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Spare Change - June

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Anchored in God’s Word

I have already addressed this topic in a couple of articles in a roundabout way, but I think it's helpful to revisit it, this time head on.  We must be anchored in God’s Word to keep pursuing gospel centered, God honoring faith.  We cannot please God without faith and our faith must be grounded in the Word of God.  Moreover, we cannot veer from the doctrines that are taught therein.  Especially the doctrines on the Word of God:
inspiration, inerrancy, sufficiency, necessity, and authority.  We do not have time here to break down each subject so I would recommend Taking God at His Word by Kevin DeYoung for further explanation on these doctrines.  This is a short book that is packed full of theological goodness.  I hope you will check it out.

It is my observation that throughout church history there has always been a tendency to drift from sound teaching that is based in God’s Word.  If you look back over the different controversies such as divinity of Christ, the nature of the trinity or what constitutes salvation, to name a few, we see a common theme.  There is often a tendency for false teachers to rise up by twisting, ignoring, or changing scripture.  Then people begin to follow that person and the church must address it for the sake of keeping sound doctrine.  The very essence of salvation is often in question.  We find these false teachers preaching a different gospel than what is found in God’s Word.  For 2,000 years
Christians have fought this battle, sometimes we have lost and sometimes we have won.

The real problem is false teachers do not walk away from the scripture in one giant step.  It usually is a combination of many small steps.  They begin to question one of the core doctrines found in the scripture, then change the meaning by interpreting scripture in a new way or they just deny that part of the scripture.  It can happen in many ways, but it always goes back to a denial of one of the core doctrines of God’s Word.

One of the greatest examples is the Reformation.  We find that the Catholic church had only authorized the Latin version of the Bible, which by the early 1500’s was primarily only taught to priests.  The common people had to take the word of the church on everything.  By then the Catholic church had defined salvation, not through faith in Jesus, but through the religious sacraments like communion.  In essence they taught a works-based salvation.  A few brave souls sought reform and were instead excommunicated.  They wanted the Bible in the common languages (some like William Tyndale gave their life for this cause) and they wanted to return to salvation in Christ alone through faith alone.  This only happened because people returned to the scriptures.

Do you see how important it is to make the Word of God the preeminent source of truth in your life?  You must know the Word, create biblical doctrine from it and then view all of life through that lens.  Once we have done that, we continue to fight to stay anchored in the Word.  Repeatedly throughout our life we must remind ourselves that we cannot veer from God’s Word, because it is these very words given to us to know the grace of God through the gospel of Jesus Christ.  It is the truth by which all truth must be measured.

There are so many ways the Word of God is being perverted, ignored, or misinterpreted today.  We need to be more vigilant than ever.  Do not under any circumstances blindly follow a teacher without comparing their doctrine to the Word of God.  We must draw a line in the sand and defend this belief no matter what.  If we fail to do so, we will stray, drift, and find our faith shaken.  Only the never-changing Word of God can keep us on the path that Christ laid out for us.  The challenge for us remains to study God’s Word continually.  Do not stop filling your heart and mind with its teaching.  Continue to go back to the well of scripture and drink deep, often.  

Posted by Bryan Gotcher with

Student Ministry - June

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Dear Church Family,

The Summer has begun, and things seem to be returning to something like what we would call “normal.” For the Student Ministry this is great news! The students have been itching to spend time together, so now that restrictions are loosening and groups are permitted to gather again, they have never been more excited just to hang out. That said, wisdom is still necessary to continue to love our neighbors and ensure that people who are at-risk are not needlessly endangered.

We are planning events for students to safely gather together and enjoy fellowship and be built up in their walk with the Lord during the Summer. At each of these events we want to be sure to have a short devotional time. For these devotional times the family ministry intern (Trey Scott) and I will be discussing the Fruit of the Spirit as given in Galatians chapter 5. This past week we started that discussion with the fruit of Love.

Here is an overview of that devotion:

Love is something that is produced within those of us who have the Holy Spirit, which is anyone who has a relationship with God through faith in Christ. If we know God, then He will produce love in us. So what is love? Not the world’s definition, but God’s definition.

Love is a choice, not only an emotion. It is a choice to 1) value something or someone, and it is a choice to 2) take action that expresses that value. The world sees love as an emotion or a strong desire for something. It is when we really want something, or really don’t want to lose something. But the world doesn’t see love as necessarily valuing and respecting something.

We know that godly love is valuing something or someone because God Himself shows us that He chose to value our good so much that He willing sent His Son to the cross in our place (John 3:16). Jesus loves the Father and loves us enough to willingly give up His own life for our sakes. That is true love; valuing someone and their wellbeing enough to sacrifice for it. We confuse love with lust all the time in this world. We think because we want something really badly that we love it. Students want a relationship with someone so badly that they think that they love that person. But do they truly value and respect them? Will they seek that person’s wellbeing, or are they just pursuing a selfish desire?

We also know that godly love involves action. 1 Corinthians 13 gives us a clear list of what love really looks like. And in that list each item is some form of physical action or an act of the will. Either way, genuine love displays itself for the good of that which is loved. We think love is about how we feel. But often the reason why we don’t feel love for someone is because we have not been acting in love toward them. And sometimes we say we love someone (like our family for instance), but we do not display marks of true love towards them, proving us to be hypocrites.

But we need not lose hope if we see that we do not always love the way God loves. If we have a relationship with God, then we know that the Holy Spirit will produce that fruit within us. We simply need to turn back to God and ask for this transformation of the heart. When we look to the One who loves perfectly, our love will be made more and more glorious as time goes on. I hope that we all will seek the Lord and love Him with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength. And if any of us is struggling with godly love, I pray we turn to the Source of love itself and ask that He grow and change us to be more like Himself.

Sincerely,

Brian Van Doren

Posted by Brian Van Doren with

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