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Welcome to 2008!

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

Welcome to 2008!

2007 is behind us, and 2008 is here. I trust it will be wonderful year for all of us, even if we do have to endure the final months of the presidential race…ha ha. At least we have the Summer Olympics to look forward to.

New Year 2008

I generally do not make New Year’s Resolutions, but I do make a small list of big things I want to accomplish in the year ahead. Here are a few of them:

  • Graduate from Seminary. If all goes well, this shouldn’t be a problem. The biggest hurdle right now is finishing my thesis. I am writing on the concept of honor and shame in the New Testament. It is very fascinating and has incredible ramifications for how we read the New Testament, and how we understand eternal reward. I will post more about this eventually. I have 14 days to write about 20 more pages. The challenge isn’t the 20 pages, but keeping myself to only 20 more pages. In those 20 pages, I have to explain about 14 passages. That’s going to be a trick.
  • Adopt Arianna from Guatemala. As I’ve posted previously, we are in the process of adopting a baby girl from Guatemala. We have so many prayer requests and needs for this process that it is hard to get my mind around them all. The US and Guatemalan governments needs to change their adoption laws, paperwork needs to be completed, funds need to be raised, and a million little details all need to come together. It is one of the biggest faith-growing adventures we have ever embarked upon. We are hoping to have Arianna in our home by Christmas of 2008, but this will only happen through much divine intervention.
  • Figure out if now is the time to go into church planting. I know that somehow, church planting is in my future. I am not sure yet if I will be planting a church myself, or taking a church that plants churches, or just helping others plant churches. This year, I hope to gain some direction on all of that. If I am going to plant a church or pastor an established church that wants to plant churches, I am not sure this will happen in 2008. But I need to plan and prepare and stay ready for the time when God says “Go.” It may be this year!

2012 Update: The links above were added well after this post was written. I did finish my Thesis, but only because one of my Thesis readers didn’t have time to read it. He told me about six months later that if he had read it before I graduated, he would have failed me. Nice, huh?ย 

We were not able to finalize our adoption of Arianna. Guatemala closed down adoptions, and so far, has not reopened. In some ways, we still feel like one of our daughters is out there, waiting for parents who never came…. It was heart breaking for us.ย 

I am kind of planting a church. Or kind of not. You would have to read most of my posts from 2009 to the present to know more about what I am talking about. In these three years, my thinking about church has radically changed…


God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship

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Winning the War on Terrible Christmas

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

Winning the War on Terrible Christmas

Putting Christ back in Christmas?

Here is something Tia Lynn wrote on her blog recently about this whole war on Christmas:

Wouldn’t it come as a baffling shock if Christians everywhere put down their picket signs, ceased the boycotts, dropped the Christmas lawsuits, and instead, showered politicians, business owners, and ACLU workers that show disdain for Christmas/Christians with thoughtful gifts, invitations to OUR Christmas celebrations, letters of prayers, (not condemning ones), asking nothing in return?

What if Christians took all the money they are spending on lawsuits over Christmas and used it to serve the poor, the marginalized, and sick?

What if we stopped courting the approval and recognition of the rich and powerful and focused on the least, the lost, and the last of this world?

What if Christians recreated our Christmas celebrations and invited the world, instead of demanding the world get it right and include us?

How much harder would it be for the world to label us as judgmental, condemning, intolerant, superficial hypocrites, if we actually lead by example, by service, by radical, ridiculous, unconditional love?

See, Jesus is no naive optimist, He is a genius!

By responding to cruelty with kindness, insult with blessing, neglect with service, rejection with embrace, it proves our opponent wrong. It shows their true colors. It halts their accusations. It could inspire a rethinking of their assumptions. It makes us a people separated unto God. It clears the way for reconciliation, healing, renewal, forgiveness, and transformation.

When we take the bait and repay evil with evil, eye for eye, dollar for dollar, insult for insult, when we demand our DUE, we not only lose in the end, but we becomeour “enemy,” for we are guilty of the same offenses, tactics, and attitudes.

For what good is it if we only show love to those who love us? Do not even non-christians do this? Aren’t we called to a higher standard?

Thanks Tia for showing us how toย be truly incarnational during this “holiday season.”

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Christmas, Discipleship, holidays

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Would Jesus be a Christian?

By Jeremy Myers
45 Comments

Would Jesus be a Christian?

Jesus is not a ChristianI have a friend who sees everything wrong with the world, and then looks at the average Christian, and as a result wants nothing to do with Christianity.

He says that it appears Christians would rather spend their time arguing and debating theology than helping the poor and homeless, and would rather drive Hummers and build huge church buildings than drill wells in Africa or feed orphans.

He doesn’t think that Jesus would be a “Christian” if Jesus were walking the earth today.

The other day, he showed me a YouTube video where a secular rock artist posted his video about this very thing.

The artist was very angry. The video and song lyrics show Christians going to church and pastors preaching sermons, all the while ignoring the hungry and needy that are all around them. The basic message of the song is “Christians need to stop praying and preaching and building huge cathedrals for themselves, and start doing something that actually helps!”

After I watched the video, my friend turned to me and said, “I think there is a special place in hell for Christians.”

Whether you realize it or not, this is the prevalent attitude toward Christianity among those who are ages 18-35. If you don’t believe this is true, you probably don’t know many non-Christians who are 18-35 years old.

How have we as Christians come to this, and what (if anything) can we do about it?

Here are two books I recently read which may be of some help in this area:

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: be the church, Christian, Discipleship, love others, Theology of Jesus, Theology of the Church

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Planting Sterile Churches

By Jeremy Myers
5 Comments

Planting Sterile Churches

Sterile ChurchesI have previously written about sterile preaching. In this post, I want to direct you to a site I discovered today about church planting which has an excellent post on “Sterile Churches.”

What is a “Sterile Church”?

It is a church that doesn’t reproduce.

Here is an excerpt from the article that put into words what I have been thinking:

I want to show you the difference between what I call a “growth culture” in which we’ve all been trained and a “reproduction model.” Because I believe to plant a church is a different animal than to plant a church-planting church. In fact, I’m convinced that the skill sets we learned in ministry training will actually insure that things don’t reproduce.

In our growth culture we’ve learned to focus on individual conversions, while a reproduction model focuses on group conversions.

We’ve started on believer’s turf. But in order to reproduce, we must start on unbeliever’s turf. If we want group conversions of family members, co-workers, neighbors and friends, those people are not going to come to a stranger’s house or into the strange setting of a church. They will come to turf where they are always involved. In our culture we teach Scripture for information. With the reproductive model it is taught for application, so that people are watching the power of God.

We’ve begun by finding Christians. But if you want a really powerful church start, find people of peace. Bar the Christians; don’t let them in. They mess things up in the early stages.

We’ve begun in facilities. This takes money and expertise, which are not readily available. If you begin in homes or front porches or yards or parks, there are always more of them.

We’ve tended to start with celebration in a large group. For reproduction you start with a small group. Very few people actually have the ability and gifts to do a large group well. It takes more expertise, more preparation, more everything. A lot of people can facilitate small groups. They were already doing it in their own natural network before they were saved.

We build programs and buildings. To reproduce, you build leaders.

Leadership is also different. Traditionally we import professional clergy. But what we need for reproduction is to have indigenous and convert-emerging clergy. Where are the future pastors for this setting? They are in the streets, they are beating their wives, they are ripping off their employers.

Also, the leader tends to see himself as the leader for all the participants. In a reproducing church, the leader is the equipper for the emerging leaders. That is how they see themselves, and that is how they stay focused. We are used to funding the church starter. But for churches that will start other churches, you need to have bi-vocational church starters. If we are going to see the cities reached, it is going to be with bi-vocational people. Otherwise, it takes too long to actually fund.

In my own experience, every time we got ready to plant a church we felt like we couldn’t afford to lose those people, their tithes and all that. But every time we did, we actually didn’t skip a beat. God supplied. I found the most powerful thing is that connection with another church who cares.

In fact, in every church that I see planting churches, I find that some of their own issues begin to dissolve. I don’t know what it is. They are giving themselves away. I am convinced you cannot out-give God. The more you give, the more God does.

Update: Sadly, the original post for this article no longer exists, so I cannot direct you to it. I don’t even remember who wrote it. If you know, please leave a comment below. Thanks!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: church growth, Church planting, Discipleship, evangelism

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Preach the Word? Maybe not.

By Jeremy Myers
9 Comments

Preach the Word? Maybe not.

preach the word

One of the things I loved most about being a pastor was preaching the Word.

For years, I thought that a church could get by without music, without a building, without programs, without youth groups, and without children’s programs, but a church was not a true church unless there was strong biblical verse by verse preaching. A true church required a pastor who would preach the Word.

Several years ago, it occurred to me, however, that my requirement for churches to preach the word may be partly due to the fact that preaching and teaching the Word is my spiritual gift. I am a teacher, and so naturally, believe that teaching is the most important part of church. Better yet, I even have a verse! 2 Timothy 4:2 says “Preach the Word.”

You may not realize it, but whatever your spiritual gift is, you tend to think it is the most important part of being the church. If you have the gift of service, you think a church is not really doing it’s job unless it’s serving in the community. If you have gifts of hospitality, you think churches are only genuinely following Jesus if they spend a lot of time hanging out with each other in homes and around dinner tables. I have the gift of teaching, and so I thought that it was essential for churches to “preach the word.”

But recently, I have undertaken the practice of questioning absolutely everything the church does in light of Scripture and effectiveness. (By the way, I define “effectiveness” as “making disciples.” Something is “effective” if it is helping people become more like Christ.)

I came to the uncomfortable conclusion that it may not be best for pastors to spend so much time preaching the word.

Preaching is Ineffective at Making Disciples

The stats and studies are in. As much as it pains me to admit it, preaching is one of the most ineffective ways of making disciples. So along with me asking “Why?” about every other aspect of church, I have had to painfully face that tough questions about my own passion as well. Why do I preach, especially when it is so ineffective? Should we abandon the sermon altogether?

So I set out to figure out what Paul meant in 2 Timothy 4:2, and if it was meant as a universal command for all who lead part of church. For various reasons, I do think it is a universal instruction for all pastors. All pastors are to preach the Word.

Preach the Word – 2 Timothy 4:2

As I studied what Paul might have had in mind when he told Timothy to “Preach the Word” I learned that preaching in Paul’s day was not much like “preaching” in our day.

Preaching the WordThere are few (if any) accounts of a monologue sermon where one person gets up, and teaches for 30 minutes or an hour, and then sits down. “Preaching” in Paul’s day was closer to what we would think of as “Teaching.” There was frequent interaction between the main teacher and the students.

When you read the Gospels and Acts, you see hints that this is the way Jesus, the apostles, and Paul taught. When you read the sermon transcriptions of the early church fathers, especially those of St. John Chrysostom (aka “Golden Tongue”) when he taught through books of the Bible, it becomes clear that while the “Teacher” did most of the speaking, there was a lot of interaction with those who were there to hear him.

Interactive Teaching

And guess what? Those same studies that have proven the ineffectiveness of preaching have also shows that interactive teaching is incredibly effective. Interactive teaching engages the mind, helping the learner not only learn the text, but also how to study it on their own, and then apply it to their lives.

This is not to say that there is never a place for one person standing up in front of a crowd and delivering a monologue. In fact, that may be the only way to teach in some large-group settings (though even then, wise teachers may include a Q&A time after the message). But for the most part, I am convinced that some sort of interaction should be a normal part of “preaching.”

Looking back to the times I have taught this way, I now realize that it is in the interactive studies of Scripture that I have most often felt the electric presence of the Holy Spirit.

Do I love “Upfront-on-the-stage-in-the-spotlight” preaching? Kind of. Though between you and me, I usually feel a bit guilty after I step down off the stage. I don’t know why though…

However, there are two forms of teaching I love. The first is interactive teaching, where a group of people get together and discuss Scripture and theology. There is usually not just one person leading the discussion, but there is genuine give-and-take between all who are present, with each one learning from the others. I think it is in these settings where the Holy Spirit is most at work.

The second form of teaching I love is writing. Especially blog writing. Why? Because, once again, it is interactive. You can leave comments, and I can learn from you, and you can provide your own input and insights into the topic of the blog post.

Both of these can be applications of what Paul means when he instructs Timothy to preach the Word.

So having said that, can you do two things for me?

First, let me get you input in the comments below! I would love to know your thoughts on preaching, teaching, and what it means to “preach the Word.” 

Secondly, would you please invite other people into the conversation by using the share buttons below? Thanks!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: 2 Timothy 4:2, Discipleship, preach the word, Preaching, sermons, teaching

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