Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Monday Morning Church



Excerpted from The Monday Morning Church by Jerry Cook.

Everyday Evangelism: Christ in You


You are called not so much to do great things, as to be a great person--and that person is Jesus Christ. The Church is the resident presence of Jesus in the world.

No matter how big church attendance is on Sunday, it will never penetrate the culture with Jesus. The reason is clear: The church on Sunday is experienced by the church community; it is only observed by the unbelieving community.

However, Monday through Saturday, the church operates in the experience of non-believers. It lives on their turf, moves in their society, and operates in their culture. On Monday Jesus becomes incarnatethrough you. And because He can be seen and touched, He can be received or rejected. True evangelism is possible.

Your Strategic Placement
Most Christians have been trained quite well to be the church on Sunday. But what does it take to be the church on Monday?

The first step is to recognize your strategic placement. "Strategic placement" means this: each redeemed, Spirit-filled Christian has been strategically placed by Jesus, the Lord of the church. Where each believing man or woman lives and works is part of that strategy. Christians are people of destiny, purposely placed deep in our culture. We are God's points of penetration. Because of us Jesus is present at the very heart of society. And it is this strategic presence of Christ that opens the door for his revelation as Savior to man.

Incarnational Christianity doesn't try to get people to God. Many men and women don't want to get to God. Others are unaware there is a God to get to! The incarnation was God coming to us; in a similar way, incarnational Christianity brings Jesus to man.

That's the basis for true evangelism: in the believer the presence of Christ reaches out to others. It's also the basis for true discipleship: in the believer the presence of Christ walks alongside the new believer. Thus, the two main activities of the church–conversion and discipling–are wed, as they were meant to be. The Great Commission, after all is not simply to go into all the world and make converts; we are to go and make disciples.

Jesus said simply, "I am the way. If you have found me, you have found God." Unfortunately, the church often adds a debilitating step to the divine program. We say, "Jesus is the way to God, and the church is the way to Jesus. Come to the church and find Jesus, then Jesus will take you to God." We must never allow the church institution to be the way to God. Jesus himself is the Way. The goal of the church on Monday is to make the Way present and visible in the world.

Open for Business
Of course, it does no good to have a strategic force in place if the people don't know they are strategic, don't know they are a force, and don't know they are in place.

Most Christians give mental assent to this idea of strategic placement, but they have no concept of its implications. Some think of inviting hurting people to a church program, others think of using some type of soul-winning gimmick to make a convert. Most, however, don't do anything with the idea at all. It simply floats around, untapped, in the background of their experience. They're strategically placed, but they're not "open for business."


"Christ in you, the hope of glory" (Col. 1:27) means you are filled with the Holy Spirit and Jesus is present wherever you go. You are capable of responding to the needs of others exactly the way Jesus would. The gifts of the Spirit are how Jesus works through you to touch people's lives.

Our time on earth is about being Jesus in our world. Jesus didn't come to our planet on vacation; He came on assignment. Likewise, you and I have not been born here and now accidentally. We don't just happen to bump into hurting people. There's divine strategy at work. You are where you are because God strategically placed you there.

I'm convinced that if more Christians were open for business, then more business would show up. Evangelism as a primary goal is often artificial and powerless. But when it's a serendipity of spirit-filled believers being Jesus in their world, it is natural and unstoppable!


 Reprinted with permission from www.jerrycook.org.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

ALWAYS LED IN TRIUMPH


 
"Now thanks be to God who always leads us in triumph in Christ, and through us diffuses the fragrance of His knowledge in every place."  2 Corinthians 2:14

It is said that in this statement, Paul is comparing himself as a Christian to that of a captive of a Roman general being led into the city of Rome.
 
In Philippians 3:12, Paul says that Jesus has "laid hold" of him. Jesus took him captive. However, the captivity of Jesus was for a different purpose than the captive of a prisoner by Rome. The Lord Jesus took Paul captive to lead him into a life of service to others.
 
In 2 Corinthians 3:5-6, Paul gives the source of his victorious life of service in the Kingdom: "Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think of anything as being from ourselves, but our sufficiency is from God, who also made us sufficient as ministers of the new covenant, not of the letter but of the Spirit; for the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life." 
 
Paul is no longer attempting to keep the law, which ends in death. Jesus took him captive to live under the new covenant of grace—the covenant of Holy Spirit power. His life of service is not one of self-effort and self-sufficiency. God is his sufficiency.
 
All born-again believers can believe that they have been taken captive by God to be in His service—not to struggle in their service for God by doing their best for Jesus, but to trust God alone to be their sufficiency.
 
God will be their sufficiency not to be ministers of the old covenant of legalism but to minister the new covenant of life in the Spirit.
 
We only need to live out our oneness with Christ.

- David Kuykendall

Copyright © 2000-2005 David Kuykendall Ministries. 

Monday, August 2, 2010

Transformational Church: Christ the Center

We ... advocate that churches minister in a culturally comprehensible
manner. But before we think about the culture, we must first be
biblically grounded. And being biblically grounded means that the
church is centered on God's revelation of Jesus as the Messiah.

Transformational Churches know the Source of transformation. They do
not fall into the trap of believing in personal innovation or
corporate vision as the source of changed lives. Focusing on Christ,
they show and share the gospel. Focusing on Christ, believers
confidently live knowing that many more lives will be transformed.

So much today seems to shroud the work of the church. Distracted by
pedestrian logistics, some churches become mired in minutiae. Falling
into sin, others disqualify themselves from authentic ministry.
Transformational Churches on the other hand remain clearly focused on
the Messiah who founded and loves the church.

Jesus states that He will build His church [Matt. 16:18]. As much as
we want to help, He simply doesn't need it. But He still invites us
into the task with Him.

["For we are God's fellow workers; you [the church] are God's field,
you are God's building" 1 Cor. 3:9, NKJV.]

Ed Stetzer and Thom Rainer, Transformational Church, (B&H Publishing,
2010), 227.