Sunday, June 21, 2009

Infantilism

INFANTALISM. You may have never heard of this before but it’s a danger for many Christians – Here’s what it is…

The inability of a Christian to spiritually feed oneself, resulting in an unhealthy dependence on supplemental nourishment from pre-digested food (sermons, books, study guides, etc.).
Instead of becoming Self-Feeders, lots of Christians become dependent on good Bible teachers to feed them. Now when you are a spiritual infant, that’s great. But you don’t want to stay an infant. You don’t want to keep eating pre-digested meals. You don’t want to become dependent on pastors and commentaries to study the Bible for you and tell you what it means. You need to learn to feed yourself.

Pastor Willie O’Burke
, a church planter in Greeley, Colorado, refers to those believers who want to come and sit in their pew and be fed gourmet spiritual meals every Sunday as “pew leeches.” They are just taking up space. They are not making any contribution to the Body. They come to church to be fed, and they are quick to complain if they feel that they are not getting enough pre-digested spiritual food to eat.

Pew leeches will never become growing, healthy Christians because they don’t learn to study God’s Word for themselves. Many churches are failing to teach believers how to feed themselves. Instead, they are teaching them to grow fat on a diet of pre-digested spiritual sermons which leave them spiritually weak and dependent. “We are never doing people in the church a favor by encouraging them to come and just listen and take notes … if we want them to grow.”

Imagine if you are out to dinner tonight at Outback Steak House with your family and you see my wife and me and my daughter eating there too. Suppose as you look over, you see that I have ordered a nice big juicy steak and my wife is cutting it up into little pieces for me. She then takes my fork and picks up a piece of meat and places it in my mouth. If you were to observe this from your table, you would not think that was cute. You would think that there was something wrong with me. If my wife is feeding me like an infant, you would think that I had maturity problems. If you looked at my outward appearance, you would think that I was physically mature, but when my wife feeds me, you realize that I am not.

Wayne Cordeiro, founding pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu, Hawaii, is devoted to training believers to spend daily time with God in His Word. He emphasizes the importance of being mentored daily by the Holy Spirit through the Word. By the use of analogy, he pictures himself wanting to learn to play the guitar and contrasts the results from a group class once each week at a community college versus personal mentoring by Jazz great, Joe Pass, for one hour each day. After one year, anyone would be able to recognize that he did not learn to play at a community college. He learned from the master.

Applying this concept to your spiritual development, it is obvious that there is a huge difference between learning the Bible once a week in a group class (church service) or the Holy Spirit mentoring through the Word for one hour each day. At the Exponential Conference in 2007, Wayne affirmed, “The best things we’ve ever done for our church is to teach people to feed themselves.”

Mark Atteberry asks the question “With all the new Bible translations, software packages, study aids, teaching conferences, and wonderful Christian books that are available nowadays, how is it possible that a conscientious Christian could be malnourished? Unless he’s sitting around waiting to be spoon-fed. My advice to any starving Christian is to pick up your fork and eat!” (The 10 Dumbest Things Christians Do, p 88)

Wolfgang Simson believes that the way to keep disciples immature is through teaching. “The teacher’s job is to teach them how to teach, and not endlessly do it for them. This, in fact, is a way of artificially keeping people in perpetual immaturity, prolonging their baby status in the name of great and wonderful discipleship teaching.” (Houses That Change the World, p 105)

We need to be students of the Word of God and study it for ourselves. Don’t let your pastor or some pastor on the radio or anyone else do that for you. Learn to study it for yourself. Be like the Bereans in Acts 17. Luke describes the Jews in Berea, “Now these Jews were more noble than those in Thessalonica; they received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so” (v 11). They didn’t just accept Paul’s teaching, they checked the Scriptures for themselves. They didn’t just eat what Paul taught, but they taught themselves from God’s Word.

Here’s what Paul tells Timothy in 2 Tim 2:15 – “Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.”

1. Be Diligent! – Do your best! Focus. Give it your full effort. Pursue it. Make it your priority. Don’t put it off – don’t delay it. Be diligent to do your best in your pursuit of being an approved worker. Take effort.

We are all busy – and each one of us must discipline ourselves to continually be feeding on God’s Word. Like the wise man who built his house on the solid rock, this demands work. It isn’t easy. And that’s why so many Christians neglect the study of God’s Word.

R. C. Sproul recognizes this so well – He says, “Here then is the real problem of our negligence. We fail in our duty to study God’s Word not so much because it is difficult to understand, not so much because it is dull and boring, but because it is work. Our problem is not a lack of intelligence or a lack of passion. Our problem is that we are lazy.”

We choose to neglect the intake of God’s Word because we are unwilling to put forth the effort. Paul says, "Be diligent...." Do your best! Give it your best effort.

2. Rightly Handle the Word! – Be precise! Be accurate. Don’t guess what it means. Study it.

Let me give you the three principles I learned for accurately studying the Bible –
1. Context
2. Context
3. Context

Study the passage in its original context. Ask, "What did it mean to its original hearers? How would they have understood this passage? What was the historical background? What was the cultural setting?"

Be a student involves asking questions as you read! That’s the difference between really studying the passage and just reading the passage.

What questions should you ask? Start with some really basic questions…
  • Who?
  • What?
  • Where?
  • When?
  • Why?
  • How?
Here’s a basic principle as you study the Bible and ask questions as you read…“If the plain sense makes common sense – seek no other sense, for it will be nonsense.” – Dr. Curtis Mitchell

You can also ask these C.A.S.E. questions. Is there…
  • a Command to obey?
  • an Attitude to adopt?
  • a Sin to avoid?
  • an Example to follow?
If you ask these questions as you study God's Word in context, you will discover the truth of the passage. Then you can work to apply it to your life.

When I was in college I learned 5 ways to really get a grip on God’s Word. If you want to be approved by God – grasp the Word of God and live it out in your life.

Here are 5 ways to GRASP GOD’S WORD…
  1. Hear it regularly.
  2. Read it daily.
  3. Memorize it accurately.
  4. Meditate on it fully.
  5. Study it thoroughly.
How can we do this? We need to be diligent. We need to give it our best effort.

HEAR
+ Attend church weekly where you can hear it being taught. Come prepared to hear what God wants to teach you. Prepare your heart to hear from God.
+ Listen to God's Word on your iPod.

READ
+ A USA Today poll showed only 11% of Americans read the Bible every day. More than half read it less than once a month or never at all. When Jesus said, “Man does not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God” (Mt 4:4), He certainly intended for us to read every word.

MEMORIZE
+ Find verses that apply to the issues you are facing and right them down and memorize them. When you store God’s Word in your mind, it is available for the Holy Spirit to take and bring it to your attention when you need it most.
+ You can remember 100% of the verses that you memorize.

MEDITATE
+ Ps 1:1-2, "How blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, Nor stand in the path of sinners, Nor sit in the seat of scoffers! But his delight is in the law of the LORD, and in His law he meditates day and night."
+ To "meditate" is the picture of a cow chewing its cud, digesting the food over and over and over again.
+ When you meditate, you think about what it says and what it means over and over and over again.

STUDY
+ Ask questions as you read and find the answers to the questions.
+ Look at cross-references to clarify the meaning.
+ Discover how the verses tie together with the theme or purpose of the entire chapter, and then the entire book.

HEAR – READ – MEMORIZE – MEDITATE – STUDY God’s Word!

You don't have to be infantile in your spiritual life. Be a student of the Bible. Saturate yourself with the Bible.

Become a Self-Feeder!

(Infantilism is one of the dangers to Missional Christianity that I wrote about in my doctoral dissertation; other obstacles include Extractionalism, Attractionalism, Clericalism, Mega-ism, and Consumerism. Portions of this post were included in the message I taught at CBC Arise on June 21, 2009)

Saturday, June 20, 2009

What If?

David Garrison describes church planting movements (CPMs) as "a rapid multiplication of indigenous churches planting churches that sweeps through a people group or population segment." After studying lots and lots of these movements worldwide, they've observed that church plating movements always outstrip the population growth rate as they race toward reaching the entire people group.

One thing that is happening in CPMs is that they do not simply add new churches. Instead, they multiply. Surveys of CPMs indicated that virtually every church is engaged in starting multiple new churches. They are satisfied with nothing less than a vision to reach their entire people group or city - every man, woman and child.

What if your church decided to reach every man, woman, and child in your city? What would it take? How many churches could be birthed if you started making disciples who make disciples who make disciples who make disciples?

What if you partnered together with other churches to start multiplying disciplemakers and churches all over the place? What if you started inviting other churches to join you to disciple your local neighborhoods? and to disciple your city?

What if the momentum of reproducing churches outstripped the ability of your church to control it? What if the making of disciplemakers and multiplying of churches became the ONE THING that every believer in your city was committed to? How many lives would be transformed by the power of the gospel?


What if...?

Friday, June 19, 2009

What Stops Church Multiplication? Disobedient Christians

When disciplemaking stops, new churches stop being birthed. Jesus told His disciples to make disciples (Matthew 28:19-20). This required going, baptizing, and teaching to obey. When we fail to teach obedience to Christ's commands, disciplemaking stops. When disciplemaking stops, church multiplication stops.

Disobedient Christians hinder the advancement of the kingdom. Disobedient Christians stop the church.

Obedient Christians make disciples who make disciples who make disciples. Obedient Christians reproduce obedient Christians.

What would it look like to teach others to obey everything Jesus commanded?

What would it take to start teaching your family: If the Bible says "Do it," then you must do it. If the Bible says "Don't do it," then you don't do it?

What would happen if Christians started passing everything they learned on to someone else as soon as possible?

What if obedience-based discipleship was the norm for all Christians? What if every Christian became an obedient disciplemaker? Churches would start all over the place as disciplemaking communities multiplied!

Thursday, June 18, 2009

The Key to Multiplying Churches: Obedient Christians

Jesus told His disciples to make disciples who make disciples who make disciples who make disciples... (Matt 28:19-20). I am a disciple of Jesus today because of Christians who obeyed Jesus' command. There would be more Christians and more churches if more Christians obeyed Jesus.

I've been thinking about this a lot. If I were to start Lake Hills Church again, I would focus on making obedient disciplemakers.

Disciplemaking isn't optional for Christians. It is essential. But somehow, I act like it's okay to disobey. In fact, most churches tolerate disobedience.

I wonder what God thinks of disobedient pastors, disobedient elders, and disobedient Christians.

The key to multiplying churches is obedient Christians who make disciplemakers.

Think about your church (if you belong to one) - whether there are 40, 400, or 4,000 members. Imagine if everyone was obedient to the Great Commission and started this week to be a disciplemaker. What would happen if every Christian in your church just obeyed this one command of Jesus to make disciples? What would happen if 50% of them actually obeyed the Great Commission and started making disciples?

How would your church be changed? How would your city be changed?

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

God Sent You Here!

"If you are a Christian in New York City, the reason you are here is because God sent you here. You are part of His story." - David Bisgrove, March 29, 2009
Those words in a message at the West Side Evening Worship of Redeemer Presbyterian Church capture the essence of Missional Christianity. Every believer is sent on mission by God. It's no accident that you are where you are. You've been sent there by God. Jesus said in John 20:21, "As the Father sent Me, so I send you."

Many young Christians (as well as older Christians) wrestle with God's will for their life. I learned many years ago that it's not about me or God's will for my life. I've been sent on mission with God, for God and by God!

My son lives in New York City. I live in Seattle. Why? Because God sent us here! Our responsibility as followers of Jesus is to align ourselves with God's mission in the zip code, community, neighborhood, building, or block where we live. Missionaries are those sent on mission - God sent Jesus as a missionary to this world - and He sends each believer as a missionary wherever you live.

What does it look like to live as if God sent you here?