Advent Week 2: Timeless Moments with God

By Natalie LaValley

In the previous blog, I wrote about waiting. I’m going to return to the lines I quoted from T.S. Eliot’s poem “East Coker.”

I said to my soul, be still, and wait without hopeFor hope would be hope for the wrong thing; wait without love,For love would be love of the wrong thing; there is yet faithBut the faith and the love and the hope are all in the waiting.

In the first line, Eliot connects waiting to stillness. Or rather, stillness is a prerequisite to proper waiting. That can be hard to pull off during Advent. December is notorious for its busyness–there’s so much shopping, wrapping, decorating, baking, and traveling. It can become a time fraught with stress from financial pressures, activity, year-end deadlines, and family drama.

Why is stillness important in Advent? Stillness clears our minds so that we remember what we are waiting for. We typically blame consumerism for taking away from the “real meaning” of Christmas, but busyness is just as much the culprit. In fact, busyness and consumerism feed into each other. When you’re stressed, buying things or shopping online can create an addictive sense of temporary excitement or accomplishment. But shopping adds to the busyness, and so the vicious cycle begins. All the activity and consumption serves to overload our brains. When we practice stillness, we give our brains a chance to calm down so our minds can recenter on Christ.

There’s copious amounts of research showing why stillness is good for mental health, and it makes perfect sense that what is good for our souls is good for our bodies as well. Many people practice meditation purely for the health benefits. So if secular people are practicing stillness, shouldn’t we also be practicing it for our spiritual as well as physical health?

You don’t have to go to a monastery to incorporate some stillness into your life. Maybe it means shopping ahead so you have less to do during December (I know, too late for that now). Or maybe it means deciding you don’t have to put up all those lights or go to all those stores when a gift card will do. Perhaps with that extra time, you can spend thirty minutes reading and meditating on the Psalms. Or spend the first fifteen minutes of your morning in prayer.

The point is not to follow a legalistic procedure that you feel guilted into because some Christian writers are telling you that Christmas is too consumerist and busy.  Stillness is so much deeper than that. It’s the place, the timeless moment, where God can quietly reorder your mind and heart.

Advent Week 1: God’s Presence in The Wait

By Natalie LaValley

I said to my soul, be still, and wait without hopeFor hope would be hope for the wrong thing; wait without love,For love would be love of the wrong thing; there is yet faithBut the faith and the love and the hope are all in the waiting.- T.S. Eliot, “East Coker”

I’ve been meditating on this difficult passage from T.S. Eliot. After all, Advent is all about waiting. But what does Eliot mean by waiting without hope or love? Eliot, as an Anglican, was familiar with the ancient Christian tradition of the via negativa, or way of negation. This tradition recognizes that when we seek God, we often are actually seeking feelings of peace or love, and when we think of God, we are actually imagining our own earthly images. In the via negativa, Christians find God through absence–the absence of those things that we cling to but are not God Himself. Christians have often referred to this experience as “the dark night of the soul” (beginning with St. John of the Cross). The via negativa is a hard road, and not everyone needs to take it. But in this time of Advent, we do well to remember what we are really waiting for. We are not waiting for the arrival of hope or love as feelings or experiences. Even better, we are awaiting the birth of Christ Himself. The Psalms and other places in the Bible exhort us to wait on the Lord. When we wait for the Lord, we do not have wait while trying to generate feelings of hope or faith or love. Rather, as Eliot says, our waiting is our hope, faith, and love. Advent is a hard season for some people. It may mark the anniversary of a loved one’s death or a traumatic event. Or you may simply be having a stressful year, full of busyness or sickness, and you’re struggling to feel the joy that you’re told you’re supposed to feel in this season. If you find yourself in this place, you don’t need to feel bad. Although it has changed with time, Advent was traditionally a time of fasting, much like Lent. Seasons of waiting are often hard, because they are the absence of the thing you are waiting for. Moreover, you might be waiting on something particularly painful–a health breakthrough, a job, or a loved one’s return to Christ. It doesn’t make it any easier that we’re waiting on someone for whom “a thousand years is like a day” (2 Peter 3:8). These experiences, culminated in Advent, remind us of when the whole world was waiting for the Messiah. Whatever you may be waiting for, remember that there is something of immeasurable value that we no longer have to wait for: Jesus Christ, His salvation, and the Holy Spirit. We have an incomprehensible privilege in that Emmanuel has come into history, and His Holy Spirit dwells in us. The absence of joy or peace, though hard to endure, is not the absence of God. God is never absent. God is with us. 

“Wait for the LORD; be strong, and let your heart take courage; wait for the LORD!” Psalm 27:14. 

Discipleship Perspectives featuring Rhonda Spriggs

As I’ve been blogging about discipleship, I began to wonder what other church leaders and staff had to say about it. What are common experiences, frustrations, and hopes? Here’s my interview with Tom Fuerst, the senior pastor at Bluff City Church in Memphis, Tennessee.

Is the Church doing a good job of discipling congregations?

There are indicators that can be measured over generations which suggest we’re not doing a good job. If we’re just asking about programs, we are probably the most programmed people in the history of the world. But as each generation grows up, they don’t come back to church until they have children, and each generation comes back at a smaller percentage. This indicates that they don’t think the church has much to offer for their lives.”

What’s the biggest obstacle church leaders face?

On the staff end: We’re over-programmed. Additionally, leaders don’t want to do anything about discipleship even if they acknowledge that it’s weak. Our primary measurement is “butts in seats” because it looks like success.

On the congregation end: Things in church don’t matter. We have the greatest topic in the world to talk about, and we make it boring and undemanding. We try to keep people in church by entertaining them. But when people graduate and all they’ve been done is catered to, they discover that college groups can fulfill that better – the world entertains better. We’re not showing them how important this really is. We even have adults who have that assumption about the church.

Another major challenge is busyness. We don’t have healthy work/life balance to begin with. Then people have children, and they want their children involved in all the programs, to be busy. God would tell us not to do that with our lives. We don’t surrender our plans to Him, because He’d probably tell us to cut out half our activities.

You can see the problem reflected in the church attendance. Inconsistent attendance is the new norm because people are so busy.

If you look back in history, Ancient Israel understood worship service as a reordering of the world. The world is in chaos, and we reorder it by worshipping the Creator of order.

The final problem is laziness. If we’re honest, we don’t really think God matters, and we would rather watch football.

What do church leaders need?

The pull of American individualism and consumerism is so strong that I don’t know if we know what we need. And if we did, we wouldn’t want it. At the end of the day, our success needs to be measured by faithfulness to God – but the model held up by evangelicalism and conferences is that if you’re successful, you have lots of people. We’ve mixed capitalism into the way we measure church success by assuming that if you have a good church, you’ll have a big congregation. If the product you provide is meeting a genuine felt need, regardless of of the numbers, you will be successful. But what if, at the end of the day, God is not interested in being our product? I’m all for improving things and doing things with excellence – but what’s the motivation? I need the reminder that my identity is not the number of people listening to me. It’s hard.

To have genuine discipleship, we’ll have to dismantle capitalist, consumer, and celebrity Christianity. Just watch in a few years as a new celebrity pulls out a few verses and says this is how church is supposed to be!

We need greater appreciation for the story of the Bible. We don’t tell the story well; we either break it down into hyper-analyzed academic particles without the whole picture, or we think that people will be more drawn to our programs and entertainment than to the greatest story in the world.

Please feel free to comment and share constructive thoughts on these posts. I always love to hear more perspectives, so if you have your own thoughts on discipleship or topics you’d like to see covered in this blog, email me at natalie@ascendingleaders.org.

Discipleship Perspectives featuring Dr. Philip Tallon

As I’ve been blogging about discipleship, I began to wonder what other church leaders and staff had to say about it. What are common experiences, frustrations, and hopes? Here’s my interview with Tom Fuerst, the senior pastor at Bluff City Church in Memphis, Tennessee.

Is the Church doing a good job of discipling congregations?

There are indicators that can be measured over generations which suggest we’re not doing a good job. If we’re just asking about programs, we are probably the most programmed people in the history of the world. But as each generation grows up, they don’t come back to church until they have children, and each generation comes back at a smaller percentage. This indicates that they don’t think the church has much to offer for their lives.”

What’s the biggest obstacle church leaders face?

On the staff end: We’re over-programmed. Additionally, leaders don’t want to do anything about discipleship even if they acknowledge that it’s weak. Our primary measurement is “butts in seats” because it looks like success.

On the congregation end: Things in church don’t matter. We have the greatest topic in the world to talk about, and we make it boring and undemanding. We try to keep people in church by entertaining them. But when people graduate and all they’ve been done is catered to, they discover that college groups can fulfill that better – the world entertains better. We’re not showing them how important this really is. We even have adults who have that assumption about the church.

Another major challenge is busyness. We don’t have healthy work/life balance to begin with. Then people have children, and they want their children involved in all the programs, to be busy. God would tell us not to do that with our lives. We don’t surrender our plans to Him, because He’d probably tell us to cut out half our activities.

You can see the problem reflected in the church attendance. Inconsistent attendance is the new norm because people are so busy.

If you look back in history, Ancient Israel understood worship service as a reordering of the world. The world is in chaos, and we reorder it by worshipping the Creator of order.

The final problem is laziness. If we’re honest, we don’t really think God matters, and we would rather watch football.

What do church leaders need?

The pull of American individualism and consumerism is so strong that I don’t know if we know what we need. And if we did, we wouldn’t want it. At the end of the day, our success needs to be measured by faithfulness to God – but the model held up by evangelicalism and conferences is that if you’re successful, you have lots of people. We’ve mixed capitalism into the way we measure church success by assuming that if you have a good church, you’ll have a big congregation. If the product you provide is meeting a genuine felt need, regardless of of the numbers, you will be successful. But what if, at the end of the day, God is not interested in being our product? I’m all for improving things and doing things with excellence – but what’s the motivation? I need the reminder that my identity is not the number of people listening to me. It’s hard.

To have genuine discipleship, we’ll have to dismantle capitalist, consumer, and celebrity Christianity. Just watch in a few years as a new celebrity pulls out a few verses and says this is how church is supposed to be!

We need greater appreciation for the story of the Bible. We don’t tell the story well; we either break it down into hyper-analyzed academic particles without the whole picture, or we think that people will be more drawn to our programs and entertainment than to the greatest story in the world.

Please feel free to comment and share constructive thoughts on these posts. I always love to hear more perspectives, so if you have your own thoughts on discipleship or topics you’d like to see covered in this blog, email me at natalie@ascendingleaders.org.

Discipleship Perspectives featuring Phil Morrow

As I’ve been blogging about discipleship, I began to wonder what other church leaders and staff had to say about it. What are common experiences, frustrations, and hopes? Here’s my interview with Tom Fuerst, the senior pastor at Bluff City Church in Memphis, Tennessee.

Is the Church doing a good job of discipling congregations?

There are indicators that can be measured over generations which suggest we’re not doing a good job. If we’re just asking about programs, we are probably the most programmed people in the history of the world. But as each generation grows up, they don’t come back to church until they have children, and each generation comes back at a smaller percentage. This indicates that they don’t think the church has much to offer for their lives.”

What’s the biggest obstacle church leaders face?

On the staff end: We’re over-programmed. Additionally, leaders don’t want to do anything about discipleship even if they acknowledge that it’s weak. Our primary measurement is “butts in seats” because it looks like success.

On the congregation end: Things in church don’t matter. We have the greatest topic in the world to talk about, and we make it boring and undemanding. We try to keep people in church by entertaining them. But when people graduate and all they’ve been done is catered to, they discover that college groups can fulfill that better – the world entertains better. We’re not showing them how important this really is. We even have adults who have that assumption about the church.

Another major challenge is busyness. We don’t have healthy work/life balance to begin with. Then people have children, and they want their children involved in all the programs, to be busy. God would tell us not to do that with our lives. We don’t surrender our plans to Him, because He’d probably tell us to cut out half our activities.

You can see the problem reflected in the church attendance. Inconsistent attendance is the new norm because people are so busy.

If you look back in history, Ancient Israel understood worship service as a reordering of the world. The world is in chaos, and we reorder it by worshipping the Creator of order.

The final problem is laziness. If we’re honest, we don’t really think God matters, and we would rather watch football.

What do church leaders need?

The pull of American individualism and consumerism is so strong that I don’t know if we know what we need. And if we did, we wouldn’t want it. At the end of the day, our success needs to be measured by faithfulness to God – but the model held up by evangelicalism and conferences is that if you’re successful, you have lots of people. We’ve mixed capitalism into the way we measure church success by assuming that if you have a good church, you’ll have a big congregation. If the product you provide is meeting a genuine felt need, regardless of of the numbers, you will be successful. But what if, at the end of the day, God is not interested in being our product? I’m all for improving things and doing things with excellence – but what’s the motivation? I need the reminder that my identity is not the number of people listening to me. It’s hard.

To have genuine discipleship, we’ll have to dismantle capitalist, consumer, and celebrity Christianity. Just watch in a few years as a new celebrity pulls out a few verses and says this is how church is supposed to be!

We need greater appreciation for the story of the Bible. We don’t tell the story well; we either break it down into hyper-analyzed academic particles without the whole picture, or we think that people will be more drawn to our programs and entertainment than to the greatest story in the world.

Please feel free to comment and share constructive thoughts on these posts. I always love to hear more perspectives, so if you have your own thoughts on discipleship or topics you’d like to see covered in this blog, email me at natalie@ascendingleaders.org.

Discipleship Perspectives featuring Tom Fuerst

As I’ve been blogging about discipleship, I began to wonder what other church leaders and staff had to say about it. What are common experiences, frustrations, and hopes? Here’s my interview with Tom Fuerst, the senior pastor at Bluff City Church in Memphis, Tennessee.

Is the Church doing a good job of discipling congregations?

There are indicators that can be measured over generations which suggest we’re not doing a good job. If we’re just asking about programs, we are probably the most programmed people in the history of the world. But as each generation grows up, they don’t come back to church until they have children, and each generation comes back at a smaller percentage. This indicates that they don’t think the church has much to offer for their lives.”

What’s the biggest obstacle church leaders face?

On the staff end: We’re over-programmed. Additionally, leaders don’t want to do anything about discipleship even if they acknowledge that it’s weak. Our primary measurement is “butts in seats” because it looks like success.

On the congregation end: Things in church don’t matter. We have the greatest topic in the world to talk about, and we make it boring and undemanding. We try to keep people in church by entertaining them. But when people graduate and all they’ve been done is catered to, they discover that college groups can fulfill that better – the world entertains better. We’re not showing them how important this really is. We even have adults who have that assumption about the church.

Another major challenge is busyness. We don’t have healthy work/life balance to begin with. Then people have children, and they want their children involved in all the programs, to be busy. God would tell us not to do that with our lives. We don’t surrender our plans to Him, because He’d probably tell us to cut out half our activities.

You can see the problem reflected in the church attendance. Inconsistent attendance is the new norm because people are so busy.

If you look back in history, Ancient Israel understood worship service as a reordering of the world. The world is in chaos, and we reorder it by worshipping the Creator of order.

The final problem is laziness. If we’re honest, we don’t really think God matters, and we would rather watch football.

What do church leaders need?

The pull of American individualism and consumerism is so strong that I don’t know if we know what we need. And if we did, we wouldn’t want it. At the end of the day, our success needs to be measured by faithfulness to God – but the model held up by evangelicalism and conferences is that if you’re successful, you have lots of people. We’ve mixed capitalism into the way we measure church success by assuming that if you have a good church, you’ll have a big congregation. If the product you provide is meeting a genuine felt need, regardless of of the numbers, you will be successful. But what if, at the end of the day, God is not interested in being our product? I’m all for improving things and doing things with excellence – but what’s the motivation? I need the reminder that my identity is not the number of people listening to me. It’s hard.

To have genuine discipleship, we’ll have to dismantle capitalist, consumer, and celebrity Christianity. Just watch in a few years as a new celebrity pulls out a few verses and says this is how church is supposed to be!

We need greater appreciation for the story of the Bible. We don’t tell the story well; we either break it down into hyper-analyzed academic particles without the whole picture, or we think that people will be more drawn to our programs and entertainment than to the greatest story in the world.

Please feel free to comment and share constructive thoughts on these posts. I always love to hear more perspectives, so if you have your own thoughts on discipleship or topics you’d like to see covered in this blog, email me at natalie@ascendingleaders.org.

The Faith Journey of Marilyn Wadkins

Exploring Christ: I grew up in a family that always went to church. My mom’s father was a Church of Christ preacher, so my mom made sure we continued in that tradition. We attended a local Church of Christ and heard Bible stories on Sunday morning, Sunday evening, and Wednesday evening. My dad’s parents were Missouri Synod Lutheran, so when went to visit them, I got a taste of a mainline denomination and liturgy.

I enjoyed the harmonizing of the congregation in the Church of Christ music. My mom has a beautiful soprano voice and I learned the alto line, so we made a pretty good duo (songs and music are still an important part of our lives). It sometimes seems that God speaks to me in song titles, or in the words of songs that just seem to pop into my head at times when I am struggling.

My most vivid memory of when I really sensed that Jesus became my Savior happened when I was eleven. I was sitting in the Fellowship Hall at my family’s church, and I was with the other kids watching a slide presentation of Jesus’s crucifixion. I started crying and felt for the first time that he had suffered for me. On November 1, 1964, after about twenty verses of “Just as I Am” following a revival sermon at our church, I walked the aisle and was baptised. Stories of Jesus were always a part of my life, and finally I began a relationship with Him, too.

Growing in Christ:  In my twenties I became a worker in the kingdom. My husband was baptized. When I was twenty-three, my younger brother was force fed LSD, and he became a paranoid schizophrenic. The church I had grown up in was not supportive of my family, and we began attending an Episcopal church where therapist and author John Bradshaw was teaching a Sunday School class. John and his wife Nancy were counseling my parents. Although I continued to go to church, I struggled with understanding God, and more specifically, understanding prayer.

My 1st Wall: My brother (David) wasn’t getting well. Healing wasn’t happening. He heard “voices.” We tried finding him a halfway house that he could live in with supervision and medication, but David didn’t like being around “crazy” people, and he didn’t like the way the medicine made him feel, so he left town and became a homeless person, living wherever the weather was conducive to sleeping on the street. He returned to Houston when I was 27. We tried letting him live with us, but by that time we had a one-year old son. David had moments of violence when he slipped into his other personality, and it wasn’t safe for him to be in our home. I was also afraid of what he would do to my parents or my sister when he was off his meds. I prayed constantly for protection for my family and healing for him.

A major turning point came when I was invited to a Bible study on grace, lead by a pastor who was planting a church in a school. The church established a building at the front of our subdivision, and I began to volunteer there. Eventually they hired me to be the part-time Business Administrator, and as the church grew, I became a full-time Program Director/Business Administrator.

Close to Christ: I became a workaholic for the Kingdom. My brother David ended his life on my parents’ back porch when I was 31. The next year, my husband and I went to the Holy Land.

I decided to become certified in Christian Education at Perkins School of Theology. Seminary opened my eyes to a new way of understanding the Bible (I had no idea how many books had been written about what people thought the Bible said). The professors encouraged me to ask questions and to struggle with finding answers. The Bible became more than just stories; it became a way to connect to God, to understand God. I took a position at a larger church and became the full-time Director of Discipleship, responsible for Children, Youth, and Adult Discipleship. I also assisted with leading worship. My husband and I lead a couple trips to the Holy Land, Greece (Journeys of Paul), and Italy (History of the Church). I decided to seek ordination, took additional seminary courses, and began going through the ordination process.

My second wall: I started feeling the walls of the church closing in on me. It seemed like the church was taking over my life. I wanted the church to build relationships with people who were struggling. Then a relationship from the past came back to haunt me and brought back memories of my life before my brother’s overdose. I went into counseling to deal with my anger at my brother and what he had done to our family.

Back to Close to Christ: I became a builder for the church. I left the church I’d been working at to become Executive Director of Habitat for Humanity. The job was fascinating, but overwhelming. I decided to take my last class in worship, was ordained, and began to look for another church position. My husband and I decided to start looking for a home away from Houston, hoping for our lives to slow down a little bit. We bought an old plantation home in the country that was a Bed and Breakfast and Event facility. I left Habitat for Humanity and found a part-time position at a church close by.

My 3rd Wall: The B&B ended up being a lot more work than we anticipated. The more we advertised, the more guests and events we had, the more staff we had to hire, and the more paperwork we had to do. My husband continued working and commuting to Houston. I could not manage the B&B and the church, so I left the job at the church. This was a great time of reflection for me, but I missed working at the church. We decided to hire a manager for the B&B, and I found a full-time position as a Minister of Education in College Station.

I found myself doing church work at the B&B and B&B work at the church. I couldn’t get away from people. I came to the point of deciding that I needed to leave my husband, leave the church, or sell the B&B. God didn’t seem to be answering my prayers for sanity. We put the B&B on the market and our manager left, so I had to leave the position serving the church to manage the B&B. I was very unhappy. I missed the “busyness” of the church. I was lonely and angry. I couldn’t find God in the beauty and quiet of the countryside.

Back to Close to Christ: I found a Minister of Education position at a church back in Houston area and started commuting to Houston. I put the names of some people who came to look at the B&B in my Bible, and eventually the B&B finally sold.

Eventually there was trouble at the church between the senior pastor and the associate pastor, so I hired an executive coach who had visited the B&B to help me with the staff dynamics. My coach was an answer to prayer and an angel sent by God. My life seemed more manageable. God was listening!  

Then my younger sister became very ill from the Lyme disease she had been struggling with since 1988 (a year after my brother died), and she had to go on disability. My parents, who had previously planned to move back to Houston to live with my sister, decided to stay in Georgetown. So I went on temporary leave of absence from my position at the church to help take care of my sister and my parents. During this time away from the church, I took a certification course in executive business coaching and became very interested in the coaching approach to ministry. My goal since then has been to teach churches and people in ministry coaching techniques that have made my life and my ministry so much more effective.

Abiding in Christ: My husband and I decided to move closer to his office, and I left my paid position in the church. I am able to make time to read, pray, do things at church that I enjoy (teaching children, singing in the choir), cook healthy meals, exercise frequently, and visit with friends. Working part time as a coach has allowed me time to do the things I love.

Being a leader is primarily what has helped me grow more deeply in love with God. When someone would ask me to stretch myself in a leadership position, I grew when I accepted the challenge. I meet with my spiritual director frequently. I have learned it is okay to say “no” to some things so I can say “yes” to the things that are better for my relationship to God and to those who are the most important people in my life. I truly believe God used those “walls” to open doors.

Marilyn is extremely passionate about the value of coaching in any situation. She became certified in Executive and Life coaching in 2013, took Vibrant Church Initiative’s training, and began coaching churches in 2014. After visiting the Ascending Leaders website, she took a couple of their courses and participated in a session of DiscipleOn. She has seen a variety of denominations from all over the country struggling with the same challenges. She says, “when people grow in their faith, there is hope. When their relationship with God is strong, the world is a better place.”

The Balanced Walk: The Sacramental Life

by Natalie LaValley

In my exploration of the previous four streams of Christianity, I’ve described some of their corresponding disciplines for spiritual growth. That assumes a starting point. It may be difficult to identify an exact moment when you became interested in spiritual matters. It may have started with a tragic experience that left you grasping for more, or you might have grown up in a Christian family and experienced gradual change.

However or whenever you came to follow Christ, the Bible indicates that there is a key transition from “the dominion of darkness” to “the kingdom of the Son” (Col. 1:13). It does not necessarily mean we can point to a precise moment when we believed. But our transition from spiritual death to life occurs when we come to believe that Jesus’ death and resurrection – and nothing else – pays for our sins (John 3:16-18; Rom. 10:9).

When we are “born again,” the Holy Spirit enters us. In that moment, a transformation occurs in which Christ cleanses us of sin and presents us as righteous to His Father. At the same time, however, we do not yet perfectly reflect the image of Christ. From that point on, we enter the process of spiritual growth.

The evangelical stream recognizes the staggering importance of the decision to trust in Christ alone for salvation. As a result, the evangelical disciplines focus on clearly presenting the message of the gospel to everyone. It also emphasizes having a correct understanding of the Bible.

From a spiritual discipline perspective, the Holy Spirit can use our careful and consistent reading of the Bible to develop the evangelical emphasis. We can easily fall into the habit of superficial or purely academic involvement with Scripture, and thus the writer of Hebrews points out:

For the word of God is living and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart. Hebrews 4:12

In other words, we are not commanded to simply master the topics of the Bible. We are to engage in the Word in such a way that its living truth masters our thoughts, perspectives, and actions. The disciplines of Scripture reading, meditation, reflection and memorization powerfully help us to base our lives on truth.

Jesus and the Evangelical Stream

Jesus says, “I am the way and the truth and the life,” “I am the bread of life,” “I am the light of the world,” “I am the good shepherd,” and “I am the resurrection and the life.” He is God’s gift that we receive through faith, the one and only path to the Father.

Jesus is the Word of God living among us in the flesh, as John tells us in John 1.  He is the good news of the Kingdom, which He not only proclaims but also demonstrates. Some people, such as Zacchaeus, Mary Magdalene and the Samaritan woman, received the good news for themselves and entered into the Kingdom. Others like Judas, the rich young ruler, and many of the religious rulers held back.

Jesus then commanded His followers to proclaim and demonstrate the good news. While people commonly think of the Great Commission (Matt. 28:18-20) as Jesus commanding His followers to “go” and to “make disciples,” this is a misunderstanding. The form of the verb translated as “go” is not that of a command but rather of something that has already been happening and will continue to happen. So a better understanding of it would be, “as you are going, make disciples of nations, baptizing them . . . and teaching them to obey . . . .” The command and emphasis is not to “go” but to “make disciples.” Part of making disciples includes baptizing and teaching. With Jesus as our model, the evangelical stream emphasizes how we are to also proclaim the good news of God’s Kingdom as we go through our lives, whether we go overseas or not.

Example from History

During the late Middle Ages, some church leaders began to distort the Gospel message for profit, a temptation that Satan loves to use to try to disgrace many different churches even today. In the sixteenth century, biblical scholars such as Martin Luther and John Calvin, through study of the Word, proclaimed the gospel of salvation by grace and through faith alone. They helped lay people to understand that they did not need to spend their earnings on indulgences or other such things to earn eternal life.

Three Themes

The evangelical stream comprises three themes.

  1. The faithful proclamation of the gospel, which is the good news of personal redemption through the work of Jesus Christ on the cross. Jesus invites us all into a relationship, and when we receive it, He gives us the responsibility and honor to share the good news with others.

  2. Scripture is a faithful container of the gospel. Scripture takes precedence over personal experience, dreams, visions, and traditions.

  3. The New Testament, especially the epistles and later the early church councils, set forth the essential doctrine of the Christian faith.

A Word of Caution

Before we move on to the sixth stream of Christianity, a word of advice and encouragement to learn from others is important. The divergence of the six streams throughout church history has resulted not only to opposition between streams but also different “currents” within individual streams. In history, Christians have even resorted to killing other Christians for practicing a different stream. Our own hostility may not go that far, but that doesn’t mean it does not exist.

Have you ever wondered which “definition” of Christianity is correct? If you have much experience in churches, you likely picked up the idea that there is a “right” and “wrong” answer to every question, even ones about non-essential doctrine. Especially if you grew up in church, it’s easy to pick up the idea that there are many different kinds of Christians, but yours is the best, and when you all get to Heaven, everyone else will see that you were right all along. But do you actually think that when we all get together in paradise, God is going to give one group a “Defenders of Truth” trophy, while shaking His head sadly at everyone else?

What if, instead, we all practiced Christ’s virtue of humility? If we are to become like the multifaceted Christ, we need to admit that we all have our strengths and weaknesses. We can endeavor to be like a tree with roots drawing water from all of these streams so we can more fully flourish.

Of course, some doctrinal issues are essential, but myriads more are non-essential and varying in importance. The evangelical theme, to clarify, is not the only stream that affirms that salvation comes by grace through faith in Jesus alone; rather, it is the stream that emphasizes teaching this message as part of our post-salvation spiritual walks. These six streams are not differences of essential doctrine but different ways of conforming ourselves to the image of Christ. If we focus on only a couple aspects, we miss other important ways of reflecting Him.

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