Posts

Showing posts from September, 2021

Evaluation

 Yesterday, we started talking about what we, as the church, do.  Namely, Jesus gave us the mission of making disciples.  Though we didn't talk about it directly, we need to remember that we are disciples if we are going to successfully make disciples.  You can check out the message here  and see the outline of stages of spiritual growth that we used to think about what marks spiritual maturity.  As I said in the message, the specific stages and characteristics do not come from a specific passage in the Bible.  Rather, they are a system developed by Jim Putman and others from the New Testament as a whole. I believe the hardest part of using this outline, or any other for that matter, is accurately evaluating our own level of spiritual maturity.  A word of warning here: we must ask questions from time to time and consider how we have grown, are growing, and need to grow but we can easily get lost in self-examination and miss many opportunities we have been given to make disciples an

The Army that Cannot Lose

This might turn into a regular thing!  Those few of you who have followed my blogging habits over the years already know that consistency has been an issue.  Yesterday I preached on the Church being an army sent out and empowered by God.  I was pretty clear that our objective was not taking over land, culture, or government but, if you're concerned, you can check the whole thing out here.   The thought that Jesus' army cannot lose has caused me some further thought. What does winning and losing look like?  Jesus said that the gates of hell would not prevail against the church.  This led to my statement of invincibility for the church as a whole.  Individual members are vulnerable to Satan's attacks but the Church is sustained by and empowered by God.  As such, our ultimate victory is already secured.  Jesus wins.  Satan is defeated.  We will live forever with God.  When we think of casualties in war, we think of soldiers wounded and lost.  Spiritually, we might suffer wound

Pruning

 As with most Sundays now, I got to preach yesterday.  In a series on the Church, I took up the image of the vine and the branches from John 15.  If you're looking for extra credit, or even just curious, you can check it out here .  There seems to always be more to say and today it occurred to me that I could write it down and share it.  You might forgive me for forgetting.  It would appear that my last post was a day or two before the 2016 presidential election! Back to pruning.  In the sermon, I called attention to the fact that the passage says that God prunes every branch that produces fruit (every Christian) but I didn't have much time to explain what that looks like.  Three areas of pruning jump to mind: sin, pursuits that steal our attention from God, and good and godly things that distract us from God's main purpose for us. Sin.  Our base nature is selfish.  I want what I want and I want it now.  This will always draw us away from God and others.  As Christians, we