Archive for category church
Pat Summitt on family
Posted by D Anderson in church, family, home school, house church on May 2nd, 2009
House churching, or whatever your preferred terminology, presumes a (hopefully somewhat stable) family. After all, church is family. And family is the cradle of society, too.
Here is a short audio clip released earlier this week by my fellow Tennessean and award winning coach of the UT Lady Vols. Pat has observed kids for more than 40 years and has now concluded:
… parents are too concerned to be the child’s friend rather than the child’s parent …
Home meetings restricted in VA
Posted by D Anderson in church, ecclesiology, house church, theology on March 18th, 2009
The Commonwealth of Virginia was once the bastion for ideals such as freedom of religion and the right to assemble. Now look.
Will your state be next to require permits and limit the number of attendees?
Virginia Beach has agreed to consider giving a group of Buddhist monks a permit to hold worship services at their home. The tentative agreement would settle a federal lawsuit the monks filed against the city in September after complaints about traffic prompted the City Council to shut down their services. City officials filed a stipulation of settlement yesterday in U.S. District Court. The proposed permit would limit Sunday meditation services at the home to no more than 20 people at a time. Festivals wouldn’t be allowed but the city agreed to help the monks to find another location.
Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch, March 17, 2009
Classroom size with respect to intimacy
Posted by D Anderson in church, ecclesiology, home school, house church on December 17th, 2008
Colleges and universities are rated on a number of criteria. A high rating comforts parents as they write out the checks each semester. One criteria is the faculty to student ratio, supposedly a measure of teacher/student interaction and intimacy. Another rating consideration is the average class size. The lower the ratio and smaller the class size, the better the rating.
Obviously, there is a parallel to small Christian groups such as house churches.
(In fairness to the traditional churches, it should be duly noted that Sunday Schools also allow and encourage intimacy.)
Cheers to the Lamb in whom are hidden the treasures of wisdom and knowledge!
Do Chinese house churcher’s desire to come out?
Posted by D Anderson in church on August 24th, 2008
Do Chinese house churcher’s desire to come out?
It’s easy for us to extol and honor them for their endurance under persecution but what do they want in terms of being able to meet openly?
Any of you Chinese house churcher’s out there? I realize that most Christian sites are blocked.
Charles Finney on formless church
Posted by D Anderson in christianity, church, ecclesiology, house church on August 22nd, 2008
Charles Finney (1792-1875) is a hero claimed by the likes of far-righter Jerry Falwell and left-leaning Jim Wallis of Sojourners – and all sorts in between.
The following extract is from Finney’s Revival Lectures, chapter 14. He popularized, I believe, the view that Scripture dictates no certain form of church structure, government, or ritual. Of course, he had plenty of ideas about those matters, himself.
We are left in the dark as to the measures pursued by the apostles and primitive preachers, except so far as we can gather from occasional hints in the Book of Acts. We do not know how many times they sang, how many times they prayed, in public worship, nor even whether they sang or prayed at all in their ordinary meetings for preaching. When Jesus Christ was on earth, laboring among His disciples, He had nothing to do with forms or measures. He did from time to time in this respect just as it would be natural for any man to do in such cases, without anything like a set form or mode. The Jews accused Him of disregarding their forms. His object was to preach and teach mankind the true religion. And when the apostles preached afterwards, with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven, we hear nothing about their having a particular system of measures for carrying on their work; nor do we hear of one apostle doing a thing in a particular way because others did it in that way. Their commission was: “Go and preach the Gospel, and disciple all nations.” It did not prescribe any forms. It did not admit any. No person can pretend to get any set of forms or particular directions as to measures, out of this commission. Do it – the best way you can; ask wisdom from God; use the faculties He has given you; seek the direction of the Holy Ghost; go forward and do it.
This was their commission. And their object was to make known the Gospel in the most effectual way, to make the truth stand out strikingly, so as to obtain the attention and secure the obedience of the greatest number possible. No person can find any form of doing this laid down in the Bible. It is preaching the Gospel which there stands out prominently as the great thing. The form is left out of the question.
It is manifest that in preaching the Gospel there must be some kind of measures adopted. The Gospel must be presented before the minds of the people, and measures must be taken so that they can hear it, and be induced to attend to it. This is done by *building churches, holding stated or other meetings, and so on. Without some measures, the Gospel can never be made to take effect among men.
So, if I am a Mormon, my church rituals are OK just as long as I am not pushy about them?
“This is done by building churches,” you say? Is that “building churches” as in church buildings?
Are house churchers (and all you others) prepared to end all discussions about church rituals and forms if they accept Finney’s viewpoint? I don’t see any other choice.
Spontaneous Expansion of the Church
Posted by D Anderson in church, church planting, ecclesiology, evangelism, house church on February 18th, 2008
Rowland Allen published a fine book by this title in the early 1900’s based on his experiences as a foreign missionary. I dig that title. Bring it on, Lord.
I found a text version of the book. In it, the phrases “church planting, church planter” did not appear. That is significant in that we too often see the church as something we plant rather than God adding to.
One plants (the gospel), one waters, God gives the increase!
the ministry of moneychanging and merchandising
Posted by D Anderson in church, house church, money, servanthood, theology on January 30th, 2008
The Temple moneychangers and merchandisers, more than anyone else on record, angered our humble Saviour. They and everyone else, no doubt, saw their “ministry” as a very useful one. Jews from all over the world visited the Temple and inevitably there were currency exchange issues which frequently emerged.
Likewise, those selling the sacrificial animals offered a very real service in the eyes of most. Otherwise, they would have been removed prior to Jesus.
What did our Lord detect in their harmless looking “ministries” which enraged him so?
What if they had rendered their services on a voluntary, non-profit basis?
What can we learn from this holy outburst of righteous anger?
When it was almost time for the Jewish Passover, Jesus went up to Jerusalem. In the temple courts he found men selling cattle, sheep and doves, and others sitting at tables exchanging money. So he made a whip out of cords, and drove all from the temple area, both sheep and cattle; he scattered the coins of the money changers and overturned their tables. To those who sold doves he said, “Get these out of here! How dare you turn my Father’s house into a market!” John 2:13-16
William Wilberforce and “the ministry”
Posted by D Anderson in christianity, church, house church, ministry, servanthood on January 30th, 2008
He was in his twenties when converted to Christianity and felt led to enter “the ministry.” John Newton, his song-writing friend, forbad such a course and encourgaged him to remain in politics where he eventually had huge influence with regards to the abolishment of slavery and – of all things – the encouragement of good manners.
‘Minister’ is the same word ascribed to government officials by Paul in the book of Romans, by the way. The abolition of slavery – I’d call that a ministry.
Anyone seen the recent movie about William Wilberforce?
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