Thursday, September 30, 2010

WHAT IS A DISCIPLE?

"A disciple is a person who lives in daily obedience to the will and purpose of God in their lives,
committed to bearing fruit for the kingdom."

This is the definition we use in my congregation, the Church of God of Landisville, for a disciple of Jesus Christ. These days we are far more concerned about people being maturing disciples than merely church members.  We believe that part of the problem that Modernity created for the church is the idea that we are an organization with members (and membership has its privileges).  In that sense, the emphasis for too many

Christians and the churches they populated was divorce their thinking for the missional or sending aspect of the Church.  People said "come join our club" (and take responsibility for the club's survival) instead of going as faithful disciples out into the world, preaching the gospel and making disciples.

It also often meant that the work of the church was done at the church.  As a result, few people thought about their vocations in the workplace as an expression of their discipleship with Jesus Christ.  This compartmentalizing of their lives meant that they practiced discipleship by doing church work in their non-work time instead of living as disciples 24/7.  

In a world where God is out of sight and out of mind because many people never go near a church, the time has come to be disciples-living in daily obedience to the will and purposes of God, committed to bearing fruit for the kingdom.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

WHAT DID JESUS MEAN BY "JUDGE NOT?"

Sky Jethani writes for the blog OUT OF UR.  Noting that nine out of ten young Americans view Christians are judgmental, this opens Christianity to an automatic charge of being hypocrites.  His words are worth reading:

What did Jesus mean when he said, “Judge not, and you will not be judged.” It’s one of the most commonly quoted verses from the bible (Luke 6:37). Many of us, and not merely politicians, invoke the verse as a first defense when accused of wrong. It is also a favorite stone thrown by those outside the church to accuse Christians of hypocrisy.

In 2007 a book was published called UnChristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks about Christianity. It’s based on research done among non-Christian 20-somethings. One of their core findings was that nearly nine out of ten young people view Christians as “judgmental.” And given the prohibition against judging issued by Jesus, this would mean most people view Christians as hypocrites.

Given these findings, it’s pretty important that both Christians and non-Christians understand what Jesus means when he says “judge not.” The key is recognizing that the word judge can be used in two different ways in the New Testament. Sometimes judge is used to mean “judge between things,” to differentiate, or discern. In this case we judge between right and wrong, good and evil, righteous and unrighteous.

But this kind of judging-the act of discernment-is not what Jesus is forbidding. In fact throughout the Bible we are commanded to discern. In the same chapter of Luke 6 and in the very same discourse as the famous “judge not” statement, Jesus talks about having the discernment to see the difference between good people and evil people (Luke 6:43-45). He compares them to trees. Good trees, he says, produce good fruit and bad trees produce bad fruit. The call to differentiate good from evil is to judge, to discern, correctly.

This is often what get’s Christians into hot water in our uber-tolerant and increasingly diverse culture. When a Christian labels something as “wrong” or “evil” they are often pounced upon as being judgmental and out of step with Jesus. Sometimes this is the case, as I will discuss below, but very often the accusation is the result of a culture that no longer understands the difference between discernment and condemnation.

Read the rest of the article at OUT OF UR