I recently attended a regional Acts29 church planting event. It was the second one I have been to. You can read about the one I attended last year here.
The guest speaker was Dr. John Hannah from Dallas Theological Seminary. He spoke about spiritual formation, and specifically, how to overcome sin in our lives.
A few things he said rang so true in my life that it was like the dawn rising in my life. Below are these things. Matt Chandler spoke as well, which was excellent. Although he is a Calvinist, he may be one of the most creative and thoughtful mega-church pastors of this generation. I will make a post tomorrow about what he said.
But here is some of what Dr. Hannah said:
A Popular Christian Lie
He said, “Someone once told me—and if I could remember who it was I would shoot them—that the longer you are a Christian, the easier it gets.”
Dr. Hannah is right. That is an outright lie. If we are really making progress in the Christian life, it gets harder and harder. Spiritual attacks become more frequent. Temptations become more powerful. The unanswered questions become more numerous.
Sure, there are a lot of positives and benefits to following Jesus, but we should never tell someone that becoming a Christian will solve all their problems. It won’t. Sure, it solves some, but in many ways, being a Christian introduces more problems than it solves.
The Christian’s Nine Lines
Second, generally, when people draw the progress of the spiritual life, they put a cross on the left side, and heaven on the right side, and a squiggly line between the two that goes up and down, hopefully trending upward.
Dr. Hannah said that in his observations, there should be nine lines, one each for love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (Gal 5:22-23).
Notice the things that are not on this list: Bible reading, church attendance, tithing, etc.
Sure, these things may be present as a result of some of these nine areas, but the truth is that someone can read through the entire Bible every day, give 100% of their income to God, and attend church every day of the week, but be failures in all nine of the things on this list.
So where are these nine things on your chart?
Clearings in the Rain Forest
Dr. Hannah likens the Christian life to a rain forest. When you first become a Christian, and you fly over the rain forest of your life, it is thousands of square miles of impassible and inhabitable jungle, full of twisted vines, rotting leaves, and deadly predators. But as you make progress, and continue to fly over your life, you begin to see clearings appear.
You are not sure why those clearings are there, or what they will be used for, but they appear, and over time, get bigger and bigger. Then organized buildings and roads appear. And areas of the jungle become useful, habitable, and productive.
Is the rain forest ever completely cleared? No. There will always be areas of jungle that remain. Also, everyone’s jungle is quite different. Just because a clearing appears in a certain area of my life does not mean that same clearing will appear in the lives of others. That area of their life may never get cleared in their entire lives. But that is because the master planner knows what he is doing, and knows what he needs.
Waiting for a Fall
Finally, he said that when you grow in your mental knowledge of truth, but not in your participation of that truth, it’s just a matter of time until you fall into grievous sin.
Yes and Amen.
Jim says
Another good post. The first one really hit home with me and my wife. Thanks for continuing the discussion on the church. A sad thing we have an excellent pastor and have reached max capacity, but the elders don’t seem to understand the expansion model in the NT. I live in “Judea” where there is no FG church, so we drive about 15 minutes or so to get to church.
Another leader and I want to approach the elders about a new church plant. Much smaller and more intimate than we have with 3-4000 people.
Jim
Jeremy Myers says
Jim,
I really encourage you to move toward planting. Hopefully your church and the pastor and elders will see the importance of such an endeavor.
I am going to have a post in a few days with a video in it that might help you show them the vital importance for church planting, so check back then. It will probably be Monday.
And by the way, I’m glad I’m back to talking about the church as well. It is my greatest ministry passion. I love the church!
Michelle says
Hello, Jeremy: I was lied to as well. It takes a long time to get past some of the bad teaching – or find a place where the Word is truly taught. I feel we’ve spent much of our time being “wandering jews” going from church to church to find a good “fit.” We like where we are now, much love and grace is extended freely. I’m so glad cause I need lots! We’re in the Dallas area – seems you are too – Bent Tree Bible Fellowship is our newest home. Hope we can stay a long time! Blessings to you, Michelle.
Jeremy Myers says
Michelle,
Bent Tree, huh? I think I wanted to attend there, but it was way too far for us to drive to. I checked out your blog. You’ve got great stuff there. Keep it coming! I see the NorEaster interacts with you some. Did you two meet at de-conversion?
Michelle says
Thanks, all of this is new to me. I’m disabled and recently felt the Lord telling me to blog – didn’t even know what it was. It’s been a great way to connect.
Yes, I’ve tried to engage there, it’s quite challenging. NorEaster has some great s on his blog.
May I ask, are Grace Free churches similar to Evangelical Free? We used to attend Stonebriar – love Chuch Swindoll, wasn’t he Evangelical Free for a long time?
Jeremy Myers says
Michelle,
Evangelical Free Churches are a denomination. Yes, Swindoll was “EVFree” when he was in Fullerton, CA, but I don’t think Stonebriar is EVFree, though I could be wrong about that.
Free Grace Churches are united not along denominational lines but rather theological lines. So within “Free Grace Churches” there may be some EVFree, some Lutheran, some non-denominational, etc. The unifying theological theme within Free Grace cirlces is that eternal life is given freely to anyone and everyone who simply believes in Jesus Christ for it.
Currently, however, there is some splintering going on within “Free Grace” circles on exactly what is meant by “believe” and “eternal life” and “Jesus Christ.” So while we are supposedly united on “faith alone in Christ alone for eternal life” there’s not a lot of agreement on what that means. It has become almost comical. I have my theories as to why this debate is happening, but won’t air them here…at least not now.
Michelle says
Got you! 🙂
I knew Chuck was in CA. Stonebriar is part of a network of Bible churches – we still hold our membership there. So Grace Free is more of a network?
Sorry to hear about the splintering. If we could only agree on the essentials and let go of the non-essentials, we would be a much better witness to the world.
Take care…
Jeremy Myers says
Yeah, “Free Grace” is a network of churches based on a particular theological viewpoint.