At some point in the last 150 years, we placed ourselves under a curse. It
happened slowly and innocently, not suddenly and dramatically. When? The
moment we concluded that conformity to prevailing religious emphases
verifies true conversion.
It is the concept of spiritual cloning. "Conversion to Christ manifests
itself in identical ways in every person. Genuinely converted people think
alike, reason alike, reach identical conclusions, have identical emphases,
conform to identical standards, and defend identical convictions with
identical reasoning."
James and John (the sons of thunder) were very unlike cocky, confident
Peter, but God used all of them. Matthew the tax collector and Simon the
Zealot came from groups whose thinking and actions were totally opposite,
but God used both of them. Nicodemus and the Samaritan divorcee came from
different spiritual universes, but God used both of them. Barnabas, the son
of exhortation, radically differed from Paul, the converted persecutor, but
God used both of them. The discouraged John Mark and the uncircumcised
Titus were quite different from all the above, but God used them too. Jews
and idol worshippers who were converted to Christ shared nothing in common,
but God used them both.
The "people diversity" of the early church is staggering. Only one thing
allowed God to use these diverse Christians for His purposes: their living
faith in Christ.
Some have asked me, "What do you think the congregation will decide about
the building? About the screening committee? About additional elders?" My
honest answer: I haven't the slightest idea. These are your choices, not
mine.
"What do you see in all this?" I see incredible opportunity. "For
facilities? worship? leadership? growth potential?" Certainly, I see those
opportunities, and each has more potential than we grasp. But none of them
are the incredible opportunity that I see.
Whatever you decide, what an opportunity! For what? For us to grow in
Christ's spirit, for us to destroy old walls, for us to live in the present
instead of the past, for us as a congregation to pursue Christ's total
objectives instead of our own preferences.
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