Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts

Monday, 24 September 2018

One Size Fits All

….for all of you who were baptised into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise. Galatians 3:27-29 NIV

This covers race, prisoners, and gender, and note there are only two genders mentioned, so I take it there is no third or fourth gender or anything between. The good news is that when you become part of God’s family (clothed with Christ) you are right where you need to be.

These verses are an encouragement to those who work with race hatred, and in the prison ministries, but we still have some way to go before we all recognise and honour the place of our women in the church. We are told that all these groups of people are ‘heirs according to the promise’ but there are some churches and people who prefer to use other Scriptures against this one to make another point.

In secular terms if we are mentioned in a ‘Last Will and Testament’, we have full rights as an heir whether male or female. To suggest that women heirs can only get the crumbs of their inheritance after the menfolk get theirs, goes against the laws of God and country. As we are told in Luke 11:12 by Jesus: If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!’ That’s anyone and everyone who asks, including the women. Who are we to limit God in what men and women can do? Oh, I am well aware of the verse that’s used to curtail the role women can play in the church as expressed in 1 Corinthians 14:34: Women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the law says. Also Ephesians 5:22 says: Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord, but context is everything.

Paul passed on his experiences to young Timothy of the difficulties he encountered in the young church at Corinth. He found many practices there which he felt needed some leadership, and Paul stepped up to the mark and pulled no punches in correcting the sinful and wrong practices. One of the disruptive things going on was some women who would talk over the teachers, or speak loudly among themselves thus disturbing the Spirit in the meetings. He writes in 1st Timothy 2:12 (Phillips) “Personally, I don’t allow women to teach, nor do I ever put them into positions of authority over men—I believe their role is to be receptive. My reasons are that man was created before woman. Further, it was Eve and not Adam who was first deceived and fell into sin.” In other translations it says “I do not permit”, and that is something we cannot ignore or ride roughshod over. Paul, very rightly in the circumstances, expressed his opinion to the young preacher, and it seemed to work in Corinth. He makes it clear that it is Paul who is speaking, and not a command from God. So why do some make it such a directive where it is not an issue?

As we know, where there is no context, there can be no text. When a man or a woman, boy or a girl, comes to Christ in prayer in any church that proclaims the salvation of a living God, will that loving God treat the man and boy any differently from the woman and girl? While you think about that, ask yourself why Paul wrote these words of caution to the churches he chose? Not every church. Let’s be careful how we treat God’s Word because there is a warning we need to heed in Revelation 22:18 addressed to the churches (which are types of our churches today) which says: “And I solemnly declare to everyone who hears the words of prophecy written in this book: If anyone adds anything to what is written here, God will add to that person the plagues described in this book.”

Monday, 26 June 2017

Why This Church?

Do you know what your church stands for? The things it accepts or frowns on? Have you checked anything out to your own satisfaction? Whoa, too many questions there I hear you say. However, there are reasons why we find ourselves in our particular place of worship, and the biggest one is that we just like it there!

I was brought up in a Christian home, with Godly parents, so it was easy for me to see that the Christian faith actually works, and I wanted some of that for myself and my family. Added to that was my observation that most non church goers I knew didn’t seem to fare as well when hit hard by life. So, for years I went along to the same fellowship, and grew up ‘in the church’. Not a bad thing at all. How about you? But why your particular church? We can give different reasons.

I was sent to Sunday School as a child, and never really stopped. Perhaps that’s your story too. Some of my best friends still go there, and we use it as a place to meet up. The singing and sermons make me feel good about myself. Or maybe, like me you have experienced a personal encounter with the living God, and no other reason is as important. Let’s go back to the beginning. The church you attend is there for a reason, but do you know and understand what that reason is? Do you know how it differs in doctrine and practice from other churches? If not, don’t you think it is worth finding out?


Shouldn’t we find out what our church believes about things like: The Bible, Creation, Evolution, Salvation, Heaven, Hell, The Christian Life, Sanctification, Marriage, Drugs, Alcohol, Tobacco, and Homosexuality to name just a few. I hope I have given you something to think about, but the most important thing is this, don’t stop going to church!