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The Truth about Truth

By Jeremy Myers
7 Comments

The Truth about Truth

Jesus is the truthOne of the best ways to reach people for Jesus today is not to try to persuade or convince them through rational arguments and persuasive reasoning.

Certainly, some will respond to this, and so there is a place for it, but the majority of people today are relational in their approach to truth.

Most people are not asking, “Do I want to believe like you do?” but instead are asking, “Do I want to live like you do? Do I want to be like you?”

Whether you agree or not, most people today believe that beliefs result in behavior.

If your behavior stinks, people assume your beliefs stink too, without even knowing what it is you believe.  

If you want to convince people of the truth of Christianity, the best way to “argue” it today is not through reason and and rational propositions, but by becoming more and more like Jesus in everything we do.

Since Truth is a person (John 14:6), truth is best learned through knowing that person, Jesus Christ, and truth is best shown by living like Him.

Of course, it is not as easy at it sounds. I am convinced that most of us Christians and many of our churches have a very skewed idea of who Jesus was, so while we think we are living like Jesus, we may actually be living like Judas.

If you want to reach our culture for Jesus, the best (and most biblical) thing you can do is show people Jesus and invite them to follow Jesus with you.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, evangelism, following Jesus, love, missional, service, truth

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Bad People = Good Soil

By Jeremy Myers
5 Comments

Bad People = Good Soil

A while back we looked briefly at the Parable of the Four Soils and how it applies to all people.

Ideally, if we are good planters for the Kingdom of God, we want to be planting seeds in the best soil. It is this soil that gives a 3000%, 6000%, or 10,000% return on your investment.

But who is that soil? Which type of person should we focus on for the greatest return in our spiritual investment?

good soil

If you look in the average church, we think that the good soil is the rich, powerful, pretty people. Those with seminary degrees, nice hair, and big smiles.

But are these sorts of people really the “good soil”?

I am not so sure.

After all, what makes good soil?

Good Soil People

When I was young, my mom had some flower gardens, and every spring, she would go down to the lawn and garden store, and buy bags of “Manure” to put in her gardens. One year I asked her, “Mom, what is manure?” She said, “It’s cow poop.”

What made mom’s garden grow? Poop.

So what makes good soil? Good soil is that which has a lot of nutrients in it. Good soil is that which has a lot of fertilizer.

I am convinced that the “good soil” people are those who have a lot of sh*t in their lives.

Which people are these? The people we would normally think of as “bad people.” Sinners.

And yet in most of our churches, we work hardest to keep these people out. We say “come as you are” but the fine print says “only when you can act like us, talk like us, and look like us.”

But when we look at Jesus, who did He pick to work with, minister to, and pour His life into?

good soilJesus was friends with tax collectors, sinners, thieves, murderers, prostitutes, and drunkards. Why? He knew a good investment whenย He saw one.

In bad people, Jesusย saw fields upon fields of rich, fertile soil just waiting to be planted. Bad people make good soil for the seeds of the Gospel to take root.

So who are you and your church trying to seek after, love, and embrace?

(P.S. Credit goes to Neil Cole and his book Organic Church for most of this idea. Buy this book and read it!)

God is Redeeming Church Bible & Theology Topics: church growth, Discipleship, evangelism, friend of sinners, Parable of the Four Soils

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Pussycat Preachers

By Jeremy Myers
12 Comments

Pussycat Preachers

Heather Veitch Pussycat PreachersI read about this onย the MMI Weblog.

When young pastor Matt Brown announced he was supporting a ministry for women in the sex industry led by an x-stripper, he was expecting applause. Instead, he got cold stares and an e-mail inbox filled with angry letters. At issue was Heather Veitch, an x-stripper turned evangelist. She looked too much like a stripper and was leading Christian women into the dark world of strip clubs for so-called โ€œoutreach.โ€ Capturing it all, was documentary filmmaker Bill Day for his new film โ€œThe Pussycat Preacher.โ€

โ€œMost Christians know that Jesus spent time with prostitutes and tax collectors because that is where the word was needed. But believing the ideal is one thing and living the reality is another,โ€ says Day.

โ€œIf we all took a vote on being Biblical versus being respectable , we would all vote for Biblical,โ€ says theology expert Professor Sarah Sumner PhD from Azusa Pacific University in the film. โ€œBut the reality is many churches are more concerned with respectability.โ€

Pastor Greg Laurie from mega-church Harvest Christian Fellowship in Riverside was one of pastors who didnโ€™t believe Heatherโ€™s method of winning souls was worth the risk. He warned Brown to stay away from Veitch.

โ€œWhen a Pastor you look up to tells you something like that itโ€™s scary,โ€ Brown confesses. โ€œIโ€™m a pastor and I am supposed to love people. But I didnโ€™t love strippers. What Heather did was she birthed that in me and my congregation.โ€

Instead of backing away from Heather, Pastor Brown put up $50,000 of church money to support the ministry. But in no time at all, a rumor got started that the $50,000 was being used by Brown to buy lap dances for himself. Brown suddenly found himself on the verge of losing his church facility housed on the campus of Southern California Baptist University.

For her part, Heather Veitch claims she is winning souls and that is what matters. For evidence, she has the documentary which shows a number of strippers making their first venture into church. โ€œNow comes the hard part,โ€ Heather smiles.

Day says the film is not rated but very โ€˜โ€™PGโ€™โ€™ It has no nudity or offensive language. It isย available on DVD from Amazon.

What do you think about this kind of ministry? What do you think about Greg Laurie’s response? Is this kind of ministry too risky?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, evangelism, ministry, missions, strip club, strippers, witnessing

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Church Demographics You Will Not Find Anywhere Else

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

Church Demographics You Will Not Find Anywhere Else

church demographicsWhen going into church planting, planters are advised to look up the demographics of the place they are thinking of planting in. Today, I found a site with a special set of church demographics you won’t find anywhere else.

If you want to reach into the gutters of life and find a place that needs the Gospel, a place filled with people who to be shown grace, love, kindness, and mercy, click here to check out some interesting demographics studies by Forbes Magazine.

Lots of people think that the way the church is in their neighborhood is the way it is around the country. Nothing could be further from the truth. Some areas, such as Dallas, Colorado Springs, and Wheaton, are church Meccas. Lots of people and lots of money flow into churches.

Other places, like Vermont, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Nevada, and Oregon, are church wastelands by comparison.

If you are going to minister in your town and neighborhood, it is critical that you understand the spiritual and church demographics and history of the people who are there. Here are a few websites that will help.

The Association of Religion Data Archives

This is a fantastic site. You can get statistics and data maps on your area. It shows you what denominations there are, how many people attend church, and other helpful bits of information.

American Religious Identification Survey

This is a helpful report about religious trends from 1980 until today. It shows that even though our population has increased, church attendance is waning. I have linked to the Wikipedia page for these results because there is a lot of other helpful information on that page as well.

Seven Deadly Sins in America

If you compare the previous two pages with this page, some interesting trends are revealed. One thing I noticed is that six of the sinsโ€“avarice, gluttony, lust, sloth, pride, wrathโ€“are most common where church is sparsely attended. However, the seventh sin, envy, is most popular where church is widely attended. Interesting.

Hartford Institute for Religion Research

Hartford Seminary posts some good religion research statistics. I have used them before to research megachurch trends. At the time of this posting, however, their website was down, so I cannot give specific pages or links. Hopefully, they get the site back up and running.

Do you know of any other good sites for free religion demographics and research?

American Ethnic Geography.

Some good maps and statistics on religious diversity in America.

Most Religious States Map

A map which shows the states that are the most (and least) religious. Some good information here!

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

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The Atheist-Sensitive Church

By Jeremy Myers
4 Comments

The Atheist-Sensitive Church

Jim & Casper Go to Church - an atheist and a Christian talk about churchI recently readย Jimย & Casper Go to Church by Jim Henderson and Matt Casper. Not only did I thoroughly enjoy the book, but I also appreciate the various blogs managed by Helen (see chapter 5 in the book) over at Off The Map. Go check them out.

The set up for the book is that Jim Henderson “rented the soul” of Matt Casper on EBay for $504. ย Jim took Matt to several churches around the country to see what Matt thought of Christianity and the way we “do church.” The book records what happened.

Encouraging Things about Jim & Casper Go to Church

Theย two main things I took away fromย this bookย is that there is incredible value in (1) visiting other churches, and (2) inviting (or hiring) people who don’t believe the way we do to come and brutally critique our churches.ย Doing these two things would probably change the way most of us do church, and for the better. (As a side note, check out what LeadershipNow says about why businesses should hire “Insultants.” The same thing applies to churches.)

What I found mostย encouraging about the book is that Matt Casper, the Atheist, had many of the same critiques of modern “churchianity” as I do. Since I want to embrace and engage people just like Matt Casper, it was encouraging to see that in some ways, I am on the right track. His concerns about what is going on inย the churches he visited with Jim areย similar to many of theย concerns I have.

Challenging Things aboutย Jim & Casper Go to Church

The most challenging aspect of the book is how Jim, the Christian, rarely tried to correct or fix Casper’s views. Casper, as an “outsider” really did misunderstand what some churches were doing and why. I sometimes found myself thinking, “Why doesn’t Jim explain that to Casper?”

But at the end of the book (pp. 149-150), Jim explains why he didn’t.

There are three basic reasons: First,ย when people visit a church, they generally don’t have someone there to answer their questions and refute their misconceptions.ย Second, most Christians in the pews wouldn’t know how to respond to Casper anyway. Third, most of us Christians are too defensive and argumentative toward people who criticize the church. Instead of trying to develop genuine relationships with people, we most often try to win arguments. That’s no way to reach out. Rather, we should let their critiques stand, and maybe change the way we do some things.

I could go on and on about this great little book (even though there were some things I disagree with). Let me just give you a few of the best quotes:

Jim: “A while back (1,700 years to be exact) the church drifted into the religion business. I call it beliefism — the worship of the right beliefs — and what you’re hearing today is a version of beliefism. Rather than Christians giving priority to what we do, we’ve been taught a view that tells us what’s really important to be known for is what we believe” (p. 7).

Casper: “Is that what Jesus told you guys to do? Put on aย  Christian rock show that’s visually and sonically indistinguishable from a non-Christian rock show, change the words, and call it church? Is that pulled from the Bible?” (p. 18; cf. similar statements on pp. 39, 67).

Casper: “Outreach only lasts so long. The first step is always pretty good, polite outreach: ‘Would you like to come check out our church?’ Then it’s ratcheted up a notch: ‘Have you thought about where you’ll spend eternity?’ And then, they throw in the towel: ‘Have fun in hell, sinner!’ Maybe I’m exaggerating, but you get my drift” (p. 95).

Casper: “I understand that Christians believe Jesus was free of sin, but my impression is that he didn’t focus on that. He wasn’t like, ‘Look at me! No sin at all! Be just like me!’ Based on what I’ve read, his main thing was going out and helping the poor and those who were suffering, and instructing others to do the same” (p. 100).

Casper (note this from an Atheist!): “If the Bible is really the Word of God, it’s very, very important to not take it out of context. I mean, that’s the rule that applies to most every phrase ever said, so you’d think it’d apply tenfold to the Bible! …You can’t take a snippet of the Bible out of context and misuse it, or spin it, to support your particular pitch. That’s twisted” (p. 141).

The book abounds with such insights from an Atheist. I recommend reading it, and then going out and finding an Atheist or two to come visit your church and tell you what he or she thinks. Tell them to be brutal.

Then, when they are brutal, don’t try to defend yourself. Just listen. Whatever you do, don’t do this as some sort of marketing pitch to get Atheists to attend your church. That’s just dishonest. Be genuine. Be real. Just try to make friends. Andย if you can’t make friends with atheists, I suggest shutting down your church because you’re not doing anybody any good.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: atheists, Books I'm Reading, Christian books, church growth, Discipleship, evangelism, ministry, Theology of the Church

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