Tuesday, October 13, 2009

The necessity of change

Nothing like a quote from the wise ones who have gone before us. I've been a fan of Chuck Swindoll for over 30 years. As we pray about the needed changes here at Pacific View, I thought his words were well worth the read.

Principles All Churches Should Examine and Apply-- Part Two
Last week, I shared with you the first two of three principles all churches should examine and apply. Here they are again, in summary:
Clear, biblical thinking must override secular planning and a corporate mentality. Think spiritually!
Studied, accurate decisions must originate from God’s Word, not human opinions. Stay biblical!
As promised, here’s the third principle and imperative: wise, essential changes must occur to counteract any sign of erosion. Please notice I did not use the word “easy.” Change is not easy when erosion has occurred—but it is essential. The imperative? Be flexible! Be ready and willing to make some changes—essential changes—especially if you hope to arrest the slow, silent, subtle slide of erosion. And stand alone through those changes, if necessary. The poet and artist E. E. Cummings wrote: “To be nobody-but-yourself—in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody but yourself—means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting.”1
As a pastor, you may find yourself standing alone against erosion in your church. If so, I commend you. And believe me, that isn’t an easy place to be. When I realized the erosion that had already begun to occur in our church years ago . . . when I realized how far we had drifted from God’s original, simple plan, I prayed: “Almighty God, give us that original vision again. Give me the courage to lead this flock back to the essentials. Make it happen again!” And He has begun to do so. It’s been marvelous!
But it has not been easy.
Course correction requires changes. It demands a devotion to the essentials of a church as modeled by the early church. Here they are:
They were continually devoting themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. (Acts 2:42)
It isn’t enough simply to have the essentials in our churches. We must continually devote ourselves to them. In the original language, that phrase translates a single Greek term that means: “to continue to do something with intense effort, with the possible implication of [doing so] despite difficulty.”
Will there be difficulty? Absolutely! Open your New Testament and revisit the early church. Just look at any church! The Adversary will stop at nothing to overcome the work of Christ. You can count on it.
—Chuck

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