MentorNet
#61 WHEN
WE DRIVE OUR TENT PEGS TOO DEEP Copyright © 2009 by Galen Currah, George Patterson and
Edward Aw Christian
researchers have concluded, after watching North American trends for three
decades, that the evangelical movement in has stagnated. (Evangelicals are
those who have strong beliefs about the sole authority of the Bible, the
Lordship of Jesus, his atonement at the Cross, and
personal faith for salvation.) Since those conclusions derive from statistics,
that is, from percentages of populations, they tend to be weak in explaining
the causes of stagnation, or the lack of causes that should have led to more
growth. Fortunately, many church planting movements in other parts of the
world have more than offset the decline in The original
Good News about Jesus remains the explosive power of God to save all who turn
to him in faith. That fact is neither in doubt nor
contradicted wherever the gospel flows unhindered. Thus, we who seek to
mentor gospel workers, such as missionaries, church planters, evangelists,
and pastors, must understand some of the hindrances to a continual flow of
the Good News, balanced with a repertoire of gospel facilitators. Now, most
hindrances to evangelism happen to be good things, things with a biblical
basis, and things that used to help confirm the gospel, but now hinder it. We
shall call them “tent pegs,” good things driven too deep. The tent pegs seem
to come in three pairs, clergy and chapel, abstraction and academy,
performers and platforms. These tent pegs work very well and should not be discarded readily where they help to promote
the gospel and lead sinners to repentant faith. However, where driven too
deep, these aids to spreading the gospel actually keep it from moving,
spreading and finding new homelands. Apparently, in Driving Tent Pegs Too Deep Tent pegs 1 & 2: the clergy & the chapel. From the
earliest days of the Christian movement, elders appointed apostles who, in
turn, appointed elders in new churches. Elders and deacons are good for
churches, helping them to grow and to reproduce. Elders pastored church
members, empowering them to exercise their spiritual gifts and to obey the
commandments of Jesus. From the earliest times, churches gathered in homes,
market places and schools. Believers often enlarged
their rooms to accommodate believers. With time, however, and under pressure
from government, churches adopted Roman political offices, idol chapels and
Greek oratory as their own, driving these tent pegs too deep. To this day,
where Christian ministry remains tied to chapels, including their cost,
upkeep, programs and impersonal seating arrangements, even lively churches
eventually stagnate. Where shepherding elders are replaced
by paid clergy who grant themselves privileges, including salaries,
liturgical authority, and superior social standing, even the best-intentioned
eventually stagnate. Some of the authors of this article
are or were clergymen. (See Loosening confining tent pegs, below.) Tent pegs 3
& 4: the abstract and the academy. Some of the authors of this article
are or have been themselves instructors in bible schools and seminaries, so
they speak not as enemies but as educators. Perhaps the greatest bane of the
evangelical movement in the 19th and 20th centuries was its theological controversies, all of which
derived, not so much from a misunderstanding of the Bibles as from abstract
theology. Where we taught our outlines of Latin-based words as authoritative
truth, our Aristotelian logic as proof of truth, and our statements of faith
as tests of fellowship, we made enemies of our friends, and became divided
and conquered. The very
educational institutions that we erected to educate our evangelical clergy,
missionaries and evangelical workers, have too often served to weaken their
confidence in their own ability to understand their Bible. This has alienated
them from fellow believers, to replace the Word with abstract theology, to
decry obedience as legalism, to doubt the power of God to solve human
problems, and to denounce the loving efforts of laymen
as substandard dangers to the faith. Tent pegs 5
& 6: the performer and the platform. Evangelical
faith, as commonly perceived in The social
response to these changes in the evangelical movement has been to stay away
in droves. Some of the performers stand ignored except when lampooned by scoffers. The content of the original
apostolic gospel has become the least understood message of the 21st century in Loosening our Tent Pegs Learn the original Good News. Know the
First, let us review the original Good News, as Jesus and his apostles taught
it, preached it, recited it, sang it, and wrote into the Holy Scriptures of
the New Testament. Amazingly few evangelicals can tell you more than one or
two points of the gospel. Instead of the gospel, evangelicals were taught by their clergy and in their academies that
the gospel is a set up abstract ideas, philosophical notions, or ideas hard
to express. The Good News was originally a story, the true history about
Jesus. Telling this story brings men and women, boys and girls, Hindus,
Muslims, Buddhists, animists and atheists to faith
and eternal life. Abstract theologies, clerical privileges
and platform antics cannot do so. Take these texts as examples of the
original gospel: Luke 24.44-49; Acts 2.22-40; Acts 3.13-26; Acts 5.29-32;
Acts 10.34-48; Acts 13.23-41; Acts 17:1-4; Acts 17.22-31; and 1 Corinthians
15:1-8. Your
assignment is to summarize these accounts into a story that you can tell to
others through whatever media they prefer. Do not expect all clergy to teach
the gospel, for some will only tell you how they do their liturgy. Do not
leave it to theologians to explain the gospel, for they will mostly elaborate
their abstract theory of the atonement; and do not expect to hear the gospel
from performers who mostly want to draw attention to themselves. Empower
believers to tell the Good News. Learn together to tell the story
about Jesus. Then practice singing it, acting it out, painting it or
recording it. Use methods that new believers can imitate and equipment that
they have available, so that they can spread the Gospel in a popular
movement. Find or draw pictures that illustrate the story. Test the pictures
to be sure that local folk understand the pictures, and change the pictures
if you must. Plan with them where they will go and with whom they will share
the story. Practice with them how to invite others to repent of their old
ways and to put their trust in Jesus. Invite them to be
baptized and to become a new church, cell or home group. Believers
should normally go two-by-two when they share the gospel, as Jesus
instructed. They will feel more confident, and while one speaks, the other
prays. When they return, listen to their reports, answer their questions, and
plan with them the next steps. Do not leave telling the gospel for others to
do, especially do not leave it all to platform performers, clergy in their
chapel or theologians in their academy. Those all have their place, but not
in bringing your relatives and neighbors to faith in Jesus. Avoid every
obstacle that hinders the Good News flowing to families, friends
and society. The gospel story about Jesus remains the most powerful
message on earth. It transform character, releases folk from every kind of
spiritual, mental, social and chemical bondage, it conquers every wicked
spiritual force, it mends hearts, heals relationships, and gives hope in this
life and the life to come. No wonder that Satan does all he can to stop the
message! Three
of the greatest hindrances to the gospel flowing freely remain (a) confining
the message to sermons preached by the clergy, for sinners will not hear
them; (b) defining the message with abstract theology that says true things
about the cross in terms incomprehensible to ordinary mortals; and (c)
refining the message by platform healers and entertainers seeking to promote
their own business, reputation and income at your expense. Resources P. O'Connor, Reproducible Pastoral
Training, <www.MissionBooks.com>. Free
CP training software “Come, Let Us Disciple the Nations” from
<www.Paul-Timothy.net/dn/>. Free
mentoring tools and materials for new leaders from
<www.MentorAndMultiply.com>. Train & Multiply® church planting and pastoral
training course from <www.TrainAndMultiply.com>. Order Church Multiplication Guide from
a bookshop or at <www.WCLbooks.com>. To subscribe to MentorNet or
to download earlier messages, visit: <www.MentorNet.ws>. |