Sunday, December 12, 2010

The Bible study that became the linchpin for my changing beliefs.

A few years ago we had left Wildwood Baptist ( leaving there may someday be the source of another blog entry) and joined Creekside Community Church (They would later change the name to Creekside Bible Fellowship, and after I left there they changed it again to Rowlett Bible Fellowship).  At the time they were a Southern Baptist Church that operated more as a Bible Church.  I was teaching 4-6th grade boys and was in their Care Group Leadership Group for present and future Care Group leaders. By all accounts, I should have been happy there.  My family was very happy there, but I was not.

 I felt a longing inside my soul to study the Pharisees in the Bible.  I needed to see them as 3 dimensional beings instead of the 2 dimensional ones that are taught in churches.  What I mean by that is that for most people, they are like the cowboys in the old western movies that wore black hats.  We see the name Pharisee and immediately think that they are the bad guys, so therefore everything they did was wrong.

I started by looking at their name.  Pharisee means separate and is taken from Lev. 15: 31
"Thus you shall keep the sons of Israel separated from their uncleanness, so that they will not die in their uncleanness by their defiling My tabernacle that is among them.".

This is what the Pharisees were all about.  They live in an era where the ruler was named Herod, who really was a Roman governor but was allowed to use the tittle King.  He did a lot of rebuilding in Israel, but he also sought to incorporate the Roman lifestyle into Israel.  The Roman lifestyle is the same lifestyle that Christians oppose here in the USA.   Some of the Israelites who were called Herodians looked to him as the coming Messiah.  There were other religious leaders of that day called Sadducees who denied the existence of angels, and the belief that man had a soul that would continue to live after he died, and denied the resurrection of the dead.  They only believed in the law  and that God would physically bless those who obeyed it and punished those who did not.  The Pharisees saw both groups as wrong and tried to live out the whole council of scriptures that they had up to that point which we call the Old Testament.

They carried this message across the world to bring people to God.  They tithed their crops as commanded in the law and gave to the temple.  They so disciplined themselves that they look like they obeyed every command from God.  There was one command that could not be done by self discipline and that is the command "Do not covet".  Paul would later write that the more he fought against this sin, the more that he committed it.  I believe that this sin is what Jesus was talking about when He said, "You clean the outside of the cup and the dish, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence. Blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup,   so that the outside may become clean too!".

As I looked at this I began to think about the message that was taught by well meaningful leaders, myself included, I began to see that we are no different from the Pharisees of Jesus day.  We seek to spread the message about Jesus and then tell people that they need to follow certain rules to be accepted by Him.  Jesus taught that He would clean the inside of a person and as that person becomes clean on the inside then their actions would reflect that on the outside.  

From this lesson, I now focus on relationships and not on changing people.  When I try to change someone by putting commandments on them and browbeating them, I am really showing that I do not trust God to change them.

4 comments:

  1. So at that point, you became a bit dubious about your role it sounds like. You weren't sure that all of the various activities being set up were all that useful.

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  2. Actually, at that point I found a freedom. Most Church programs are set up to train people in a similar way to the way they train dogs.Do things over and over and reward good behavior until it becomes a habit. It is a outwards in philosophy. In this new freedom, it is an inside out philosophy that allows God to work.I also started seeing church leadership as more pharisaical (including myself) than before.

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  3. The second part of this study was over the method of leadership within the church, and I hope to get that ready at some point soon.

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  4. Steve, one thing about this study: I told a couple of elders about this study that I posted here today and the next thing I knew -- the Pastor was leading a devotion with the group of Care Group leaders that I was a part of and using Romans 7 to tell us that the Pharisees were all bad and there was nothing good about them and that neither Creekside or its leaders were anything like them. That reaction just reinforced my second part of the study about the leadership within the church, that I had started but had not mentioned to anybody yet.

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