The Cornerstone
This is the Stone which was rejected by you builders, which has become the Chief
Conerstone." Acts 4:11
Pulbished to Support the Work
of the West End Church of Christ, Richmond, Virginia
Volume 8 * Number
4*
January 27, 2008
A Mind to Work
Much good can be accomplished when
Christians have a mind to work. (Nehemiah 4:6) There is plenty of
work for all of our members to be actively involved in. (Ephesians
4:16) Consider our work here.
Each month our local treasury supports the
preaching of the Gospel in 10 different locations around the world.
With the passing of Brother Basil Cass we give benevolent assistance
to Sister Cass. Consider how much more we could do if our giving
increased.
Each month 40 to 48 lessons are taught by
someone during our Bible Class hours. There is work to be done.
Not only are the teachers needed, but also the students. Being
present is a work we all can do. Don’t stop there, bring a friend.
Each month we have to maintain the
facilities that this congregation has been blessed with for over 50
years. Present bodies means dirty pews, floors, blackboards,
tables, trash cans, and bathrooms. Brethren are needed to prepare
the Lord’s Supper and also to mow the lawn. There is work to be
done.
Ask yourself this question, Are you serving
or being served? If the answer is the later ask for a broom.
Stacy
Crim
The Political Church
Jay Horsley
As churches have
abandoned their God given responsibilities to teach the lost, edify
the saved, and worship in the purity and simplicity of Christ, they
have found a myriad of other activities to justify their existence
and fill their days. So the spiritual has been replaced with the
social, the recreational, the educational, the entertaining and
increasingly, the political.
This is nothing but
worldliness. The social things that churches do are exactly what
their secular counterparts do. The recreational and entertaining
things churches do are exactly what the world does. And so it is
with the political things also. Conservative minded churches engage
in conservative politics by giving out Christian Coalition voter
guides and helping to organize, fund and campaign for pro-life and
limited governments candidates and causes. Liberal minded churches
host left leaning politicians and help organize, fund and campaign
for pro-choice, homosexual rights and other big government
candidates and causes.
As the preacher
(although usually regarded as “pastor” with all the usurped
authority that goes with it), I am constantly asked by various
politicians, interest groups, and even other “pastors” and churches
to join with them in various political causes. All these think that
I should use my moral authority and influence to mobilize those who
hear my
sermons behind their cause. This would an absolute abuse of my
authority. The preacher has the right, no the obligation, to speak
forcefully. “These things speak and exhort and reprove with all
authority.” (Tit. 2:15) But what are “these things”
that must be taught in this way? The things revealed in the word of
God.
To preach politics with
the same authority and from the same place of authority (the pulpit
in the house of God), is to make worldly things equal with
the things of God. Moreover, to preach political things instead of
the things of God is to deem them more important than the
things of God because you use your limited, precious time and
resources to concentrate on them instead of what God said. But this
does not stop the worldly minded from doing it.
As an example of this,
consider a mailing I recently received addressed to me as a “leader”
of this congregation. It came from the “Baptist General Convention:
Christian Ethics and Public Life Section: Christian Life
Commission.” This is a full scale permanent bureaucratic structure
dedicated to involvement in political issues. If I had received the
same type letter at my home from a special interest group I would
have simply trashed it like the rest of the junk mail. But this came
to the church from a religious group.
The letter was advocating that I should stir the congregation to
action against a proposed container port near Seabrook. There was
going to be a meeting for public comment, so they wanted me to get
you there. They said, “our goal is to have a very large crowd
there,” and “Please come join the voice of many and help us
be heard.” Would not these sentiments have fit perfectly with
those politically minded Jewish zealots who wanted to force Jesus to
be their earthly king? (Jn. 6:15) “Get a crowd! Let's be
heard! Don't let them ignore us!” they might well have cried. But
Jesus' kingdom was not one of political motivations and
mobilizations. Yet on this political issue a church instructed me to
do just this and to direct all questions about it to the “Baptist
General Convention of Texas,” the First Baptist Church in Seabrook
or its “pastor.” (At least we can hope that their involvement in
politics keeps them from teaching Baptist false doctrines on
salvation.)
This letter from the Baptists also contained all manner of
information about air pollution, effects of dredging in Galveston
Bay, wetlands, land usage, traffic and railroads. No matter how
interested you are I may be (or not be) in any of these issues, on
which of these should I speak about, or advocate action on, from the
pulpit? I must preach the gospel with the certainty of a “Thus
saith the Lord” from book, chapter and verse. But no matter how
certain I may be in my conviction on these other matters, or how
important I consider them, they are areas of judgment. The book of
God does not address them except under the general principles of man
being a good steward of the earth God gave him dominion over. God
said “fill,” “subdue” and “rule” the earth. (Gen.
1:26-28) Unless obvious and mindless wreckage of God's creation
is taking place, the decisions about these matters are areas of
judgments of men which are decided politically.
In these areas of judgment, one man's urban sprawl is the place
where another's dream house is being built. One woman's long awaited
shopping center is another one's wetland destruction. The business
man's new pier might be destruction of the retirees' fishing hole.
The increasing traffic I hate to wait in is the lifeblood of the
businesses that line the street. These are all matters of judgment,
political discussion, property rights, economic interest, regulation
and community concern. But they are outside the scope of the church
of the Lord's spiritual mission. We are to save souls, not wetlands.
We are concerned with morality, not property values. We are to save
souls by faith, not live to preserve fish, fowl, predator and prey.
Thus to take part and take sides is not the preacher's or the
church's job. As a citizen, take part in all the politics, issues,
causes and concerns that interest you and you have time for. Use
your Christians principles to guide you as you do. But as Foy
Wallace, Jr. said in a previous generation, “The Christian's
relation to the nation is that of individual responsibility. The
government deals with the individual. [In these matters] the
church cannot speak for its members.” The Sermon
on the Mount and the Civil State,
pg. 12.
www.dickinsonchurchofchrist.org
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