Apr 30 2009

Evangelical Untouchables 4

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Here is my latest installment for the Internet Monk’s Evangelical Untouchables series…the main article can be found here.

The Question -

Many evangelicals are abandoning the practice of formal church membership. What is your feeling about the practice of formally joining the local church? How do you relate your church’s practice to the mission of the church?

My Answer -

The only church I’ve ever been a part of that practiced formal membership was the Conservative Baptist Church, where I came to Christ as a teenager.

Calvary Chapel as a whole does not embrace the practice of church membership. I think there may be a few Calvary Chapels that have instituted the practice but by in large it’s not part of our tradition or ecclesiology.

For our church locally I think we have always seen church membership as something that happens on a spiritual level, we are baptized into one body (1 Cor. 12:12ff) and any effort to duplicate that falls short of the intended goal. Obviously church membership does not equate salvation, so the motivation generally falls under the category of discipleship. For which I have absolutely no qualms whatsoever. If the leadership of a local church believes that they can best fulfill the Great Commission by practicing formal membership then they would be sinful not to do it. Transversely if a church institutes or perpetuates membership so that they can obligate people to attend, serve, and give more faithfully I think they are traveling down a slippery slope.

I want people to identify with Jesus first and foremost. We are in fact Christians, which means that our identity should never be with “Calvary Chapel” or any other denomination. That being said the absence of formal membership does not insulate a church from this isolationist paradigm. My movement has been very guilty of turning its nose up at other Christian groups and that is a shame. Therefore in light of this desire to simply identify with Jesus and no man or group we have chosen not to adopt the practice of formal membership, and it hasn’t been a hindrance any in of the above areas of concern.

However in light of the Bible’s ambiguity regarding the subject I believe that each individual church needs to hear from God as to what practice will help them best achieve the mission of the local church.

Our mission at Calvary Chapel in Prineville, OR has been to make disciples of Jesus; to inform people that the kingdom of God has come near (Luke 10:11) and to allow the Holy Spirit to revolutionize lives with the power of the gospel. In keeping with that mission we want to bring broken people to His kingdom, which is far bigger than what we’re doing here. We are dedicated to pointing sinners to Jesus and allowing Him to covenant with them individually from which will flow a spontaneous response of faithfulness in the local church.

Here is an article that is related to the subject.




Apr 28 2009

Church Names

I am kicking around a few church names for the church plant in Ft. Collins, CO.

1. Prodigal Church – The word prodigal actually means “reckless spendthrift” and defines not only us as sinners who have ruined our lives by spending all that we have with reckless sin but also our God who gave everything to redeem us.

Our youth pastor, Chad Carpenter, has a custom t-shirt business called Prodigal Threads – MySpace and Facebook but I actually thought of this name before he named his business…weird.

2. The Bridge or The Bridge Church – This name is much more common and not nearly as creative…of course it speaks of the fact that Jesus is the bridge (Mediator) between God and man (1 Timothy 2:5)

3. Missio Dei Church – Again not original but I love the meaning (Mission of God). This is one of those Latin church names that either labels you Reformed or Emergent for which I’m neither.

4. Mission Church – Could go with the English version…there are churches everywhere with this name including a new church in Bend.

5. Restoration Church – The whole point of God’s mission…to restore mankind to His intended purpose (Genesis 1:26).

6. Refuge Church – The word refuge means…shelter, aid, protection. All things that describe Jesus and the gospel as He shelters us from judgment, aids us in our greatest need (forgiveness) and protects us from the consequences of our sin by taking God’s wrath upon Himself.

7. Paradigm Church – A paradigm is a something that serves as a pattern or model and also it defines the worldview of a community; both of which have great implications for the purpose of the church.

*Updated Names -

8. Emmaus Church or Community (Bob Sweat) – Jesus showed the disciples that the Bible all points to Him on the Emmaus road.

9. Regeneration or Regeneration Church (Bill Walden) - speaks of conversion and the work of salvation

Let me know which one you like best or if you have a better idea let’s hear it.


Apr 28 2009

Church Plant in Ft. Collins

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Most of you know that my family and I are planning on moving to Ft. Collins, CO in the next 3-6 months to plant a gospel centered, Jesus focused, missional church…that cares more about God’s glory than man’s happiness. Holding tightly to the text of the Word while desiring to engage the context so as not to become an isolated subculture but a city on a hill.

Fort Collins is a city of about 140,000 people (the metro area is closer to 300K) and the home of Colorado State University.

We are going to miss the people of Calvary Chapel of Crook County, the city of Prineville, and all the friends and family we have here in Central Oregon. It’s been an amazing ride here in Prineville…we have seen lives radically changed, a wonderful church planted, we have made many friends (and only a few enemies), and added our two children to the Couch family.

Please keep us in prayer…here are some specific ways you can pray.

1. The transition of pastors here at Calvary Crook County (the search for a new pastor, his transition to becoming the lead pastor).

2. The church body (please pray that the enemy will not gain any traction in the lives of people in our body during this transition).

3. The church plant in Ft. Collins…
a. Conversions to faith in Christ in the Ft. Collins region
b. A team of like-minded Christians to join with us in this work
c. Inroads into the community and the university to engage the culture with the gospel
d. Provision

If you would like to support this church plant our contact information is in the drop down menu above.

For Jesus’ fame,

ryan


Apr 23 2009

Announcement

If you were in attendance at our mid-week service last night you are already aware of this. If you weren’t I wanted to catch you up on what is happening in our church and my family.

About 8 years ago I was standing outside of Calvary Chapel Redmond asking God to confirm what I was sensing was a call to plant a church here in Prineville. Confirm it He did and about 6 months later – Andrea and I along with Dave and Laura Gagermeier began a Bible study in a local home. About 6 months later on May 5th 2002 about 30 adults gathered in the library of the Ochoco Elementary School for our first official Sunday morning service.

Over the last 7 years there have been many ups and downs, much fruit, and tremendous challenges. Many have been converted to faith in Jesus Christ; many of you have grown in your relationship with Jesus. What began as the call of God and the vision to establish a strong Jesus centered, gospel preaching, Bible focused missional church has turned into an amazing community of believers that is making a deep impact on this city for Jesus’ fame.

Andrea and I came to Prineville out of obedience to Jesus. We knew He was calling us. We now know He is calling us elsewhere. We love this church, we love each of you very deeply but we love Jesus more and we must obey Him above anyone or anything else.

Over the last few years God has been stirring in my heart to plant another church, but not having any direction we just waited and prayed. About 3 months ago I received a phone call from a friend of mine who pastors a large church in Denver, CO. Through that conversation, and a trip to Colorado in March, the Lord has confirmed to Andrea and I that he is calling us to plant a church(es) in the Northern Colorado area.

Andrea and I have made this decision after much prayer, and with a clear sense of God’s call and an understanding of the sacrifice this will be. We have counted the cost of leaving this wonderful church, the great friendships we’ve made with many of you, and this great community. We have poured our lives into this work and we will leave part of ourselves with you. We want you to know that we love you, and this is most definitely the most difficult thing that both Andrea and I have ever done.

Please remember that Jesus has and always will be the Senior Pastor of this church. He founded this church, He loves this church, He died for this church, and He has a great future in store for this church. What is good for Andrea and I will also be good for this body. As your pastor I want you to understand this transition in light of the Kingdom of God. I want you to see this as sending our family not losing our family. We will all spend eternity together but until then we are on a mission, a mission to spread the gospel around the entire world. Our mission is calling us somewhere else…but it’s the same mission that I’ve been challenging you to embark upon right here in Prineville. My hope and prayer is that you continue to pursue Jesus’ mission for you in my absence because you are not serving me you are serving Him! You are His slave…that means your life is dictated by Him. You are on mission with Jesus and He will never leave you nor forsake you!

We do not have a definite timeline. We have our house on the market and we are praying along with the elders and other leaders for God’s perfect timing in this transition. The elders are considering a few men to take my place as Lead Pastor and you will be kept abreast of all future decisions. Please keep our elders in prayer as they make this decision. Please keep myself, Andrea, and our children Kaitlyn and Carson in prayer as well.

I love you!

If you have any questions please direct them to me or one of our elders. Each of us can be contacted from the church website here.

If you would like to hear the audio from last night’s service it will be available soon in the media player here on my blog and on the media page of the church site.


Apr 22 2009

Gospel Coalition: Tim Keller

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Tim Keller is one of the most brilliant preachers of our day. He understands the gospel…He understands our culture and he understands how to engage our culture with the gospel.

If you haven’t read his books Reason for God or Prodigal God…you are really missing out.

Tim opened the Gospel Coalition Conference in Chicago yesterday. The Resurgence blog is making all of the speakers notes available and Tim’s were so rich I wanted to share them with you.
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“The Grand Demythologizer: The Gospel and Idolatry”

Paul’s preaching was effective: it changed people’s lives to such an extent that it even changed the culture. The reason for this is that Paul confronted idols.

Confront Idols

You can’t preach the gospel effectively if you don’t challenge idols. Paul always challenged people’s idols in his preaching. In Acts 17, Paul went to the Agora, the marketplace, which is where the idols of that culture were formed. In our culture, the marketplace is not shops and busy streets, because that’s no longer where culture is formed. For us, challenging idols in the marketplace means going to Hollywood, Harvard, and the New York Times—the places where ideas and beliefs are shaped.

Every culture, gender, class, city, field of work, etc., has its own idols. Idolatry is anything I look at and say, “If I have that, my life has value.” Anything that is so central to your life that you feel you can’t live without it is an idol. Idolatry is making a good thing an ultimate thing. Because Paul saw idols everywhere, he was a really effective preacher. Like Paul, we need to discern, expose, and destroy idols in order to preach the gospel.

3 Kinds of Idols You Have to Expose to Preach the Gospel:

  1. Personal Idols
  2. Religious Idols
  3. Cultural Idols

Personal Idols

  • Money can be an idol, especially in the business world. Everyone recognizes this as the idol of Wall Street. (All over New York City, child sacrifice is going on. If you want to succeed, you have to sacrifice your family. If you’re going to get the money and power, you must sacrifice your children. Jobs are set up that way.) How do you do your job without bowing down to it—how do you demythologize money? Only by living in the gospel.
  • Romance is another idol. This is when you look to your lover or spouse for worth. Only they can make you feel valuable. You cannot lose this person. People who have a good marriage must constantly fight this idol, constantly looking to Jesus and finding their satisfaction in Jesus more than their spouse.
  • Self-expression is an idol of the artistic community.
  • Children can be idolized when you find your significance and meaning in your children. You know you’re worth something if your children turn out well.

Unless you understand personal idols, your counseling, pastoring, and mentoring is going to be superficial. You won’t really be able to help people. As Luther said, there’s a reason the first of the Ten Commandments is about idolatry. You never break commandments 2-10 without first breaking number 1. You cannot understand moral failings or psychological problems without understanding idolatry.

Religious Idols

  • Those who worship religious idols think they are devoted to God, but they’re not.
  • Truth can be made an idol. Are you resting in the rightness of your doctrine rather than the work of Jesus? If so, the Bible calls you a fool. In Proverbs, “the scoffer” is a person like this. The scoffer is always sure he is right, and always disrespectful, disdainful, and mocking toward his opponents. The internet breeds scoffers, because if you’re a scoffer you get more traffic to your blog.
  • Gifts can be an idol. You can mistake spiritual gifts for spiritual fruit. Especially if you are successful in ministry, you can begin believing in justification by ministry: “I know I’m in God’s will because my ministry is going well.” Many of us in the Reformed world make an idol out of being a great preacher: “If I could just be a great preacher, then my life would have significance.”
  • Morality is a religious idol. It’s typical for Christians to feel like that God loves them and will bless them because of their moral record.

Cultural Idols

Evangelicals love to talk about cultural idols. We look back at the idols of the Enlightenment: the elevation of human reason, the belief that reason/science will solve all the world’s problems. Today we see the idol of individualism. We attack Western individualism, but in many traditional cultures family is an idol—so you have honor killings, women treated as property, etc. In individualistic cultures like our own, the individual is an idol. No one can tell anyone else they’re wrong, no one can impose their beliefs about God on anyone else.

Any ideology can be an idol: free-market economics, communism, socialism, democracy, liberalism, etc.

Confronting Idols Is Dangerous

When idols are opposed, it’s dangerous. Idols are violent. Through idols, the powers and principalities control us. If you oppose them, you take your life in your hands. Paul risked his life to oppose them; he rested in Jesus, who had already given his life to defeat the principalities and powers. Jesus defeated the idols both objectively and subjectively through the cross:

  • Objectively: Punishment for our adultery and reconciliation with God were fulfilled in Jesus.
  • Subjectively: We remember that none of our idols can die for our sins. Our idols will always crumble under the weight of our expectations. Only by living in the power of the cross, exulting in the cross, and proclaiming the cross can we be fearless and free from the power of idols. You must learn how to take the gospel to the idols.

You can watch or listen to the sessions from the Gospel Coalition the next day here. You can also watch today’s sessions live  here.