This week we have been looking at the eighth
statement that comprises our doctrinal statement as a church. This eighth
statement addresses what we believe as a church about what is referred to is
church mumbo jumbo talk as “Christian living”. This statement summarizes the
answer to the question “How are we supposed to live as followers of Jesus? What
should drive how we live out our lives as followers of Jesus here on earth?"
The eighth statement of our doctrinal statementstates:
We believe that God’s justifying grace
must not be separated from His sanctifying power and purpose. God commands us
to love Him supremely and others sacrificially, and to live out our faith with
care for one another, compassion toward the poor and justice for the oppressed.
With God’s Word, the Spirit’s power, and fervent prayer in Christ’s name, we
are to combat the spiritual forces of evil. In obedience to Christ’s
commission, we are to make disciples among all people, always bearing witness
to the gospel in word and deed.
So far, we have discovered that God’s
transformational activity in our lives not only rescues us from our rebellion
so that we can experience forgiveness and the relationship with God that we
were created for. In addition, God’s transformational activity in our lives
results in us living lives that increasingly reveal and reflect Jesus.
As followers of Jesus, we are rescued from our selfishness
and rebellion not because we brought anything to the table. Instead, we are
rescued from our selfishness and rebellion because of God’s transformational
intervention and activity in the world through His Son Jesus. Also, while
good works do not result in salvation, the good works that flow from God’s
transformational activity in our lives provide the proof of salvation. We were rescued
by God so that we would live our lives in a way that is engaging in God’s kingdom
mission to be the vehicle that He uses to reveal His Son Jesus to others.
In addition, we discovered that, because we were created in God's relational image,
we show our love for God by how we love others around us. That is why, for
Jesus, what is most important when it comes to obeying God is not an either or
proposition; it is a both/and proposition. We show our love for God when we
love our neighbor. Conversely, we show a lack of intimacy with God when we are
indifferent or hostile toward our neighbor.
You
see, when we love God with our total being, In addition, we show and
reveal our love for God by how we love and serve others. Our doctrine and
theology should be evidenced in how we live our lives in relationship with
fellow followers of Jesus and in relationship with those who are far from God. As
followers of Jesus, we are called to care, love and serve the poor and
marginalized that are in our midst. The church has a responsibility to reflect
Christ’s heart for the poor and the marginalized by meeting their pressing
needs as well as sharing with them their profound need for Christ.
We also discovered that the letters
that make up the Bible reveal for us the reality that there are spiritual
forces that are opposed to God, the Kingdom of God and followers of God. In
church mumbo jumbo talk, this is often referred to as Spiritual Warfare. Simply
put, spiritual warfare is a multidimensional war against selfishness, rebellion
and sin that every follower of Jesus experiences. As followers of Jesus, we are
constantly in a battle against the world, which are those things in the world
around us that are at odds with God and place themselves in opposition to God.
In addition, we are constantly in battle with our flesh, which is our old selfish
and rebellious nature before we became followers of Jesus, and the devil and
his forces.
We achieve victory over these forces
that oppose us as followers of Jesus requires allowing the Holy Spirit, through
prayer and reading and reflecting upon God’s Word, to expose areas of selfishness
and rebellion and the areas of vulnerability to those areas of selfishness and
rebellion around us. As God reveals areas of either selfishness or rebellion,
or vulnerability to the world, the flesh or the devil, as followers of Jesus,
we are to confess that selfishness and rebellion and reject the lies that the
world, flesh or devil are trying to sell us.
Then, as followers of Jesus, we are
to replace the lie that is being sold to us with the truth of the message and
teaching of Jesus. As followers of Jesus, we have been armed with the presence
of the Holy Spirit, the truth of the message and teachings of Jesus, and the
power of prayer, to win the spiritual battle against the forces of evil that
oppose Jesus and His followers.
But not only do we live our lives as
followers of Jesus on the defensive against the spiritual forces of evil. In
addition, we are to live our lives as followers of Jesus on the offensive in
order to advance God’s kingdom mission in the world. This is what is stated in
the final sentence of the doctrinal statement that we are looking at, which
states “In obedience to Christ’s commission, we are to make disciples among all
people, always bearing witness to the gospel in word and deed”. We see Christ’s
commission to His followers recorded for us just a few chapters later in the
gospel of Matthew. Let’s look at that commission together, beginning in Matthew
28:18:
And Jesus
came up and spoke to them, saying, "All authority has been given to Me in
heaven and on earth."Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you
always, even to the end of the age."
Now whether you regularly attend church or whether this
is your first Sunday in church; whether or not you regularly read the Bible,
you are probably at least somewhat familiar with what Jesus says here. You are
probably familiar with Jesus words here because this is one of the two sayings
of Jesus that are described with the adjective great. Jesus here is giving His
followers a mission; and that mission is to make disciples of all nations.
The phrase “go and make disciples of all nations” in the
language that this letter was originally written in, literally reads “as you
are going, make disciples of all nations”. God is not commanding us to go. God
is commanding us to make disciples as we go. In other words, as followers of
Jesus, we are to strive to make disciples, or followers of Jesus, as we are
living our day to day lives in the spheres of influence that we have been given.
Now a natural question that arises here is “well how are
we supposed to make disciples? And how do we know that we are actually being
successful in making disciples?” First, we are to make disciples by going to
those who are far from God. Whether at home, at school, at work, or in our
relationships; in whatever sphere of influence we have; we are commanded to
live our lives as missionaries that are engaging, investing, and inviting those
who are far from God to become followers of Jesus. We do not need to go to a
foreign country to be a missionary. As followers of Jesus, we are called to be
missionaries wherever we are. And in your day to day life, God has already
positioned you in areas of influence where you can be a missionary to those who
are far from God.
Second, we are to make disciples by baptizing them in the
name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Baptism, as we will
discover later in this series, is an outward act that serves to publicly
identify one as being a follower of Jesus.
So a major part of discipleship is to be used by God to bring those who
are far from God to a place where they place their confident trust in God’s
transformational activity and publicly identify themselves through baptism with
Jesus as a follower of Jesus and with the kingdom mission that He has given us
as His followers.
Third, Jesus explains that we are to make disciples by “teaching
them to observe all that I commanded you”. Now the word observe, in the
language that this letter was originally written in, literally means to persist
in obedience. In other words, a disciple of Jesus will naturally grow in their
faithfulness and obedience to Jesus over time. While there may be occasions
where a follower of Jesus commits sin, a follower of Jesus, over time, will
live a life that is becoming more like Jesus in character and conduct.
And as followers of Jesus and as a church, we are called
to create environments where people are able to understand and embrace the
message and teachings of Jesus in a way that results in their spiritual growth
and spiritual good. That is why we are such huge proponents of community groups
here at City Bible Church. That is why we create environments such as the Adult
Bible Fellowship and Kids Konnection on Sunday mornings. That is why we create
environments such as AWANA and Fusion student ministries. We desire to create
environments where followers of Jesus can explore faith, grow in their faith,
and experience and become a part of a genuine and authentic community of
followers of Jesus.
At the church where I serve, we summarize how we engage
in God’s kingdom mission to make disciples this way: “City Bible Church is a
city within a city that is striving to reveal and reflect Christ as we love and
serve the city”. We are a community of
believers that desires to reveal and reflect Jesus in word and deed. We are a
community of believers that has been strategically placed here by God to engage
our community with the claims of Christ and the message of the gospel in a way that
reflects Jesus. We are a community of believers that has been given a kingdom
mission to love and serve our community in a way that reveals and reflects
Jesus in real and practical ways to our community.
We desire to be a church that creates environments where
we can love and serve our community in real and practical ways that provide an
opportunity to share the love of Jesus and the message of the gospel. And we
desire to be a church of missionaries that are genuinely and authentically
following the message and teachings of Jesus in our spheres of influence in a
way that is investing and inviting those who are far from God to come to
experience the forgiveness of sin and the relationship with God that they were
created for by believing, trusting, and following Jesus as Lord and Leader.
Now
this leads us back to the question that will run throughout this series, which
is “Dave does what we believe about the how we live our lives as followers of
Jesus really matter?” And the answer to that question leads us to a timeless
truth about why it really matters. And that timeless truth is this: What we
believe about how we are to live our lives as followers of Jesus really matters
because our rescue by Jesus should result in a life that looks like Jesus and
that leads others to Jesus.
You see, what we believe about how we live our lives as
followers of Jesus really matters because we have been rescued by Jesus so that
we can live in a relationship with Jesus that reveals and reflects Jesus in our
character and conduct. What we believe about how we live our lives as followers
of Jesus matters because we are to live our lives in a way that loves God with
our total being and that shows our love for God by how we love and serve those
among us.
What we believe about how we live our lives as followers
of Jesus matters because we are to live our lives as the hands and feet of
Jesus that meets the pressing and practical needs of those around us so as to
expose their profound need for Jesus as they see Jesus in us. What we believe
about how we live our lives as followers of Jesus matters because we are to
live our lives in a way rejects the lies, temptations and desires of those
things that oppose Jesus so that we can reveal Jesus by our response to those
lies, temptations, and desires.
And what we believe about how we live our lives as
followers of Jesus matters because we are to live our lives in a way that leads
others to follow Jesus and experience a growing relationship with Jesus that
comes as a result of experiencing forgiveness of sin and the relationship with
God that they were created for through Jesus.
So here is a question to
consider: How are you living your life as a follower of Jesus? And do you think
that how you are living your life as a follower of Jesus matters?