I have been interested and dismayed by the stories this week of hundreds of Anglican clergy leaving the Church of England for the Roman Catholic church.
I am fully in agreement with them in not wanting to endorse women bishops or homosexual clergy, but joining the Roman Catholic church is surely not the way forward.
Obviously for those who are joining the Ordinariate, all that occurred in the reformation is meaningless. The huge numbersof those martyred for refusing to accept the Catholic mass have been forgotten.
I realise this sounds like I am anti-Catholic, but I'm not. I truly believe that there are many born-again Catholics who I will be able to laugh with in heaven about all of our misguided theologies.
That said, there are some major beliefs in the Catholic church which are simply not Christian. - How does an Anglican vicar having handed out bread and wine as a symbol of Jesus body and blood, change to administering the actual body and blood of Christ.
Transubstantiaton is NOT a Christian doctrine, and it was because of this very belief that so many reformers were martyred. Jesus died once for all Hebrews 9:24-28. The doctrine of transubstantiation believes that every time the elements of bread and wine are given Christ is sacrificed again! If that were the case, then the cross wasn't enough! If Jesus needs to be re-sacrificed for our forgiveness, then I am not saved. Thank God that this is not the case. He died once for all, that I and you might live.
I understand that the liberal theology that is pervasive among many in the Church of England is to be deplored. I agree that you should not belong to a church where you cannot trust and follow those in authority, but please Anglican brothers and sisters, don't trade what you've got for something worse.
Christ's death and resurrection is fundamental to all Christianity, if I need to re-sacrifice Christ through the mass, or need to say penance to absolve my sin then Christ died for nothing! I do not set aside the grace of God, for if righteousness could be gained through the law, Christ died for nothing!
This blog is about God, his fantastic church, and me. My God is great, and he is making a perfect new society called the church. It doesn't often seem that perfect, but it's God's plan A with no back up. I'm living for God and for that society. I'm hoping to use this blog to explore what the Bible says about making the church the way He wants it. I'll also be using it to waffle about the things God tells me, and the things that help my relationship with Him.
Showing posts with label Theology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theology. Show all posts
Friday, 11 March 2011
Thursday, 10 March 2011
Choosing a Church 1
Where to start is continually my issue, everything I do leaves me struggling for a starting point, and therefore I procrastinate. But I was in the shower this morning and it came to me - if I am to write about the church, it might be a good place to start with how do you pick one?
For Whatever reason: You've just become a believer, you've moved to a new area etc. etc. you are looking for a church. What's important and what's not?
I have a feeling that this post may end up running on and on with different things to look at and why they're important, but I think I'll start with this:
For Whatever reason: You've just become a believer, you've moved to a new area etc. etc. you are looking for a church. What's important and what's not?
I have a feeling that this post may end up running on and on with different things to look at and why they're important, but I think I'll start with this:
THEOLOGY
Our theology is essential. To know what we believe about God, the Bible and the Church, and why we believe it is fundamental to growing as a Christian.
So when we pick a church before how great it's worship is, before size, before social action, before anything else we must know it's theology. Because it is out of what a church and it's leaders believe that worship, ministries, and growth flow out.
Your desire might be to see a work among the homeless, or an amazing kids work, but even should a church not have these things yet - if that church has a strong theology, the application of their belief will be to serve these and other needs in their community as God gives them the grace to do so.
I used to be a Methodist Local Preacher, and I was regularly amazed that those in the churches I preached in had no idea what the church believed (I'm sure not every Methodist Church is like it, I can only speak for the 2 or 3 circuits in England I have preached in). The truth was those in leadership didn't know what the Methodist Church believed. I was told it was a very broad church, by a tutor who believed that Joseph was Jesus natural father! I was also told, should I want to, I would be rejected for candidating for ministry as I believed in Male eldership. (Not as broad as they thought?)
To speak on doctrines such as Atonement, or Propitiation, Election would have meant little or nothing to people who struggled with concepts any larger than "God loves You". The problem with this, is that when an issue arises, serious sin, a famous preacher saying something heretical, a collapse in faith, there is no theological training to reinforce the truth.
What do you believe about the doctrines that make churches what they are :
Church leadership
Baptism
Holy Spirit gifts
Worship
Church Discipline
Church leadership
Baptism
Holy Spirit gifts
Worship
Church Discipline
Tithing & giving
Election & Predestination
If you join a church which upholds your belief about what the bible teaches, you can have a confidence that you will not find yourself in a difficult place of not being able to agree with a decision made by church leaders which you cannot follow. This gives a great deal of security.
Of course there is always the possibilty that what I or you or your church believe could be wrong. So we also need the humility to allow God to change our theologies!
If you join a church which upholds your belief about what the bible teaches, you can have a confidence that you will not find yourself in a difficult place of not being able to agree with a decision made by church leaders which you cannot follow. This gives a great deal of security.
Of course there is always the possibilty that what I or you or your church believe could be wrong. So we also need the humility to allow God to change our theologies!
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