Thursday, September 27, 2007

Day 11 – Unification Theory

"The people devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. Everyone was filled with awe, and many wonders and miraculous signs were done by the apostles. All the believers were together and had everything in common. Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need. Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved."
Acts 2:42-47

I can remember serving on staff at a church in Gatesville, Texas. I was the youth pastor at the time and it was my first full time staff position since going into ministry, so I was very excited, naïve and full of hope for what God would do there. I remember talking with the people who attended the church and developing some great friendships with those people. There really wasn’t anyone in the church I didn’t like. Good, hard working people.

That’s why it surprised me a little – well, a lot – when the fighting began. It seemed subtle at first, but over time it became just downright mean. People began arguing over so many small and petty things. Then the name calling, bickering and backstabbing began. A lot of the conversation became focused around worship styles - hymns versus choruses - and eventually a faction of the church split off from the congregation and started their own church so they could “truly worship God.”

After a couple of years, I left that church to go attend seminary in Fort Worth. Over time, I discovered that a lot of churches fight over a lot of different things. Not every church, mind you. But more than one would think. It's kind of a sad irony when you think about it; the Church is the singular agent that God has sent to declare to the world that there is peace between God and man and the message keeps getting blurred by the lack of peace between the messengers.

I wish these unity challenged churches understood the principles in the passage above. The first thing that happened in the first century church after 3000 people committed their lives to Christ was these same people committing their lives to each other. They studied God’s Word together. They ate together. They prayed together. They took care of each other’s needs. And, as a result of their commitment to each other, they truly worshipped God and everyone around them couldn’t wait to be a part of their community.

I wonder what the world thinks about our churches today. Do they see a place where people are committed to each other – even the difficult people among us? Do they see an environment where people are sensitive to each others’ needs and aren’t just focused on their own needs? Do they have a sense that these people would do anything for each other and that they just love being around each other? If they did, it seems as though we would see a lot more people wanting to be a part of the church. It would make sense that there would be more people being added to the church’s numbers who were committing their lives to Christ because they had to be a part of this community of givers and servants.

We can do something about it. We can revolutionize how the world defines “church.” We can be a part of the movement that restores this sense of Biblical community to the world’s eyes – at least to Austin’s eyes. So much so that they cannot fathom not getting involved in this amazing group of Christ followers. We can be the most loving, giving, caring community of people they have ever seen.

Not only can we do this, we must do this. Not just for the world’s sake, but for our own.

Scripture is filled with admonitions and commands for God’s people to be unified at all costs. We can’t allow even a hint of disunity to exist among us. It begins with you and me. We must set the bar of unity high and guard that bar with everything we have. Together we can redefine “church” for the city of Austin and beyond.

Together.

As you pray, allow these prompters to facilitate your interaction with God.
  • Thank God that He did everything necessary for you to be united with Him through Jesus’ death on the cross.
  • Thank God that He does nothing that would lead people towards disunity.
  • Ask God to give you wisdom as to whether or not you need to make any relationships right that may be fractured.
  • Ask God to help you to be a unifying force in the Body of Christ, a guardian of the standard of unity, and a champion for your brothers and sisters in Christ.
  • Ask God that our church would be a part of redefining “church” for the city of Austin and beyond.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I just wanted to post a comment that I am following the daily readings on this Prayerway to Heaven. I am a new member of the church and became a Christian only 2 years ago. I am stuggling with turning total control of my life over to God, releasing all my authority over my environment, and coming to the realization that only God is truly in control. I'm trained as a scientist and have been taught to over analyze problems based purely on evidence, so this background has me extremely conflicted at times. However, I am getting many positive messages from these bible studies and am approaching my relationship with God one step at a time. I truly hope to someday see God in everything so I can make the right decisions in my life. I understand it will take time but would ask that others pray for me. Pray that God gives me the power to bare with my struggles with true, honest faith in God. Pray that God brings me to enlightenment and will show me his teachings throughout the course of each day that I live. God Bless.

Devin