Ephesians 4:1-6 - Therefore I, the prisoner for the Lord, urge you to walk worthy of the calling you have received, 2 with all humility and gentleness, with patience, accepting one another in love, 3 diligently keeping the unity of the Spirit with the peace that binds us. 4 There is one body and one Spirit—just as you were called to one hope at your calling— 5 one Lord, one faith, one baptism, 6 one God and Father of all, who is above all and through all and in all.
As a high school student I remember going to pep
rallies before the big game on Fridays. We would sit in the gym according to
our classes, with freshman in one section, sophomores in another, juniors in
their place and seniors usually in the best section of the gym. The
cheerleaders would lead us in various cheers and then the classes would seek to
outdo each other in displaying our enthusiasm for the team.
One of the cheers we often chanted went
something like “We got the spirit, yes we do, we got the spirit, how about
you?” This would be chanted by one class, and another class would have to
respond. Whoever shouted the loudest was considered to have the most school
spirit and therefore won the pep rally.
As an adult looking back on those pep rallies,
it occurs to me that we were all cheering for the same team. We were all there
to show our support for the team and encourage them to play hard and bring home
the trophy. It really did not matter which class was the loudest. But back then
it sure seemed important to win the pep banner and show the most school spirit.
I think this “we got the spirit, how about you”
attitude sometimes creeps into the church. Some churches follow a more
traditional path in worship. Other churches follow a more innovative path.
Still others seek to combine elements of both traditional and innovative
worship. Like high school students, we tend to hang out with people in our own group
and we tend to think our group has a lock on how the Spirit wants us to cheer
on the saints in worship. At times it seems that we are acting more like high
school students at a pep rally instead of mature leaders in the church of Jesus
Christ.
Traditional pastors may think that innovative
pastors have watered down the bible and abandoned biblical principles. Innovative
pastors sometimes feel traditional pastors have quenched the Spirit and are
riding a dead horse into the ground. Often pastors are caught somewhere in the
middle and afraid to share their ideas about these matters with anyone because
they are not sure how those ideas will be received. Such pastors tend to drift
back and forth between one group or another never really fitting in completely.
Perhaps we should stop acting like self-centered
teens trying to prove we have the most spirit and instead focus on serving the
Lord in the way that He leads us to. While some traditional pastors may have
indeed quenched the Spirit, there are others who are deeply in love with Jesus
and serving Him with passion but through traditional ways. Likewise, some innovative
pastors have taken far too many liberties with the bible in their efforts to be
contextual. But many others have searched the scriptures and many things they
are doing are often ancient practices of the church re-packaged for a more
modern clientele. Since we are all on the same team, we should rejoice when
someone discovers a way to engage a group of people and lead them in genuine
worship, even if it looks different than how we lead our own group in worship.
It takes all types of churches to reach the many
different types of people in our society. Together, as a team, we can join God
in His work and reach all those whom He is calling to Himself.
Lord,
help all Bible believing Christians find unity in our mutual faith together
instead of being in competition with each other. Amen.
This devotional is from the book “Heavenly
Mundane” by Dr. Terry W. Dorsett. Dr. Dorsett has been a pastor, church
planter, denominational leader and author in New England for more
than 20 years. He is a happy husband, a proud father and adoring
grandfather. He is a cancer survivor and believes that God
works powerfully through times of suffering. He writes extensively
and you can find all of his books at:
It takes all types of churches to reach the many different types of people in our society. Together, as a team, we can join God in His work and reach all those whom He is calling to Himself. Good word.
ReplyDeleteThis is amazing that is exactly the Bible text I chose to preach on yesterday the title of the sermon was loving the body of Christ!
ReplyDeleteSo well said. God has called each of us to a task and gifted us for service for the position we have been.
ReplyDelete