When you try your best, but you don’t succeed
When you get what you want, but not what you need
When you feel so tired, but you can’t sleep
Stuck in reverse

And the tears come streaming down your face
When you lose something you can’t replace
When you love someone, but it goes to waste
Could it be worse?

Lights will guide you home
And ignite your bones
And I will try to fix you

So go the lyrics of the famous song by Coldplay. So, often, goes the thought process of many well meaning Christians who want to work in housing schemes and council estates. We get so swamped by people and their myriad problems that we can easily become desperate to find solutions for them. This is compounded when our ‘advice’ is ignored or doesn’t work and we can slip into spiritual depression. It’s not a terrible thing to want to help the broken but it is a dangerous thing, both for ourselves and those we are trying to ‘help’, if we forget that it is only grace that can bring real, lasting change into our hearts and lives. I recently spoke at the RTU Conference in Liverpool on these verses from Titus 2:11-15:

11 For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people, 12 training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright, and godly lives in the present age, 13 waiting for our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ, 14 who gave himself for us to redeem us from all lawlessness and to purify for himself a people for his own possession who are zealous for good works. 15 Declare these things; exhort and rebuke with all authority. Let no one disregard you.

Paul has been telling Titus to urge his people to lead Godly lives that are an example for other to follow. He is to teach what is in accord with healthy doctrine and he is to be an example by doing good in his life (Titus 2:1-10). But in the above verses he is to remember that it is grace that saves, not doctrine. We need to be reminded that people will only begin to change when we resist the urge to try to fix them ourselves and instead point them to the grace of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. Sometimes, we’re so desperate to see people change that it drives us to distraction when they just won’t follow our simple advice to sort themselves out. Yet, consider the following:

..in many churches advice often masquerades as the gospel. Messages filled with advice to help people improve their lives or turn over a new leaf are in contradiction to the nature of the gospel—news we must respond to, not insight we should consider heeding. Church leaders offering advice and calling it gospel will not develop transformed disciples. Worse, they will confuse people as to the true nature and content of the Christian faith. In churches where transformation is most likely to occur, the gospel is prominent and advice diminishes.

Our job as believers of every ilk, whether we’re planters, pastors or youth workers is to ‘speak’ healthy doctrine into the lives of those around us. That means constantly pointing them toward grace and let the Holy Spirit get on with His job. Notice in the text that the grace that save us also works to change us. Grace does not just get us through the door of salvation, it holds our hand and walks us through the trials of life and right into glory.

For those of us struggling in the ministry, it is a great comfort to know that the only thing that is going to transform our communities is the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. His work is not reliant on our good intentions, great plans, training programmes, amazing discipleship and wonderful advice. It rest simply on His amazing grace. When we let Him take the strain an amazing thing happens – it frees us from the stress of ‘performance’ or getting sucked into the chaotic vortex of scheme life and relationships. It is only by His grace are we going to win back out communities one painful, stuttering, chaotic soul at a time.

We press on.

Christ Centred Womanhood

Posted: May 20, 2012 by mezmcconnell in Uncategorized

see here. for a definition of this.

Also on the same blog is an interesting article concerning children. see here.

A really good article from Johnathan Leeman at 9marks. check it out here.

By Andy Constable

One of the words that is dirty among the newer generation of Christians is the word ‘doctrine’. Christians of my generation think that doctrine hinders our ‘worship’ of God rather than helps. Doctrine is something that we don’t have to think about because worship is more about our experience of God with our emotions than what we think about with our minds. However, the Bible is very clear that doctrine is very important. Here are some reasons why.

Firstly, God cares about the truth. God calls us to love the truth about him in 2 Thessalonians 2:10. Jesus says that the truth will set us free in John 14:6.  God wants everyone to come to a knowledge of the truth in 1 Timothy 2:4. God reveals his wrath against those who suppress the truth in Romans 1:18. And Jesus says that he will send the spirit of truth to us in John 16:13. Therefore, God deeply cares how we view him and how we worship him. This is where doctrine helps us out. It helps us get a grasp on biblical truth and how God wants us to see him. Without doctrine we would simply create a God that matches the idols of our hearts and not the truth about him.

Further, everyone has a doctrine whether they consciously think about it or not. The word doctrine literally means ‘what is taught’. It is the set of beliefs that a person (or a church) holds on who God is and what he is like. Every person is forming a view of God as they understand it and by necessity teach others because people are constantly sharing their views about God with people around them. Everyone has a doctrine and so it’s deeply important that we think about how we are portraying God to those around us.

Secondly, if everyone has a doctrine then surely it’s important to have good doctrine. Paul writes to Titus: “He must hold firmly to the trustworthy message as it has been taught, so that he can encourage others by sound doctrine and refute those who oppose it.” Paul encourages Timothy to be very careful what he teaches others about God. He says refute false teachers and encourage others by sound doctrine. How can we have good doctrine? We need to study God’s perfect and infallible Word. This brings in another word that is dirty these days and that is ‘study’. It takes disciplined and patient study to grasp the truths about God. The problem is that we live in the ‘McDonalds generation’. We want a life changing devotion in 15 minutes everyday. We open our Bibles and get bored when nothing grips us after 2 paragraphs. But, disciplined study is good and helps us build good doctrine that honours the Lord.

Thirdly, our emotional experiences are wasted unless they are based on biblical truth. Regardless of what we think or feel, there is not authentic worship of God without a right knowledge of God. As John Piper writes: “The apex of glorifying God is enjoying him with the heart. But this is an empty emotionalism where that joy is not awakened and sustained by true views of God for who he really is.” God is to be honoured as he is revealed to us in scripture. If the truth of God from his word isn’t driving your worship then you are worshipping another god with your emotions. It is wasted energy and doesn’t bring glory to the Lord.

Then there are those who love doctrine more than God. They use it to boost their intellect and don’t allow it to impact their hearts. What I mean by that is that the knowledge of God doesn’t move their souls towards a greater love of Christ. This is very dangerous because those who love doctrine as an end in itself become self-righteous and disconnected from God emotionally. We are to worship God with our hearts and minds. Anything that we learn about God should fuel us to love God more and glorify him with our lives. When you look at the Apostles in Acts they were men who knew God’s Word very well. They taught the people the Old Testament and the truth that it points people to Christ. They knew their theology and doctrine and that set them on fire to share the gospel and glorify God with their lives.

The goal of revelation from God’s word is to change our lives. Religion through doctrine won’t change your life. It can command us to love God but only the truth of the gospel of grace set on fire by the spirit of God can change our hearts to love righteousness. We are to have doctrinal depth but revival happens as people are set on fire by these truths. We need to feel them in the very core of our souls and this causes us to love Christ more than anything else in our worship. Don’t reduce doctrine to just your minds but allow it to affect your hearts! Tim Keller writes this:

If we don’t find that our affections have been moved away from earthly idols toward God, we haven’t worshipped….if I leave Sunday mornings having had no emotional connection whatsoever, I haven’t worshipped. I must allow my heart to be touched to worship.”

In conclusion, doctrine is very important to God because he cares about the truth, and commands us to care about it also. Every person has a belief about God and the Bible is clear that we need to have good doctrine in order to worship God with mind, heart and soul. Our emotional experiences will be empty unless they are sustained by true views of God. Therefore, let doctrine fuel your worship AND let the truth about God set you on fire to treasure God more than anything else!

Thomas Chalmers, the well-known Scottish preacher, in his famous sermon, “The Expulsive Power of a New Affection,” says it all: “Seldom do any of our habits or flaws disappear by a process of extinction through reasoning or “by the mere force of mental determination.” Reason and willpower are not enough. “But what cannot be destroyed may be dispossessed… The only way to dispossess [the heart] of an old affection is by the expulsive power of a new one.” A young man, for example, may “cease to idolize pleasure, but it is only because the idol of wealth has become the stronger and gotten the ascendancy,” and is enabling him to discipline himself for prosperous business. “Even the love of money ceases to have the mastery over the heart” if it’s drawn into another world of ideology and politics, “and he is now lorded over by the love of power.” But “there is not one of these [identity] transformations in which the heart is left without an object. Its desire for one particular object may be conquered, but . . . its desire for having some one object” of absolute love “is unconquerable.” It is only when admitted “into the number of God’s children through the faith that is in Jesus Christ [that] the spirit of adoption is poured out upon us. It is then that the heart, brought under the mastery of one great and predominate affection, is delivered from the tyranny of its former desires, in the only way that deliverance is possible.” So it isn’t enough to hold out a “mirror of its imperfections” to your soul. It’s not enough to lecture your conscience. Rather, you must “try every legitimate method of finding access to your hearts for the love of him who is greater than the world.”

There are two kinds of people in our churches. Those who are following Jesus and those who are not. If a person is not allowing Jesus to define their life, submitting to His will and His authority and living in a way that puts His priorities at the centre of who they are and what they do, the chances are that they are not Christians. We don’t get saved by giving it all to Jesus. Giving it all to Jesus shows that he has really saved us.

For a fuller discussion on this topic, Tim Keller has written an excellent article here  at the “Gospel Centred Discipleship” site.

Because church planting seems to be “in” at the moment, there seems to be an endless supply of young men (and old) putting themselves forward as “planters”. Interestingly, very few feel “called” to housing schemes/council estates (although a few of us in the UK are seeing a slow but steady turn around in this). Perhaps the most popular question I get from people is: “How did you know that God called you to plant/revitalise churches?” The answer? I didn’t have the first clue.

Scott Thomas from Acts 29 has produced a list of 20 attributes to look for in a church planter. You can read the article here. If I was to list my top 10 attributes for a scheme/estate/favela planter, they would, in no particular order, be:

  1. A deep and unswerving faith in and love for Christ as shown by a healthy personal, spiritual prayer/devotional life.
  2. A visionary leader able to think 5 years ahead but also humble enough to let the Spirit lead and change any plan in a moment.
  3. Able to preach and apply God’s Word simply and clearly.
  4. A quick thinking, adaptable, entrepreneur.
  5. Able to draw people to himself.
  6. A heart for evangelism and mission.
  7. A deeply committed and loving  husband of a biblically supportive and hospitable wife.
  8. Courageous with a spirit of perseverance and balls of steel.
  9. Mentally stable (ish) and not easily disappointed and distracted by periods of small and/or no obvious numerical growth.
  10. Must have a love of doctrine and theology with a particular understanding of the importance of a good ecclesiology in order to grow a healthy, biblically sound local body.

Scott’s article is a must read for those interested in church planting. However, I sometimes question if I had gone through an Acts29 type interview process a decade ago, would I have “passed”? It’s a good and helpful thing to do but we must also remember that God uses some of the most unlikeliest people in history to achieve His purposes. These processes are, I think, necessary guides in an area swarming with so many false starts and poorly thought out projects. Many men have been burned by the thought that they could plant a church and, once started, discovered just how much a war of attrition it can be. My worry is that we can over professionalise this area, particularly in my patch of the church planting world. I couldn’t even get a job stacking shelves in Sainsbury’s 15 years ago. That’s how unemployable I was. Yet, a decade and a half later I am thankful that God found a use for me by using latent gifts I never knew I had for the building up of His kingdom.

When I consider some of the members of my team (pre interns, interns and core team), pretty much all of them were (and are) a “risk”. I don’t imagine more than 2 of them would “make it” past the interview stage for most middle class churches hiring staff. I remember in Brasil when we grew a team of 12 full-time workers for our church and street child ministry out there. They were like the Brasilian dirty dozen – a biggest bunch of misfits and biblical illiterates you could never hope to find. A local church pastor asked me privately: “Mez, why do you employ these people when there are so many better candidates in the church?” My reply was simple: “Look who we’re trying to reach, Pastor. I’m not trying to reach good people. I’m trying to reach those that society has written off. And who better to do that than Christians that the church would not even consider ‘fit for service’. God has sent me the perfect team.” And I was right.

I know that the attributes of a team player is far different from the attributes of a lead planter. Don’t get me wrong – my standards are high and if you work for me then you will be pushed to the limit. My point is in housing schemes we just have to look a little bit deeper and see a little bit farther when we consider who may or may not be suitable. That’s why we have our three-tier structure in place. I am not saying we have it right and it is definitely not fail safe (but no system is) but we are constantly learning and evolving our processes as we succeed and fail.

In the UK, if you are asking this question then I recommend you talk to your pastor and you contact ACTS29WE. They have an intense interview process which, if nothing else, will crystallise your theology and help you discover where your gift set might best used for God’s glory. Use the tools on offer for us today but remember they are a guide and not the final answer for your life. If you think you want to plant or work in housing schemes contact me personally. We offer onsite, first hand ministry experience with ongoing evaluation, which hand in hand with the Acts29WE process (which we would recommend you do) pretty much offers one of the most rigorous procedures in the UK. If you are not in Scotland I can put you in touch with some good guys in pretty much every part of the UK. If you survive all that then you definitely fulfill the criteria of number 8 above!

 

The issue, as per usual, is all over the media once again. Hats off to the homosexual lobby for keeping this issue alive. I read somewhere that there are less homosexuals in our country than evangelicals, but whilst we all waste time fighting about hymn books and the use of drums in worship, they have mobilised behind a common cause to great effect. Many Christians are confused at worst, and ill-informed (biblically) at best when it comes to some of the nuances of the current debate.

Christianity Today have written an article showing some of the demographics and cultural changes in Evangelical Christians toward the issue (particularly the young). It is worth a look here.

The White Horse Inn have produced a thought provoking and stimulating paper discussing some of the nuances of the debate. Read it here . Consider the following quote as an example:

Same-sex marriage makes sense if you assume that the individual is the center of the universe, that God—if he exists—is there to make us happy, and that our choices are not grounded in a nature created by God but in arbitrary self-construction. To the extent that this sort of “moralistic-therapeutic-deism” prevails in our churches, can we expect the world to think any differently? If we treat God as a product we sell to consumers for their self-improvement programs and make personal choice the trigger of salvation itself, then it may come as a big surprise (even contradiction) to the world when we tell them that truth (the way things are) trumps feelings and personal choice (what we want to make things to be).

They then produced an extremely helpful follow up paper here on how to respond “Christianly” to the issue. Highly recommended! Read Part II here.

The Blazing Center take a different approach. There is a short essay here by Stephen Altrogge on what to do when people put “story above scripture”. Worth reading here.

The Gospel Coalition (Justin Taylor) have produced a series of four DVD clips and various articles and helpful resources on their site. Take your time ploughing through this lot here. Highly Recommended.

Likewise, EPM (Eternal Perspective Ministries) with Randy Alcorn have a whole host of pdf and video resources on the topic on their site here.

Kevin De Young has given 5 reasons why Christians should continue to oppose gay marriage here.

Finally, from a non-Christian perspective, The Daily Telegraph had an interesting take on President Obama’s recent announcement on the issue. Read it here.

I continue to pray for faithfulness and deep, gospel driven, biblical thought as we seek to engage with these issues and apply them to our own contexts.

This is a conference for those working in inner city areas, council estates and housing schemes. Check out their website here. This is a preview of their conference this week where I will be speaking twice. Please pray for it and for the many faithful pastors, evangelists and gospel workers in the UK.

What is required are more gospel centred, Bible teaching churches. End of.