Realization

RealizeBelief is a dangerous word.  This stems from the fact that there doesn’t seem to be a universally accepted truth about what belief is, what constitutes as belief, or whether belief even matters at all.  Within the body of Christ, there is a disagreement on how to define it, whereas outside the body of Christ, there is a consensus that it only matters to each individual conscience, in other words, there is no belief that everyone should adhere to. 

I want to primarily address belief within the body of Christ.  In some religious backdrops, belief is primarily defined as adherence to certain Biblical information.  This is often referred to as intellectual assent. For example, if you ask almost any Christian about who Jesus is and what His work was on this earth, the vast majority of those questioned will respond with the same answer.  Almost all will reply that He is the only begotten Son of God who came to this earth as a man to die for our sins so that we might receive salvation.   This answer confirms at the very least that there is a common belief, or more specifically, a mental agreement with the facts about Christ. 

The majority of the church reasons that the Bible is correct when it
states "by grace are you saved through faith, not of yourselves lest
any should boast".  When asked, most will admit that we can not do
anything to make ourselves acceptable to a Holy and Righteous God, that
we need His grace in order to be forgiven and restored.  We also freely
admit that is is by simple faith in Christ and His work that we receive
the life saving grace He bestows.

However, is the mere acceptance of information indicate true belief?  Doesn’t the scripture inform us that the demons believe the very same facts about Christ that most Christians do?  Yet, we don’t think of the demons as "believers" do we?  Because we know that true belief runs beneath the surface of mental agreement don’t we?

So once the facts are agreed upon, we often hear the call to "act" upon these beliefs.  This is expressed even in cliches like "if you are going to talk the talk, you gotta walk the walk."  I don’t know of many Christians who are satisfied just to know the facts about Christ.  I think most desire or at least reason that our lives should reflect our beliefs. 

The question I pose now is this.  When we recognize that belief is not just mental agreement, and that it is validated by action as James teaches in the New Testament, what do we do now?  Do we seek to validate our mental agreement with works?  Do we define every day as a "workday" in the Christian life?

Let me answer that last question with another question.  Is there anything more defeating to the human spirit than the thought that they can never be good enough or do enough good in order to be made worthy in God’s eyes? Yes, and that is the thought that I must live my life earning the gift of salvation after the fact!?   

I believe there is one important element that acts as the glue between mental belief and acted belief.  This bonding agent is simply known as "realization".  In order to reconcile the mind and heart, there must be realization.  Dictionary.com defines it as coming to understand something clearly and distinctly.

I remember in school studying for history exams.  Unfortunately, I didn’t pay attention in class very well which resulted in late night cramming.  When you cram for a test, you try to memorize every fact on the review.  I became real adept at finding ways to remember things by writing silly songs or word association.  In essence, I was memorizing these facts so that I would remember them long enough to write them down the next day.  The next day, I couldn’t have told you a thing about Napolean, Rome, The Alamo, or the Declaration of Independence.  I never took the time to read about these events or immerse myself in them.  I was only interested in the surface information, and even then, not until the last minute. 

Years later, I would watch movies about the things I was taught as a kid, and the light would go on in my head!  It was really as if I was hearing these things for the first time.  Actually, it was the first time that this information was ever realized! 

As husbands, we often experience the phenomena of realization in communication with our wives right?  "You spent how much on a purse!!!" we scream.  Then our wives reply with something like, "I told you yesterday that I needed this purse and how much it costs to which you said, ‘ok"!

Our whole spirit changes, we come to life once we realize the truth. 

So, I think the disconnect between the head and the heart can be summoned up in this one important word.  Realization.  There are many who believe God forgave them of their sins, but they don’t forgive others.  There are many who believe Jesus is the Way, yet they explore other ways.  There are many who believe Jesus is the King, but they acknowledge themselves as King. 

If you are experiencing this disconnect, you might be asking "what do I do"?  That is a hopeless question when you think about it.  Trying to figure out what you are to do will only keep you disconnected.  Unless you begin to fully realize what you claim to believe, then you will never live as you think you should. 

Take forgiveness for example, if you truly believe you are forgiven because of what Christ did, then why do you keep trying to live your life earning the forgiveness that has already been extended?  The Bible uses the description "gift of God" which is very familiar language to the Christian, but not really believed.  If Christians really believe that Salvation was God’s gift, then they wouldn’t spend their lives trying to pay Him back. 

Indeed, it is a difficult thing to comprehend.  The Gospel is that we only need to receive the gift!  Receiving is the natural response to grace. When we carry a mindset of earning, whether it’s before our after our initial faith, we lose the essence of grace altogether.  We need realization to truly free us from this bondage. 

What if someone walked up to you and handed you a thousand dollars in cash right now.  What would be your response?  The natural human response would be to question the giver. "What’s the catch? What do I have to do?"   You would need some convincing that this money was free and you didn’t have to pay it back.  What it would take to convince you?  You would be convinced once you realized that this was a gift.  Maybe it would take several things to convince you like the giver to walk away and never be heard from again, or a shopping spree at the mall.  At some point, maybe that day, maybe a year later, you would finally realize that the money was a gift!  You would have a spirit of freedom!  Perhaps you would never be free.  Maybe you would live your life expecting the giver to show up at your door to collect a favor from you.

I truly believe that many Christians have never realized the gospel.  They’ve heard it’s content thousands of times and they could ace the written exam.  They’ve repeated prayers, they’ve stormed the altar, and they’ve taught Sunday school, but they perhaps never realized what they claim to believe!

There’s something else about the nature of realization.  It often requires time and patience.  As a minister of the gospel, I sometimes wish the process was faster.  I wish everyone would experience a Pauline conversion, a blinding light of accusation that electro-shocks our spirituality.  But for most of us, that’s the exception not the norm.

Luther
Sadly, many church leaders work on a dangerous assumption.  They assume that because mental assent runs rampant, that there is no need to deliver the gospel message with regularity.  They reason that people already know the gospel, and now just need practical advice on how to be a better person.  They fail to realize that the gospel is not only for those who haven’t heard it, but also for those who’ve heard it a thousand times. 

When asked why he preached the gospel every week, Martin Luther replied "Because you forget it every week."  In reality, it takes people a long time to realize the truth no matter how often they hear it. 

I wonder if a day will come when everyone who has ever breathed will realize the truth of the gospel? Hopefully it will take place in this life and not after.  If not, that will be a sad realization.

One Thing

Curly
One of my favorite movie characters by the name of Curly from the movie "City Slickers" with his Marlboro Man finger skyward pointed asks Mitch Robbins "do you know what the secret to life is?" to which Mitch replies, "your finger"?  "One thing" Curly exclaims! "You stick to that and everything else don’t mean ****!" 

Although I’m sorry to allude to such a crude movie quote to make my point about the gospel, I’m not sorry to say that the church has "one thing" to stick to!  Once we do, everything else…well…never mind.

I admit it.  I fell into the trap years ago.  In order that I might rebel against the spirit of legalism, I nearly threw the baby out with the bathwater.  The water of fundamentalism as I experienced it was a horrible stench.  Even the lost world came to this conclusion well before the very church that bathed in it.  Once the church at large started to smell herself, she went to great lengths to clean herself up.  (therein lies the problem) 

"The world won’t hear the gospel because of our pride and our attitudes" we rightly recognized.  So we pursued solutions instead of God.  We tried techniques and methods, instead of a prostrate position before Christ.  We blamed our fundamentalist, legalistic preachers instead of standing up and taking responsibility ourselves.   We abandoned the pastor-shepherd for the Administrative CEO/Manager.  In hope that we might not be as offensive as the ones before us, we took the offense out of the message.  To compensate for arrogance from the pulpit, we painted God as sin-tolerant.  Instead of proclaiming the gospel that tells us we won’t get any better, we supplanted it with a message on how to be a better you. (morality) 

Instead of telling the world that there is "none righteous, none that seeks after God", we informed them that they were "seekers".  Instead of preaching the relevant gospel we sought the counsel of the ones we called seekers and served up messages they find relevant.  Instead of equipping Christians with the Gospel so they can evangelize the world in which they live, we are preaching morality so they can actually have NO effect on the world in which they live. 

Does our music need new wine skins?  Yes!  Must we know our culture in order to reach them!  Yes! Do we need to better communicate the gospel so that it is accessible (understandable) to the un-churched?  Yes!  Should we keep an open mind to technological advances as they relate to improved communication of the message?  Yes! Are any of these things the gospel?  NO!

Do our pastors love people or the culture?  Where is their passion?  Is it invested in their careers as Pastor/CEO,  or is it invested in the scripture, in Christ! 

Let me leave you with the words from a sermon by Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones.  As a church, we must get back to our God sanctioned role as proclaimers of the Gospel.  We need to proclaim "One Thing".  All other messages of morals and principles are powerless.

Blessings, Rob

"Our only message to those who are in the world is to repent and to believe the gospel! Nothing else. There is no hope for the world outside Christ, none whatsoever! There is no improvement predicted or prophesied for the world, none whatsoever! There is no greater error or heresy than to think it is the business of Christian preaching  to improve the world somewhat!  It’s a denial of the gospel!  The idea that it is the business of the church to recommend Christian principles to the world and plead with it and ask to put it into practice. To send messages to statesmen and ask them to put it into practice, I say is a denial of this. The only message of the gospel to the world is to tell it to repent because it’s under the wrath of God and unless it repents it’s lost eternally!  There is no message I say but repent and believe! The world that is without Christ is entirely without hope!

Good News is Good Food

Roast
I confess, I eat too much fast food.  You know you eat out too much when you refer to your meals as numbers.  What can I say? I love a good Whataburger, medium fries, and large coke!  In spite of my lunchtime vice, I still prefer a home-cooked meal!  During football season we eat at home on most Sundays.  My wife will put in a roast with potatoes in the oven, smothered in tomato sauce and spices, and as soon as we get home from church I can already smell it before I open the front door! 

Like most people, I love food! After all, it’s my primary source of life sustenance along with air and water.   I even love a good deli sandwich with fresh smoked ham!  However, the meat has to be fresh because I am  paranoid when it comes to ham or any other meat in the fridge.  I always smell it before I blindly put in on a slice of bread and chow down.  Why?  Because one time I took a bite of a spoiled ham sandwich, and it didn’t even make it past my tongue!  The sandwich retreated the other direction before it had the chance to invade my stomach with it’s bacterial poison!

All this talk of food reminds of 3 gospels:  The Fast-food gospel, the Spoiled Ham gospel, and the home-cooked gospel. 

Allow me to start with the Spoiled Ham Gospel.  I want to start here, because this was my first introduction to any kind of gospel.  Having grown up in a legalistic church environment, I was subjected to many repulsive gospel presentations.  Now, that’s not to say I didn’t hear the gospel growing up at all.  It’s just that the great majority of presentations were what Martyn Lloyd-Jones calls "appeals to the will".  An appeal to the will sermon is when the preacher attempts to "get you saved" by telling you to do certain things while refraining from doing certain things.  It is classic life-crushing legalism.  It is not a Biblical gospel, it’s Pharisaical at best.  There’s just enough truth to keep you hooked, and more than enough lies to crush your spirit. If you spend 20 years immersed in the spoiled ham gospel as I was, you know that it takes at least that long to shake your soul of its asbestos!  The Biblical gospel eradicates this poison with the truth that I am, by nature, unacceptable to God because of my sin, but it doesn’t leave me to die in my sin, it offers the solution which is the perfect atonement of Christ!  The Biblical gospel leaves me with no doubt that there is nothing to do on my part. The spoiled ham gospel will say you can’t earn salvation yet demands that you try anyway! Depressing. I’ve come to realize that you can’t reach people with a gospel that harps on behavior.  Ideally it sounds wonderful, but realistically it’s spiritually impossible!

One might wonder why people who are brought up this way don’t immediately escape from it.   Why not spit it out like spoiled meat?  I contend that if someone has never tasted fresh deli ham, they are unaware of it’s taint.   What makes spoiled meat so repulsive is the knowledge one has that this is not the way it is supposed to taste.  Having grown up in fundamentalism, I didn’t realize completely what the gospel was because I was rarely presented a gospel message that was complete in itself. A complete gospel will serve two purposes, revealing our soul to ourselves, and revealing God to our souls!  If the message we hear doesn’t accomplish this it’s not really good news in the long run.

Fastfoodknowledge
Then there is the Fast-Food Gospel.  I like fast-food because, well, it’s fast!   Today, I was amazed at how fast I walked out of a
local sandwich shop as the sub was literally wrapped and ready
before I signed my debit card receipt!  You know what else?  Fast-food tastes good!  Fast food is
fast, convenient, and delicious! I like it because it satisfies an
immediate hunger. Consumers by nature love immediate results.  This is why we gravitate so closely to the Fast-food gospel.  This gospel is the basic knee-jerk reaction to the Spoiled Ham Gospel.  I suspect that those who preach this message probably came from the same background I did.  They understood the first gospel as a life-crushing proposition, so they responded with something more palatable.  In order not to offend unbelievers, they devised a gospel that was no longer offensive.  The problem here is that the Bible tells us that the gospel is offensive to the lost. (Jeremiah 6:10)  It offends primarily because it leaves us with nothing to do and that drives us crazy!  It offends because it asks us to receive grace and simply be grateful.   That really is good news, but human nature doesn’t think so!

This gospel is being served in our modern day evangelical church.  It is sometimes linked to prosperity with claims that God wants to make you rich if you’ll only be more faithful.  But it’s not limited to financial prosperity.  Ironically, even those who denounce this gospel end up preaching the same gospel anyway.  Except this time it’s not wealth, but well-being.  Instead of emphasizing the object of faith (Christ’s work on the Cross), it is the individual’s faith that is exemplified!  There’s little mentioned about the characteristics of a divine grace which extends itself to undeserving sinners who will never seek after God (although they’re referred to as "seekers" which is a less offensive replacement).  This gospel tastes good, but it is dangerous to the soul!  In McDonald’s like fashion, it is mass produced for a consumer audience.  Powered by this marketing engine, it is presented in the form of "being a better you" which can be equated with desirable goals such as being a better parent, spouse, and manager of money.  Of course, these are all things we should desire and Christians should seek to glorify God in these ordained positions of father/mother, husband/wife, and steward.  However, being a better you is not our essential spiritual need.  Our biggest need is not improved behavior in various areas of life!  Our biggest need rests in our souls and only God truly knows its condition. It is our own depravity that keeps us from seeing the true condition of our souls!  This is why we need the Gospel!  There is nothing inherently evil about fast food, but the realization will arrive some day that all of these years of gorging fries and quarter pounders produced an undesirable effect to your physical health.  The same is true of a fast-food gospel.  You will come to a realization that despite all of the good, "Christianizing" information you received over the years, that something is still amiss!  It is something in the depths of your soul! A Fast-food gospel will provide no lasting nourishment for your soul.  That’s not to say that it won’t satisfy your short term hunger.  That’s not to say it won’t taste great! But just as Jesus scolded the religious right of his day by pointing out to them that they spend all their time cleaning the outside of the cup while the inside smells wretched, that’s exactly what certain gospel presentations do.  They work on the outside of the vessel, and leave the inside totally unchanged!   So in an attempt to counter the legalistic tendencies of the spoiled meat gospel, the fast-food gospel has introduced a new form of legalism.  Both gospels appeal to the self and crowd out the gospel of grace!

Finally, there’s the Home-Cooked Gospel.  Home cooked meals just taste better, and even the unhealthiest ones are better for you than the average fast food meal or at least seems like it.  It’s certainly better than a spoiled ham sandwich. A meal like this is fulfilling because you realize the preparation involved.  There’s the carefully selected ingredients, the right mix of spices, and slow cooked in the oven at just the right temperature for the exact amount of time.  Finally, you sit down at the table surrounded by family and friends as you share your lives for this brief period of dining pleasure! 

The Home-cooked Gospel is the only message that satisfies the soul.  It doesn’t strong arm you into impossible expectations and it doesn’t promise a life without suffering.  As a matter of fact, the home-cooked gospel promises that there will be suffering in this life.  ‘But doesn’t Christian life promise peace and joy‘ you ask?  Yes, but it is peace and joy for your soul, not your flesh.  This is where prosperity gospel is so dangerous.  It confuses the state of the soul with the desires of the flesh.  The Apostle Paul knew the difference! This is why he was able to sing praises to God while in prison.  This is why "to live is Christ, to die is gain" was his sustaining mantra!  No one realized the gospel as strongly as Paul.  The self-acclaimed chiefest of sinners knew exactly what the gospel was in its fulness, and exactly how deep it went to raise him up to his new life! 

We as ministers of the Gospel have a simple but important responsibility.  We are commanded to preach the gospel.  There is faith involved in doing this simple task.  The faith is in the Word of God and it’s claim of power.  The faith is in the Holy Spirit to convict and penetrate hearts.  There’s no need to spin it, take the edge of it, or make it more relevant.  The gospel is relevant all by itself.  More than anything, I desire for people to receive Christ, but it has to happen by his prescribed way of gospel preaching and the work of the Holy Spirit! 

As individuals, we must focus on the fact that God has done all of the necessary work and we have but one response.  We are to receive it!  No morality to achieve, no work to do, nothing more.  He’s prepared the meal and has invited us to sit at his table and eat!