Matthew 23:1-4 - Then Jesus spoke to the crowds and to His disciples: The scribes and the Pharisees are seated in the chair of Moses. Therefore do whatever they tell you, and observe it. But don’t do what they do, because they don’t practice what they teach. They tie up heavy loads that are hard to carry and put them on people’s shoulders, but they themselves aren’t willing to lift a finger to move them.
The Facebook discussion began with an
honest question from an innovative church planter serving in a more traditional
part of the country. He asked for the pros and cons of having his primary
worship service on a day and time other than Sunday morning. Some responders
were very traditional in their thinking, suggesting Sunday morning was the only
legitimate option. Others focused more on whatever option would be the most
effective evangelistically. What was insightful was that many participants, on
both sides of the issue, seemed to think that their personal preferences were the
same as God’s Word.
One person said she attended a church
for a while that had a Saturday night service, but it was not convenient for
her. That person concluded that since Sunday morning was the most convenient
time for her, Sunday morning was the only biblical option. Other people gave
the very same reason, convenience, for why worship services should be held at
times other than Sunday morning. After a lengthy comment thread, people on both
sides of the question concluded that what was convenient for them was what God
wanted everyone to do.
One individual felt empowered to speak
for non-believers. However, in supporting the supposed views of non-believers,
he only offered his own preference as a committed believer. It was a bit
difficult following his logic, but he concluded that “If non-believers want to
come to church, they need to get with the program and not expect believers to
make it easy for them.” It sounded a lot like the attitude of the Pharisees in
the New Testament who seemed determined to make faith difficult for as many
people as possible.
Regardless of what we may feel about the
issue of when we should worship, those of us who have grown up in traditional
Christian settings need to acknowledge that we frequently substitute our own
preferences for God’s Word. We tend to make selective use of a scripture or two
in the effort to prove our viewpoint is right without looking at the whole
canon of scripture. Without realizing it, we have fallen into the deception of
thinking our preferences are actually God’s Word.
If we expect revival to come, we are
going to have to give up our personal preferences and stop assuming that our
opinion is God’s opinion. We will have to remember what Jesus said in John
8:31, “If you continue in My
word, you really are My disciples.” We must hold firmly to
scripture, but be willing to give up our own personal preferences for the sake
of the Kingdom. Sometimes it is hard to know the difference, but if we pray,
and study the Word of God with an open mind, the Holy Spirit will give us
discernment, and we will be able to follow biblical principles even if it means
we must abandon our personal preferences.
Lord,
help us to diligently study Your Word and be willing to abandon our own
personal preferences for Your glory. Amen.
This post is an excerpt from the book, The
Heavenly Mundane: Daily Devotions from Ordinary Experiences. Filled with stories of how God spoke in
big ways through small events, the book will encourage people to look for God
in the mundane things of life. Great for both personal use and to give as a
gift to friend, either the print version or the e-book version may be purchased
at this link:
Wow... abandon our own personal preferences... next you'll be telling me that there actually is NO assigned seating in the church. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Terry, for this wonderful post! It is such a needed reminder that we must cast off our own biases in favor of God's truth. God bless.