TROUBLING
TRADITIONS, PART 2
“Beware
lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the
tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after
Christ.” - Colossians 2:8
Last
week's blog message certainly caused a stir about the subject of baby
dedications. For the record, I am not denouncing preachers or
churches as being sinful if they practice this tradition. Instead, I
wanted to point out how easy it is to have a tradition become
second-nature to us and treat it like a Biblical mandate. I believe
children should loved, nurtured, taught and prayed for by believers.
Today,
I want to finish dealing with the issue of traditions. Not all
traditions are bad, but some are. I find that “worship” at
church can often be tainted with tradition. The activity of a church
can be geared more by tradition than truth. Over time, we fail to
see this as a problem. But I want us to consider two things that
have become tradition. Each needs to change.
1. MAJORING
ON MINOR THINGS
First
of all, we are easily led to major on minor things. It is amazing
how many sermons, and even bylaws, are delivered on minor things. We
can spend an enormous amount of time and energy on some of these
minor issues. Let's consider a few of them.
Denominationalism
is a major issue among some churches. The politics, programs and
traditions of a denomination can, in certain circumstances, hinder a
church from accomplishing God's will. Our main allegiance should be
to the Lord and His Word, not a denomination. More and more, we are
seeing denominations compromise the truth and conform to the world.
Politics
is another issue that is hindering our spiritual progress. While I
think it is important for Christians to vote and be part of the
political process, the issue of politics has become a focal point in
churches. While it isn't wrong for a sermon to address political
issues that have a spiritual significance, it is wrong for politics
to replace the preaching of the Gospel. Look at the book of Acts.
Political issues did not prompt the church to picket politicians or
conduct rallies. Instead, believers remained focused to the
spreading of the Gospel. We should do the same.
While
Protestants harshly condemn the way Roman Catholics worship their
pope, personality worship exists among evangelical, and even
Fundamental churches. While it is proper to respect pastoral
leadership, it is wrong to put your pastor upon a pedestal.
Furthermore, we have made celebrities out of TV ministers. Sadly,
we've seen some of these notable ministers fall morally and devastate
their followers. A TV minister is not your pastor. While you should
respect your pastor's leadership, your primarily goal is to follow
Jesus.
I
could go on about the minor things that we tend to major on, such as
music preferences, worship styles, Bible versions, programs, a
person's length of hair, dress codes and other similar topics. I
think you get the idea. These things aren't as important as we make
them out to be.
2. MINORING
ON MAJOR THINGS
While
churches tend to major on minor things, we also tend to minor on the
major things. We have reduced our emphasis on several major issues.
First
of all, Biblical teaching and preaching has been replaced with
motivational and politically-correct speeches. God's people need to be
fed from the Word, not taught from a philosophy book. What ever
happened to powerful preaching? We have allowed our pulpits to get
weak, our membership to get cold and God's Word to be diluted with
worldly concepts. We need bold, Spirit-filled Biblical preaching
once more!
Secondly,
our churches need to return to prayer. God's house is to be a house
of prayer. Prayer shouldn't be just another item in the order of a church service, but a corporate approach to the throne of grace. Our
churches need to be praying churches once again.
Third,
we need to emphasize evangelism once more. Our world needs the
Gospel like never before. Souls are perishing all around us. While
we play church, our friends and family members are going to hell.
Like Fanny Crosby's song states, we need to rescue the perishing and
care for the dying. We need to train believers to be evangelistic
every day, not just on Sundays.
There's
much more that could be said about these issues, but my main concern
is that we quit majoring on minor things and get back to majoring on the
main things once more.
Time
is running out. Let's get busy doing God's will and finish strong!