Two Ways Missions Should Focus on the Local Church
Church planting and strengthening existing churches are both necessary mission work.
Many of us can imagine what pioneer mission work looks like, but strengthening ongoing church work may be harder to picture. It doesn’t mean encouraging missionaries to hold on to the reins of leadership in a church long after capable local leaders have emerged. That has been done, and the fruit is generally quite poor.... Continue Reading
Puritan Reformed Seminary and Greenville Presbyterian Seminary Forge Strategic Partnership for Puritan Research Center
The Puritan Research Center will serve as a research, education, and publications hub for study of Puritanism.
Puritanism is widely regarded as a post-reformation movement, working out the ideals of the Protestant Reformation, and is the subject of intense scholarly interest because of its significance as a movement of reform in doctrine and practice, and the profound legacy it left on America’s religious, political, and intellectual landscapes, as well as its appropriation... Continue Reading
Faith groups provide the bulk of disaster recovery, in coordination with FEMA
The efforts of volunteer groups come at essentially no cost to the government yet they also have a significant cash value to the states they serve.
In a disaster, churches don’t just hold bake sales to raise money or collect clothes to send to victims; faith-based organizations are integral partners in state and federal disaster relief efforts. They have specific roles and a sophisticated communication and coordination network to make sure their efforts don’t overlap or get in each others’ way.... Continue Reading
The Church Community at Its Worst—and Its Best
Those within caring churches can turn to them as sources of support during times of need. Those without caring communities—not so much.
For example, as reported in the Philadelphia Inquirer, a University of Pennsylvania professor studied 11 churches and one synagogue and concluded that the average economic worth of each to its Philadelphia neighborhood was over $4 million a year. Even more so, the non-financial benefits are priceless, as I was reminded during a recent weekend. ... Continue Reading
New Survey Finds Majority of Protestants Are (Maybe) Not Protestant
According to a new survey by the Pew Research Center, 46 percent of U.S. Protestants agree that faith alone is needed to get into heaven while 52 percent say both good deeds and faith are needed to get into heaven.
The conclusion I draw is that some people were reading the question as I did as being about justification, while many others were seeing it as merely about salvation. What it makes clear is that a large group of evangelicals gave the wrong answer based on what they thought the question was asking. Unfortunately, it’s impossible... Continue Reading
Keith and Kristyn Getty: Singing Isn’t Just for Sunday
Why congregational worship is a feast we prepare all week long.
As evangelicals, we take the Bible as our authority. And when we look at the Bible, we find that, actually, the second most common command is to sing. It wouldn’t come up that often if it weren’t extremely important to God. Yet when Kristyn and I started studying this, we realized we couldn’t find good... Continue Reading
Handling Abuse in the Church
Too often, churches have been the easiest place for child predators to gain unsupervised access to children.
Sadly, abuse can and does happen in homes and churches, places where we intuitively believe we should be able to trust people. Only by embracing the message that “nowhere is safe” can we hope to protect people from abuse. The steps we’ve outlined are about churches’ increasingly becoming places where abuse is confronted and the... Continue Reading
Are We Shooting the Wounded or Acting in Love By Not Soon Restoring Fallen Leaders Back to Ministry?
Repentance and forgiveness always means full restoration to fellowship in Christ’s body. It does not mean you should go right back to a position of leadership.
Those who defend fallen Christian leaders as “wounded warriors,” and put all the emphasis on their need to heal and be productive and use their gifts, often do not seem to grasp the harm done to the church, the body of Christ, and the damage done to the credibility of the gospel among unbelievers. In... Continue Reading
The Urgency of Preaching
The recovery and renewal of the church in this generation will come only when from pulpit to pulpit the herald preaches as a dying man to dying men.
Without doubt, few preachers following this popular trend intend to depart from the Bible. But under the guise of an intention to reach modern secular men and women “where they are,” the sermon has been transformed into a success seminar. Some verses of Scripture may be added to the mix, but for a sermon to... Continue Reading
Why Tradition In A Church Is Good And Traditionalism Is Not
Following traditions without giving in to traditionalism.
It hinders reaching the next generations. Traditionalism assumes that almost anything new is a threat to the gospel, even if the gospel itself is never compromised. It requires young generations to become us if they want to follow God. It blocks making necessary change. Traditionalism fights change, often without honest consideration of the options. It doesn’t inform change like... Continue Reading
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