Friday, December 17, 2010
One Of The Lies Heard In Church Every Sunday
There are secular and sacred things in life
Firmly entrenched in most people’s thinking is idea that all of life is divided into two separate categories: the sacred and the secular. In the sacred or spiritual category are things like church, church buildings, prayers, rituals, clergy, the Bible and Bible reading. What’s secular or “unspiritual”? Everything else, which includes basically 95% of where ordinary people spend their lives and energies: marriage, parenting, work, possessions, hobbies, and interests.
Let me say it straight out: This distinction has no basis in Scripture. It is false, and in fact reveals a deep misunderstanding of the nature of the Christian life. This is not only one of the deepest misconceptions about Christianity, it is one of the most difficult to correct. It seems this type of thinking has roots in human cultures like oak trees — deep, tangled, and near-impossible to uproot. The message of the living Christ that went out into the world almost two thousand years ago was a frontal assault on this kind of thinking, and that is why the early Christians turned the world upside down. It was their overturning of this natural way of thinking that baffled and impressed their neighbors. Nothing like this had ever been seen before.
Yet, here we are all these centuries later, and we still have to reeducate every Christian generation to think biblically on this. People will attend church, hear a sermon and perhaps participate in worship, then go out and live just like their non-Christian neighbors. Sometimes you’ll hear people say, “When you leave church and get back into the ‘real’ world, here’s what you do …” It’s believed that you can experience “sacred” things in church, then you go live in the “secular” world according to different principles. This false distinction between sacred and secular is the root of this.
TAKE A FRESH LOOK AT THE SCRIPTURES
We know today that Jesus Christ is the risen, glorified, enthroned Lord of heaven and earth. That He be honored as such is completely right. We should remember, however, that this same Jesus spent approximately 30 years on earth living an ordinary human life — keeping in mind that “ordinary” for Jesus included complete sinlessness. That set Him apart, certainly, but human He was, nonetheless.
When Jesus was called to begin His mission, the Father spoke to Him at His baptism: "And behold a voice out of the heavens said, “This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well-pleased” (Matthew 3:17).
Remember, those 30 years were all lived before He preached a sermon, healed a leper, or walked on water. So far as we know, Jesus never did a miracle before He began His public ministry under the leadership of John the Baptist. Most probably, He merely did what any eldest son would have done in that culture: He worked alongside His father Joseph in the family business — basically an independent contractor, working with stone, metal, and wood.
In other words, Jesus pleased the Father by the quality of His life in the “ordinary” spheres of existence — home, family, friends, neighbors, work. Recall what we’ve seen about the our identity in Christ.
"By this will we have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all" (Hebrews 10:10).
You are a holy child of God. The word holy means “set apart.” The words sanctified, saint, and sacred are all forms of the same word root in both Greek and Hebrew. People tend to lump all these terms in the “religious” category, the category of the “sacred” we talk about in church. But this is a far greater truth than that. All these terms refer to an object that has been set apart as God’s special possession, for His exclusive use. That’s why the New Testament refers to all believers, including you, as “saints” — “holy ones.” People who have been “set apart as God’s special, beloved possessions, intended for His exclusive use.”
CLARIFY YOUR THINKING
If that’s true, it follows that everything in your life has been made holy. There’s no such thing as secular and sacred. The opposite of sacred according to its real meaning is “common” or “ordinary.” And there’s no doubt about it, you are truly uncommon if the life of Jesus Christ dwells in you. Consequently your environment becomes an uncommon, sacred environment because you are there. Jesus didn’t fear what we would call the secular world. In fact he plunged himself headfirst into it. By his presence in those environments, he made sacred those things that had been considered secular.
The idea that there’s a difference between sacred and secular in the life of a Christian is not true. You live and move and exist in Jesus Christ. Consequently, everything about your life is sacred. Our role as believers is to allow “Christ in us” to move into every sphere of our lives, bringing His influence to homes, families, businesses, governments — even churches. Christ expressing Himself through you wherever you are is the real Grace Walk.
52 Lies Heard in Church Every Sunday will be available in January. To preorder your copy now and receive free shipping, click this link: http://gracewalkresources.com/item.asp?cID=0&PID=635
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Awesomeness Steve!! Very well said and very real issue that I too struggle with at times!! Can't wait for the book!!
ReplyDeleteAs for Jesus living His life...It always amazes me that His first miracle wasn't making the blind see, lame walk, healing lepers, or raising dead...He made drinks at a party...So it could continue!!!
A.W. Tozer said that there are no wrong choices for people who are surrendered to Christ!!
Thanks for your service Steve!!
Hi Steve
ReplyDeleteThanks for your thoughtful words!
There is only one life and that is the life of Jesus and all humanity has been included. There is no separation between secular and spiritual, it’s a deception and delusion. Mankind has been saved do we want to BE who we truly are?
Titus 3:4-7
4But when the kindness of God our Savior and His love for mankind appeared, 5He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewing by the Holy Spirit, 6 whom He poured out upon us richly through Jesus Christ our Savior, 7so that being justified by His grace we would be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life.
We tend to think there are three states for a Christian's activities: 1) Godly behavior (going to church, serving, witnessing, etc.), 2) sin, and 3) everything else that is mundane but necessary (or not) for life.
ReplyDeleteAccording to God, though, there are only two active states for a believer--walking after the Spirit or walking after the flesh.
What if Paul, who used to murder Christians, is the anti-Christ?
ReplyDeleteJesus prayed to and worshipped Father God, whereas Paul--who was focused on saving a religion rather on saving souls--led us to praying to and worshipping Jesus.
The New Testament would have no contradictions if we simply believed Jesus who said that he's the son of God and Man and that Father God knew more than Jesus knew. I trust Jesus utterly. And I will never trust Paul and the Council at Nicene and all the pastors and priests who contradict Jesus by saying that Jesus is God.
I believe that Jesus is pained and horrified by our insisting on elevating him to being God--as the Egyptians did with the sons of pharaohs, so that their authority wouldn't be questioned.
As someone who has felt God's hands and witnessed God's miracles firsthand, I know that, if Jesus were God, then Father God would have revealed that truth to me.
We Christians will never be Christ followers until we truly do as Jesus did: pray to and worship Father God with all our hearts, minds, and souls; love others as ourselves; and serve and forgive everyone.