THE ORGANIZED CHURCH & THE JESUS MOVEMENT
FOR AUDIO VERSION CLICK
HERE.
This week I want to clarify some of my
thoughts on the organized Church today. I
know some of you no doubt feel that I am
against the Church, but this is not true. You
see, I am striving to understand what Jesus
intended and what Jesus did, in fact, launch
as the church of Jesus. Much of the time we
have added man-made doctrines and methods to
His teachings. These doctrines and methods
may be good in themselves, but Jesus had a
better idea in mind. It's very important to
say that I am not against the organized
Church, but seek to support it in its many
ministries and to encourage leaders and
laymen alike to get back to the heart of
Jesus as they conduct their Church ministries.
When I teach what Jesus said and did with His
disciples and what He intended with respect
to the future disciples of His disciples, it
is clearly different from what we know and
love today in the Church. And as I teach
these things the contrasts are very clear,
therefore it may seem that I am blasting the
Church in the process. That is not my heart
at all. I see the organized big C Church in
much the same way as the early Synagogues and
the Temple in Jerusalem. When you frame the
Church in this way, it becomes clearer how
the Church fits within the Jesus movement.
The Synagogue and Temple were the mass
meeting places where believers would come to
pray, confess, offer sacrifices, worship and
hear the written Word of God read each week.
The Synagogue had instruction for children
through adults. Jesus and His disciples
attended Synagogue, never spoke against it,
didn't seek to change it, and didn't start
another one to compete with it. There just
wasn't any bashing of the Synagogue.
The Church today is the same as the
Synagogue. It's a place where believers can
gather in mass to pray, worship, hear
teaching and enroll their children in some
sort of spiritual instruction. It serves the
consumer needs of the people. The mega
churches provide programs that are unequaled
and very helpful, especially to the needs of
families.
So, the big C Church has its place in the
plan of God, however it's too easy to miss
what kind of thing Jesus intended. I call it
the little c church. The term "church" is not
a special or holy word as many believe and
teach. It literally means "called out ones"
and was used to describe city council
meetings or any kind of assembly where people
are called out to meet for a purpose. It
simply is a gathering of followers of Jesus.
The simple gathering of followers of Jesus on
any day and at any location is a church.
These gatherings Jesus launched revolved
around four ingredients-fellowship, food,
prayer and the apostles' teachings (teachings
and principles of Jesus).
The big C Church by its very nature tends
toward making most people spectators; the
little c church is all about relational
participation. The big C Church is founded on
a set of beliefs or doctrines-a system of
do's and don'ts; the little c church is
founded completely on a personal relationship
with Jesus and as we gather seeing Jesus show
up. The big C Church is a place where you go;
the little c church is not a place to go, but
wherever you go you are to be the church-the
gathering in the name and power of Jesus.
The big C Church is an organization; the
little c church is a live organism-organic in
every way.
Check out these observations:
FIRST-the church of Jesus is a movement. You
cannot get your arms around it, visit it, or
even see it. It's like the wind. You can't
see the wind, but you can definitely see the
effects of it. It's not a monument that one
builds; it's a movement around Jesus that is
contagious and must be caught. It's not a
denominational or religious organization to
be joined; it's a living movement through
which Jesus captures your heart.
SECOND-the church of Jesus is everywhere and
all around us-wherever followers of Jesus
gather together in His name. No matter the
location (coffee shop, living room, bar,
race-track, battlefield, school, office), no
matter the culture (Buddhist, Jewish, Muslim,
Hindu, Christian and even agnostic), and no
matter the level of society (the powerful or
the poor), you can find the Jesus movement
making a difference in His name.
THIRD-the church of Jesus is a relational,
participatory dynamic where people encounter
Jesus and walk with Him together. The Jesus
movement is not driven by a certain doctrinal
system; it's driven by a real, personal
relationship with Jesus, Himself.
FOURTH-the church of Jesus is out of
control-man's control-and under the
leadership of Jesus, the Head. Maybe the one
most deadly move we tend to make in life is
to be "in control".
We are given a strong clue to what Jesus came
to do in His prayer to the Father in John 17.
He said, "Father, I have finished the work
you gave me to do." Let's listen in own
this prayer: "I have manifested Your name
to the men whom You gave Me out of the world;
they were Yours and You gave them to Me, and
they have kept Your word. Now they have come
to know that everything You have given Me is
from You; for the words which You gave Me I
have given to them; and they received them
and truly understood that I came forth from
You, and they believed that You sent Me. But
now I come to You; and these things I speak
in the world so that they may have My joy
made full in themselves. I have given them
Your word." Jesus came into this world to
invest His life in a few men and now He sends
us out to do the same. "As You sent Me
into the world, I also have sent them into
the world."
This is the essence of the church Jesus came
to build-a movement consisting of a few
followers who gather in His name in such a
way that they are able to know the Father
personally and intimately. He says, "I do
not ask on behalf of these alone, but for
those also who believe in Me through their
word; that they may all be one; even as You,
Father, are in Me and I in You, that they
also may be in Us, so that the world may
believe that You sent Me."
So, are you caught up in the dynamic,
participatory movement of Jesus-being the
church-or are you satisfied with being a
spectator-going to church?