Who changed things from the vibrant, Spirit-empowered “by life or by
death” faith of the New Testament to today’s spineless home-and-garden
Sunday-morning religion?
Who changed things from “Leave everything and follow Me” (see Luke 14:33) to “Pray this little prayer and you’re set for eternity”?
Who
changed things from “All who live godly lives in Christ Jesus will
suffer persecution” (see 2 Tim. 3:12) to “Ask Jesus into your heart and
enjoy a comfortable life”?
Who changed things from a fearless
proclamation of the truth, whatever the cost or consequences, to a
watered down, compromised message that is afraid to offend anyone?
By
what authority, by whose decree, based on what new revelation have we
so blatantly departed from the faith of the apostles? Who changed
things?
Who changed things from the New Testament faith, where
even the disciples couldn’t minister without the Spirit’s enduement, to
today’s version, where whole ministries are run with hardly any evidence
of the Spirit’s work?
As A.W. Tozer once said, “If the Holy Spirit
was withdrawn from the church today, 95 percent of what we do would go
on and no one would know the difference. If the Holy Spirit had been
withdrawn from the New Testament church, 95 percent of what they did
would stop, and everybody would know the difference.”
This remains true of most of the contemporary church in the West.
Who
changed things from a God-centered faith to a man-centered faith, from
"Take up your cross and deny yourself" to "Bypass the cross and empower
yourself"?
Who changed things from holiness being beautiful to
holiness being bondage, from the early church being known for its high
standards to the contemporary church being known for its scandals?
Who
changed things from the people of God being a threat to the powers of
darkness to the people of God being active participants in darkness?
In
the early church, Paul instructed the Corinthians to separate
themselves from people who claimed to be believers but were living in
outward, unrepentant sin (1 Corinthians 5). Today, some of those people
lead our churches and preach from our pulpits. Who changed things?
Who
changed things from a faith that was so focused on the life of Jesus
and so infused with the reality of His death and resurrection that no
sacrifice was considered too great and no act of service considered too
extreme—to the contrary, suffering for Him was considered a privilege
(Matt. 5:10-12; Acts 5:41; Phil. 1:29)—to today’s convenience-store
Christianity, where we have to “sell” salvation to the sinner by spicing
up the deal with perks and benefits?
When did Jesus stop being enough?
When did obedience become an option?
When
did keeping God’s commandments out of love for Him become “religious”
(in the negative sense of the word)? Didn’t Jesus say that if we loved
Him, we would keep His commandments (John 14:15, 21)?
Who changed things?
If
we belonged to another religion that claimed to have other books that
supplemented the Bible or traditions that superseded it, that would be
one thing.
But we don’t. We believe the Scriptures alone are God’s
Word and that nothing that comes after the Scriptures—no tradition, no
alleged revelation, no consensus—can undermine or countermand the
written Word of God.
So, who changed things from the biblical version of the Jesus faith to the modern American version?
We
can debate church history and blame this group or that group, and we
can point out what’s wrong with this denomination and that denomination.
We might even have some great historical and contemporary insights.
But
unless we get back to believing what is written and acting on what is
written, we will continue to perpetuate our merry-go-round Christianity
with lots of noise and action and bells and whistles but with little
authority, little purity and little effect (if any).
I didn’t get
the memo that God’s Word and Spirit were not enough, and I’m far more
concerned with what He says than with what the latest polls say.
Really,
now, since when did the Lord command us to fashion our preaching and
our style of worship and even the way we look based on what’s trending?
If
some church leaders choose to trust in worldly business models and
carnal consulting firms, that’s their choice. I say that we go with the
power of the name of Jesus and the wisdom of the Word of God and the
fullness of the Spirit. I say that we go with the New Testament model,
applied with boldness and with compassion to the needs of the day.
Years
ago, Leonard Ravenhill said, “One of these days some simple soul will
pick up the Book of God, read it, and believe it. Then the rest of us
will be embarrassed.”
I want to be that simple soul. How about you?
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