawn of the twenty-first century find themselves living in an exciting, beautiful, liberating, and holy period of historic transition.”

In less than one week, the “Nashville Statement” has marked an ironic achievement. It has incited those who would replace Christianity with a new religion teaching a new morality to be explicit in their rejection of the historic Christian faith.

The main goal of the “Nashville Statement” is to point all persons, regardless of the form of our struggles over sexuality or self-identity, to salvation and wholeness in Christ. With all our hearts, we believe that the sexual revolution cannot deliver on its promises, but that Christ always delivers on his.

The very fact that the statement made headlines and was greeted with shock and surprise in some quarters underlines why it was needed. We believe that human dignity, human flourishing, and true human freedom are at stake. We know that two rival visions of what it means to be human are now fully apparent. We stand by the vision affirmed in the historic Christian faith.



Albert Mohler Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.

The Nashville Statement

Preamble

Evangelical Christians at the dawn of the twenty-first century find themselves living in a period 
of historic transition. As Western culture has become increasingly post-Christian, it has embarked upon a massive revision of what it means to be a human being. By and large the spirit of our age no longer discerns or delights in the beauty of God’s design for human life. Many deny that God created human beings for his glory, and that his good purposes for us include our personal and physical design as male and female. It is common to think that human identity as male and female is not part of God’s beautiful plan, but is, rather, an expression of an individual’s autonomous preferences. The pathway to full and lasting joy through God’s good design for his creatures is thus replaced by the path of shortsighted alternatives that, sooner or later, ruin human life and dishonor God.

This secular spirit of our age presents a great challenge to the Christian church. Will the church

of the Lord Jesus Christ lose her biblical conviction, clarity, and courage, and blend into the
spirit of the age? Or will she hold fast to the word of life, draw courage from Jesus, and
unashamedly proclaim his way as the way of life? Will she maintain her clear, counter-cultural
witness to a world that seems bent on ruin?

We are persuaded that faithfulness in our generation means declaring once again the true story of

the world and of our place in it—particularly as male and female. Christian Scripture teaches that
there is but one God who alone is Creator and Lord of all. To him alone, every person owes glad-
hearted thanksgiving, heart-felt praise, and total allegiance. This is the path not only of glorifying 
God,
but of knowing ourselves. To forget our Creator is to forget who we are, for he made us for

himself. And we cannot know ourselves truly without truly knowing him who made us. We did
not make ourselves. We are not our own. Our true identity, as male and female persons, is given
by God. It is not only foolish, but hopeless, to try to make ourselves what God did not create us
to be.

We believe that God’s design for his creation and his way of salvation serve to bring him the

greatest glory and bring us the greatest good. God’s good plan provides us with the greatest
freedom. Jesus said he came that we might have life and have it in overflowing measure. He is
for us and not against us. Therefore, in the hope of serving Christ’s church and witnessing
publicly to the good purposes of God for human sexuality revealed in Christian Scripture, we
offer the following affirmations and denials.


Article 1

WE AFFIRM that God has designed marriage to be a covenantal, sexual, procreative, lifelong
union of one man and one woman, as husband and wife, and is meant to signify the covenant
love between Christ and his bride the church.
WE DENY that God has designed marriage to be a homosexual, polygamous, or polyamorous
relationship. We also deny that marriage is a mere human contract rather than a covenant made
before God.

Article 2
WE AFFIRM that God’s revealed will for all people is chastity outside of marriage and fidelity
within marriage.
WE DENY that any affections, desires, or commitments ever justify sexual intercourse before or
outside marriage; nor do they justify any form of sexual immorality.

Article 3

WE AFFIRM that God created Adam and Eve, the first human beings, in his own image, equal
before God as persons, and distinct as male and female.
WE DENY that the divinely ordained differences between male and female render them unequal
in dignity or worth.

Article 4
WE AFFIRM that divinely ordained differences between male and female reflect God’s original
creation design and are meant for human good and human flourishing.
WE DENY that such differences are a result of the Fall or are a tragedy to be overcome.

Article 5
WE AFFIRM that the differences between male and female reproductive structures are integral
to God’s design for self-conception as male or female.
WE DENY that physical anomalies or psychological conditions nullify the God-appointed link
between biological sex and self-conception as male or female.

Article 6
WE AFFIRM that those born with a physical disorder of sex development are created in the
image of God and have dignity and worth equal to all other image-bearers. They are
acknowledged by our Lord Jesus in his words about “eunuchs who were born that way from their
mother's womb.” With all others they are welcome as faithful followers of Jesus Christ and
should embrace their biological sex insofar as it may be known.
WE DENY that ambiguities related to a person’s biological sex render one incapable of living a
fruitful life in joyful obedience to Christ.

Article 7
WE AFFIRM that self-conception as male or female should be defined by God’s holy purposes
in creation and redemption as revealed in Scripture.
WE DENY that adopting a homosexual or transgender self-conception is consistent with God’s
holy purposes in creation and redemption.

Article 8
WE AFFIRM that people who experience sexual attraction for the same sex may live a rich and
fruitful life pleasing to God through faith in Jesus Christ, as they, like all Christians, walk in
purity of life.
WE DENY that sexual attraction for the same sex is part of the natural goodness of God’s
original creation, or that it puts a person outside the hope of the gospel.

Article 9
WE AFFIRM that sin distorts sexual desires by directing them away from the marriage covenant
and toward sexual immorality— a distortion that includes both heterosexual and homosexual
immorality.
WE DENY that an enduring pattern of desire for sexual immorality justifies sexually immoral
behavior.

Article 10
WE AFFIRM that it is sinful to approve of homosexual immorality or transgenderism and that
such approval constitutes an essential departure from Christian faithfulness and witness.
WE DENY that the approval of homosexual immorality or transgenderism is a matter of moral
indifference about which otherwise faithful Christians should agree to disagree.

Article 11

WE AFFIRM our duty to speak the truth in love at all times, including when we speak to or
about one another as male or female.
WE DENY any obligation to speak in such ways that dishonor God’s design of his image bearers as male and female.

Article 12

WE AFFIRM that the grace of God in Christ gives both merciful pardon and transforming
power, and that this pardon and power enable a follower of Jesus to put to death sinful desires
and to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord.
WE DENY that the grace of God in Christ is insufficient to forgive all sexual sins and to give
power for holiness to every believer who feels drawn into sexual sin.

Article 13
WE AFFIRM that the grace of God in Christ enables sinners to forsake transgender self conceptions and by divine forbearance to accept the God-ordained link between one’s biological
sex and one’s self-conception as male or female.
WE DENY that the grace of God in Christ sanctions self-conceptions that are at odds with God’s
revealed will.

Article 14
WE AFFIRM that Christ Jesus has come into the world to save sinners and that through Christ’s
death and resurrection forgiveness of sins and eternal life are available to every person who
repents of sin and trusts in Christ alone as Savior, Lord, and supreme treasure.
WE DENY that the Lord’s arm is too short to save or that any sinner is beyond his reach.



Scripture References*
Gen. 1:26-28; 2:15-25; 3:1-24; Ex. 20:14; 20:17; Lev. 18:22; 20:13; Dt. 5:18, 21; 22:5; Jdg. 19:22; 2 Sam.11:1-12:15; Job 31:1; Ps. 51:1-19; Prov. 5:1-23; 6:20-35; 7:1-27; Isa. 59:1; Mal. 2:14; Matt. 5:27–30;19:4-6, 8-9, 12; Acts 15:20, 29; Rom. 1:26–27; 1:32; 1 Cor. 6:9–11, 18-20; 7:1-7; 2 Cor. 5:17; Gal. 5:24; Eph. 4:15, 20–24; 5:31–32; Col. 3:5; 1 Thess. 4:3-8; 1 Tim. 1:9–10, 15; 2 Tim. 2:22; Titus 2:11-12; Heb.13:4; Jas. 1:14–15; 1 Pet. 2:11; Jude 7
* Scripture texts are not a part of the original document but have been added subsequently for reference


The Nashville Statement is an evangelical Christian statement of faith (drafted in August of 2017) relating to human sexuality and gender roles authored by the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood (CBMW) in Nashville, Tennessee. The Statement expresses support for an opposite-sex definition of marriage, for faithfulness within marriage, for chastity outside marriage, and for a link between biological sex and "self-conception as male and female." The Statement sets forth the signatories' opposition to LGBT sexuality, same-sex marriage, polygamy, polyamory, adultery, and fornication. It was criticized by egalitarian Christians and LGBT campaigners, as well as by several conservative religious figures.(copied from Wikipedia)

Saturday, January 12, 2019

The chief end of the believer - Todd McCauley




The Westminster Catechism was a document written by the Westminster Assembly between 1643 and 1649.  The catechism had two divisions, the larger and the shorter catechism.  The shorter catechism is more familiar and was prepared for instructing children in the Christian faith.  The shorter catechism contains a series of questions and answers that were meant to be memorized and then rehearsed.  Probably the most familiar of the questions and answers is question number one.

Question:  What is the chief end of man? (i.e., what should be the main goal of mankind?)
Answer:  To glorify God and enjoy Him forever.


In this article, I’d like to examine the idea of glorifying God.
Concerning this idea of glorifying God, there are two questions that I want to answer.

I.  What does it mean to glorify God?

II.  How is God glorified by the believer?


Let’s deal with our first question

What does it mean to Glorify God?

According to the N.T. glorifying God has several meanings.  It means, “To show forth His praise”, It means to, “Put God on display”(i.e., to make conspicuous his character and attributes), means, “To honor and celebrate who He is and what He’s done”.  Finally, it means, “ to make Him look good”.

Putting all these meanings together we discover that the chief end, the main objective of man is to show forth God’s praise, to put God on display, to honor and celebrate who He is and what He’s done, to make Him look good.

Folks this is important for you to understand, glorifying God in the ways that I’ve just described is not only the responsibility of Christians but all humanity.  Isaiah 43:7 states that God created man for his Glory, but because of sin, Rom 3:23 states that mankind falls woefully short of glorifying God.  Because of sin, man fails miserably at showing forth God’s praise, because of sin man fails miserably at putting God on display, because of sin mankind fails miserably at honoring and celebrating who God is and what He’s done, and because of sin mankind fails miserably at making God look, God.

But the Good news is that through the finished work of Christ, the born-again believer now has the God-given ability to Glorify God.


This leads me now to our second question:

How is God Glorified by the Believer?

The Scripture mentions many ways, but for the sake of time let me mention three(3):

1.  God is glorified through answered prayer (John 14:13)

Contrary to the belief of many, God really does desire to answer the prayers of His people.  But here’s the key to answered prayer.  It’s found in verse 13, “And whatever you ask in My name, that will I do...”

Asking in Jesus’ name means more than just saying at the end of a prayer request, “In Jesus’ name I pray”.  To ask in Jesus’ name means first and foremost to pray according to His will or in light of His will.  1 John 5:14-15 states very clearly in support of this idea, “If we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.  And if we know that He hears us in whatever we ask, we know that we have the requests which we have asked from Him”.  So the key to answered prayer is God hearing us and the key to God hearing us is our praying according to His will.  If this is the key to answered prayer, let me give you according to John 14:13 the purpose of answered prayer.  Let me say this loudly and clearly, the chief purpose of God answering our prayers is not the meeting of our needs, the chief purpose of God answering our prayers is that He Himself will be glorified.  In other words when God answers our prayers, certainly we benefit, but ultimately and most importantly God is honored, God is put on display, God is made to look good.


2.  God is glorified through our bearing fruit (John 15:8)

John states that when a person is rightly connected to Christ-the vine, the inevitable result is fruit.  In other words, if a person is truly connected to Christ he or she will produce fruit(no question).  This idea that a person can come to Christ and never demonstrate the fruit of that union is foreign to the Scripture.  In fact, Jesus clearly states in verse 5, “...apart from me you can do nothing”.  If a person claims to be saved yet never produces fruit, that fruitlessness demonstrates that that person was never in Christ.

     I’ve been talking about fruit, what does this fruit look like.  In other words, when a person is rightly connected to Christ what fruit does Christ produce in that person's life.

1.  The fruit of the Spirit(Gal 5:22)[Godly character]
        2.  The fruit of righteousness(Phil 1:11)[Godly living]
        3.  The fruit of souls(Rom 1:13)[Godly offspring]

And here’s the central purpose of fruit-bearing according to John 15:8, “that God may be glorified”.  When Christ produces through us Godly character, Godly living, and Godly offspring, God is made to look good.

3.  God is glorified through holy living (1 Cor 6:12-20)

The Apostle Paul encourages the Corinthian believers to glorify God in their physical bodies(vs 20).

Two reasons why we are to glorify God with our physical bodies:

Number one:  Our bodies don’t belong to us (vs 19)
When God saved you He not only purchased your soul/spirit, but your body as well.  Our bodies belong to God. This means that contrary to popular belief, we  can’t do anything we want with this body.

Number two:  We were bought with a price (vs 20)
The Apostle Peter states in his first letter, “...you know that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you were redeemed from the empty way of life handed down to you from your forefathers, but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect”.

Side Bar comment
I don’t know about you, but as a former pastor, I know that I have told people- young people, married people, single people that sexual immorality is wrong and that engaging in it can have disastrous results.  We know that this is true, but as I reflect on what we’ve been talking about, maybe what we’ve been telling people is an inadequate message.  I believe we need to begin telling people especially Christian people that the reason they should not engage in immoral behavior is not just because they might get a divorce or catch a disease or get pregnant but first and foremost we should communicate that to involve ourselves in behavior that’s contrary to God’s righteous standard is to put God’s glory is at stake.  I think undermining God's glory is far more detrimental than getting pregnant, getting a divorce, or getting a disease.  I’m convinced that we need to get away from our man-centered approach to man’s problems and get back to a God-centered approach.

As Christians God’s glory must be our controlling motivation

The Apostle Paul said it this way, “...whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God”.


Soli Deo Gloria


Wednesday, January 9, 2019

The Evangelist And The Local Church - Mark Slaughter


I genuinely love my local church!  Our shared vision, mission, and values mutually fuel each other.  It’s like three individual spotlights – my personal relationship with God, our vocational ministry, and our local church – all converging into one spotlight!  I feel blessed!
However, I also know that the relationship between evangelists and local churches has frequently been strained and challenging.  Evangelists have been hurt or felt alienated by churches which did not affirm or recognize their evangelistic gifts and callings, or which didn’t share their evangelistic passion.  From that hurt, we evangelists have too often spoken harshly about the church or acted independently from her… and for that we need to confess.  But also, pastors and church leaders have been hurt by evangelists who ignored or took advantage of the local church, using it for their own agendas.  And from their own hurt, pastors and church leaders have denigrated the biblical gift of the evangelist.  We all need grace!
But what did God intend for the relationship between gifted evangelists and the local church? 
The Apostle Paul makes it clear that (along with other leadership gifts) the gift of the evangelist was given to the church “to equip God’s people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up…”  (Eph. 4:11-13).   The evangelist serves the church externally and internally – proclaiming Jesus Christ to outsiders (external) and training and building up believers especially in sharing their faith (internal).
At the end of the first International Conference for Itinerant Evangelists (known as Amsterdam ’83) held in Amsterdam in July 1983, about 4,000 evangelists from 133 countries individually and collectively affirmed 15 Amsterdam Affirmations of core commitments and biblical values which we pledged to uphold as evangelists.  I vividly remember that holy moment, standing and committing ourselves to them, including one explicitly about the local church:
“We are responsible to the church, and will endeavor always to conduct our ministries so as to build up the local body of believers and serve the church at large.”  (from Amsterdam Affirmations)
Additionally, we committed that for those who would come to faith under our ministries, we would “encourage them to identify with the local body of believers…” 
Building off the Amsterdam Affirmations, here are 4 aspects of the relationship between the evangelist and the local church:
1. Evangelists are SENT BY the local church
In Acts 13:3, Paul and Barnabas were called and affirmed by their local church in Antioch, being sent out by the church, not just on their own.  Timothy’s calling and gift were acknowledged by elders who laid hands on him (1 Tim. 4:14; 2 Tim. 1:6), and you can’t lay hands on yourself!  Likewise, an evangelist’s gifts and calling should be observed and affirmed by local church leaders. 
After preaching several times at my home church while I was in college and discerning my calling, I vividly remember an older church leader saying, “I don’t think you’ll be a pastor in a church.  I can see you traveling from church to church, from place to place preaching.”  I had never thought of that, but over time I saw his words as early affirmation of my itinerant evangelistic calling.
2. Evangelists are ACCOUNTABLE TO the local church.
Besides being accountable to our ministry organizations or boards, we also are accountable to our local church which sends us. (Acts 14:27) We are responsible to them, report to them, and receive their counsel in guarding our lives, families, doctrine, and ministry.  Being vitally connected with a local church helps evangelists feel less isolated, having a community where people know you, love you, and care for you.
3. Evangelists are to BUILD UP the local church.
According to Ephesians 4:11-12, evangelists are to equip believers so the Body of Christ may be built up.  This is a key part of our calling!  The evangelist can be a great evangelistic catalyst for his or her own local church by training believers in evangelism or being an “evangelistic consultant” to pastors and church leaders as they develop resources or strategies.  I have thoroughly enjoyed leading an evangelism training seminar and helping our church increase its evangelistic temperature, baptizing 500 people within six months!
When we serve in other locations, we should always seek to partner with local churches, coming at their invitation.  We can listen to their visions and needs, and ask how we can serve them.  In large scale evangelistic outreaches, we must do everything possible to follow-up new believers and connect them with local churches, so local churches are better off after we leave!
4. Evangelists are to SERVE the local church.
Besides speaking, training, or consulting, how can we serve our churches?  I regularly meet with key pastors and leaders in our church simply to share mutually and grow as “safe friends” with no agenda.  I’m not selling a plan or solution, simply listening and encouraging.  Over years, tremendous trust and synergy have grown as each of us shares from our personal lives and how we’re growing in evangelism. Often in speaking across the country, I share outreach best practices from our church, and bring to our church resources I discover from other ministries.  Yes, I’ve served in official leadership positions, but also in these quiet, behind the scenes roles.  We need humble hearts willing to serve in small, unseen ways too!
As we see our ministry as overflow from our local churches, we will more likely speak well of the local church, and ask of our local churches: “What does our church need and how can I best serve?”

As we work in, through, and for the local church, together Jesus is exalted and God’s Kingdom is advanced through the Church.