Faith

November 06, 2007

God’s Way is Better

When I taught about giving a few weeks ago, I challenged our people to try managing their money God's way. I think the Bible is pretty clear that we should tithe (give 10%). But we think we're exceptions. We think those rules are out of date. We think we're better at handling our stuff than God. Consider...

God says, if you're a Christian, to only marry Christians. We think that is so 2,000 years ago and marry who we want. Now look how many single moms come to church with their kids while Dad stays home to clean out the garage. God's way is more limiting, but it's better.

God says, except for adultery, don't get divorced. We think our circumstance is different, and our society treats marriage like a college class that you can drop or take again if you fail. So more than 50% of marriages end in divorce and the whole society (especially the numbers of kids that are messed up) suffers. God's way might be tougher, but it's better.

God says to give 10% of your money, which is really God's money, to the "storehouse." But instead of living off of 90% and obeying God, we think we can't do it. So we have mortgages on houses we can't afford, HELOC loans, leases and an average of 8,700 in credit card debt. I don't think our way has gotten us where we thought it would. Barna says that only 2.7% of people tithe. God's way might be harder, and it might not make sense in the Excel budget spreadsheet, but it's better.

July 19, 2007

Be Different

My friend’s questions continue with this: God calls us to be separate from the world, set apart and holy. It seems within the emergent church movement, there is this strong desire to be just like the unbeliever because that is the only way you can share the Gospel with them. In terms of your dress, language, movies and t.v. you watch, and your Sunday morning concerts. How do you say you distinguish yourself from the secular world?

This is a great question, and personally, a great tension. As Christians, we follow Jesus, and try to live as He would live. We’re called to be holy, set apart, and live like “called out ones.” At the same time, we’re called to live in the world, rub shoulders with lost people, and make a difference.

On one hand Jesus said “love not the world,” and then another time he said “love your neighbor.” I think the “love not the world” focuses on a worldview. Romans 1 talks about people who elevate their position above God and only seek their own interests. They worship the created rather than the creator. That’s a wordly view. On the other hand, we’re surrounded by people, and we’re called to love them and be near them. All in all, a delicate balance, and there are probably strong opinions on both sides.

There are things that I don’t do because I am a Christian. There are things that I don’t say because I am a Christian. But I don’t think a checklist – I don’t drink; I don’t cuss; I go to church – is all that God had in mind for being different. I think it’s much bigger and much more important than that. I think my children are different from most children because of the Biblical worldview that we teach. I think that my overall thoughts and beliefs are different from the world because of how I was raised and what I read and think. It’s a renewed mind that transforms us, not a renewed behavioral checklist.

As far as the specifics of dress…I don’t know what dress like the world or dress like Jesus means. Should I wear robes and sandals and ride on a donkey? I don’t think so. I think Jesus dressed like a first century carpenter…he looked normal for his day. That’s how I dress. I dress like me. I dress like a lot of other people. When I go to a wedding, I wear a suit because that’s what’s socially acceptable. It’s just normal, I guess. I don’t think it really matters if a person wears a suit to church or comes in sandals. The Bible doesn’t tell people how to dress when they come to church, unless you’re an Old Testament priest. In different religious traditions, pastors and priests wear different things, and that’s cool. I can’t imagine getting to heaven and Jesus saying, “Well done, except you didn’t dress right.” I wear jeans and polo shirts or button up shirts nearly everyday of my life.

I do think it’s pretty funny that the standard “uniform” for young church planters these days seems to be jeans, an untucked long-sleeved shirt, and a goatee. For the record, I’ve had a goatee since I was married. And the main reason is because my wife doesn’t like it when I shave it off. And I've been untucking my shirt ever since I was a kid and my mom wanted me to tuck it in. :)

I personally love stories, and movies are stories. I go to movies pretty frequently, but there are some movies that I won’t go see. I will see an R rated move like the Passion of the Christ or Saving Private Ryan. I won’t go see a movie that’s filled with nudity, because that’s not spiritually healthy for me. I don’t go see horror movies and slasher movies, because there’s a check in my spirit on that. I don’t think all movies are evil, but I think some are not appropriate for me and my family.

Same goes with music. I don’t just listen to Christian worship music. I think a lot Christian music stinks. I like all kinds of music, because I’m a wanna be rock star. ☺ But there is some stuff that I don’t listen to, because it’s filled with profanity, vulgarity and sexual stuff. This is why I don’t listen to much hip hop. I think God gives us a conscience and we’re to operate with wisdom. At Oak Leaf, we play the music of the day. Music is something that can help us connect to God…it’s like a language. Guitars, drums and keyboards are like words and letters. It’s a part of our culture and a way of life. In the Old Testament, David used instruments that we no longer have. Stringed instruments were around before keyboards and organs. And in the 1800’s, organs in churches became popular. It’s a constant ebb and flow.

I guess it would be a lot easier if God would have just given us a constantly updating list of do’s and don’ts. But instead, He gave us His Spirit, which leads and guides. I think blanket statements like all movies are bad, or pastors should wear suits, fall so short of what God wants. It’s not the external, it’s the internal. It’s not just our actions, it’s our actions plus our thoughts and our motives that God will judge.

People put the line at different places, and there is freedom in Christ, but your conscience is a God-given guide. And we have lots of Biblical principals to guide us.

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    About Me

    • My name is Michael Lukaszewski. I grew up in Jacksonville, Florida and went to school at Florida State University. I'm the lead pastor of Oak Leaf Church in Cartersville, Georgia. This is a blog of my personal thoughts and ideas, and does not necessarily reflect the official position of Oak Leaf Church or any other organization mentioned here.

      Church leaders and church planters, check out behindtheleaf.com. It's an inside look of the success, struggles, and ideas that come from starting a new church.