Redeeming God

Liberating you from bad ideas about God

Learn the MOST ESSENTIAL truths for following Jesus.

Get FREE articles and audio teachings in my discipleship emails!


  • Join Us!
  • Scripture
  • Theology
  • My Books
  • About
  • Discipleship
  • Courses
    • What is Hell?
    • Skeleton Church
    • The Gospel According to Scripture
    • The Gospel Dictionary
    • The Re-Justification of God
    • What is Prayer?
    • Adventures in Fishing for Men
    • What are the Spiritual Gifts?
    • How to Study the Bible
    • Courses FAQ
  • Forum
    • Introduce Yourself
    • Old Testament
    • New Testament
    • Theology Questions
    • Life & Ministry

Stop Calling Yourself a Christian

By Jeremy Myers
87 Comments

Stop Calling Yourself a Christian

love like JesusI think all of us “Christians” should stop referring to ourselves as “Christians.”

Nor should we ask other people if they are a “Christian.”

I have two lines of reasoning for why we should stop saying we’re Christians.

1. They were first called Christians in Antioch (Acts 11:26)

When the term “Christian” was first invented, it was coined by an outside group of “pagans” who observed the way Jesus-followers behaved and recognized the similarity between what they were doing and what Jesus did. And so they called these Jesus followers “Christians.”

In other words, the first “Christians” did not take this title for themselves; it was given to them.

The term means “little Christ,” and while some scholars think that it was maybe intended to be a derogatory term (sort of like Yankee Doodle), I do not think so. I think the people of Antioch noticed how “Christ-like” the people were who claimed to follow Him, and so they started to referring to this Christ-like followers of Jesus as “Christians.” It was a way to identify them and talk about them.

they will know you are christians by your loveThe Christians of Antioch were not known for their hate, venom, judgmentalism, or religious pride, or even for their good theology, pious life, and vast Bible knowledge. Instead, They were knowing for looking and acting and behaving like Jesus Christ, and as a result, they were “called Christians” by those who were not Christians.

If the watching world started giving titles and nicknames to those who proclaim to follow Jesus today, what sort of titles do you think they would give us?

I am not sure I want to know … but I doubt it would be “Christian.”

But this leads me to the second line of reasoning for why we should stop calling ourselves “Christians.”

you keep calling yourself a Christian

2. They will know you are Christians by your love (John 13:35)

If you truly are a “Christian” you don’t have to tell people. They will know it. How? By your love.

Those who truly act like a “Christian” do not have to tell people they are a “Christian” because people already know it. They know it by your love.

I follow Jesus t-shirtI walked by two guys in the store the other day who were both wearing Christian t-shirts. One was saying to the other, “Yeah, they all hate me at work, but that’s okay, because I’m standing up for Christ.”

Now, I cannot say for sure, but I imagine that since I heard this about five days after the United States Supreme Court ruled in favor of gay marriage, that this man’s idea of “standing up for Christ” consisted of telling his coworkers that LGBT people were headed for hell, were destroying our country, and were signs of the collapse of modern society and traditional marriage.

Some religious people think that “standing up for Christ” in today’s culture means telling others that God hates gays. Just check out some of the comments on my post from two days ago.

Look, I don’t know where you stand on the gay marriage issue. I don’t care. What I do know, however, is that wherever you stand on gay marriage, the proper response to gay people is love.

The same goes for other groups of people some Christians love to hate. Like Muslims. Whatever you may think about the Muslim religion, the proper way to treat a Muslim is with love.

Love is the proper (and only) response to ALL people, no matter what they believe or do, if we are followers of Jesus.

If you want to represent Jesus to people, don’t do it by hating or condemning them. (And don’t use the line about how you “Love the sinner, but hate the sin.”)

Anyway, back to the conversation I heard in the store, I wanted to tell this guy who was proud of his “stand for Christ” that just because people hate you for what you say doesn’t mean that you are standing for Christ.

In fact, in the Gospels, the only people who really hated Jesus were the religious people. Those who were condemned and judged by the religious people loved Jesus and hung out with Him and were accepted by Him.

So if the world hates you but religious people love you, you might not be following Jesus.

Also, if, like this guy in the store, you have to tell people you are a Christian by broadcasting it on your t-shirt, you’re doing it wrong.

If we want to tell people we are followers of Jesus, we do it by loving them. Just as He loves us. Unconditionally. That’s what Godly love is.

I am convinced that the person who loves others unconditionally but doesn’t claim to follow Jesus is closer to the Kingdom of God than those who claim to follow Jesus but doesn’t love others unconditionally.

love is of GodIf love is of God, and everybody who loves is born of God and knows God because God is love (1 John 4:7-8), then it only makes sense that love will be the prevailing characteristic of one who is born of God and know God!

It is not a person’s words that make him or her a Christian, or what they post on Facebook or wear on their t-shirts, or even how many Bible verses they can quote, or how often they attend church and Bible studies, or whether they can “take a stand for Christ.”

They will know we are Christians by our love, and if you have not love, they will never know you are a Christian, no matter how much you tell them you are.

Or maybe I should put it this way: If you have not love, you can never properly act like a Christian, no matter how much you tell people you are one.

The REAL Question We Should be Asking Ourselves (and others)

So the question we should be asking is not “Am I a Christian?” but rather, “Am I Christ-like?”

“Do my words sound like words Jesus might say?”

“Do my actions look like things Jesus might do?”

“Do I love unconditionally, forgive freely, serve sacrificially, and accept all?”

“Do I challenge the religious status-quo for setting up barriers to God and creating groups of us vs. them?”

“Do I break down the walls of religion by eating with the so-called ‘tax-collectors and sinners’?”

If so, then keep living in love and looking like Jesus, and maybe, just maybe, someone might call you a “Christian.”

God is Redeeming Church, Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: 1 John 4:7-8, Acts 11:26, Christian, Discipleship, evangelism, hate, John 13:35, looks like Jesus, love, love like Jesus, missions

Advertisement

Why I Let a “Murderer” Live in My House

By Jeremy Myers
6 Comments

Why I Let a “Murderer” Live in My House

James (not his real name) and his brother had been convicted of murder. Both were given life sentences and had begun doing their time. But then (for reasons I wonโ€™t go into here) the courts decided to give James a retrial. And while he was awaiting retrial, they allowed him to post bail and live under house arrest.

There was only one problem: James had no house in which to live while under house arrest.

So my wife and I offered to have James live with us in our house. We had a one-year old daughter at the time.

Nearly everyone in the church I was pastoring counseled us against such an action. They told us we were putting ourselves and our new daughter at risk. They told us his presence in our home would create stress on our marriage, from which we would never recover. Some of the people wanted to know if he would be attending our church. They were not sure they wanted a convicted murderer to be attending our church while he awaited trial.

But we took him in anyway. He lived with us for about 6 months. Eventually, James was found innocent, and has been living as a free man ever since. I even had the privilege of performing his wedding several years back.

And let me tell you … those six months that James lived with us were some of the best months my wife and I experienced in our young family, and were some of the best months I had as a pastor in the church where I worked. His presence in our house was a blessing to all of us.

I am not recommending that anyone do this. It is true what the people in my church said: Taking in a convicted murderer could be dangerous. So I do not share this story to say that everybody should follow my example. I myself might not follow my example if a similar situation arose today.

But at the time, based on where we were at in life, and based on what we knew of James and his situation, it was the right thing to do, and we never felt the least bit of fear or concern. We hope that we also were able to give James a sense of love, acceptance, safety, and comfort as he faced an uncertain future.

I think this is how the Christian concept of โ€œhospitalityโ€ works.

Christian Hospitality

The way Christian hospitality often functions in most churches today is that every once in a while, some people in the church invite other members of the church over to dinner. They eat a meal, share some stories, and then the guests go back to their own home.

But this is not really hospitality. This is entertaining. Most Christian hospitality is little more than Christian entertaining.

There is nothing wrong with entertaining. Entertaining is a form of fellowship, and is a great way to get to know other people. My wife and I โ€œentertainโ€ all the time, and we thoroughly enjoy it.

Christian hospitality, however, is quite different.

gospel hospitality

True Biblical Hospitality

In biblical times, hospitality involved allowing newcomers in town to stay in your house while they were there. It involved giving itinerant prophets a place to live. It included taking people in from the street where they were likely to get hurt. It may even include giving food and lodging to those who were too poor or too sick to care for themselves.

The common theme to hospitality, it seems, involves meeting a physical need of someone else, especially in regard to food, lodging, and safety.

It meant taking those who were in some sort of need or danger, and providing them with food, lodging, safety, and security. It meant making your home their home.

How might hospitality look today?

hospitalityIt might look like my friend Sam Riviera, when he takes food, clothing, and a kind word to the homeless people on the streets of San Diego.

It might look like my friend Dan Mayhew, who lets people live in his home in Portland.

It might look like the people all over the world who allow teachers like Wayne Jacobsen to stay in their homes while he is traveling or speaking.

It might look like my parents, who let a homeless man (and his dog) live with them for about a year while he was working to get his feet back under him.

It might look like my friends, Pam and Dona, who are allowing a woman to live with them while she faces numerous physical problems and has nobody else to take care of her.

It might look like my wife and daughters, who regularly helped an elderly neighbor with his yard work and grocery shopping after he had heart surgery.

As you can see, the forms of hospitality are as diverse as the people to whom hospitality is shown.

Hospitality begins with a willingness and desire to share what you have with people in need. Maybe it is your food. Maybe it is a spare room. Maybe it is clothing.

And then hospitality takes place when God brings people to our attention that have needs, and we seek to meet those needs with what God has given us.

Hospitality, as someone has defined it, is making someone else โ€œfeel at home.โ€ How can we, as followers of Jesus, help others โ€œfeel at homeโ€ when they are in our presence? How can we put them at ease, serve their needs, give them comfort, safety, healing, and rest?

Hospitality is not true hospitality unless it makes us less comfortable and someone else more.

Do you have examples of how you or a friend showed hospitality to someone else? Do you have suggestions or tips on how people can develop hospitality? Share your stories and ideas in the comment section below.

Note: This post was part of the June 2015 Synchroblog. Here is a list of posts from the other contributors:

  • A Sacred Rebel โ€“ Hospitality
  • Carol Kuniholme โ€“ Violent Unwelcome. Holy Embrace.
  • Glen Hager โ€“ Aunt Berthie
  • Leah Sophia โ€“ welcoming one another
  • Mary โ€“ The Space of Hospitality
  • Loveday Anyim โ€“ Is Christian Hospitality a Dead Way of Life?
  • Tony Ijeh โ€“ Is Hospitality Still a Vital Part of Christianity Today?
  • Clara Ogwuazor Mbamalu โ€“ Have we replaced Hospitality with Hostility?
  • Liz Dyer โ€“ Prayer For The Week โ€“ Let us be Godโ€™s hospitality in the world
  • K.W. Leslie โ€“ Christian Hospitality

God is Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, fellowship, hospitality, synchroblog

Advertisement

Waaaaa! I’m not getting fed!

By Jeremy Myers
36 Comments

Waaaaa! I’m not getting fed!

Vince AntonucciOver at the “All About Eve” blog, Eve asked me about getting fed as a Christian. I gave her a summary of the posts below, which were written by Vince Antonucci in 2008. These posts are classic Vince. (I hope he doesn’t mind me reposting them here … on his blog, they take up about 400 posts … so I compiled them all and put them here for your reading enjoyment.)

Oh, and full disclosure … I used to be one of those “I’m not getting fed!” Christians, and I encouraged this sort of attitude in the church I pastored. Why? Because I prided myself in being a pastor who provided good feeding. I praised people who came to my church from other churches because they wanted good preaching. I used to say, “We don’t steal sheep; we just grow the grass.”

Of course, today, I have a completely different view of preaching and church growth and how discipleship occurs … some of these changes I attribute to Vince Antonucci (who wrote an endorsement for my book Adventures in Fishing for Men.). Of course, though Vince pastors a church for people who don’t like church, even his church is too churchy for me. But that’s the point.

Maybe churches are not supposed to be a place for those who want to get fed. Maybe the Sunday morning “church” serves a particular role and particular function within the body of Christ to meet the needs of a particular group of Christians for a particular time. But beyond that, the Sunday morning event becomes unhealthy.

Let me be more specific: It is important to be fed spiritually … when you are spiritual baby.

But as you mature as a Christ-follower, you will hopefully become a self-feeder. That is, you will learn to feed yourself.

If a college professor has the same student in his class for 37 years, that professor is a failure. At some point, the college professor needs to pull that student aside and say, “You have learned everything you can from me. You have passed the class. It is time to move on and get started with life.”

So also, if parents continue to feed their children for 48 years after they are born (barring any special mental or psychological factors, of course), that parent is also a failure. At some point or another, those parents must show their children the door, saying, “It is time to be an adult on your own.”

I know that I have been negative in the past on the “institutional church” structure, but if there is one thing the institutional church does better than anyone else, it is the mass feeding of spiritual babes. I would LOVE it if the portion of God’s church which meets regularly on Sunday morning could make this a primary goal of theirs. They would bring in spiritual babes, teach them the fundamentals of the faith, and then kick them out the door. What if churches, instead, of trying to hold on to all the members from birth to the grave, instead held a “graduation ceremony” every year for those who had been there for 4 or 5 years and who were ready to launch out into the world as spiritual adults?

As the church, our goal should not be to feed people, but to mature people, which means they can feed themselves.

Anyway, here is Vince Antonucci’s (now famous) blog series, “WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed!”

But one warning first … Vince’s style in this series is … well … confrontational. Feel free to complain in the comment section below or directly to him on Twitter @vinceantonucci.

waaaaa im not getting fed

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 1)

I thought Iโ€™d share a few thoughts on the battle cry of my least favorite people, the church hoppers, shoppers, floppers, and stoppers โ€ฆ โ€œIโ€™m not getting fed.โ€

Weโ€™ve heard that quite a bit over ten years of Forefront, and Iโ€™ve gone through kind of an evolution of my thoughts on this topic.

For a long time I blamed myself and felt guilty about not being โ€œdeep enoughโ€ and thought maybe it was because I only attended seminary for nine months and canโ€™t read Hebrew or Greek. (One ironic thing, though, is that I would sometimes โ€œuseโ€ (i.e. steal heavily from) other peopleโ€™s sermons, and often it would be guys considered โ€œdeepโ€ preachers, or it would be a series from a churchโ€™s mid-week or โ€œdeeperโ€ service, and people would still say it wasnโ€™t deep enough.)

Then I started to blame the Forefront context. When youโ€™re trying to reach people who are far from God itโ€™s obvious. So, for instance, on a Sunday morning weโ€™ll have some goofy videos (mostly for people who arenโ€™t Christians) and weโ€™ll carefully explain communion (mostly for people who arenโ€™t Christians) and we have a rockinโ€™ style of worship music (mostly to connect with people who arenโ€™t Christians) and then we have a sermon. And even if the sermon is โ€œdeepโ€ and really good for Christians, I think some Christians simply cannot see past the context it falls within. They realize that several other aspects of the service were not primarily intended for them, and that this church is passionate about non-Christians, and so itโ€™s impossible for them to believe the sermon IS for them, even if it is. Theyโ€™re wrong, but I understand it โ€“ itโ€™s difficult to take anything seriously when itโ€™s preceded by a dancing gorilla.

But as I talked to other pastors I realized almost everyone hears this complaint.

Even preachers who arenโ€™t as shallow and uneducated as me, and even churches that donโ€™t feature iPod Suppository commercials before the message. So I used to totally think it was I was to blame, or my church was to blame, and to some extent I still believe thatโ€™s partially true, but not as much as I did.

This caused me to take a closer look at the types of people who complain that theyโ€™re not getting fed, and increasingly I believe the problem lies in them. In the next few posts, Iโ€™ll explain why. Until then, leave big tips for your waitresses.

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 2a)

Last time we started a series on people who say, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fed!โ€ and I promised weโ€™d start to look at the type of people who make that complaint.

im not getting fedBabies.

Babies complain that theyโ€™re not getting fed. When my kids were babies, my wife and I had to feed them. I had never been around babies and so this was brand new for me. Suddenly I was pretending a spoon was an airplane and a cheerio was a chug-a-chug-a-choo-choo! When we didnโ€™t feed our babies on time, they let us know it. They cried. As they got a little older they learned not to cry about their displeasure but would verbalize it, โ€œMa-ma, Iโ€™m hungry. Da-da, feed me!โ€

Babies complain about not getting fed. My son is now nine and now when heโ€™s hungry he asks, โ€œDad, can I get something to eat?โ€ My answer, of course, is, โ€œYouโ€™ll eat when you have a job and can pay for your own food!โ€

Only babies complain about not getting fed. There should be a progression in life, and in spiritual life, from needing to be fed, to feeding yourself, to being able to feed others.

And so when someone in a church says, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€ my thought is, โ€œThen you BETTER be a baby.โ€

It never is. The people who complain about not getting fed are never new Christians. Never. Isnโ€™t that funny? The people who complain about not getting fed are never the baby Christians, but always the older, supposedly more mature Christians.

Can you picture if I, at 37 years old, called my mother every month or two and complained, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fed!โ€ Or if I e-mailed her and said, โ€œSorry, but Iโ€™m leaving this family because Iโ€™m not getting fed. In fact, I havenโ€™t gotten fed in some time here.โ€ Sound absurd? Well, itโ€™s the freakinโ€™ reality in most churches in America!

I illustrated this in a sermon once. I started my sermon by carrying a baby up with me, and fed it a few spoonfuls of baby food. At the end of the sermon I asked for a volunteer. One of the Navy Seals in our church raised his hand, so I brought him up, sat him on my lap, and got ready to spoon feed him baby food. It looked totally absurd. And, again, thatโ€™s the freakinโ€™ reality in most churches in America!

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 2b)

Earlier today I posted about how only babies need to be fed by another person, and only babies complain about not getting fed.

This reminded me of when I was a brand new baby Christian โ€ฆ (I was twenty-years-old) โ€ฆ and I was immediately put in a situation where I had to feed others. The reason was that I was leading people to Christ and, compared to them, I was the โ€œlong-time Christianโ€ (even though I had only been a Christian for a few weeks!).

I had no choice, at least not that I knew of, and so I studied the bible like a mad man, put together studies and lessons, and gave them (as crappy as they may have been) to others. Youโ€™ve heard of the blind leading the blind, well this was the baby leading the babies.

And what I learned is this: A person grows WAY MORE from feeding others than they ever grow from being fed. So, I guess, if you want to really be fed โ€“ feed someone else.

Sometimes babies can feed others โ€ฆ but only babies should need to be fed.

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 3)

Picture this: Tonight youโ€™re watching the local news and youโ€™re startled by the report: Every restaurant in your area is closing down. Not just your favorites, not just some, but ALL OF THEM. You would obviously be disappointed. Going out to eat is fun. And often the food you get in a restaurant is better than what you make at home. Itโ€™s also nice to have a night where you donโ€™t have to make your own meal. And not having to pack your lunch everyday is a convenience you enjoy. So, of course youโ€™d be disappointed.

But what if the next day a friend came up to you, โ€œDid you hear that all the restaurants are closing?!? What will I do?!? Iโ€™m going to starve! Iโ€™m not kidding, I will die because of this! I canโ€™t live without restaurants!โ€ And youโ€™re friend is serious. Heโ€™s not joking or exaggerating.

What do you think of your friend? That heโ€™s got some serious problems, right? That he is ridiculously lazy, right?

Well, in my not so humble opinion, when a Christian says, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€ this is truly what theyโ€™re saying. I mean, sure, itโ€™s nice to go to church and get some bible fed to you. We all enjoy being lazy once-in-awhile. And most preachers can give you a better bible study than what you can do on your home at home.

So thereโ€™s nothing wrong with going to church and โ€œgetting fed.โ€ But if youโ€™re dependent on it, if itโ€™s the only way you can get fed, if you donโ€™t know what to do without it, youโ€™ve got some serious problems and you are ridiculously lazy.

People who say, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€ are lazy. Seriously, think about it. The people who say this only get 30 minutes with their preacher a week, but they expect their preacher to feed them. They have 167 ยฝ hours the rest of the week, but their spiritual sustenance is supposed to come from their preacher, in only 30 minutes. They canโ€™t figure out some other way of getting spiritual nutrition the rest of their week despite living in a country where we can legally own bibles (and the average home has three!), where Christian bookstores are all over the place, and where the internet provides a never-ending supply of spiritual resources.

So, what kind of people say โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€? Thumb-sucking babies, and pampered-pouting lazy Christians.

adult babies

Tomorrow Iโ€™ll tell you how I really feel. Until then, save me the aisle seat.

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 4a)

So Iโ€™m doing the greatest blog series in the history of the world. The series is on what pastors hear so often, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fed.โ€ Last time I asked: โ€œWho says this?โ€ and answered, โ€œThumb-sucking babies and pampered, pouting lazy Christians.โ€ Today I have one more answer: Christians who miss the point.

What do I mean? Some people misunderstand โ€œspiritual maturity.โ€

What do you think are the signs of a person who is truly spiritually mature? This is something Iโ€™ve studied and thought about a lot, and hereโ€™s what Iโ€™ve come to. The three greatest signs of spiritual maturity are: (1) Intimacy with God, (2) Obedience to God, (3) Serving other people. The way weโ€™d say that at Forefront is, โ€œLove God, Love People.โ€

Jesus said that all the commandments hang on this. Loving God is a relational thing and leads to intimacy with Him. (So itโ€™s sharing His heart, and sharing my heart with Him.) Jesus also taught us that to love God is to obey His commands. (So one way to measure spiritual maturity is how quickly you obey God.) Jesus also said He came to serve and weโ€™re to follow His example. (So getting past self-centeredness and learning to put others before ourselves is what weโ€™re after.)

We could argue about this (I guess thatโ€™s what the comment section is for) but Iโ€™m sticking with my answer, because itโ€™s what Iโ€™ve found in the Bible.

Unfortunately, this is NOT EVEN CLOSE to the definition most American Christians have for spiritual maturity. How do they define it? Iโ€™ll tell you later today. Until then, Iโ€™ll give you $5 if you can get yourself on Cops.

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 4b)

So how do American Christians define spiritual maturity? I donโ€™t know how it happened (but Iโ€™d be interested to find out*) but somewhere along the line we have equated spiritual knowledge with spiritual maturity.

We see this in all kinds of ways.

Who is in the person who leads the small group? Well, the person who knows the most, of course.

Who is revered in your church? The person who knows the most, of course.

Bible college professors are held up as spiritual giants. Why? Is it because of their intimacy with God? No. Because of their obedience to God? No. Because of their service to other people? No. We donโ€™t know any of those things about them. What we know is that they know a lot. And thatโ€™s enough.

We believe the person who knows the most about God, the most about the Bible, is the most spiritually mature. And the only problem with that is that itโ€™s wrong. Knowledge does not equal maturity. I have known lots of people who know lots about God and the Bible and are not remotely Christ-like. (And, by the way, I can think of someone who knows a ton about God and the Bible, could it be โ€ฆ Satan?!?)

Next time Iโ€™ll talk about how this misunderstanding of spiritual maturity has wreaked havoc for Pastors and churches and Muppets and people who press olives in Greece and โ€ฆ

* (this is a footnote!) โ€“ Do you think itโ€™s possible that part of the reason weโ€™ve defined spiritual maturity as knowledge is because that way we donโ€™t have to obey? Instead of obeying what we know, we just learn more!

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 5a)

I said last time that in America weโ€™ve (wrongly) equated spiritual knowledge with spiritual maturity. We think that the more you know, the more godly you are.

Because weโ€™ve created that culture, we have Christians whose goal is to know more and more, and thatโ€™s why they come to church on Sundays. So โ€ฆ if our sermons donโ€™t stuff more Greek and Hebrew and obscure (and probably useless) bible history into their heads, theyโ€™re not happy. (And many, many preachers are worshipping these people by giving them exactly what they want.)

So, actually, for these people, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€ really means, โ€œTo feel spiritually mature (and superior) I need to expand my store of virtually useless bible information so I can impress my friends and win Bible Jeopardy and youโ€™re not giving me the facts I need!โ€

This is SO ridiculous.

I also think itโ€™s a MAJOR reason why so many Christians feel spiritually empty inside. Itโ€™s because theyโ€™re approaching Christianity like itโ€™s something to be studied, rather than lived โ€“ and God becomes someone to know about, rather than to know.

Okay, I have to rant on this more, but Iโ€™ll do it a little later (in fact, two more coming today). If you donโ€™t want to hear any more about this, Iโ€™ll understand if you stop reading my blog โ€“ but youโ€™ll regret it for the rest of your life. So good luck with that.

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 5b)

So earlier I started going off about how people define spiritual maturity as spiritual knowledge and how they end up feeling spiritually empty (and thus say, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fed!โ€) and itโ€™s because theyโ€™re approaching Christianity like itโ€™s something to be studied, rather than lived โ€“ and God becomes someone to know about, rather than to know.

Think of it this way. Letโ€™s say my marriage is going poorly. So my wife and I go to a counselor. We tell him we donโ€™t feel close at all and want more out of our marriage. So he says: โ€œHereโ€™s what you need to do. Each of you should hire someone to do a 30 minute presentation on the other each week. Attend that seminar, learn all the facts you can about each other, and your marriage will be great.โ€ Good advice? No. The stupidest thing youโ€™ve heard since you learned that Brittany and Jaimie Lynn Spearโ€™s mother is putting out a book on parenting? Maybe.

The way to make a marriage better is โ€ฆ quality time together, really talking, listening to each other, having date nights, serving each other, submitting, finding common interests.

So when Christians donโ€™t feel close to God and want more out of their relationship with Him the answer is a โ€œdeeperโ€ sermon on Sundays? Are you kidding me?!? The answer is that you need to get โ€œfedโ€ by your preacher? Really?!?

โ€œYou should go to a church with deeper messages.โ€ Is that good advice? No. One of the stupidest things youโ€™ve ever heard? Maybe.

If thing with God really is a relationship (or anything like a relationship) than what weโ€™re after is not knowledge, its intimacy. And you canโ€™t get intimacy through a sermon.

Wait, I have another way of saying this. Iโ€™ll tell you later.

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 5c)

Okay, this is like the 400th post in this series (sorry) but weโ€™re talking about what spiritual maturity looks like and why people say, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€ and how if youโ€™re not feeling close to God or where you need to be spiritually, thereโ€™s no way my 30 minute sermon can help you.

crying like a babyEarlier I used a marriage as a metaphor, hereโ€™s another one: If you feel woefully out of shape physically, and once a week you attend a seminar on how to work out, or how to eat healthy, but then the rest of the week donโ€™t live any different, can you complain about the seminars?

Of course not! A seminar canโ€™t get you in good shape, you have to DO what the seminar is talking about, and you have to do it consistently.

And so โ€ฆ stop giving me your โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€ crap and go home and spend lots of time face-to-face with God, and you WILL grow in intimacy with Him. And then youโ€™ll realize that thereโ€™s something far better than knowing about God, and itโ€™s knowing God.

(Sorry, I lost it there for a minute.)

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 6)

So Iโ€™ve gone on and on about this โ€œnot getting fedโ€ thing and I have to start wrapping it up. Hereโ€™s the question: What do we do when someone says, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€?

Well, I have two answers.

First, we need to make sure that weโ€™re teaching people HOW to feed themselves. Iโ€™ve made it quite clear this last week or so that I donโ€™t think itโ€™s my job as a pastor to โ€œfeed peopleโ€ on Sunday mornings. But I DO believe itโ€™s the churches job to teach people to feed themselves. And so, when someone says, โ€œIโ€™m not being fedโ€ I need to ask myself, โ€œHave we taught this person to feed themselves? If not, then I have to take a lot of the blame for this, and I need to do something about it.

At Forefront, weโ€™ve tried to make sure weโ€™re teaching people how to feed themselves. For instance:

  • We do a sermon, or an entire series, almost every year on how to read the Bible. In 2007 we did โ€œThe Bible for Cavemen.โ€ In 2006 we did a 3 part series called, โ€œOff the Shelf and Into Myselfโ€โ€ฆ
  • In our โ€œNext Stepsโ€ class we have a session on how to have a โ€œQuiet Timeโ€ of bible reading and prayer.
  • Each week in our program we provide six โ€œready-to-doโ€ Bible studies that give you a passage to read, about six questions to help you dig into and apply the verses, and a study note or two offering background/context information.
  • This year we made and are going to distribute a โ€œPursuitโ€ book, a spiritual growth handbook that teaches six spiritual disciplines, including bible study (why to do it, how to do it, etc.).
  • We had a guru at this kind of stuff come in and do sessions with our staff, and a session with leaders in our church, on how to develop intimacy face-to-face with God.

(Iโ€™m sure thereโ€™s more we could do โ€” what are some of the ways you all are teaching your people to feed themselves?)

So when someone says, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fedโ€ the first thing I do is ask myself: Have we taught this person how to feed themselves? If the answer is no, Iโ€™m the problem. If the answer is yes, well, weโ€™ll talk about that next time.

WAAAAA! I’m not getting fed! (Part 7)

I think this is the last post in this insanely long series on the issue of people saying, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fed at this church.โ€ Last time I talked about how I think itโ€™s the churchโ€™s role to equip people to feed themselves, and if weโ€™re not doing that, I need to take some blame for a person in our church who isnโ€™t being fed.

However, if our church IS equipping people to feed themselves and a person still says, โ€œIโ€™m not getting fed,โ€ โ€“ what would I say?

โ€œLet me show you the door.โ€

Yes, I suggest that they find a different church.

I donโ€™t know about you, but Iโ€™ve reached a point where I suggest that they find a different church. That may not be the most compassionate or pastoral thing to do, but Iโ€™ve got a bunch of people who want to experience intimacy with God, and want to obey Him, and want to serve people and change the world, and I need to spend some time with them, not with a lazy baby who wants me to help them succeed in bible trivia.

I hope I donโ€™t sound too self-righteous, but itโ€™s kind of like Nehemiah, when people were complaining about what he was doing and asking him to give them time and he said, โ€œโ€˜I am carrying on a great project and cannot go down. Why should the work stop while I leave it and go down to you?โ€™ Four times they sent me the same message, and each time I gave them the same answer.โ€ (Nehemiah 6:3-4)

Iโ€™m sure some people thought, โ€œThatโ€™s not very Christ-like,โ€ (yes, I know that there was no such thing as โ€œChrist-likeโ€ back then) but Nehemiah was a man on a mission, and you werenโ€™t on the mission you were off his radar.

Jesus told people that if they wanted to follow Him they had to carry a cross. We tell people that if they want to run with us, they have to feed themselves. Will that turn away some Christians? Definitely. Do we want to turn away Christians? Definitely.

I want to have a church full of two types of people: the lost, and missionaries to the lost. When someone goes to a foreign country to be a missionary, they arenโ€™t going over there to get fed. They are going on a mission, and realize that theyโ€™ll have to feed themselves. If youโ€™re gonna be a part of Forefront, youโ€™re going on a mission and must realize that youโ€™ll have to feed yourself. And if that ainโ€™t you โ€“ donโ€™t let the door hit ya where the good Lord split ya.

Waaaaa Responses to Your Waaaaa Comments

There have been so many comments and questions on this series that I promised I would try to respond to some. First, let me first say that I donโ€™t consider myself some kind of Christian Yoda who knows all, so Iโ€™m just sharing my thoughts, not the โ€œright answers.โ€ Second, I donโ€™t have a ton of time right now, so Iโ€™ll only be able to respond to a few and only give short answers. Third, I may post a few of my favorite comments later during the day. So here we go:

โ€œWhy should people bother coming to church (on Sunday mornings) if the pastor isnโ€™t supposed to feed them?โ€

Answers: Wow, thereโ€™s a lot. And I think this question actually shows how weโ€™ve gotten confused about churchโ€ฆ so: (1) Iโ€™m not saying the pastor shouldnโ€™t feed people or that itโ€™s wrong to get fed at church. Iโ€™m saying that it should be something extra for Christians, not what they depend on for their spiritual sustenance. Just like going to a restaurant is a nice change of pace to get fed on a lazy day and get some food you wouldnโ€™t get at homeโ€ฆ (2) I think we want to be a part of something bigger than ourselves, and meeting with other Christians on Sundays helps us with that โ€“ singing together, fellowshiping, etc. (3) Sunday mornings can be one of the places where the pastor gets to teach people how to feed themselves. (4) This is like saying: โ€œIf a basketball coach isnโ€™t going to teach his players how to play basketball during half-time, why should the players even go into the locker room?โ€ Well, maybe the players need to be inspired? Maybe they need to be reminded of what they already know? Maybe he needs to get in their face? Maybe they need some encouragement? (5) I could keep answering this question forever, Iโ€™ll stop.

โ€œDoes Forefront spend as much time developing Christians into missionaries as it does reaching out to non-Christians?โ€

Answer: No. But we need to. Please pray for us that we do a better job with this.

โ€œMaybe lazy Americans โ€ฆ or single moms โ€ฆ or you name it โ€ฆ need to be fed by their preacher because theyโ€™re lazy โ€ฆ or donโ€™t have time โ€ฆ or you name it.โ€

Answer: I feel for people who donโ€™t have time or whatever, but the issue is one of intimacy with God. If Iโ€™m too lazy or too busy to spend quality time with my wife, weโ€™re not going to have a great marriage. We could go to a weekly 30 minute seminar on marriage (or a weekly counseling session) but if we donโ€™t spend decent quantities of quality time together outside of the seminar (or counselorโ€™s office) weโ€™re still not going to have a great marriage. So โ€ฆ even if you go to a church with the greatest preacher ever, if you donโ€™t spend a lot of time with God outside of Sundays, you are not going to have a great relationship with Him. And itโ€™s about a relationship with God. Now we can trick ourselves and pretend itโ€™s about knowledge, but it isnโ€™t.

โ€œWhy does Forefront produce people who have a โ€˜Iโ€™m not getting fedโ€™ attitude?โ€

Answer: I think we produce less than most churches, but yes, we do have some. Why? Maybe because (1) Weโ€™re all naturally selfish and lazy (including me!) and so itโ€™s easy to fall into this kind of thinking for anyone, and (2) Christian culture is so pervasive even our people get bitten by it โ€“ we live in an odd time where you can be exposed to other churchโ€™s preachers on the radio, podcasts, Christian books, etc. and so the church you go to is not going to be the only influence on how you think and approach God & Christianity.

โ€œThe last time I checked, God doesnโ€™t talk back. Not lately, anyway.โ€

Answer: I disagree. God still speaks to us today. If not, it wouldnโ€™t be much of a relationship, would it? God still speaks, the issue is whether weโ€™re listeningโ€ฆ

God is Redeeming Church Bible & Theology Topics: church growth, Discipleship, Preaching, teaching

Advertisement

I am Dying … (So I Can Live Again)

By Jeremy Myers
48 Comments

I am Dying … (So I Can Live Again)

One of the themes of my life is that death precedes resurrection.

I firmly believe that many people hold on to personal goals and pet projects long after they should have let them die a natural death. If we would let these things die, this would enable God to raise up something new in our life from the dust and ashes of the past.

I am dying

I wrote about this in The Death and Resurrection of the Church. Churches often keep programs running for many years after they have ceased contributing anything to the life of Jesus in the church. If a church would remove programs from life-support, they would see God raise up new leaders with new ideas for new ways to reach new people.

But talking about letting things die is one thing. Actually letting things die is quite another.

I have recently begun to feel God calling me to let a lot of things in my life die.

What things?

dying to my blogSpecifically, most of the things related to my โ€œonline presence.โ€

This blog.

My publishing company.

My books.

My writing.

My web design work.

My Twitter account.

My Facebook account.

I feel that God is calling me to allow everything that makes me โ€œmeโ€ to die.

Why? Because my online presence has consumed the real-life me.

When I first started my website over fifteen years ago, I wrote just for the fun of writing.

But in the last year or two, writing has become a burden, a chore. It has become something I must do so that I can maintain everything I have built up to this point. Rather than being excited about some new insight from Scripture or idea about theology which I get to pass on to others, my writing has become more about pageviews, backlinks, ad revenue, email subscriber stats, book sales, and comment counts. And as I have come to focus on these, the thrill and joy of study and writing has disappeared.

So I feel God wants me to just let it all die.

This is terrifying for me.

I have spent countless thousands of hours building my website and getting it to the place it is now. Can I just let it all go?

I generate money every month from advertisements and books sales which I have come to depend upon for monthly bills. What will I do without that money?

I have made some good online friends through online blogging and writing. Will they now disappear?

I do feel, however, that if I let everything die, God will raise something up from the ashes. I feel that God has something more for me than the tiny little blogging and book publishing empire I have built for myself (Which is not an empire at all, but more like a cool-aid stand on the corner…)

But at the same time, I wish that before I let everything die, God would tell me what He is going to resurrect. That would make the dying so much easier.

Yet I know that God does not work that wayโ€ฆ Every time I have seen death lead to resurrection in my life, I have never, not once, known what the season of resurrection was going to look like during the time I was going through the season of death.

So I am going to let things die, and then see what God raises up in His own time.

Here is what this looks like for my blog and books:

I am not actually “killing” anything. I’m not going to delete this blog or cancel my Facebook account. I am just going to step back from it all. I am taking a break from online activity.

For the most part, I will not be very active on Twitter, Facebook, or on this blog. For how long? I do not know. It may be a month. It may be a year. It may be forever. I just donโ€™t know.

Nothing that is currently online will be taken down. I am leaving up all my blogs and websites. I just will not be adding content to them regularly (if at all).

I do, of course, have some commitments to tie up. I have agreed to publish some books through Redeeming Press. This will get done. Those authors who are already published will continue to receive royalty payments.

I am blogging once a week in preparation for the โ€œAll About Eveโ€ conference. That will continue as well.

But thatโ€™s about it.

I think one reason God is calling me to die to all this is because very little of it is me. Over the past two years, I have come to see that God does not want us to be like Him, nor does God want us to be like Jesus. God calls us to be fully us.

We most glorify God and we most reveal Jesus only when we live up to who God made us to be and where Jesus is leading us to go.

As long as we try to be like God and point people to Jesus, we are hiding from and even denying the person God has made us to be.

As I look back over my research, study, and writing from the past several years, I see that I have been doing everything I can to not be me, but to be someone else instead. This is not all bad, because we learn by imitation, but God has recently been calling me to be me.

new lifeSince I am not sure I know what that means, the me I have become must die so that the me God desires can rise up refreshed and renewed.

So until God raises up something new in my life, or gives me direction on what He wants me to do, or maybe just gives me permission to pick back up where I left off because I needed a Sabbath rest, I will not regularly publish new blog posts, write new books, respond to comments, or interact with people much on the various social sites. If you send me email, I cannot promise I will respond to that either. I just feel God calling me to die.

And when resurrection comes โ€ฆ as it always does โ€ฆ it will be in Godโ€™s timing, in Godโ€™s way, and for Godโ€™s purposes.

See you on the other side!

God is Redeeming Church Bible & Theology Topics: death, Discipleship, dying, new life, resurrection, synchroblog

Advertisement

Thanks for helping Rescue Girls from Sex Slavery

By Jeremy Myers
3 Comments

Thanks for helping Rescue Girls from Sex Slavery

If you had lived back during the days of slavery, would you have helped slaves gain freedom?

If you answered “Yes!” then keep reading…

First, I want to thank those of you who donated to help me rescue girls from sex slavery.

I said I would cut off one inch of hair for every $100 dollars raised. I raised almost $600, but went ahead and cut off over 10 inches of hair anyway. I didn’t get enough to shave my head though!

Here are the Before and After shots:

Jeremy Myers hair

Hair of Jeremy Myers

That second shot was with my webcam, which obviously as terrible color….

Anyway, if you would have helped rescue slaves from slavery, you still can. There is more slavery today than at any other time of history, and most of these slaves are young girls. How much more dire could it get?

If you are somehow still not aware of the crazy epidemic of slavery in our world (and here in the United States!) RIGHT NOW, go see some of the stats on this page about Forced Prostitution.

And just think about this: Current estimates say that about 12 million Africans were shipped across the Atlantic for slavery from the 16th to the 19th centuries.

But according to Human Trafficking Statistics, there are CURRENTLY 12.3 million slaves RIGHT NOW. Yes, this year.

Human Trafficking

And many of them are children who are forced into prostitution. The average age is 12-14 years old. Most are girls. California has 3 of the 13 highest child sex trafficking areas. Some of them are raped 30-40 times EACH DAY.

Human Trafficking and child slavery is more common today than it was during the 300 years of slavery of our past.

There are more slavery victims this year than the total number of slaves during the entire 300 years of slavery in the past.

If you want to help, our favorite organization is the International Justice Mission.

To learn more about Human Trafficking and sex slavery, check out some of these posts:

Human Trafficking Posts

  1. Sex Slaves
  2. Would You Fight Slavery?
  3. Rescue Russian Sex Slaves
  4. Rescue Russian Girls from Sex Slavery
  5. Stop Her Nightmare
  6. Another Girl Rescued Today
  7. Girls for Sale
  8. Goal Reached!
  9. I Want to be a Prostitute
  10. $52,000 raised!
  11. 31 Million Sex Slaves
  12. Renting Lacy
  13. More Than Rice
  14. Human Trafficking Ring Busted
  15. The Other Big Game
  16. Sex Slavery, Planned Parenthood, and Your Tax Dollars
  17. How to Minister to Prostitutes
  18. Wisconsin Woman Held as Sex Slave in Brooklyn
  19. Coked-Up Whore
  20. Human Trafficking has Many Faces
  21. Into an India Brothel
  22. You Need a Girl?
  23. Human Trafficking Media
  24. The Son of God is Selling Children
  25. My Girls Raised $300 to help stop Human Trafficking
  26. Rape for Profit
  27. Human Trafficking Statistics
  28. Help Rescue Girls from Forced Prostitution

God is Redeeming Theology Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, human trafficking, prostitution, sex trafficking, slavery

Advertisement

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • …
  • 167
  • Next Page »
Join the discipleship group
Learn about the gospel and how to share it

Take my new course:

The Gospel According to Scripture
Best Books Every Christian Should Read
Study Scripture with me
Subscribe to my Podcast on iTunes
Subscribe to my Podcast on Amazon

Do you like my blog?
Try one of my books:

Click the image below to see what books are available.

Books by Jeremy Myers

Theological Study Archives

  • Theology – General
  • Theology Introduction
  • Theology of the Bible
  • Theology of God
  • Theology of Man
  • Theology of Sin
  • Theology of Jesus
  • Theology of Salvation
  • Theology of the Holy Spirit
  • Theology of the Church
  • Theology of Angels
  • Theology of the End Times
  • Theology Q&A

Bible Study Archives

  • Bible Studies on Genesis
  • Bible Studies on Esther
  • Bible Studies on Psalms
  • Bible Studies on Jonah
  • Bible Studies on Matthew
  • Bible Studies on Luke
  • Bible Studies on Romans
  • Bible Studies on Ephesians
  • Miscellaneous Bible Studies

Advertise or Donate

  • Advertise on RedeemingGod.com
  • Donate to Jeremy Myers

Search (and you Shall Find)

Get Books by Jeremy Myers

Books by Jeremy Myers

Schedule Jeremy for an interview

Click here to Contact Me!

© 2025 Redeeming God · All Rights Reserved · Powered by Knownhost and the Genesis Framework