Tag Archives: Decisions

Off the cuff: The misleadings of our own understanding

Why should I go to church when it’s full of hypocrites?

In the last six days I have had this statement/question asked of me by two different people.  The first is my eighteen year old daughter; the other is a late twenty-something former student of mine who has kept in contact.  Both are Christians and both young ladies have had difficult lives to say the least.  Both want to do what is right and are looking for the sweet fellowship, support and love from brothers and sisters in Christ that we all need and desire.  Both are members of a church that for various reasons no longer offers that love, support, and fellowship to meet their needs.

Hannah, my eighteen year old daughter, recently told me that she no longer goes to church because the one she was going to is “full of hypocrites.”  She then told me that her pastor had an affair on his wife; for that reason, she was not going back to church but was going to read her Bible at home. She even added that no where in the Bible did it teach that one had to go to church.  She was totally unfamiliar with what the apostle Paul wrote: Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching (Hebrews 10:25).

Monday morning, I ran into my former student at the post office in the town where I live.  As we exchanged pleasantries, she asked me if she could ask me a personal question – she asked what I thought she should do about going to church.  She told me that she did file for divorce in May 2012 from her husband of eleven months.  When she moved back home with her infant daughter, she began attending the church where she grew up.  She had sweet memories of what it was like when she was a child and wanted her daughter to be surrounded by that kind of warmth, support, and love.

Instead, she became an object lesson for her church, was asked not to participate in (or offer support to) certain church ministries.  She was further disheartened when another young woman, divorced since January, was asked to teach a vacation Bible School class; when she asked why the pastor or youth minister why she could not help, she was not told any reason except it was not her place to question the decisions of the church leadership.  She was not angry about it, just deeply hurt.  She told me that she was done with churches since there was obviously a perceived double standard.

As we talked for another ten minutes I was asked how I would have handled the situation – the rejection of service by the leadership of the church.  I shared with her an experience I had in 1996 – I had been married for three years and had been medically discharged from the U.S. Army in March of that year.  My wife left me to move in with her old high school boyfriend, taking my children with her.  At the time, I was the song leader of a small, independent Baptist church and because of what I was going through, I was asked to immediately resign all my positions within the church.  The pastor of the church did tell me why I could no longer serve; I was told that Jesus cannot use divorced people in the ministries of the church!  For the next handful of years I struggled with church attendance, “hypocrisy” of the church, and not trust[ing] in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding (Proverbs 3:5).

Living a life that reflects God’s plan (Part 3)

For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and not to me only, but unto all them also that love his appearing (II Timothy 4:6-8).

 In the last installment of Living a life that reflect’s God’s plan, we looked at how God must have top priority in our life.  He is our creator and redeemer.  He is what brought us into existence and is there when we draw our last breath.  Too many times every one of us has placed something in front of God; we may not have planned to do that but it does happen.  The second most important relationship that Christians have is with their spouse if they are married; if unmarried, they are to seek after God and to focus on him and their earthly family.

The apostle Paul writes that if we are not married, we are not to seek to be married: Art thou bound unto a wife? seek not to be loosed. Art thou loosed from a wife? But and if thou marry, thou hast not sinned; and if a virgin marry, she hath not sinned. Nevertheless such shall have trouble in the flesh: but I spare you (I Corinthians 7:27-28). This is hard for many to accept, including myself.  Those around us, such as our family and friends, encourage us to seek that special person; even family reunions stigmatize unmarried adults by putting them at the same table with all the children.  Our movies and entertainment sends a clear message that unless we have that special someone, we are not complete. In my own life, I have rushed into relationships that were spiritually and physically unhealthy for the sake of having that “someone.”  Our churches are filled with divorcees who rushed into marriage that they sought out rather than to wait for who God would bring.

In that same passage, Paul also tells us not to seek separation from our spouses if we are married.  As I have mentioned in a previous post, I teach at a local community college and have been involved in higher education for the last nine years.  Each semester I hear stories from the students in class about their marriages, divorces, and dating habits.  Not counting those who have been victims of abuse, domestic violence, and infidelity, too many marriages are ending for the wrong reasons.  About three years ago, I actually had a man in his late 20s tell me that he and his wife of four years were getting a divorce because he wanted a dog and she was allergic to animal dander!  Older couples who have been married for twenty or more years also divorce; many claiming that they no longer know their spouse!  These couples have managed to elevate something else – kids, jobs, dogs – in the place that God had ordained for their spouse.

Paul instructs both men and women, married and unmarried, young and old, that we all have roles to fulfil in order to strengthen the family and church.  Older couples are to be the role model for younger couples; the older men teaching to the younger men what it means to be a father and husband, the older women teaching younger women what it means to be a wife and mother.

Since the early 20th Century, we have witnessed attacks on traditional marriage; most pointing out that the Bible calls for women to be submissive to their husbands. While the Bible does say this, those who complain about it never continue to read the passage where Paul instructs the husbands to love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it (Ephesians 5:25).  Men are to love their wives to the extent they should be willing to die to defend and protect her.  A godly, Bible based marriage is not one in which the husband dominates and rules over the wife, but one where both are co-equals, supporting one another, but where the man is held accountable to God.

Living a life that reflect’s God’s plan (part 1)

For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand.  I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith:  Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and not to me only, but unto all them also that love his appearing (II Timothy 4:6-8).

On May 16, 2012, I had the honor and privilege of preaching/teaching at Gospel Light Baptist Church, my family’s home church since July 2011.  My pastor’s wife sent me a text message earlier in the day asking could I possibly fill in for the pastor as he was sick and would not be able to be in church that evening.  Having been roughly ten years since I have had the opportunity to fill a pulpit, I was unsure about what to present and even more unsure about my ability to present a message in a manner that would not only be biblically sound but practical.

The next few posts will be taken from the teaching presented on May 16th.  This will be a five part series aimed at teaching God’s divine structure for our lives.  When I first began working on this message I had no idea the direction that God would take me.  As I began to research the topic of the message I began to understand that oftentimes in my own life – and usually about the time when it seems that everything is coming apart – I have neglected certain aspects of my life and have placed other things higher on my priority list than they are on God’s.  When we are focused on the here and now it is extremely easy to put things as a priority that would not even be considered as important if we were to see the big picture.

There are four additional installments of this series.  Part 2 explains why we need to make God the top priority in our lives.  In part 3 we will explore why it is important to place our spouse (or family if we are not married) as the second priority in our lives.  Part 4 explains the importance of children within the home and finally, Part 5 explains the reason why our vocation must not come before God, our spouse, or our children.

It all begins in what we consider success.  According to the Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, success is defined as “a degree or measure of succeeding, a favorable or desired outcome, the attainment of wealth, favor, or eminence.”  With this in mind, there have been many scams claiming on how to help us attain the successful life that is supposedly at our fingertips.  Walk down any self-help aisle of your favorite bookstore, or do a search at Amazon or other book sellers on the Internet and what you find is that for around $20.00 you can buy a book that will tell you how to become wealthy, or lose weight, or to even gain popularity.

We see what a successful life means in the eyes of this world in which we live by the last portion of the definition of the word success – the attainment of wealth, favor, or eminence.  How many people have sacrificed their families, their relationship with God, and in some cases their eternal soul in order to achieve the world’s view of success?  Instead of focusing on the big picture, they simply see the world around them and focus on the things that this world tells us is important or what it takes to be successful.  In my own life, I thought that an advanced degree, a job with a lot of promotion potential, a large house, money in the bank, and all the related things were important and would define me as being successful; I was even working 16 to 18 hour workdays trying to attain those things I thought would define me as being successful.

Several times we are warned in the Bible not to look for these earthly treasures, but to seek the treasures in Heaven – you could restate it by saying we should not seek the accolades of men or to be successful according to how the world defines success; instead, we should seek the approval of God upon our lives.  God’s word clearly sets the order as to how we can achieve the ultimate success – hearing God tell us “well done thou good and faithful servant…” (Matthew 25:21).  What was it that gave the apostle Paul the ability to boldly claim that he had fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith:  Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness (II Timothy 4:7)?  God actually has such a plan to help us live productive and successful lives according to his plan for prioritizing all that we do so that we, also, may have such confidence.  All we have to do is to recognize this order that God has set before us and allow it to become the way we live our lives.