How the Lord has covered the
Daughter of Zion with the cloud of his anger! He has hurled down the splendor of
Israel from heaven to earth; he has not remembered his footstool in the day of his anger.
Without pity the Lord has swallowed
up all the dwellings of Jacob; in his wrath he has torn down the strongholds of the Daughter of
Judah. He has brought her kingdom and its
princes down to the ground in dishonor.
Lam 2:1-2
An open letter to the elders,
teachers, and evangelists in our fellowship of churches
Dear brothers and sisters-my fellow
servants in Christ:
Grace and peace.
God has been very good to us. He has
demonstrated much love to all of us since the beginning of our
‘movement.’ Countless miracles, signs, and wonders have occurred before
our eyes and the eyes of our sons and daughters. Many of who are now
disciples. Untold blessings have been spread at our feet.
Who could have imagined all that has been accomplished- the heroes, the
sacrifice, the answered prayers, all the churches and countries! Truly,
much grace
and power has been lavished on all of us by God, as well as great
patience.
However, at this moment in our brief history, I have never been more
alarmed,
even ashamed of what we have become. Or more grief-stricken for my own
sins
in helping to deepen our current problems.
Crossroads and Crisis Our movement is no longer moving.
This is no mere “awkward- teenage phase” that we constantly hear about.
Virtually every high-gate we have built,
and every trophy that we have boasted in- as proof to ourselves
and
to the world- that we are ‘Gods Modern Day Movement’, has been
effectively
dismantled. The things we boasted in: our numerical growth, our
retention
rate, our member to fall away ratio, the faithfulness of our children,
our
never missing a Special Contribution, our consistent sacrificial
giving,
and now, perhaps most painful of all- even our unity- all these have
been
leveled by the hand of God. On what grounds do we now claim that we are
“God’s Modern Day Movement”? And on what basis, now, can we be
sure?
Is God even ‘with’ some of our churches and leaders anymore? Everything
we
trusted in has been taken away. The ‘remnant chosen by grace’ and the
baby
saved from ‘kicking in its own blood’ have grown up to become a very
proud
princess indeed! But now what? In the prophet’s words, our skirt has
been
lifted over our head, and our shame exposed. And so I ask again- are
we-
‘THE ICOC’, ‘THE KINGDOM’, ‘THE ONE TRUE CHURCH’- still the
remnant
chosen by grace? Or was that claim itself simply too much for God? I
know
this is painful to hear, and you can be sure I am crying with you.
Brothers and sisters, as leaders in
the kingdom, as servants of Christ-we have reason to pause and
deliberate, deeply. We are at a crossroads, a
crossroads that will soon become a crisis if we do not act
courageously.
Fallen elders and evangelists; countless other leaders who have
resigned
or stepped down-staff and non staff alike; questionable practices and
teachings;
serious concerns over finances; the heart-ache, disappointment and even
disgust from the mouths of faithful but weary disciples who are now
‘allowed’
to talk openly (some in great anger); the quarter million who have
fallen
away; the tens of thousands who have walked away or been pushed away;
and
the enormous sub-culture of critics that constantly challenge us (and
lets
be honest, several of them are sincere and conscientious) - all of
these
things and more- have damaged our integrity, deepened the mistrust
between
‘clergy’ and ‘laity’, and given reason for many to question our moral
authority
and even legitimacy.
I am not denying the good and
miraculous things God has done, or the
faith and sincerity of the rank and file believer. Or even your love
for
God and zeal and personal sacrifice. But I am concerned about what we
have
become as a movement-a movement that is no longer moving- and why this
has happened. That is my main question or thesis I suppose- not what
has
happened to us per se (albeit extensive and serious), but more deeply,
why has it happened and, deeper still, why has it been allowed to
happen?
The London/UK Upheaval As many of you know-in London we are
in the midst of a spiritual upheaval. I would even call it a crisis or
an unraveling. Please continue in your
prayers for us. The London and UK churches have had an incredible
history
and as a movement we owe them much. Unfortunately, over the years,
because
of harshness and legalism and systemic problems I will soon identify,
the
churches have suffered dearly. The Templers have now resigned because
of
oppressive leadership. To quote Mark’s own letter, ‘The church has not
been
bearing spiritual fruit, and many people have been hurt. The
environment
of accountability, pressure and negativity was not inspiring, and
Christ
was not lifted up. Many souls have been saved. But many have been
lost.’
And the response from Adrian Hill,
‘It has at this stage become apparent that Mark and Nadine Templer do
not enjoy the confidence of the full time ministry staff. Due to an
authoritarian style of leadership, and the harsh administration of
accountability, an environment was created which was
oppressive. We commend the Templers for taking responsibility for what
has taken place.’ However, and this is vital, the problems in London as
expressed in the current crisis, and the depth of feelings now being
openly
shared are hardly just about the Templers leadership, but are historic
to the 20 year life of the congregation-especially the last fifteen or
so.
God Says ‘Enough’ A backlash from years of ‘not
listening’, insensitivity, abuse, coercion and legalism -as well as
cowardice from the full-time ministry leaders
to stand up for the truth- is now under way. We are in the midst of
excruciating openness and pain right now. The credibility of much of
the ministry staff is now being questioned .We are having open forums-
and years of suffering, questions and concerns are pouring out. Some of
it is hostile; some of
it, unspeakably sad; and to be sure, some of it unfair. However, every
last word is useful.
In short, what has been sown
is now being reaped, and those practices and sins that are systemic to
our movement are being exposed by God. It
is that simple. This dramatic turn of events, how they unfolded, their
speed and intensity could not have been orchestrated by a man- it is
just too
painful and unnerving to be of human origin. The presence of God seems
overwhelming at times-his dread, as well as his grace. And even though
most of the outpouring has settled quite a bit, some of the biting and
devouring continues. Hearts are still breaking, and hearts are being
crushed. Even among the full time staff, anger and hurt and mistrust
have taken hold. (But is being dealt
with decisively and graciously). The church has demanded several
resignations, and several have been tendered. In fact, the majority of
full time ministry staff have offered to resign pending future
‘commendation’. Some have stepped down permanently already.
In spite of all this, the Christians
are feeling liberated, emancipated even. And in spite of the hurt and
anguish, they generally believe that God is faithful to His promises,
that He has come to rescue His people and provide them with shepherds
who fear Him, and who will love His flock above themselves, and who
will no longer lord it over them. In my view, in answer to the cries of
many, God is answering with thunder. In short: He has had enough. His
sheep are being saved. His ‘leaders’ must now give account.
Epicenter Of A Revolution It is not necessary to go into the
specifics of the issues that are being raised in London. Let me just
say that what has been vocalized by the Christians here, by and large,
are similar to the concerns many of our critics and
‘fall aways’ have voiced over the years- some with equal intensity.
What
is so painful is that these sentiments are coming from the faithful,
the
persevering, the good and noble hearted, and even from best friends we
are
‘over in the Lord.’ These are things that have been in their hearts for
years.
Only now, collectively, have they been emboldened to speak. And this
should
not have surprised any of us.
To my knowledge, this is the most
significant event ever to happen in one of our churches. It is much
more significant than what occurred in Indianapolis. In fact, there can
be no comparison made to anything since our beginning. I also believe
that this is going to make an impact all over the world.
London is the epicenter of a ‘new movement’ of God that I am convinced
will
make huge waves around the world. For this very reason I am writing
about
it. An incredible door of opportunity has been opened for us by God- a
new
passageway for repentance and rediscovering our freedoms in Christ. But
I also believe that God is commanding us to enter, not just asking us
to,
or we will forfeit His grace and pleasure.
Of course this is intensely
personal, but in reality, it is not specific men who are under attack
per se, but our ‘religious culture’. In London, the upheaval is against
systemic evils that have gone unchallenged for too long. Rebellion is
always the fruit of conformity and coercion, and rightly so-‘You were
bought at a price; do not become slaves of men’. And
‘Stand firm then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by the
yoke
of slavery’ As JFK once said, ‘If you make peaceful revolution
impossible,
you make violent revolution inevitable.’ Please pray for a peaceful
revolution.
How It Started Mark and Nadine are true heroes in
the kingdom, and rightly so. They
have served and sacrificed for the gospel well beyond what most of us
would
dare to. I have no doubt that Mark and Nadine would suffer martyrdom
for
Christ, they love Him so. In spite of their mistakes and sins, few
would
question whether they have lived and lead from a clear conscience.
Nevertheless,
they have sinned and have fallen hard- if only temporarily. We believe
they
are repentant/repenting and that their decision to resign is crucial to
bring much needed healing to London. Mark is a very dear and longtime
friend,
and what is so excruciating for me personally is having to see another
good
man fall hard to ‘the sins of our system’.
After the so-called LA Unity
meeting, Mark opened himself up to honest feedback from the full-time
staff and faced a one-way barrage of hurt and questions and concerns,
sometimes in anger. It then carried on in private for several more
weeks. It was devastating for them, and hard on all. In my view, it was
one of the most courageous decisions I have ever seen a
man make, but was the right thing to do.
Mark has taken responsibility for
his sins. Now the rest of the staff, who have also suffered from abuses
of authority, are having to own up to their own misguided pressures and
practices over the years, the whole process falling like dominoes all
around the UK. Whether from commission, omission, cowardice, bad
theology or irresponsibility-our sins needed to be exposed and
acknowledged for repentance and healing to take place, and for the
crucial restoration of trust.
Why am I telling you this?
Specifically, why tell you about the sins
and shortcomings of one man in particular, Mark? Because Mark has
become one of hundreds of leaders, if not thousands, including myself,
who have been or are currently trapped in the same kind of sins. And
the
same systemic evils that entangled him, have also entangled multiplied
thousands
of us as well. That is the stubborn reality and nature of our
hierarchy.
As you will see, many of the issues I am going to raise in this paper
are
endemic to our ‘culture’ as a movement - the corruption of power,
selfish
ambition, the continuing climate of fear and cowardice, the bravado and
rank
duplicity from our ‘top leaders’. Why I am so ashamed and saddened is
that
I have been as much to blame as any one. But really, whether more or
less
is beside the point, because almost all of us are guilty to some extent.
Salvation Issues My criticisms and concerns are not
merely about one’s personal style
of leadership, and cannot be dismissed as the actions of a few rogue
leaders or overly zealous, but immature evangelists. These are the sins
and weaknesses we all share- movement wide. They are not small gripes
and criticisms about our methods or even a few glaring shortcomings. In
fact, I have come to believe that these are salvation issues- yours and
mine- and as a natural consequence, the salvation issues of many of our
hearers as well. I am saddened to say this, and I choose my words
carefully- but the integrity of ‘our gospel’
is at now at stake- the gospel of Gods grace- as well as the future
relevance and power of our churches. And just as in London, unless
there is a ‘kingdom-wide’ admission of guilt and repentance where
necessary, a clear denunciation,
and perhaps hardest of all, a sincere public apology, I believe we may
become heretical in just a few more years.
The Pharisees The sins of the Pharisees were
endemic to their religious culture. What I mean is, once ‘in the
group’, there was no way to be immune from its evils. They simply could
not escape from ‘within’ the system. Even if somehow
they could objectively see through it all, they could not remain a
Pharisee
and exclude themselves from its corruption. The demonic values and
pervasive influences of their party would touch every last Pharisee to
some extent. Their pride and arrogance; their exclusivity; their
elitism; their outward vanity and bravura; their titles of respect and
authority and personal renown; their heavy burdens that crushed so
many, their devouring of widow’s houses to maintain their system; and
their ‘sneering greed’- albeit hidden - were something that a Pharisee
could not be immune from if he remained ‘one of them’
The Pharisees, or ‘the separate
ones’, had misguided but noble intentions to begin with. They wanted to
protect the law from law-breakers and so
imposed a religious system of rules and regulations and traditions to
be
a ‘hedge’ around the law of God. They reasoned: ‘If they don’t break
our
rules, then they will not be able to break the Law of Moses’. We all
know
this. And we all know the sorry outcome- freedom denied, individual
integrity
diminished, the Sabbath becomes a tyranny, the weightier matters of the
law-justice, love and mercy are neglected, and ultimately, the eventual
slavery of men to the powers that be.
Once their religious system was
firmly established, it then only needed to be stabilized and
maintained. Overtime, naturally, the Pharisees as an institution became
systemically evil. Therefore, what they came to represent ‘as a whole’-
what they evolved into- needed to be exposed and vigorously denounced
by Christ. What an offence that must have been! In fact, has the world
ever witnessed such a sustained and unsparing attack on religious
leaders? I don’t think so.
Certainly, there must have been
sincere Pharisees- Paul for one. And
a few more we can assume from reading the gospels. But together-as a
system of religious authority- they were ‘sons of hell’, ‘fools’,
‘blind guides’, ‘whitewashed tombs’, ‘a brood of vipers’, and finally,
a barrier to the
truth of God’s goodness and grace: ‘You shut the kingdom of heaven in
men’s
faces’. They were lawyers and teachers of the law; sharp and
prominent
and well respected (at least to their face). They sat ‘in Moses’ seat’
and
so needed to be ‘obeyed’. They were men of extreme dedication and zeal-
missionaries to distant countries and fanatically ‘separated’ from all
outward
sins. Nevertheless, in spite of their sincerity and zeal for God- every
convert to the Pharisees in the words of Jesus, became ‘twice as much a
son of hell’ as the one who converted them. That is how powerful a
religious
system can be. It will ignore the voice of conscience, the voice
of
reason and even the voice God.
In light of this, should we as
leaders not pause to reflect on our own leadership values and
doctrines? Should we not humble ourselves, and even tremble before God
when we realize how extensive this battle between Christ and the
religious leaders of his day became? Why such rigorous denunciations
and warnings? Why so many written heated exchanges in the gospels? Why
would Jesus- who was meek and lowly- publicly berate them and insult
them and
constantly expose their hypocrisies to public shame? My answer is
this-they
were to be an example and warning to you and me, the religious leaders
of our own generation. This demonic tendency towards pride and control,
ostracization and greed, no matter what name it goes by or in what
century,
will keep on waging war until it has once again infiltrated and ruined
the
integrity of God’s leaders. And through us, into the church.
Apostasy Apostasy is a word we all know and
fear. We have warned each other repeatedly over the years, ‘we are only
one generation away from apostasy’ This is
a true statement. In just a few years, all of the Galatian churches, an
entire geographical region, were about to fall from grace. That is why,
in his letter to the Galatians, Paul is so urgent and even angry in his
defense of the gospel and personal liberty in Christ. His apostolic
authority,
and therefore his gospel, were under attack. As a consequence, their
salvation and the integrity of the ‘true gospel’ were at stake. The
legalists who
poisoned them were anathema.
Again, within just a few decades,
five of seven churches in Asia Minor had or were in the process of
apostatizing. (Revelation 2-3) How quickly a religious movement can be
corrupted! Even within the lifetime of eyewitnesses to the
resurrection, even with living apostles at the helm!
For the most part, we as a
‘movement’ have succumbed to several evils that are systemic-and are
bitterly difficult to admit, let alone see our way out of. We need
ruthless and courageous honesty, as well as brokenness before God and
His Word if we are to regain what has been lost or surrendered or
corrupted. I believe that many of our sins and practices will continue
on forever unless we attack our entire religious culture head on. Or
until God strikes the shepherds and scatters the sheep for good. We
must, without sentiment, identify what is systemically evil, and what
is bad theology, then publicly denounce them-to our churches and to the
world if necessary.
‘Our System’ By and large, as a movement, and by
that I mean the sum total of our
global congregations, we have slipped into serious error, if not
apostasy.
The devil has his fangs deep in our neck, and I am afraid that unless
we
repent-many of our churches and thousands more of our Christians will
be
devoured. Although there are a few exceptions,
and only a few, we also have become another religious ‘system’. At
least that is a word I hear more and more each year, perhaps one
hundred times this month alone-a word that frightens me and nauseates
me at the same time. Again, the devil has being lying to us, and for
whatever the reasons, we have not fought back tooth and nail. We have
become proud and blind, just like the Pharisees. And being blind
without knowing it is the most frightening kind of blindness of all.
This
paper is an attempt to open our eyes before it is too late. My goal is
not
only to break our heart, but in a sense, to slap us in the face as well.
I, for one, refuse to belong to a
system; any system that is not clearly of divine origin. I was baptized
into a kingdom and into union with the
God/Man, Jesus Christ, but not into a system. That is all I have ever
wanted.
That is all that I need.
Failure Is Not An Option In my opinion, London, as one of our
first plantings, with so many seasoned evangelists who have come and
gone, and with so much kingdom-wide exposure and influences (good and
bad), is a microcosm of our movement-for better or for worse. That’s
why this process must succeed, but why I am so afraid it might fail.
In London, it will not be enough to
simply change the long-term leadership structures, or merely
acknowledge and apologize for specific sins and abuses, however
sincere. The Christians deserve so much more, and rightfully, are
demanding so much more. In general, they are fed up, disgusted and
angry because of the sins and widespread abuses of leadership and now
have what you might even call, through the Spirit, a ‘forehead of
flint’. There is
simply no going back.
What is essential to our success is
this: not only must the sins and
abuses be radically repented of (and there are many), but also, more
importantly, the structural evils that helped foster them must be
theologically exposed and denounced. I am afraid that without this
vital step, there will be
no profound or permanent change; let alone true forgiveness and
healing.
This is a very painful time for us in London, but not as painful as the
outcome if the process is minimized, rushed through, covered over or
spun.
That said, I don’t believe it needs
to take long to recover, if we are thorough. It will be ‘scary’ of
course, but we must assume God is accomplishing a deeply gracious and
purifying work. Jesus stated, ‘I know your deeds’
to the seven churches of Asia Minor, and then, just as simply, ‘Repent’.
In a nutshell, London is all of us.
Our entire religious movement- our culture and belief system, our
spiritual abuses, the way we train
our Christians, and our control mechanisms are so widespread and
invasive,
that unless they are officially, uniformly and publicly denounced, they
will continue on forever. Sweeping evils and bad theology can only be
rectified by exposing and opposing. That should be the urgent agenda
for the next
‘LA meeting’, and maybe five months from now is not urgent enough.
Movement
wide, we have no choice but to admit and apologize, expose and expunge,
denounce and dismantle.
Apology and a Few Definitions Apology ‘Let God be true and every man a
liar’
Before I continue, let me say, I am
not resigning or even remotely interested in leaving our churches. I am
deeply in love with our fellowship of churches, and am grateful to God
for all he has done for us and through us. But you must understand, for
me, this is much more than a lovers quarrel. I was
called to be an evangelist and so it must be. I am called to proclaim
and
defend the whole counsel of God-no matter the consequences. And so I
have
chosen to fight back, hard.
I am more ready than ever to discuss, debate,
renounce and dismantle. That said, I am also prepared to disown if I
have to, be disowned if it
comes to that.
The reason I am writing this paper is simple – no
one else has. Or if they have, nothing of substance has come of it. I
started writing this 18 months ago but let it sit because I was
intimidated. However, because of recent resignations, (and in my
opinion) the ‘failed’ LA unity meeting, and the spiritual crisis now
unfolding in London, the timing could not be more appropriate. I have
been strengthened in my resolve.
I am asking each of you to weigh my words
carefully. If I am wrong there is nothing to fear. If you disagree,
then you must defend.
I realize that many of you have good and noble
hearts and that
you have spoken up and tried to resist what is wrong. Several of you
really
are champions of grace and freedom. However, to one degree or another,
all
of us have been caught in the cross- fire. That is the nature of
systemic
evil. And only a full on assault by all of us will prevail.
My comments are based on the uniform and
universal experience of thousands of Christians, hundreds of private
conversations, ‘late night’ conversations, and the public statements
and sentiments expressed by full time staff and non-staff alike.
My words cannot not be easily dismissed. We first
visited Boston in 1981, and moved there in the spring of 1982. The
third couple to do
so, I think. I have been discipled by all these men: Bob Gempel, Kip
McKean, Al Baird, Jim Blough, Mike Taliaferro , Mike Fontenot and
others. Douglas Arthur has been a major influence in my life for more
than thirteen years, and Douglas Jacoby as well. Before moving to
London (our second time), we served in the American Commonwealth Region
under DA from 1994 till 2001. In various capacities, Marilyn and I have
lived and served on four continents, in six countries, two world
sectors, ten churches and about 15 different ministries. I say this for
one reason: we have seen enough, experienced
enough, heard enough and done enough in the last twenty years to
believe,
with great agony but deep conviction, that we are entangled in several
systemic
evils. Evils that are all encompassing, affecting our entire fellowship
of churches.
I am sorry about the length, but felt it was
essential to prove my thesis. I have tried to make it as organized and
readable as possible. Although rarely referenced in full, most of the
Scriptures I am sure you can identify. A few I have quoted in full.
The intensity and number of examples is not
intended to overwhelm, although I am sure they will, but to prove more
convincingly my foundational arguments.
Of course this is extremely personal, to all of
us. But I have
endeavored not to use ‘personal examples’ as such so you can focus on
the
issues, and not the men.
Working Definitions ‘Now the Lord is the Spirit;
and where the spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.’
1. Liberty: Gk. eleutharia; freedom,
generosity, independence. A distinctive blessing of the economy of
grace, in contrast to the Old Testament’s legal restrictions and rules
about life. Opposite: deouleria; slavery or the
state of dependence or having to
follow a prescribed course.
2. Systemic: ‘Of, pertaining to, or
affecting the whole body’
3. Endemic: ‘Widespread, peculiar to
a particular area or people’. As in, diseases that are endemic to the
tropics.
4. Apostasy: ‘Abandonment of a
former allegiance, as to one’s faith’
Four Systemic Evils If movements begin in caves and die
in cathedrals, here are the four
main pillars in our cathedral that must be denounced and demolished:
Our corrupted hierarchy
Our obsession with numbers
Our shameful arrogance (the cause/by-product of 1
and 2)
Our seduction by mammon
1.Our Corrupted
Hierarchy Ah, sinful nation, A people loaded with guilt, A brood of evildoers, Children given to corruption! They have forsaken the Lord; They have spurned the Holy One of Israel And turned their backs on Him
Why should you be beaten anymore? Why do you persist in rebellion? Your whole head is injured, Your whole heart afflicted From the sole of your foot to the
top of your head there is no soundness-- only wounds and welts and open sores, not cleansed or bandaged or soothed with oil. Isaiah 1:4-6
By and large, intentional and
unintentional, we have become a religious hierarchy that has created,
fostered and sustained a culture of control and dependence on men,
rather than freedom. As leaders in this hierarchy, we
have become a band of conflict-avoiders, cowards and men-pleasers,
rather than God-pleasers. This is the only way to explain not only what
we do, but why we keep on doing it.
That we have become a top to bottom
hierarchy is not in question. The truth is we are. Why we have chosen
this model, and sought to crystallize it, when the apostolic church has
no such model, is the big question. Even with other models to pattern
ourselves after; even with so many teachers in our churches who surely
know better, the fact is that we have chosen and
systematically enforced this one. The reason I use the word ‘enforced’
is
simple: we have become what we’ve wanted to become; what we have
insisted on becoming.
How did this happen? I am not
entirely sure. Why we let happen is the more radical question. We began
with good intentions: to structure ourselves, to create a framework for
our message and our mission, and to foster unity and cooperation. Over
time, however, we’ve evolved into a culture that has not respected the
dignity of human freedom, but instead has sought to control the lives
of those under us and around us. Well-intentioned or not, we
have failed to become a people pleasing to God. I believe that God is
now
opposing our cult of personality, and our abuse of spiritual authority
in the strongest possible way.
What do I mean by a culture of
control? Consider these facts: We are
a hierarchy, and have been led by one man at the top. We have had a
‘founder’, complete with personal and ‘kingdom-wide’ authority that we
were expected to respect and follow. We have had World Sector Leaders
and Geographic
Sector Leaders – to consolidate the grip of power and establish a
global
network of control over every last congregation. We teach ‘one church,
one city’, not always in the pure interest of unity, but as a means of
tightening control.
Local church autonomy is
practically viewed as heresy. Intimidating statements have been made to
keep us all in line. We’ve been told to ‘get our Boards on board’,
undermining the very purpose of having a board in
the first place. As ‘lead evangelists’, we have routinely forced our
administrators to ‘get in line’ or be ‘loyal to us’ – as plans and
programs and pet projects are railroaded through to the dismay of all.
Administrators have admitted to deceit in the name of compliance, and
to ‘smoke and mirrors’ with the finances. Some of the more intimidated,
have been involved in wholesale
financial mismanagement. We have universally maligned our
critics, and tried to protect our members from reading ‘spiritual
pornography’. Other materials are also censored
from widespread circulation-brilliant and Scripturally insightful
papers
from some of our own teachers among them. Papers that have gone against
the
party line.
We have routinely humiliated and
marginalized those members who speak out as ‘critical’ and ‘disloyal.’
Many of our churches have autocratic leaders. We give perks to the
compliant, and bigger pay checks to those higher up the chain of
command. We reward outward conformity.
‘Official Kingdom’ issues include an
enforced Special Contribution every year, the collecting of monthly
statistics worldwide, and the recognition of KNN and UpCyberDown as our
‘official’ media sources. (Some of these
issues are the same as those brought up by Ed Powers, resulting in his
being dis-fellowshipped and marked by us. While not endorsing his
approach
or commenting on his integrity, I wonder how many other members and
leaders
have questioned these same practices and pronouncements?)
We have also exerted ‘influence’ or
suppressed suspicions by the use
of ‘spin’, non-transparency, and double standards. For example, we are
very open about the sins of those underneath us, but not those ‘above’
us, because ‘it will hurt the church’. We have given our evangelists an
authority greater than our elders, when clearly, the elders have higher
moral and spiritual requirements for leadership as ‘overseers of the
flock’ Men who are specifically commanded to guard
that which was purchased by the blood of Christ. How can this be?
And just why do we have so few
elders among us? I believe it is not always because of family or
maturity issues, but because we have not found many men who are willing
to commit completely to our party line, or who have
not come up through the full-time ranks as it were. Their local
churches
would trust and commend them, but we do not. They have not proven if
they
will comply with ‘the system’, therefore we cannot be sure.
We have seen almost all criticism of
the movement to be sinful. We accuse people of having bad hearts or bad
attitudes or independent spirits, when very often, they have every
right to feel as they do. When anyone does
leaves the church, they are automatically categorized as a ‘fallen
away.’
But why? Many have left because of conscience issues, or harsh
treatment,
or by feeling trapped and guilty by the way they’ve been led. Is it
fair
or right to declare that they have left God because they’ve decided to
leave our ranks? Others choose to stay, but live in constant fear of
being
branded as divisive or disloyal if they disagree, and will routinely
follow
bad advice for the sake of submission. Others simply go numb, suffer in
silence, sit at the back or just roll over and play dead.
On Discipling We have assumed, wrongly, that the
sheep are stupid. We have trained them to depend on men, on us in
fact, and not on Christ. ‘Did you get advice’ for the most part means
‘Did you get permission.’ Yes of course, they are vulnerable and open
to attack, but they are not stupid. It is we who have been stupid,
Biblically and spiritually. Should we not assume, rather,
that a true, Spirit-filled Christian desires to please God, not to
rebel?
Ezekiel 36: ‘I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I
will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.
And I will put my Spirit in you and move you to follow my decrees and
be
careful to keep my laws’.
Through our discipleship partner
theology, we have attempted, like modern-day Pharisees, to put a hedge
around God’s law. In trying to protect or control the Christians, we
have routinely violated their liberty in Christ. We
have not trusted disciples to live by their own convictions and
decisions
(and mistakes), and have fostered in them an unhealthy dependence,
rather
than freedom to grow and mature. Many of our discipling guidelines are
nothing more than ‘rules taught by men’, condemned by Jesus as
burdensome
and legalistic. No control mechanisms, or traditions of men, or rules
and
culturally accepted regulations will keep anyone faithful who does not
want to be faithful in their heart. But they will create rebellion and
criticalness among sincere and liberated Christians. We did not become
new creations to be controlled by men; rather, ‘it is for freedom
Christ
has set us free’
On Church Authority In the N.T. there is not one mention
of one congregation ‘over’ another, or of ‘pillar churches’. In our
misguided zeal to make certain churches
the biggest and best, we have plundered the ranks of sister
congregations.
This is man-made, humanly engineered ‘growth’ formula is just not
Spirit
led. It has resulted in bad feelings and cynicism, by those affected
directly
and those merely observing. (James 3)
Our lack of autonomy and freedom has
blunted our thinking. There is very little ‘thinking outside the box’
in the ‘ICOC’ in terms of diversity in leadership structure, women’s
role in ministry, the collection of contribution, and even our teaching
(e.g. the ‘official studies’) All of this contributes to the control of
our members and ministry staff, a putting out of the Spirit’s fire.
On Ministry Training And Practices In the N.T., there is no control of
one leader over another. We have
no rulers or lords. That is what the pagans do, Jesus said. But
‘with you it must not be so’. The Bible says all of us, from apostles
to ‘men of little account’ are free in the Lord. But we dare not
challenge our leaders!
Why not? In the N.T. leaders
were criticized, abandoned, disagreed with, questioned, challenged, and
made the object of bad (or good) report. They were put on the defense
by their own ministries- and to a large extent, this was surprisingly
tolerated (Revelation 2) Sure, most of the time an enemy may have
stirred this up, but the Christians were not uniformly condemned for
it. Why should they be? There were many false apostles and deceitful
workmen among them, and they needed to be alert. Those leaders and
apostles who were truly accredited by God appealed to their life and
doctrine as
their defense. That is all. No one enjoys dealing with a strong
willed
or contentious opponent, especially a brother in Christ, but forced
compliance, out of fear of being shut down or shamed, is just as evil.
We have not cultivated an environment where there is freedom to
question, challenge or confront
the ‘leadership’. Shame on us.
For the most part, we have
surrounded ourselves with loyal men – not
those necessarily loyal to God or their own conscience, but loyal to us
– very much like tribal kings. Those who make waves are not tolerated.
Another question: how can we be
utterly honest and live with integrity when those above us, ‘our best
friend and discipler’ is at the same time our ‘boss’? If I, like Paul,
may need to oppose my ‘friend’ to his face, or must strongly challenge
a course of action that my ‘boss’ wants to take, it is not just my job
that is at stake, but all of my relationships, friendships, future
security, and the emotional well-being of my family and their
relationships as well. All of these loyalties and conflicts of interest
are twisted together in one huge knot – making it difficult to be
honest and true to our own
convictions. This is another aspect of control that contributes to
conformity
and ultimately, to apostasy and seared consciences.
The way we have moved leaders around
at will and altered the leadership of many churches is also
questionable. So many leaders have been moved or replaced for ‘not
doing well’ even when their local congregations love them and want
them. Conversely, we routinely place evangelists over a congregation
without even consulting the members, or allowing the leaders to be
commended by those they will lead. And we expect these churches to
abide by our decisions without dissent or question. Alternatively,
church leaders have also remained for too long in situations where they
were clearly not commended by their staff or members- simply because
they have the backing and blessing of a higher power. But worst of all,
several of our ‘higher’ leaders have gone exactly where they wanted to,
and have had others moved out of the way just so they can take their
city. It is difficult to imagine Paul or his contemporaries operating
like this.
On Our Self Description In one generation, we have gone from
protecting the flock to preserving our institution. What has been our
agenda, other than keeping control over our congregations? We have made
incredible statements about the ICOC that gall our critics and keep our
members ‘committed’. We call ourselves ‘God’s Modern Day Movement’, and
say that we are ‘defining Christianity for this generation’. We have
equated ourselves with the ‘Kingdom’ as if we are one and the same, and
not merely part of the Kingdom – a Kingdom that belongs to a King, and
is known by God alone. When we call ourselves the ‘One True Church’,
our arrogance does several things. a) By implication, almost everything
we say must be right, because we are the right church. b) Therefore:
comply, don’t question, and don’t even think about leaving. Where can
you go? It’s either ‘us’ – or the gates of hell.
Accept it or not-this statement
alone is our most powerful mechanism
for ensuring compliance and ‘commitment.’ I am not going ‘liberal’ on
the
doctrine of salvation, or claiming that ‘other’ churches are saved-
there
really is only one universal church, and one way to become a Christian.
However, by calling ourselves by these names, and claiming it with such
exclusivity and superiority, many of our disciples will remain
‘faithful’,
but also living in fear and misery.
Because so many of us have been
conditioned to acquiesce, we just keep slipping in more and more
control mechanisms and unbiblical practices without discussion or
debate. The reason: ‘being unified is more important than
being right’. Sometimes, to be sure, but not more important than being
righteous.
2.Our Obsession With Numbers ‘Christ did not send me to baptize
but to preach’ Paul
‘Such “wisdom” does not come down
from heaven but is earthly, unspiritual, of the devil. For where there
is envy and selfish ambition, there you find disorder and every evil
practice’ James
‘So neither he who plants nor he who
sows is anything, but only God,
who makes things grow’ Paul
Publicly stated or not, but for all
practical purposes: Numerical growth, specifically baptisms, has been
our number one objective-even at the expense of goodness and godliness.
Many of our leaders have become so obsessive about ‘the numbers’
it has retarded them spiritually, made them neurotic, or even
idolatrous. What started out as a genuine and intense effort to
evangelize the world in one generation has quickly turned sour from
false
motives and selfish ambition. The motives for what we do and why we do
it
have become so askew that I am afraid many will not be able to recover
Selfish
ambition and humanism have led to the systematic abuse of stats and
stat-
taking, goal setting and goal making. This has ruined countless lives
in
the process, damaged our integrity and trustworthiness as ministers and
leaders,
and has fostered a climate of manipulation, fear and men pleasing. The
consciences of thousands, especially new and vulnerable staff members
and new Bible
Talk or Family Group leaders have been violated. And they in turn have
compelled others to do the same. This is systemic-a phenomenon that
reaches from top to bottom. This cannot be denied.
‘Stats are a tool’, we have said. I
agree, but what kind of tool? A hammer and a knife-for bashing and
inflicting pain on those we are over. They
have become a means to satisfy the secret ambitions of unscrupulous
men.
They are routinely used to cajole and threaten, or to appease the anger
of those over us. We have used them to lift up men and to boast and
brag.
Of course, stats in and of
themselves are only bits of information, nothing really, much like bits
of wood and clay. It is how they can be twisted
and used for idolatry that I am concerned with. Accompanied by our
pride
and a corrupted hierarchical structure, they are too much for our
fallen
nature to bear.
I am all for knowing my ministry and
the names of the sheep, and knowing if one has wondered from the ninety
nine, and for being on top for budgetary purposes. And I think a census
of some kind is very helpful for various
reasons. I am even for sharing the great things God has done! (Acts 11)
You know that’s not what I mean.
I am talking about using stats to
measure our worth before God and one another, preaching Christ from
false motives, using the numbers to compare and compete, and to boost
the ungodly egos of insecure and selfish men.
Consider the almost universal ramifications of this emphasis in our
churches.
All of these examples, in one way or another, are the fruit of this bad
theology and humanism. This is what I have seen, heard or been a part
of
over the past 20 years:
I know of many cases of dishonesty in reporting
stats. Whether
to fudge or inflate attendances, or to not accurately do the ‘month
end’
because ‘we have to grow this month’ or ‘ there is no way we are going
negative!’
I know an evangelist who invented ‘baptisms’ to
avoid harsh accountability.
We have practiced and even theologically defended
the wholesale write-off of members in the name of ‘pruning’. Not only
is this phenomenon repugnant, it is completely without Biblical
precedent. Jesus commanded-‘Leave them alone’-‘let the wheat and the
tares grow together’. Are we stronger or
wiser than he? How arrogant of us-it is Christ’s own church we have
pillaged, his own body we have mutilated!
We have taken off, prematurely, the very weak or
very discouraged, because we want a ‘tight ship’ Entire families have
been ruined by this
conceit and immaturity. We have, in short, slaughtered the innocents.
It is almost a truism that each new evangelist
that takes over
a ministry will prune and purge. Why does this happen, really? We all
know. It is the need to look good from ‘your’ new beginning, or not to
be blamed for ‘their’ weak ministry in the future. When we do this, we
have betrayed ourselves to angels, my friend-angels that rejoiced
before the face of God when they were first converted! Should not the
Christ-like servant wait
for the sure evidence of God before making membership decisions; before
whacking and hacking? The deeper we go with these questions, the more
obvious
our systemic evils become.
The majority of our baptisms come near the end of
the month. Why is that? Some, embarrassingly, just before midnight. And
why is it the
vast majority of those same baptisms are those who will fall away?
How many times have we hurt for ourselves when a
goal or target is not met instead of weeping for the lost? Something is
grievously and seriously wrong here
We rank each other, all the time, in our hearts
and even in public on ‘the numbers’- our faith, heart, talent,
holiness, self- worth, awesomeness or ‘lack of ministry skills’ are
constantly being judged. And most of this from pride, jealously,
insecurity, competitiveness or rank humanism. Do
true men of God, really, have to be led by a system of carrots and
sticks?
Or should it be by something more substantial, like love and moral
obligation and the consequences of rejecting the gospel?
How many Christians have we neglected when they
moved into our
ministries from other cities? Why is that, honestly? ‘If they are weak,
and we put them on our membership list, they might fall away and we
will
look bad’ Great, let them prove themselves all over again! Of course,
because
of this evil conceit they just might fall away- but their blood will be
on our head.
We are constantly insecure, especially at
conferences and such, or at staff meetings, if the numbers are ‘below
average’
The more baptisms, or better numbers- the more
glory, the more
speaking ‘rights’, the more respect.
We have gone from ‘anytime, day or night urgency’
to saving up
baptisms for Sundays (to encourage the church!) to anniversary
services,
where the goal is to have a hundred or some other large number on a day
(to encourage the movement!) Saving up to have one hundred in a day, or
even shooting for it, is not encouraging at all, it is degrading the
gospel.
And is always suspect. Does this inspire the angels or embarrass them?
First,
we must have them make it by the end of the month, then, we must hold
them
off for our special service! Is this not simple pride and duplicity?
Even
Schizophrenia?
Where did ‘good’ ‘great’ and ‘awesome’ come
from and why? Why do we tolerate this humanism and pressure inducing
dumbness? Some have even put ‘poor’ on their stat sheets. That sure is
encouraging for the interns! Isn’t this all a bit embarrassing?
The LA Ratio. What is that? What if we had an
apostolic ratio,
or a Pauline ratio or an Antioch ratio? Would that not bury us in
shame?
Maybe that is why there is not even the remotest hint of such in
Scripture.
God loves us too much.
In earlier days, we have ‘re-baptized’ hundreds
and claimed them on our stat sheets as first time ‘baptisms’- as if
trying to fool everyone. I know this practice has ceased, but it
revealed an ominous foreshadowing of our present obsession/validation
by numbers.
I was in a church where 95% of the staff felt
conflicted about
a specific goal they were expected to ‘get behind’ and make sure
‘everyone else gets behind it’. Mercifully, God allowed us to fail-but
through it all, no one spoke up. Only months later were the staff
honest
about their inner conflicts. How is that possible? (That will lead me
to
my cowardice point a little later on.) Those who did speak up in
private
were rebuked.
We know of almost an entire staff in one of our
largest churches that falsified attendances and membership numbers.
Several were fired.
Where does that kind of behavior come from? Could it be from the
religious
culture we have created for ourselves? What ‘force’ could be more
powerful
than the fear of God? Our culture of fear and men pleasing!
We keep people in ‘our’ ministries because it
will ‘hurt our numbers’. Even if their desire is best for the person,
or will bring them closer
to their family, or legitimately help their careers. ‘Bloom where you
are
planted, go where you are sent’. How can we assume to know what the
Spirit’s
intention or individual will is? What’s wrong with a change of scenery?
We do it all the time. Shame on us.
We have consistently judged the sharp or
prominent of greater worth than the poor or less talented - because of
what they can accomplish ‘for the church’ .We are judges with evil
thoughts said James.
Many have neglected the weak because they are a
distraction and take too much ‘real’ ministry time. Excuse me? We will
not go after the strays heart and soul, but we will go after the
numbers. The pressure to build
well (justice, love, mercy) or to build fast is a constant conflict
among
men of good conscience. How many of us have built on wood or straw
because
of short cuts and the constant pressure to perform?
We are constantly bragging about our ‘fruit’ and
our ‘numbers’
and our ‘impact’ and then, reflexively declare, ‘And to God be the
glory!’
In fact, the entire concept of ‘personal fruit’ as we know and have
taught
it a thousand times is Biblically irresponsible.
How many of us have compromised our own
conscience and baptized someone just to make a manmade goal or to keep
our selves from being ‘yelled at’ or publicly shamed , or simply
to please a man?
‘If we don’t have a monthly stat sheet, how are
we going to grow the ministry?’ How did they do it in the early church,
which was the most formidable of all? Did all of their leaders have a
piece of papyrus?
In most of our churches, our Christians routinely
study hard with our converts until their ‘baptism’, and then do almost
nothing afterwards in terms of consistent, mature follow up. We make
babies, and let them die of neglect because we want to make more
babies! In the world, we would be imprisoned.
Sector leaders/FG leaders routinely give out
foolish, even asinine advice to appease ‘the god of growth’ (or ‘lord’
of the Lords Day!)-‘Don’t go to that wedding, it will hurt your
ministry’ ‘I know its your family, but this is the family of God, come
back for Sunday’ ‘ You can go on holidays sure, but only for this long
…’ ‘You made the goal-you’re responsible to get them ready. Just do it’
‘Do you have to visit that other sector or church, it’s going to hurt
our attendance?’
Why are we always ‘cleaning’ up our membership
rolls in December? Is it not possible we might be off track here
because of a human timetable and not a divine one? All we have to do is
follow a kind of ‘and why do we do this?’ trail of questions to know
exactly the reason. It cannot be for Christ’s name or glory. Or is it
simply because Janus, the god of the Romans, bids us to?
Have you ever heard this ‘When you set a goal
(even if you didn’t want to)-you have to make it’? Of course we have
to, or we will suffer the consequences- or at least feel stupid.
Admit it, as bad as this sounds, sometimes we
even feel validated when others are not doing well in their ministries.
And envy creates even more ungodly thoughts than that.
‘If you are a good leader, and know what you’re
doing, you should be able to predict your targets accurately, 80-90% of
the time.’ Does this contribute to our humility or our humanism? Won’t
this kind of arrogance only lead to a violation of conscience? Does
this really make us ‘better leaders’?
No it doesn’t, but it gets more ‘baptisms’ by month-end!
Our practice of taking other leaders from other
churches, sometimes by the hundreds so we can have ‘the biggest’ and
best church in our city, and to satisfy the demands of those ‘over’ us
is hardly inspiring to anyone. Instead, it has created massive
disrespect and division. All because of
numbers. Nothing more.
And finally, one of our most seasoned and
respected evangelists admitted ‘he had not been sending out church
plantings because it would diminish
his numbers at home – and that he did this to keep his leaders from
being
on him because of his numbers’
I could give 100
more examples, easily. And so could you. The point is, we have
sacrificed our self- respect and perhaps some of our own souls on this
altar. This is not building for the glory of God, but for the glory of
man.
God, because of his own love for the
lost, has not blessed us with conversions; he has blessed them for His
own sake. I believe He has used us- in spite of our selfish ambition,
just as we have used others. God has accomplished His ‘own’ dreams for
the lost-even if much of it has been through ‘our’
dreams for ourselves.
We have ranked and competed
and defiled and manipulated, even used others, to satisfy the wants and
needs of sinful pride or insecurity -and to please the men who are
‘over us’ and ‘over them’ and ‘over them’ etc. None of us are immune.
And for what? The praises of men and not the praises of God, the fear
of men and not the fear of God.
We have turned what is the most
consequential and beautiful act in the eyes of God for another human
being-their union with Christ- into an object of personal glory. When
the true motives and intentions of our hearts will one day be exposed,
then what? Our salvation, not just our reward, might be at stake.
In my experience many of you, if not
most, will agree with what I am
saying. Perhaps every last one of you. But why have we not stopped this
madness? Why does it go on and on when most of us hate it so? And in
our
hearts feel guilt, if not shame? Because ‘that’s just the way it
is’?
No- but because it’s another systemic evil, another pillar in our
belief
system that must be smashed.
The more souls saved the better, I
agree- but for whom and why? When
our integrity and true intentions have been so universally exposed and
smeared -it cannot be for the glory of God alone. That is
self-contradictory.
Of course, several of you have matured beyond men pleasing and have
sincerely sought to guard your hearts, and have do a ‘pure conscience’
before God.
But kingdom wide, this simply is not the case.
For the most part, I believe the
majority of us have tried to shield
the rank and file believer from this ‘private’ clerical obsession of
ours,
and from the pressures placed on our shoulders by other men. But
somehow,
it spreads throughout our fellowship anyway. The ‘having and getting’
of
numbers-even at the expense of goodness and godliness- is a practice so
widespread, so endemic to who we are it will never stop- until
admitted,
confessed and publicly repudiated. I, for one, will never again send in
a monthly stat sheet as we know and use them. I don’t care what the
repercussions,
I am not doing it. Another evangelist just said to me, incredulously,
‘You
have to, because LA wants them’-my point exactly.
3.Our Shameful Arrogance Good examples:
‘I am meek and lowly’ Jesus
‘See, your king comes to you, gentle and riding
on a donkey’ Zechariah
‘Who, being in very nature God, did not consider
equality with
God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very
nature of a servant’ Paul
Bad examples:
“You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and
do not need a
thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor,
blind
and naked.” Jesus
‘You are the ones who justify yourselves in the
eyes of men, but God knows your heart. What is highly valued among men
is detestable in
God’s sight’ Jesus
By and large, we
have been extremely arrogant. I would even say, we have become a
breeding ground for proud and arrogant men. Moses’ lapse into
arrogance cost him dearly. And David’s own pride cost him the lives of
70,000 Israelites. Are we better than them?
Year by year and brick by brick, we
have built a gate so high it is pleading for destruction. But our pride
and determination to believe that God is
with us ‘no matter what’, and that he has approved or blessed virtually
every decision we have made has severely blinded our judgment of
reality.
When Moses sinned against God by declaring to Israel, ‘How long shall
we
put up with you’ he spoke what is in the hearts of many of us. This is
exactly
the kind of mentality we operate by. Because of our ‘me and God’
arrogance,
we have routinely slapped grown men in the face. Paul reprimanded the
Corinthians for submitting to such leaders, but this kind of ‘slapping’
is this very
thing we expect others to submit to. And we will not tolerate men who
want
to push us or slap us back.
Paul declares, ‘You gladly put up
with fools since you are so wise! In fact, you even put up with anyone
who enslaves you or exploits you or takes advantage of you or pushes
himself forward or slaps you in the face. To
my shame I admit that we were too weak for that.’ We too have enslaved
and
exploited and pushed and slapped grown men in the face. In our shameful
arrogance,
we have forced grown men to comply, even against their consciences.
Something Paul would never do. Something Jesus never did.
What is the further proof of our
arrogance? Besides our entire hierarchy and control mechanisms, there
are many: Not only have we allowed it, but we have sustained the cult
of personality. We have created and accepted
titles that have in turn created barriers and strengthened the clergy /
laity mindset. This of course has led to the widespread exaltation of
men.
In the spirit of, ‘Where the
Bible is silent, we speak’, we have routinely gone ‘beyond what is
written’.
Like the Pharisee who ‘prayed about
himself’, we have built monuments and timelines to ourselves and not
for the glory of God. We are always restoring but never
renouncing-because we can do no wrong. We have pillaged and plundered
other churches because of the wishes and desires of despotic men-who
must have the biggest and best churches because, ‘it is a sin not to be
the
biggest church in your city’ But even after they are plundered, more
bricks
are demanded!
We are constantly numbering Israel,
when even Joab, Israel’s worldly
national security commander found it repugnant! We have evolved into a
culture where the oppression and squashing of godly men is acceptable,
even the norm. Where ‘get in line, or get out’ is said, where ‘make the
numbers or get another job’ is casually declared, where ‘comply or die’
is an unspoken truth. There is a reason God has appointed us the
leaders
– we must be ‘better men’ -so shut up and listen! We have pruned the
souls
of men into damnation. This is not a membership list we cut up, but
Christ
himself. ‘Why do you persecute me?’ could just as easily be, ‘Why do
you
prune me?’ In doing so we have played the role of final Judge, we have
assumed
the prerogatives of God Himself (John 15). We have taught that we alone
are
the ‘true kingdom’, ‘true disciples’, and the ‘One True Church’. And
not
only do we believe these things, but we intensely advocate them- we
know
what we are doing, we have restored such and such, we are the remnant
chosen
by grace, we are the only church since the first century to…
We have built, by design, (or at the
very least have not dismantled it by design) a culture of control and
intimidation that shuts down and marginalizes men and women who
‘disagree’. This is an absolute abuse of power and total betrayal of
our freedom in Christ. In some of our churches, rich
leaders are getting richer. In some of our churches, the prophets and
priests
rule by their own authority. In some of our churches, its ‘give’ or get
out. In some of our churches, LA for one, its have a discipleship
partner
or go away. But go where if we are the ‘one true church’? Obviously, to
hell. Arrogance, pure and simple.
Our wholesale dismissal of critics
is appalling. How can we be sure Christ is not speaking to us through
them? After all, was Christ Himself not so offended by the arrogance of
the Laodicean church that he was no longer
‘within’ their fellowship – but stood outside the door and knocked? We
have
offered no public apologies for anything substantial.
In fact, by and large, we
don’t even listen to our own Christians- because if we did we would not
be in such a crises. Many of them ( including several outside critics)
have known all along what most of us cannot even recognize! Our ‘ever
hearing but never perceiving’ stubborness has created frustration and
anxiety and anger in our members beyond words.
We constantly pull rank where there
is not a single example of this kind of ‘rulership’ in Scripture. We
have consistently tied up heavy burdens
and placed them on men’s shoulders. Several of you, I know, have even
taken
another man’s ‘pasture’ and home at will, without consent or
conscience.
But you, like the Jewish ruling council, will do anything not to have
the
Romans ‘take your place and nation’. In like spirit, we have routinely
protected those ‘above’ because ‘what if the critics found out’ or ‘it
will cause
the weaker among us to stumble’. This is a direct violation of
scripture
– even our elders who sin must be rebuked publicly ‘so that others may
be
warned’. Because of these sins and others like them, we have received
our
reward in full, in praise and in power, in ‘ long flowing robes and
greetings
in the market place’ But in the meantime, God’s sons and daughters have
been
devastated.
There is no Jerusalem or Antioch of
the movement, or Jesus or Paul of the movement. We have no ‘anointed’
men like David, and no one man who is God’s hope for the world.
Is this kind of arrogance really the
by-product of a ‘remnant chosen
by grace’ or something more sinister? Or, if we believe like Paul, that
we are what we are ‘by the grace of God’, then why have we not acted
this
way? Why do we talk the way we do?
This kind of shameful arrogance has
both started and sustained our structural evils. In London, we are
reaping the fruit of this kind of behavior right now. We forced
ourselves on others, and now they force themselves on us. We slapped
others in the name of Jesus, and now they slap back, justifiably so!
Look at us. In just over 20 years we
have gone from ‘the happy few’ to a full-blown denomination. And even
more so, to a corrupted hierarchy with more personal control mechanisms
than the modern Catholic Church, and with more bravado than the
Pharisees themselves. At least they were whitewashed tombs – much of
their arrogance was not recognized by men, only by God.
Ours has become obvious to all.
4.Our Seduction By Money
‘ “You cannot serve both God and Money”. The
Pharisees, who loved money, heard all this and were sneering at
Jesus’. Matthew
‘…you ask with wrong motives, that you may spend
what you get on your pleasures. You adulterous people, don’t you know
that friendship with the world is hatred towards God?’ James
‘Children should not have to save up for their
parents, but parents for their children. So I will very gladly spend
for you everything I have and expend myself as well’ Paul
When John preached
in the desert, his call to repentance was all about ‘stuff’ and our
attitude towards it: a coat, contentment, extortion. All of them money
matters. We live in a kingdom where personal economics is
an exacting requirement, especially for leaders.
However, like almost every religion
or religious leader known to man, once corrupted by power and selfish
interest, the lure of money and unjust gain simply cannot be resisted.
It is a truism. We are no exception. And neither were the religious
elite of Jesus’ day.
I will continue with four more
quotations:
‘The attitude we have toward our money and
possessions reaches
to the depth of us, to the very nature of our existence.’
‘Our stewardship tells a deep and consequential
story. It forms our biography. In a sense, how we relate to money is
the story of our lives.’
‘Who is greedier than a man for whom God is not
enough.’?
‘The first responsibility of a leader is to
define reality’
If these Scriptures
and statements are true for simple Christians, then how much more so
for leaders in the Kingdom of God- those ‘upon whom the end of the ages
has come’ and who live ‘in the last days’?
To be sure, those of us who preach
the gospel full-time should earn our living by the gospel. But what
kind of living? Should it not be with the simplicity and almost
embarrassing self-consciousness of the apostles? Would that not do more
to encourage sacrifice among the saints than anything else? Or to
re-ignite our badly damaged credibility? Or to silence and shame
our critics?
This is one area of Scripture we
have clearly failed to restore. And
we all know why. Every year the seduction and surrender to money has
become more and more widespread, especially in America. Jesus’ own life
and example were a stern rebuke to the greed of the Pharisees. But when
he challenged their duplicity, they sneered at him. What has our
response been? Have we sneered? Or tried to minimize the Lord’s words?
‘You are those who justify yourselves in the eyes of men, but God knows
your heart’ he rebukes.
If we are the ones who are ‘defining
Christianity for this generation’, what are we defining in terms of
money and materialism? If we accept the premise that our first
responsibility as Christian leaders is to define reality, then surely,
the one New Testament reality we have ‘disembodied’ is this one. The reason is simple: money really
is the acid test of our sincerity
and spirituality- and our failure to obey the vital examples and
instructions of Scripture en masse is another reason I believe it is a
systemic evil, but especially endemic to the West. (Don’t challenge me
on greed, and I
won’t challenge you on materialism). Many of you of course are a noble
exception to this, Mark and Nadine being one. And certainly the
hundreds
of servants who toil on in foreign lands, especially in the third
world.
But by and large, and in particular in the West, our credibility as
‘heaven-ward’ men is crashing fast to earth.
Money is not merely a tool, or even
a drug-it is a god. A god who must be defied, not deified- especially
by full-time servants of the Lord. Christ’s personification of Mammon
in the hearing of the Pharisees should make all of us pause to search
our own souls. But instead of caution and trepidation, what has
happened?
There are now so many questions
about golden parachutes, the special
contribution, salary compensations, wasteful spending, and the
misappropriation
of funds that it is frightening. As the ‘clergy’, we have allowed for
incredible
retreats and pet projects: we have had harbor retreats, mountain
retreats,
castle and Hawaiian retreats, deep-sea fishing expeditions, five star
hotels,
presidential suites and the like; we have purchased unnecessary
business
class tickets and even season tickets to basket-ball leagues; no doubt
we
enjoy robust salaries, houses and perks. The higher up the
pyramid-
the greater the ‘responsibility’ factor- the better it gets: fatter
paychecks,
richer incidentals. We have the best cars, the best electronics, the
best
homes, the best schools, the best neighborhoods, the best clothes, and
the
best benefits.
We give golden parachutes to
those forced to resign when others who are ‘let go’, after years of
dedication, are sometimes not even mentioned in the next staff meeting
as though an embarrassment has occurred. I agree legalities have been
maintained, but this is God’s money not ours. Appearances and real
issues of greed have now caused thousands to stumble and question our
spirituality. A former GSL stated it like this, ‘Can we really expect
sincerity from men who have placed a higher value on their paychecks
and all the accompanying perks than they have on being true to their
conscience?’ That’s an honest, unemotional observation from a guy deep
within our system of things.
I am all for breaking the alabaster
jar from time to time and even honoring guest speakers. I think this is
right. I personally have been on many retreats and have benefited and
been refreshed by the generosity of other leaders and their ministries.
And truth be told, a large majority of Christians
are more than happy to ‘reward’ their hard working staff members this
way.
They are grateful for our service and understand the pressures our
families
and we are under. But is it right or responsible to continue in light
of
wide scale allegations and concerns? Is it right to have rich
leaders
in an age of suspicion? Is it right to put any stumbling block in
anyone’s
path if we are ministers of the gospel? If so, said Paul, then we are
no
longer acting in love. And truthfully, have these retreat expenses and
the
like been made public? In detail? Or only from a generic ‘pot’
mentioned
in a slide show?
A sacred trust is set in place
between those who ask and those who give- a trust that must be upheld
at all cost. Every penny we receive and spend is a matter of love and
respect for our Christians, especially the poorest among us. It also is
a matter of personal integrity and the fear of God. We are no longer
above reproach. I am not throwing stones here. I too am
guilty. I too am deeply convicted.
We have no choice but to open the
books and be utterly transparent in our expenses, especially those that
might convey even a ‘hint of greed.’ Mike Taliaferro once told
me, ‘If you can’t say it before a thousand people, it’s probably not
right’. Good advice. We must once again take pains not only to do what
is legally right, but also what is Christ-like and commendable in the
eyes of men and God. Only from specific accountability and
transparency- not from evasive pie charts at the end of the year- will
the total confidence and blessing of the saints be had once again, as
well as commending our
consciences to the poorest among our flock, the single moms in our
fellowship,
those who struggle week after week to support us, and the critics who
are
baying for blood. Are we not alarmed when we find out
a communist leader has a beautiful villa? Or when hard line mullahs
have running water and air conditioning when nobody else in their
village does? How much more should the church
be appalled when her leaders live near the ‘top of the scale’, or
convey
a double standard and love for the world? Was this not at least one of
the evils of Eli’s sons?
How we flesh out the words of
Scripture is a challenge, I know. But flesh them out we must. We have
no choice anymore. Too much is at stake. True
or not, many of us give the impression of being a hireling, a peddler,
a
white washed tomb or prophet at Ahab’s table. We have no option but to
change
for the gospel is being discredited.
I too have children and want the
best for them. This is a natural, parental instinct. But what really is
best for them? And should not a life of simplicity and frugality-even
for our families- be another cup that we who enter the full-time
ministry must drink? Even more radical to our thinking, is it
not true that the wives of the apostles accompanied them and worked so
that
their husbands could preach? (1 Cor.9.1-2) And why was this? Why had
they
refused to burden the church for even a few more denarii’s? Because of
personal
credibility and the desire to be above reproach. This is a ministry
paradigm
that has hardly been explored. I will leave that one for our teachers
to
consider.
Brothers and sisters, we must ask
ourselves, honestly: Am I embarrassed? Accused? Defensive? Apologetic?
Proud? Would we be ashamed to stand before our poorest members, our
widows and single mothers, even our critics, to have them in our
homes-each and every one- and justify our lifestyles at
their expense? Justifiable or not, inherited or not, the fruit of
great
stewardship or whatever – as ministers of an eternal kingdom, if our
salaries
or lifestyles are criticized by more than a few disgruntled members, or
are
a stumbling block to the rank and file in any way, we have to make some
serious
decisions.
We must ask ourselves, honestly:
What is the real rationale behind ‘more sphere of influence, more
money? It is not necessarily more or harder work. More pressure,
perhaps. But even so, this kind of salary model is the exact inversion
of apostolic teaching and example. Paul: ‘having nothing, and
yet possessing everything.’ Peter: ‘Silver and gold I have none.’
Accept
it or not, if money is our motive in any guise, Jesus said, we have
received ‘our reward in full.’
Should we as leaders not
exemplify the spirituality and sacrifice we call others to make, in
fact, have demanded that they make? (You fill in the Scripture)
In our own sacrificial giving/and living?
In our desire for equality?
In our demonstration of real justice?
To exemplify contentment and the joy of
simplicity?
To do everything possible to ease the burdens on
the church?
So that nothing may be wasted?
To identify with the poor, and not insult them?
To flee from even a ‘hint’ of greed? (A text we
are ruthless in applying to sexual sins, but blatantly hypocritical
when it comes to greed)
To prove that we too, are disciples first and
foremost?
To ‘show’ that we belong to a better country?
To illustrate how a disciple can resist the
plague of commercialism / consumerism?
To disarm the critics and truly be above reproach?
To imitate Christ’s own poverty/simplicity?
To flesh out the truths:‘I am crucified with
Christ’ and ‘the world has been crucified to me and I to the world’?
To restore what is clearly apostolic in practice
and spirit:‘ poor, yet making many rich’ ‘we will gladly spend
everything we have for you,
and spend ourselves as well’ ‘We made no use of our rights’ etc?
If we never pushed
so hard to get money from our Christians, it would still matter a great
deal to God, but not nearly as much as it does now, because of our
constant asking and coercive ‘getting’. We have demanded extraordinary
monetary sacrifice from our members, but comparatively, it appears we
have demanded so little from ourselves. That is, if we gauge from what
is ‘left over’ and not from what is ‘given’.
Jesus exposed and cursed the
Pharisees for their ‘open’ greed, their
‘hidden’ greed, their ‘denial’ of greed and their duplicity. He calls
it
‘the deceitfulness of wealth, and the desire for other things.’ He
commanded
us to be on guard against ‘all kinds of greed’, even if the source may
be legitimate-like an inheritance. Consider carefully: greed is one of
the
very few specific sins named in the New Testament a Christian should be
dis-fellowshipped for (1 Corinthians 5), and yet, in the richest and
most
consumer oriented country in the history of mankind, the USA-have you
ever
heard of even one person put out of the fellowship for this? Greed is
idolatry,
greed is deceitful, and greed will cost us ‘our inheritance among the
saints’
Very powerful stuff, indeed.
All Or Nothing All these structural/systemic evils
are entangled and intertwined. They will continue throughout our
churches until universally and ‘officially’ addressed. Because our
religious culture is so cohesive and conformist, it must be all or
nothing. But if the choice becomes ‘some things’ instead of all or
nothing, we will have major problems on our hands. In that case, the
only exception or escape from their continued influence would be to
practice or demand Biblical autonomy. (More on that later)
As I stated before, if we continue
to tolerate our systemic evils, and I say this with caution, our
personal salvation may very well be at stake, let alone our unity and
personal credibility. We simply cannot afford the luxury of thinking we
are an exception, immune, or above obedience to the commands of God-no
matter how much God has used us in the past. That is
one of the most spectacular fruits of pride.
When we refuse to be confronted
ourselves, or we become complacent or defiant when the Scriptures
challenge us-even to the core-we are in grave spiritual danger. And our
hypocrisy will have come full circle. We love the
revolutionary, but not if it is to overthrow us. We commend the Bereans
for
questioning Paul, but not if they question us. We love the radical
spirit of Josiah, unless he digs up our bones for exposure. We want
opinion leaders, but not if there opinion is against us. We love to
denounce the blind Pharisees, but refuse to see the Pharisee in us. We
love the simplicity of Christ -‘only one thing is needful’, and the
apostles- ‘poor, yet making many rich’, but not if it is a discomfort
to us
There is a time for patience and
even having dinner with the Sadducees and Pharisees, and then there is
a time for anger and the overthrowing
of temples. I believe that time is now. Our errors and sins must
be vigorously attacked and overthrown. Christ was hostile to a
religious
system then, and he is hostile to our religious system now. Too much is
at
stake. Our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against demons
and
their strongholds. This is no time for cowards. This is no time for
calm
deliberation or for lighting candles instead of cursing the darkness;
this
is a time for setting fire to the earth.
We must apologize. No more
spin, no more skirting the issues. We cannot move forward with
out acknowledging our past. There will be no bright future
without peering into what has been ugly in our history. I know that
even now many changes are taking place in several churches throughout
the world, but moving forward without acknowledging our past is a huge
mistake that will continue to haunt us. What is the purpose of a public
apology? To humble ourselves before God and men. To help us become
broken
and ashamed of our sins. To demonstrate true repentance and
restoration.
To prove to our beloved disciples that we ‘get it’ - and in doing so,
bring
some kind of closure to hurting or embittered Christians. To diffuse
those
criticisms that are valid and unrelenting. But most important of all,
to
please our God, and perhaps, prayerfully, bring back into the fold once
again those who have been scattered because of hurt or abuse or
consciences
that could not live within ‘our system’.
Wide Scale Problems and Concerns Here are other concerns I wish to
bring into discussion-and I am hardly alone in this- as well as tough
but honest questions, and accepted theology that must debated. In no
particular order:
1.We have had well over a quarter
million men and women leave our churches. Many have fallen away,
of course. Perhaps, the majority. But tens
of thousands have walked away with their God. We simply do not
admit
this. We have insisted, thoughtlessly and to the continuing hurt
and
dismay of many, that anyone who leaves our ranks, for whatever the
reason,
have fallen away from God. This just cannot be, and in truth, borders
on
the immoral. We know, even if we will not admit it publicly, that we
ourselves
have mistakenly ‘pruned’ hundreds away! No, not all have left their God
–they
simply left our fellowship to make it on their own. Let us admit the
truth-thousands
were marginalized, rebuked, misunderstood, wearied, or forced to follow
their
consciences out the door. Others, scattered by harsh and brutal
leadership
(Ez34)
2.Related to this, but hardly the
only reason, there is now an entire sub-culture of enemies and critics
that simply will not go away until we publicly admit and apologize for
our mistakes and sins.
3.Overall trust in our movement’s
leadership, in those ‘reputed to be pillars’ as well as those directly
‘under them’ has been seriously compromised. But more urgent still,
trust in local leadership has also been compromised, and even more so
because of proximity. (London is the loudest and angriest proof of this
at the moment)
4.The cult of personality has
finally caught up, and has betrayed our immaturity and men-pleasing
nature. Why did we wait so long for this to happen?
And why did we let it happen to begin with?
5.By and large, we have not lead as
men of courage and conscience. I
am afraid that in the eyes of many hurting and betrayed Christians-
those
who entrusted and submitted themselves to our leadership- we are now
perceived as cowards and cronies, men pleasers and peddlers of the
gospel. (Again, London is our proof right now of these sentiments-but
you know exactly what I mean) Yes, we have admitted to our abuses
and legalisms and insensitivities and obsessions with numbers, but
also, to our great shame, that we could do
nothing about it. For how long must God’s sons and daughters tolerate
this
manhandling by the arrogant? Or the cowardice of ‘men of God’ who do
nothing
to rescue his children? Even more frightening, for how much longer will
God
tolerate it? We have not stood up for the rights and needs of ‘our
sheep’
before all else. And perhaps most damning of all, we have almost
uniformly come to the defense of our shepherds first, and not to our
sheep. Shame on us all!
6.Unfortunately, too many of our
prophets are fed from the kings table and simply will not risk
discomfort, financial insecurity or the warmth
of men’s praises. Christian’s all over the world are hurting and
bitterly
disappointed that godly men do not have the love or conscience to do
what
they believe is right for those in their care. But how can they,
really?
Our own ministry staff suffers too; they also are victims of selfish
autocrats
and abuses from within ‘the system’ They are caught in the crossfire,
from
above and below. I know this will sound harsh and unfair, and to some
extent
it is, but more than a few in London want specific staff members to be
sacked,
and several even the entire staff, simply out of frustration- I will
spare
you the quotes. They feel used and betrayed.
7.We easily put up with
‘super-apostles’ and harsh or autocratic leaders in our churches- those
who love to ‘slap us in the face’- simply because of expedience or
misplaced loyalties. Or more disturbing, because ‘we have no one else
to take their place’ But surely a church with no leader (and
comforted by the Spirit) is better than a church with a bad leader (who
has
quenched the Spirit)! Few things break my heart more than to see men I
love
and respect make decisions based on ‘loyalty’ and ‘expedience’
and
‘years of service’ and ‘favor-swapping’, to the utter disregard of what
is
moral or pleasing to God. 8.Sadly, although the so called the
LA unity/governance conference was no doubt sincere and had great
intentions- it has once again failed to
address our real problems right now-our systemic evils. Even before the
LA meeting took place, one GCL expressed his feelings like this: The
movement
at this point has become a farce. The top leaders will meet in week to
discuss governance, while Rome burns. The souls of 250,000 fall aways
cry
out against the very foundational structure of our churches, yet their
aggregate value cannot even motivate an official apology, much less a
meeting
of the worlds leaders.
As several of you who participated
may know-your public announcement
after the fact has already been met with a degree of suspicion, even
cynicism. ‘More spin, not enough depth, not enough substance, what’s
really going
to change?’ ‘Why should we trust those guys anymore?’ ‘They never stood
up in the first place, why should we believe they have integrity and
courage
now?’ Our lack of unity and dysfunctional relationships are not from a
structural model that has ‘outstripped the spiritual needs of our
churches’, but is
the ongoing fruit of a corrupted hierarchy, sustained and controlled by
fallen human nature-proud and selfish. That is all.
Why can’t we see this? We will never
be, and never can be, truly united again until we ruthlessly and
painfully and theologically examine and expose our systemic evils. They
are what divide us, and always will divide us. Our struggle is not
against flesh and blood, but against demonic strongholds. Even
the Pharisees – that seemingly unified group, were never truly united.
Paul was a Pharisee of Pharisees. But in his own words, ‘we lived in
malice and envy, being hated and hating one another’
Proof: Isn’t it true, be honest,
that many of you are still angry and slanderous, are ‘out to get so and
so’ and ready to ‘bring down so and so’? Isn’t it true that many of
you, be honest, will still fight tooth and nail to not lose your
‘position’ of prominence or to not have to relinquish your need for
control and forced conformity? And isn’t it just as true, that almost
no-one resigns, no matter what their problems or how long they lasted,
without ‘serious persuasion’? I know it’s true. I heard some of your
own voices
on my phone. The question is, why is it true? Structural changes and
more
local autonomy and the resignation of a few prominent leaders and
honesty
sessions and open forums will just not work. Our problems are so much
deeper
than that. So much deeper in fact, they are demonic, and therefore must
be
‘exorcised’. Structural, systemic evils have strangled us, our
relationships,
our integrity, and our unity. Why can’t we see this? Why won’t we see
this?
It is painful and very discouraging. Changing a few hats and names, and
having a six-month ‘issues and co-operation’ council is moot.
9.There is a significant, even
radical, gap between the ‘clergy and laity’ in our churches. The
‘the priesthood of all believers’ is now in serious question. The lack
of voice, the lack of ‘in the trenches’ understanding and empathy, the
lack of non -staff representation and decision-making powers, the lack
of leaders who are legitimately ‘commended’ by those they lead, the
lack of disclosure and transparency, the pay scale differences as well
as autocratic leadership styles-and those darn front row seats-have all
contributed to an ever widening problem.
10.Why is it that so many of our top
leaders have taken so long to repent? Or refused to be discipled
themselves when they are the vanguard of a ‘discipling movement’? Why
have some even taken years? What has the WSL ‘discipleship group’ been
doing? Why have our kingdom teachers and elders not been more
prophetic? Or why have our GSL discipleship groups not been more
courageous? Have not our own protection and misplaced loyalties
encouraged,
even rewarded spiritual complacency? ‘You don’t understand,’ we
‘were
hamstrung’, ‘powerless’, we ‘tried but there was nothing we could do’
‘you
had to be a part of it to appreciate the dynamics’ and ‘don’t be
naive’.
This is a 2 fold indictment against us: It proves that we are a
religious culture that controls by fear and intimidation, and also a
culture of cowards and conflict avoiders- right to the top. The double
standards and duplicity is embarrassing. We expect non Christians
to radically change- leave their families, careers, relationships and
addictions within a matter of
weeks and days, even demand it in order for them to be baptized- but
many
of our top leaders are given years to repent and yet remain in their
positions
of authority, challenging and ‘changing’ our lives!
11.Kip’s resignation letter,
although sincere, is not enough. His letter was very moving (I cried
for a couple days), but his personal life and
failures as a man are not of greatest concern. Every one
sins.
Many leaders fall and will fall, including great men of God. The truth
is, the way we have structured and sustained things, Kips fall was
Biblically
inevitable. The main problem is that Kip never addressed the specific
‘sins
of our system’ He did not even mention them, let alone repudiate them. This is no longer about Kip or a few
high profile resignations-the future and integrity of our movement is
at stake. Our hierarchy, ‘formalized’ discipleship structure,
legalism, and systemic abuses must be admitted
as a failure- no matter how painful it will be for any of us, including
Kip. It was a great and sincere religious experiment, and God has
worked
through us in spite of our mistakes and misgivings, but new wine means
new wineskins.
12.The teaching and belief that we
are, or ever have been, the ‘One True Church’. This statement is
patently arrogant, and necessarily offensive. How can we know? At best,
we are only a part of the one true universal church of Christ, His
body-the visible expression of Christ on earth. We are the church, I
agree. And we are the true church, I agree. But to equate the
‘One True Church’ with the ICOC membership list and our organizational
boundaries is wrong, even heretical. True, I personally have not come
across others ‘like ourselves’ per se, but even the prophet Elijah was
blind to the higher purposes of God in his own generation-and he truly
was an inspired man.
Can we not be? We still know of several groups who teach the same plan
of
salvation- many of us came from that background. Although we may
publicly
deny that we teach this as such -at least to the press and our critics-
many of us, especially the rank and file believer adhere to this
conviction
as a matter of life and death. I hear it said again and again,
but
it cannot possibly be proven, it is utterly arrogant, it cannot be
theologically
defended, and it must be repudiated. To be clear, I am not saying
‘other
churches are saved’-because there is and always has been only one true
church. But its organizational boundaries can never be, will never be
known.
Only God knows those who are His. And He is always full of surprises.
To
summarize: We are the church, but we cannot say the ICOC is the One
True
Church. We are Christians only, but we cannot say we are the only
Christians.
Our membership list does not constitute the fullness, or the mystery of
the invisible and spiritual body of Christ.
13.We have crystallized into a
denomination. We have gone from
a ‘rag tag band of brothers’ to the International Churches of Christ in
just over 20 years. I know this is hard to hear, especially since
we teach against it in our ‘Word Study’. But it is true. And I am
only saying openly what many of us think in private. We are the ‘ICOC’
and have an acknowledged founder, Kip. (Until this statement, as made
on
KNN, is renounced, that is what has been taught) ‘I’m in the ‘ICOC’’ is
now a catchphrase. (I think it is offensive, personally, as in,‘My
Savior
is J.C.’ but it proves my point). We have a well-defined
hierarchy.
We have our own head quarters. We have our own names and
terminologies.
We have our unique theology and we know – exactly- who is in and out of
our membership. With minor variations we follow the same patterns and
traditions
in all of our churches. And the same systemic evils are certainly
widespread.
We fellowship no others. We have ‘official’ websites, and
‘official’
publications, and ‘official’ news networks and an ‘official’
board.
We have become a denomination. We have an elephant in the living room
and
our head in the sand. Not a good combination.
We have gone from an ‘informally’
acknowledged leader, a ragged band
of brothers, scum and refuse of the world, from the one suitcase
challenge, personal convictions and voluntary sacrifice, from utterly
spontaneous special contributions and almost no weekly accountability
or month end stats, from joy and prayer and faith with our three dollar
maps hanging on the wall and jostling to target and plant churches in
foreign countries- to a movement, a family of churches, a family
business, a corporation, and now a full blown denomination. What has
happened to us? We have replaced authentic Spirit led
leadership for an unspiritual, almost corporate like autocracy.
14.Our movement is not ‘The
Kingdom’. The Kingdom is greater than the church or any movement
of men. We are Christians, the privileged citizens of this
kingdom, but that is all. We are baptized into the kingdom, and
have a King, but the ‘kingdom of God’ is infinitely and eternally
superior to a religious movement or membership list. Why have our
teachers not renounced this or forced a discussion on this matter?
15.KNN, although extremely
encouraging at times, is more and more regarded as a propaganda tool to
further enforce our accepted practices and belief systems. It is about
crystallizing, not exploring. Conformity, and not
real unity. Perhaps nothing has contributed to our cult of personality
more than KNN.
16.Coercive giving is practiced,
wide-scale. Of course there are may sincere and generous
disciples who love to give, but the fact remains, our entire scheme for
collecting the contribution is not based on the heart, or about love
offerings, or true concern about the spiritual impact our
system of ‘getting’ has on the rank and file Christian. That is not
what
is most important. Accountability, intense scrutiny and follow up and
man
made pressures are the order of the day. When a Christian is
cajoled
into a ‘multiple’, tracked down for their tithe, categorized on
official
spreadsheets for everyone to know so that sector leaders ‘can be on
top’
- all to maintain budgets that we have created, this is coercive.
Whether
our plans and spending practices are noble or not, this type of
contrived
and controlled giving is utterly foreign to the spirit of the New
Covenant.
You know it as well as I do, but why do we keep on doing it? How we
‘get
money’ and ‘make sure we make budget’ has evolved into one of our most
invasive
and grace- killing practices. And it has created untold bad feelings.
In
my opinion, London has become one of the most frugal and responsible
ministries
in our fellowship when it comes to financial integrity. Compared to
most
western leaders, the staff in London are very frugal and self-
conscious
about appearances. But even here, the backlash over finances has been
loud
and unrelenting. Some see themselves ‘on a holy mission from God’ in
the
words of a region leader. Why is this? For the most part, it is
simply
the byproduct of coercive tactics in ‘getting their contribution’ to
begin
with, and of the pressure exerted from weekly and monthly
accountability,
and not from cheerful giving. The leadership here is very much on the
defensive
to justify their lifestyles at the churches expense. Those who give
joyfully
easily forgive, and really don’t care, and will even defend the
lifestyle
and expenditures of its leadership. But those who are coerced to
give
and feel burdened, or made to feel guilty from missing their
contribution
will fight back hard over any financial ‘appearances’ or perceived
improprieties.
Real or not. That’s just the way it is-and ought to be!
Consider just these verses from 2
Corinthians 8 and 9 alone, in the order they appear: ‘the grace that
God has given’ ‘overflowing joy’ ‘rich generosity’ ‘entirely on their
own’ ‘they urgently pleaded with us for the privilege of sharing in
this service’ ‘they gave themselves first’ ‘this act of grace’ ‘this
grace of giving’ ‘I want to test the sincerity of your love’ ‘eager
willingness’ ‘willingness’ ‘in order to honor the Lord’ ‘we want to
avoid any criticism’ ‘this liberal gift’ ‘the proof of your love’ ‘the
reason
for our pride’ ‘your eagerness to help’ ‘your enthusiasm’ ‘ the
generous
gift’ ‘not as one grudgingly given’ ‘decided in his heart’ ‘not
reluctantly
or under compulsion’ ‘God loves a cheerful giver’ etc. This kind of
deeply
personal and spiritual giving is not possible with our mechanisms of
pressurized
accountability in place. Full stop.
‘If we don’t hold them accountable,
they won’t give’ So be it. Let us preach and teach more, even command
when necessary(1 Timothy 6). Let us base
our budgets on what is truthful in giving not on budgets we have set to
further our own agenda, good or bad. Once our giving is ‘set’, our
budgets must be coerced, not the other way around. Some have had the
nerve to even discuss the possibility of ‘taxing churches’ for late
special contributions! I think that is how all revolutions begin.
17.We have burdened our membership
with special contribution goals and financial budgets that could be
dramatically reduced if we did not waste so much, or stopped spending
so lavishly on things we really don’t need, and had much more
accountability and input from non-paid staff.
18.There is a great inequity in the
way we desire to take care of the needs of our Western leaders versus
our counterparts in the third world. Our third world counterparts do
not mirror our medical benefits, our salaries and social security, and
our retirement packages in any way. Is there nothing we can do to
rectify this imbalance? Where is the justice? Where is the
equality? Where is the concern?
19.Conformity is not unity.
Consider the example of John the Baptist and Jesus-one sang a dirge,
one played the flute. One ate locusts and one drank wine. Between these
two great ‘contemporaries’ there was not hint
at trying to get each other to conform. They both preached the same
message: repent. Or consider the sharp dispute between Paul and
Barnabbas-there
was no forced conformity, or even between an inspired apostle and one
who
was not, Apollos. Nor was conformity urged between Jews and Gentiles,
or
even apostles and apostles. We on the other hand have forced conformity
upon ourselves, and then bragged to the world that we are united in
mind
and spirit. True unity is utterly based on freedom. It is
based
on relationships steeped in love and mutual respect, not on rules or
pulling
rank. True, sincere and biblical
unity is accomplished by prayer (John 17) humility and personal
surrender (Ephesians 4), by not going beyond
what is written or taking pride in one man against another (1
Corinthians
4), and by the fear of God-it is a command. It is no doubt harder
to achieve, but it is genuine, and not manufactured or coerced.
True
unity exalts in our God- given differences and is proven when
differences
of opinion and leadership styles do not keep us from fellowship-that is
the only kind of unity that ‘lets the world know we are disciples.’
Enforced
conformity always breeds rebellion, plain and simple. And the longer we
have lived, the more we should understand this.
20.The concept of discipleship
partners as presently practiced in most of our churches has
failed. Perhaps more than all else, our discipleship hierarchy
with all its ‘little leaders’ has caused more damage, heartache, and
criticism than any other thing. Among the tens of thousands of
untrained and ‘unspiritual’ disciples, advice has become permission,
opinions have become orders, and the dignity and ‘right’ of our God
given freedom
has been denied. The nature of our hierarchy and the ‘baptism is
best’
theology, when mixed with our sinful human nature has in many cases
been
a disaster. Paul said, ‘I am free and belong to no man’ and to the
Corinthians,
‘You were bought at a price; do not become slaves of men’ This is a
command
of God, not good advice. And to the Galatians, ‘It is for freedom that
Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be
burdened again by a yoke of slavery’
In our discipling relationships, we
can warn, plead, share from experience, and of course, open the
Scriptures – but in the end, each Christian must work our their ‘own
salvation with fear and trembling’. Intrusive interference in matters
of opinion is simply unacceptable. Pulling rank is a sin. A
godly man will seek advice, but another godly man will never bind
advice.
Of course, some will fall and make bad decisions-and in some cases
disastrous
decisions-but they are their decisions, not ours. We routinely make
ourselves
the judges of another man’s freedom; another man’s life. But who are we
to judge? The Ethiopian breaks every rule of discipleship we have. He
was
left dripping wet, and Phillip was immediately taken away. Are we wiser
than God? Or more competent than the Spirit of God?
We started out with good intentions,
but systemic evils corrupt everything they touch. What started
out as a sincere desire to protect the sheep has degenerated into a
mechanism of control. There can be no doubt about this. The
need for imposed discipleship relationships to maintain our system of
things is so crucial that to say ‘no thank you’ has meant
banishment from some of our churches. Kips own quote from LA is now
world
famous. That is why a sincere Christian would even think to ask, ‘Is it
a sin not to have a discipleship partner?’ Well, is it?
Much of the advice that has been
give over the years, some of it horrific, is merely a reflection of the
selfish goals or ‘higher agendas’ of those ‘over’ them in the Lord. Or
the belief that Christians are generally incapable or incompetent of
pleasing God without another mans interference. ! No matter how much we
spin it or try to deny it, this is what the vast majority of our
Christians believe and practice, because that is what they perceive
to be reality.
But what do the Scriptures say? God
will ‘move them to follow my decrees’. We are a ‘royal priesthood’, are
‘full of goodness’ and ‘competent to counsel one another’, are
‘sensible people’ who must ‘judge for yourselves’ and
can ‘ test those who claim to be apostles but are not’ and who will one
day ‘judge the world’ and ‘the angels’ Even ‘men of little account’ in
the
church could settle major disputes between believers. We are
kings
and priests and sons of God, we do not have to depend on any man at
all.
We are filled with the Holy Spirit of God, and possess the Word of God.
We have a Great High Priest, a Mediator and an Advocate with the Father.
I do not deny the phenomenal amount
of good that has come about from
godly ‘discipling’ relationships- but as a formalized, authority laden
institution it is doomed to fail and must therefore be dismantled. Why?
‘Because where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom’
21.The Pax Americana must end
22.By and large, we have protected
the shepherd and not the sheep. I understand the need
for loyalty. Men have done me favors, bailed me out, given me
second chances, lifted me up when I was down etc. But I
am not talking about one’s personal sins or family challenges (although
these can be serious), rather, I am talking about protecting and
keeping in leaders who are damaging, autocratic, brutal, oppressive,
humiliating, selfishly ambitious, defensive and proud. Or about merely
moving them to another congregation as a second chance, without any
true repentance before hand. This is unacceptable. Unfortunately,
to a large degree, the elder’s role has become one of PR
and protecting the evangelist more than anything else. The New
Testament
portrays all kinds of leaders, some good and some bad. Not all must be
categorically defended. In fact, several were publicly named and
denounced. Blind support is unbiblical. Within the context of apostolic
Christianity, within and
among the ‘one true church’, were many anti-Christs, Diotropheses’,
Hymanaeus’, ‘super apostles’, errant apostles, false apostles,
legalists, Judaizers, some Pharisees, and a ‘great many’ false teachers
on the horizon. Those
were the men who moved within the circles of fellowship within the
first
century. Can it not be true of our fellowship as well? Should we also
not
be on guard against ravenous wolves who will rise up from ‘among your
own
selves’?
23.By and large, we fear men more
than we fear God; we seek to please men, more than we seek to please
God. What is the proof? Ask yourself how is it that so many sins
and, dare I say, it cult-like practices have been allowed to prevail
for so long over the reason and consciences of good men and
women? I know what you say in secret, on the telephone, with a
close friend, with your wife and in your heart. You have the same
concerns I do but why have we not spoken up until now? Or why did we
not push through? The fear of men.
24.Whatever we crystallize,
formalize or institutionalize, that cannot be unequivocally defended by
the Bible, will always be open to criticism and debate from men of good
conscience- whether that be expedient titles and offices of authority,
or our methods or theologies or cultural norms
or whatever. This must never be stopped, but encouraged. We must fight
for
our God given right, our mandate, to always be restoring-especially the
restoration of our freedoms in Christ.
25.By and large our preaching is man
oriented, works oriented, mission oriented, duty oriented and law
oriented. A works oriented gospel is no
gospel at all-a constant barrage of ‘got to, have to, should and must’
–are
wearisome at best, grace killing at worst.
When the focus is on what we do for
God more than what He has done for us, immaturity and insecurity always
prevail. Is that really what we want? We are a wearied, distracted,
guilt- ridden group of sheep in too many
quarters. The joy and pleasure of spontaneous faith, and the inward
responses
to grace and love have been taken away. The sheer grace of the gospel,
the good news of it all, has been drowned by this kind of preaching and
teaching We don’t have to admit this to
ourselves; the evidence is all around
us, in almost every ministry. And in large part, it is the by-product
of
having to keep pushing for results, for more and better numbers. But
where
is the nourishment? Where is the mystery? Where is the systematic
theology
and deep exposition of the Word? Or the call to inward holiness and
praying
in the Spirit? Where is the jaw-dropping wonder at the glory and
majesty
of God? The love of Christ? The fellowship of the Spirit?
The greatest commandment is not, ‘Go
and make disciples of all nations’ but to ‘love God with all of our
heart and soul and mind and strength’. Evangelism is a command of God,
and not men. It should be the by- product of knowing Christ and Him
crucified, and our response and obedience to the love of
God. But in many cases, we have abused this ‘great commission’ into a
scheme
for becoming great in ourselves, and in the end have hurt the faith of
many.
Here are a few quotes from a
recently resigned evangelist on his perspective of our fellowship, the
‘fruit’ of our preaching and theologies:
‘We are a movement full of people
with really unhealthy views about themselves, with a very unhealthy
dependence on the views of others over God and a
very oppressive system in place which offers no real relief.
Our church culture is dominated by
the premise that people cannot be
trusted. We spend ridiculous amounts of energy policing them, invading
every area of their lives with extra biblical authority and pre formed
convictions
about their characters.
Activity is revered above all. To do
is of greater value in the eyes
of those whose opinions matter than to feel, think, weigh, debate,
wrestle or any other mental process that would produce character.
Our people have so few options in
reality; they can become numb, bitter or shallow. We accept numb, we
reward shallow compliance and we punish bitterness without an eye to
its antecedents.
The mission is supreme, even when
man’s interpretation of how to accomplish that mission ends up damaging
the very people the mission seeks to save.
One critic of our churches expressed
it like this, ‘What we see practiced in this movement is pushing, not
leading. They are driving the sheep from behind. It is done by men
using earthly wisdom to accomplish what they
think are God’s goals’
26.So many thousands of men have
been effectively emasculated by legalism and compliance to
authoritarian leadership. Their dignity as men created in the image of
God has been stifled. Their dreams and personal convictions and
‘wildness of heart’ have been doused. All Christians, including
brothers must learn submission, of course- that is our glory- but the
squelching
of personal dreams, inner feelings and convictions has had a
demoralizing
effect across the board. More than several men have lost their manhood.
27.How is it that elders have the
highest qualifications in terms of
spirituality, integrity and experience but are ‘overseen’ themselves by
those who do not have the same criteria or moral authority? Expedience?
Or a lack of respect? One or the other.
28.Why have we lost so many good and
loyal men? For the most part, conscience reasons and not sin. This begs
the question we refuse to look at for fear of the consequences.
One GSL, loved and respected around the world, recently resigned.
Before his resignation he wrote these words in his private journal
about his wife and children. I asked if I could share them. ‘Is
it best for them, for me to be this conflicted in what I do for a
living?
What will I feel when they start to see the weaknesses that surround
the
movement and yet they have no need to acquiesce in order to protect a
job?
What do I TRULY, on the deepest level, want for their lives
spiritually?
Do I want them to be what I am? Do I want them to live what I live? Do
they
already know and feel how much I am disappointed in who I have
become?
What must I do to assure that I do not perpetuate the cultural
shallowness
with their lives?
30.We need teachers who are
prophetic as well as academic.
31.Lets stop having “official
things” Why do we need them? They only
strengthen our denominational status. You don’t ‘officially’ speak for
me, or I for you. Jerusalem never ‘officially’ spoke for Antioch. The
Gentiles
never spoke ‘officially’ for the Jews. When we have official positions
on
anything, it strains trust and credibility. And again, in the kingdom,
it
is a violation of our freedom. In our modern cities, no one genuinely
respects
the credibility of an editor if there is only one newspaper – we need
sides,
argument, openness, debate and dialogue. The freedom to disagree
and
still remain best friends.
32.Our practice of wholesale pruning
must stop. Of course it will result in the praises of men (if that is
what you are after) but also, surely,
in the wrath of God. Destroy Gods temple and God will destroy
you. Destroy Gods children and God will destroy your
children. Think about it. The same fate will await all of
us unless we repent of this wicked and warped product of misguided
humanism.
London’s so called revival in the
early 90’s- with 450- 500 men and women being pruned from the
membership has deeply scarred or embittered hundreds of members to this
day. To say nothing of all the souls that were ruined because of this
folly. Whole families, dear friends, and not a few
‘smoldering wicks’ were torn apart and blown out because of this
unintentional
method of playing God. Who challenged this? Why did it happen?
Why
does it continue? May God have mercy on us.
33.Unfortunately, and I say this
with a sad heart, but the reputation of several of our teachers has
also been discredited to some extent. For two simple reasons:
They have spoken Biblically about our abuses and systemic evils and
theological concerns but have not been heeded. In
that case, all of my arguments for the preservation of ‘our system’ by
unscrupulous
men have been validated. Or two: They have chosen not to speak
prophetically
against heresy, systemic evils or leadership abuses, but have rather
concerned
themselves with less urgent academic issues. In that case they
have
been cowards.
34. Jesus commanded us not to have
titles that separate brother from
brother. All men are equal. But in our churches, some men
really
are more equal than others. We have allowed and even enjoyed
titles
such as these, ‘Kingdom Mission Evangelist’ ‘Kingdom Teacher’ ‘World
Sector
Leader’ ‘World Sector Elder’ ‘Geographic Sector Leader’. All of
them
quite a bit more substantial than,‘Rabbi’. And a lot more embarrassing,
too. Power does indeed corrupt and prides
always comes before a fall. And a high gate always invites
destruction. Even Peter called himself our ‘brother’, our
‘servant’ and ‘fellow elder’. His apostleship
was an office of service, not a title. Paul said, ‘I am nothing’. But
again, all of these things are the natural consequence of a hierarchy
that has
been corrupted by the pride of men and the deception of the devil. (1
Timothy 3)
35.Many in the full time ministry
are now so damaged, so emotionally
immature, so guilty, so insecure, so yielding and compliant, and even
seared
in their consciences, I am afraid it will take years for them to fully
recover. Some of them ,too, have effectively been
emasculated,
squashed. This is the cumulative damage from authoritarian, and not
servant
leadership. The healing can only begin when those ‘above’, without
defensiveness
or repercussion, urge openness and invite criticisms because of the
damage
resulting from being ‘under’ an authoritarian leader. Those ‘above’
must
confess specifically of their abuses and selfish ambition. Even
now
in London, from some of our most pure hearted and loyal staff, the
feelings
of betrayal, of being used, of being forced to go against their
consciences,
is now being voiced.
36.So many women in the ministry are
conflicted. They are not emotionally equipped for the kind of
guilt and pressure that has been placed on their shoulders. God
has not designed them for these kinds of burdens or strains.
Unfortunately, our western model of the “total woman” has
by and large been forced upon almost all of our women in the full time
ministry, in almost every country and culture in the world. And yet,
not one wife
of an apostle or evangelist is even mentioned by name in the New
Testament. It almost seems that the wives of the Apostles
accompanied their husbands for the express purpose of working to
support them financially ‘Or is it
only I and Barnabbas who must work for a living?’(1 Corinthians 9 1-2)
I
am not saying I believe it should be this way, only that we have
explored
very few other New Testament paradigms for leadership. We have elevated
our
partnership with women in the gospel to the role of co-evangelist in
many
respects, and I am afraid this model has crushed several of them.
37.Countless hundreds of good
hearted family group leaders and Bible
talk leaders have stepped out of their roles because of discouragement
and weariness. For the most part, we have not instilled in them a
sense of faith and joy and moral obligation under God, and our leaders
meeting are rarely about prayer and worship, but rather, about
accountability,
making the targets, and forced follow-ups. The result? Not a sincere
love
for the weak and lost, but feelings of guilt and frustration and shame.
Others simply ‘hate’ discipleship groups. How many thousands more
around the world do not want any form of leadership, including the full
time ministry, because of what they have seen or experienced from those
‘over’ them in the Lord? One advantage of moving around so much and
being
in so many different ministries is a wider vantage point. We are in a
crisis.
38.The genius of local of autonomy,
and the many forms of local church government provided in the New
Testament, must once again be explored and embraced. Local church
autonomy is biblical. Our choice of a hierarchical system of
government-with world wide ‘control’ of our churches as the goal- by
necessity, needed to squash and undermine the principle of local
autonomy- even if ‘the word autonomy is not in the Bible’ For whatever
the reason, we have all just rolled over and played dead on this.
But an unbiased examination of the
New Testament will surely confirm
what I am saying. Co-operation yes, control no. Unity yes,
uniformity
no. Brotherhood yes, bullying no. Giving yes, extraction no. Biblical
autonomy - or ‘self government’ – is a safe- guard against the uniform
spread of
heresy. It is a deterrent to the spread of systemic abuses.
It is the first line of defense against the violation of our freedoms.
It
allows each church to be persuaded by truth rather than coerced by men.
And
it allows each church, in turn, to persuade others as well. There are
no
rulers in the kingdom. There are no pillar churches deciding and
binding
decisions on other congregations. In fact, autonomy is the only way to
test
the sincerity of our love and unity as a brotherhood.
39.Different churches will always be
at different stages of maturity, and will have different needs. There
seem to be several models of leadership structure and local church
oversight in the Bible. God has not laid down
a once for all, inviolable statement concerning these matters- only
that
Christ is King and Head and that we are all brothers. Offices and
oversight
are there. Authority in leadership cannot be denied. But structures and
models of government seem to vary depending on need or circumstance or
stage of
maturity, but with the goal ultimately, to result in a plurality of
overseers.
However, one thing we do not find anywhere in Scripture is ‘one church
over
another’ Once a young congregation is on its feet, is filled with the
Spirit
and has ‘commended’ leaders- it must be set free, allowed to walk, run
and
even fall on its own (Revelation 2,3) When Paul said, ‘Now I commit you
to
God and the word of his grace, which can build you up and give you an
inheritance among all those who are sanctified’, he did just that. He
did not commit
them to the oversight of a pillar church somewhere.
40.The lack of centralized control
is clearly biblical, increasing our dependence on God, not man. The
ways of the Spirit are mysterious and beyond the scope of man’s wisdom.
The surprising nature of God (Acts 9, Paul;
Acts 10, Cornelius), the unplanned movements of men, the conversion of
the Eunuch and sending him into the unknown, the supernatural unfolding
of dramatic events, the attack on the church leading to the spread of
the
gospel, all came not from human control mechanisms but from God. A
centralized
body slows things down, and ultimately, puts out the Spirits fire.
Now What? There is no easy way forward. The
extraction of systemic evil will be painful and bloody – like Heb 4:12,
applied movement-wide. We must resist the temptation to simply move
forward, ignoring our past: dirty laundry must
be exposed, and the disease identified and eradicated, or it will
continue to spread throughout our fellowship. This is the nature or
mildew (see Leviticus) and gangrene. Trying to change without
acknowledging our past would be a huge
mistake. This can be scary, but, like a root canal, it must be tackled
thoroughly
and extensively. The consequences – what it might mean for some of our
leaders, or just how painful it might be – cannot be the deciding
factor. We must
do everything we can to heal, restore and rekindle our badly damaged
trust.
Our priority must never be to preserve our jobs or the institution, but
to
protect the flock. We must be able to face and speak the truth – to
ourselves
and to each other – and to hear it from those who would confront us.
Let
us be emboldened by Peter’s relationship with Paul: the necessary but
painful
truth was spoken, but Peter harbored no grudges. Here are some of my
suggestions and opinions from the things we are experiencing in London.
A: CLEANING THE CUP
1. Proceed with
much prayer and fasting. 2. Invite openness
and criticism, without defensiveness or repercussions. How you do this
is an issue of much prayer and courage and caution. Cleary, the devil
will try to use this time as well, to tear and to divide us. 3. Apply Matt 18
first, and allow the public forum
for more widespread concerns. Caution against bitter words, which could
cause serious damage in relationships. Choose as moderators, spiritual
men who are commended by the members and perceived as unbiased.
(Non-ministry). 4. Do not be
surprised at what you hear, or from whom! The forums need to be open
and honest, and allow for some venting; however, they must not become
slanderous and out of control. If the Corinthian’s
‘open’ worship services did ‘more harm than good’, how much more an
open
forum where people are pouring out their hearts, often out of much pain
and anger. Tread carefully here. 5. There must be
public heartfelt confession by the elders and evangelists. Do not even
think about doing this until you ‘get it’, or the Christians will be
even more angry and disappointed, even cynical. 6. Leaders must be
held accountable first, then the flock. We have had this reversed.
Consider almost every example of discipline and judgment in the Bible.
‘Kill them all’ – starting at the temple. ‘Those who teach will be
judged more strictly’. The leaders were the legalists, the Judaizers,
the hypocrites, the face-slappers. To whom much has been
entrusted, much will be expected. 7. Some leaders
must have the integrity to step aside and re-earn the trust of the
members, to be truly commended again. We must not think we are
indispensable: 250 of Israel’s top leaders were struck down in one
blow. (Num 16:35) 8. Practice Matt
5, leave your gift at the altar, and seek out those you have hurt – do
not wait for someone to have to ‘prove their case’ against you first.
Be completely humble and gentle. 9. Apologize
specifically, in private and in public, as much as necessary 10. Do away with
monthly stat taking as a form of motivation. Let things ‘slow down’ for
a while, as God is working deeply in the hearts of all to be purified
and reconciled. Teach LOVE for the lost, and moral obligation before
God not man. When was the last time you , as leader, shed tears for the
lost, or desired that God would save them in exchange for
your own salvation? This kind of love is not fostered by our obsessions
with stat keeping and goal setting, but by prayer and through the
Spirit.
(Romans 8 and 9) 11. We must
dismantle authoritarian DP relationships. All of these ‘little leaders’
have not been immune from bad theology. There should be more prayer,
more love, more seeking of God’s will. All Christians should be
encouraged to seek advice and examine the Scriptures, yet liberated to
choose a course of action or application according to their own
conscience. 12. We must deeply
re-examine the nature of the gospel of God’s grace. (Starting with
Galatians?) 13. If anyone
suffers unjust repercussions for being open and / or expressing their
hurt or anger, let God judge the oppressive leader
B. FILLING THE CUP Once the house is exorcised and
swept clean, and the inside of the cup is washed, let us quickly refill
it – with love, grace, liberty and the
fear of God. Let us be motivated by the Cross- with all of its
blessings
AND obligations.
1. Christ must be
overwhelmingly central in our preaching, teaching and counseling. This
seems obvious, but is hardly practiced. Perhaps this would have
prevented many of our problems to begin with. (Meditate
on this one text to understand this point, 1 Corinthians 1). 2. Let our worship
services, first and foremost, be about worship. 3. We must lead
with love, grace and humility. Then we can preach powerfully on sin,
righteousness and the judgment to come. 4. We must be on
guard, lest rules, legalism and the traditions of men creep back in. 5. In our
preaching, let us speak to the hunger of
the Christians, meeting their needs, not our agendas. 6. Let us restore
autonomy to the churches, and with it, true unity, allowing leaders to
meet the needs of their local Christians, and to exercise the gifts and
talents of the ‘royal priesthood’ of all
believers. 7. Let us welcome
and aggressively involve, by the
commendation of the church, non-paid staff to be involved in the
decision-
making processes that affect all aspects of church life. Men who are
full
of the Holy Spirit and faith. (Acts 6) 8. We must train
our children to be independent thinkers, and even, when necessary, to
have an ‘independent’ spirit. Paul said there must be differences among
you to show who is right, who is from God. Personally, I want my
children to question everything that is taught them, respecting men of
course, but fearing and following God. 9. The need of the
hour is for strong and courageous leadership, but more importantly, for
righteousness and humble leadership. We do not need more autocrats and
lords, but men and women who lead from
brokenness before God, and who are truly, in every sense of the word,
‘servant
leaders’ 10. Let us humble
ourselves collectively before God and see if he will not open the
floodgates of heaven until there is no more room…
The Glory and Cost of Freedom The Glory of Freedom Surrender and submission will be
real not coerced True love for God is explored and
worked out The spread of missions is more
spontaneous and rapid The sincerity of our love is tested We are encouraged to be lovers of
the truth Devotion is from the heart We learn to accept the weak The joy from pure motives True unity, not conformity Inoculation against forced heresy Giving is from love and faith Giving is not reluctant or from
compulsion The only way to truly mature Our differences are cause for wonder Sharp disputes are allowed To show who is truly from God True spiritual maturity is fostered God’s individual will is more
effectively accomplished Teachers are made more accountable The struggle for truth makes us
stronger We follow up on the weak from love
and compassion True passion for the lost Slaves to none Slaves to all We will disciple the heart and
motives and not outward appearances
The Cost of Freedom is Bad decisions will be made. Entire churches will leave. Heresy will arise Anti Christ’s will arise The doctrine of demons will
infiltrate Tares will grow with the wheat Entire households will be destroyed Another Corinthian church will be in
our fellowship…
But in the end, free will, voluntary
submission and love are the only thing that can stand blameless and
unashamed at the final coming of God.
A final thought from Cecil Hook, an
ex-ultra conservative mainline ‘church of Christ’ minister:
THE FREEFLOWING STREAM ‘In finding its medial course a
stream may wash from bank to bank. Although it receives pollutants
constantly, the flowing stream tends to purify itself. Dam it up, and
it stagnates and breeds all sorts of scum and slime. The
free-flowing stream is in a constant purifying process even though it
is
never pure in the strictest sense. So it is with the church. The
free,
autonomous disciples must be permitted to go unrestricted by earthly
rulers.
Free people may vary in interpretation and understanding in different
congregations
and in different generations. The church may go from one extreme to the
other as it seeks constantly to correct its course. The church will
have
constant danger of impurities, so it will always be in a state of
reformation,
but because it is composed of erring humans, it will never be without
flaw
entirely. One generation cannot crystallize and credalize a system in
order
to guarantee that its concepts will be bound on the next generation to
insure
its faithfulness. Efforts to control the next generation are attempts
to
force unity by conformity. When the stream is dammed up, it becomes
stagnant
and begins to depend upon intellectual inbreeding, which produces
doctrinal
monstrosities.’
A Personal Letter From Marilyn: Many of you might wonder where I
stand in all of this. I am in full agreement with the paper Henry has
written, and I helped him edit the first drafts. These are issues that
we have been discussing with each other for years. By temperament, and
perhaps because of my woman’s perspective, my attitude over the years
has been less to confront, and more to trust that, over time, ‘God will
work things out’. I have always believed that we are God’s people, and
that God would not let us totally go off the rails. I have always
believed that there are good-hearted men and women among us, who will
fight for
righteousness, and repent as God shows us our sin. I have seen and
heard
things which shocked and saddened me, and I have not spoken up. I have
tried to live and lead righteously in my little corner of the kingdom,
hoping
that most of us were trying to do the same thing. Now, however, in
light
of the pain, hurt, and anger that are being exposed and expressed in
London,
I’m convinced it’s time to stop living in ostrich-mode, and SPEAK OUT.
I
am fully aware of the risk this involves, but to not speak would be the
gravest
sin. I believe that God has put these burdens on Henry’s heart, and I
am
proud of the spiritual effort and energy that Henry has put into
writing
this paper. I have seen, up close, his anguish and sorrow as he has
wrestled
with the Scriptures and with his relationship to and within the church
that
he loves so much. These things need to be said, and I pray that many
will
listen, and add their own voice to the discussion that needs to precede
radical change. MK