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| Volume
XXIII |
July 2003
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Number 12
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Serving with Distinction
By
Jackie Stearsman
The Florida School of Preaching is indebted to a number
of faithful preachers and elders who have served on the Board of Directors.
As Jesus states, "And whosoever of you will
be the chiefest, shall be servant of all" (Mark 10:44 KJV). In a society
that is saturated with demanding others serve "us," "my
wants," it is not always easy to find those who will spend time and energy,
without compensation, to promote a cause. Such individuals are distinct, and
these include those who serve the Florida School of Preaching as Board members.
Brother Samuel Roney has served
the church both as preacher and elder.
He attended the Florida School of Preaching following retirement. Brother
Roney served on the Board from 1995 until June 2003. I recall with
fond memories brother Roney's trip with the group from school to Jamaica.
He,
in his quiet and unassuming manner was an encouragement to the brethren in
the campaign. He has been a loyal supporter of the Florida School of Preaching.
While preaching for the church in Plant City, he encouraged the students
to come to the congregation twice a year, and he permitted them to speak
and the congregation always prepared a delicious meal for the day. For
some it was likely the first compensation they were ever given for speaking. The Laura Street congregation continues this practice. Brother
Roney's years of experience and wisdom was always appreciated. We shall miss
him on the Board, but hope to see him often.
***
Brother Dale Spung has served churches in the central Florida area
for a number of years both as a gospel
preacher and an elder of the church. He began serving on the Board
in 1985 and served until June 2003. He asked to be relieved
of these duties.
Before Dale or I was connected
with the school, we developed a close friendship in the faith. At that
time, Dale was preaching
for the North Florida Avenue church of Christ in Tampa, and I was preaching
in Clearwater.
Dale will be missed. We always were
encouraged by his input into our meetings. His wisdom will be missed, but will always be appreciated.
Samuel Roney, Sr
1995-2003 |
Dale
L. Spung
1985-2003
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SPIRITUALITY
By
Hugo McCord
I. Misconceptions About Spirituality
1. Monasticism.
A monk or a nun retiring "from the world under religious vows" is
pursuing spirituality by privacy for concentration and fervency in personal
praying.
But retirement "from the world" is not what Jesus taught
or practiced. He taught his disciples that, though they were "not
of the world" (John 17:14), "yet they themselves" were "in
the world" (John 17:11) with orders to "shine as lights in the
world" (Phil. 2:15). Pointedly he told them "you are the light
of the world" (Matt.
5:14), and "Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every
creature" (Mark
16:15). Jesus did not seclude himself in a monastery.
2. Asceticism.
An ascetic, living alone away from all human beings, believes that
he "can
reach a higher spiritual state by rigorous self-
discipline and self-denial." But the One who reached the highest spiritual
state did not do so by abandoning all human contact. With him self-denial
meant to meet as many people as possible, to go "about
doing good" (Acts 10:38), "to seek and save" the lost (Luke
19:10). One of Jesus' grandfathers wrote, "A loner is self-centered, and
rages against all sound wisdom" (Prov. 18:1).
3. Celibacy.
Jesus was celibate for a special reason, but he did not ask others
to follow his example. Instead, he approved of marriage as being
ordained
by his Father in heaven (Matt. 19:4-5). Moreover, he walked some
20 miles to attend a wedding in Cana (John 2:1-12). Further, his
apostle
taught that to forbid marriage is to "fall
away from the faith" (1 Tim. 4:1-3). In addition, another inspired
man wrote that "marriage is honorable in all, and the bed is
unstained" (Heb. 13:4). Celibacy, therefore, is not the biblical
road to spirituality.
4. Tongue-talking.
At the beginning of the New Testament church, direct gifts from the Holy
Spirit were imparted by the laying on of the hands of an apostle (Acts
8:18). One of those gift was the ability to speak in foreign languages (1
Cor. 12:8-10). The ability to speak in a foreign language naturally had
to come to an end when the last person died on whom an apostle had laid his
hands.
As important as was speaking in tongues (as an evidence that God was prompting
the speaker), that gift could not confer spirituality to Christians. Sincere
people today in worship services who shout, jump, roll on the floor, giggle
and laugh uproariously, thinking that the Holy Spirit activates them internally,
have not learned that, when the last person died on whom an apostle had laid
his hands, all miracles ceased.
On the contrary, some say, until a Christian
talks in tongues he is non-spiritual
and legalistic. But even if a Christian today could talk in a language
he has not learned, such an accomplishment has nothing to do with that
person's becoming spiritual. What that person does mechanically with
his tongue has no effect on his inner spiritual nature. Balaam's donkey
spoke in a tongue she had never learned (Numb. 22:28), but she was
no more spiritual than a talking doll would be in our day.
5. The "House Church."
Many congregations have started in somebody's house (Rom. 16:5; 1 Cor.
16:19; Col. 4:15; Philem. 2), but their place of assembly had no
relation to their spirituality. The church at Corinth was large enough
that, when
they assembled "as a church," they had left their "houses" (1
Cor. 11:18, 22; 14:35), but their place of assembly had no relation to
their spirituality.
Unfortunately and sadly, some have misconstrued
spirituality as being impossible in large gatherings, and have retreated
to "house
churches." This doctrine is a revival of the 17th century
Pietism advocated by Phillip Jackson Spencer: small private
meetings in homes for meditation, chain prayers, and a sharing of emotional
experiences.
That same false approach to spirituality
is in a modern quotation: I would like an anti-establishment
group, maybe a group that has no pews (we can sit on the floor), perhaps
not
even a
church house. We want a small group where the closeness is felt and emotions
are radiated.
Certainly "closeness is felt and emotions are radiated" in
a small or large congregation of spiritual people, but "closeness
is felt and emotions are radiated" in family reunions, and even
in sexual orgies. Clearly, biblical criteria identifying spirituality
are not "closeness" and "emotions."
II. Biblical Spirituality
An invisible, unweighable, intangible, immortal
entity called a "spirit" (Zech.
12:1; Matt. 22:32; Luke 23:46), made in God's image who is "spirit" (Gen.
1:26-27; John 4:24), "not
flesh and bones" (Luke 24:39), is sent from heaven into a womb when
a human being is conceived (Eccl. 12:7; Heb. 12:9). That reality, a spirit
is then embodied in flesh as long as that human being lives
on the earth, and then "returns to God who gave it" (Eccl.
12:7).
People who live "after the flesh mind the things of the flesh," but
flesh itself, though often used in sin (Gal. 5:19-21) is itself
not sinful. Some translations leave the impression that flesh itself
is sinful (Rom. 8:3, "sinful flesh," KJV, ASV, NAS, NRS), but
the literal Greek is sarkos hamartias, the "flesh of sin," flesh
that is used in sinning. But to say that flesh itself is sinful makes
God look bad "by sending his own Son in the likeness of the flesh of sin" (Rom.
8:3). Jesus "became flesh" (John 1:14; Heb. 5:7).
Flesh itself (sarx, "the material that covers the bones of a human
or animal body" (B-G-D, p. 743), is amoral. If we say that
flesh itself is sinful we make God look bad, for, after he had created
humans and animals with flesh covering their bones (Gen. 1:25-27), then
he "looked upon everything that he had made, and, indeed, it
was very good" (Genesis 1:31).
Every baby is born into a world "of iniquity," his
mother already a sinner (Rom. 3:9, 23), but the baby is born sinless
(Matt. 19:14).
Only a person's own sins separate him from God (Isa. 59:1-2). Each one
must make his own decision whether he sets his
mind "on fleshly things" or "on spiritual things" (Rom.
8:5):
Each one is tempted when he is lured by his own desires, and enticed.
When desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin, and
when sin is full-grown, it bears death. Be not deceived, my beloved brothers
(Jam. 1:14-16).
As a person rises from the water of baptism, his physical "body" (that
with which he could commit fornication) is
transformed into a "temple of the Holy Spirit" who "is in" him "from
God" (Acts 2:38; 5:32; 1 Cor. 6:18-19). The new Christian
rejoices that he is a host to a heavenly Guest (Gal. 4:6).
The presence of the Guest is a precious certification
that the newly baptized person is now a child of God, and his presence
is a guaranty (if he behaves himself, Ephesians 4:30) that heaven awaits
(Gal. 4:6; Eph. 1:13-14). Thereafter he is "led" by the Spirit
(Rom. 8:14), but not by his internal dwelling. The Guest is non-communicative
and quiet. He cannot be felt. The host would not
even know that the Spirit is in him if he did not learn it from the Bible.
The leading of the Spirit, to make him a spiritual
person, is not from the inside of the Christian. His leading is external,
by his written "counsel," a "lamp" for his "feet,
and a light" for his "path" (Psalm 73:24; 119:105).
His "counsel" is that a Christian must put "to death the
deeds of the body" (Rom. 8:13), but the Spirit does not do the
killing. Neither does he lead Christians directly from his indwelling
position,
else no Christian would ever sin or even make a
mistake. It is up to the individual Christian himself to "buffet" his "body
and make it" a "slave" in order to grow spiritually (1
Cor. 9:27). Some Christians at Corinth, although indwelt by the Spirit,
were "weak
and sick, and a large number" was "asleep" (1 Cor.
6:19-20; 11:30).
Instead of Christians at Corinth or in Ephesus
being "weak and sick," they
could "be strengthened mightily in the inner
person by his Spirit" (Eph. 3:16). However, if they waited for the
Spirit directly to infuse strength by his indwelling, they would
remain "weak and sick."
On the other hand, if they obeyed the words
of the Spirit that they equip themselves with seven pieces of "God's armor" (namely, truth, uprightness, peaceableness, faith, salvation, "the sword
of the Spirit, which is God's word," and prayer (Eph. 6:13-
18), they would "be strengthened mightily in the inner person by the Spirit" (Eph.
3:16).
Unfortunately, the Christians at Ephesus paid
no attention to the Spirit's admonition to equip themselves with
God's armor,
with the sad result that they left their "first love," and received
a threat from Jesus that, unless they repented, he would "remove" their "lampstand out of its place" (Rev.
2:4-5).
If a Christian does not behave as he should,
he grieves the indwelling Guest, a Guest who wants to stay within "until the
day of redemption" (Eph. 1:14; 4:30). If he does not behave, if
he does not grow spiritually, cultivating the fruit of the Spirit (love,
joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control,
Gal. 5:22-23), the Spirit will leave the backslider
(Jude 19). However, the Spirit still stands "at the door" of the
heart of that failed Christian, hoping he would repent and open "the
door," so that the Spirit "will come in to him" again, and will
renew his indwelling, saying, "I will dine with him, and he with
me!"
(Rom. 8:9; Rev. 3:20).
The Spirit exercises no compulsion. It is up to each Christian whether
or not the Spirit stays within him the rest of his life.
In the Spirit's "counsel" he gives a command to all Christians: "Keep
yourselves filled with the Spirit" (plerousthe in Greek
grammar, imperative mood, middle voice, Eph. 5:18). The loving God
has done all he can do. If a Christian does not keep the
heavenly Guest within himself, the Guest is grieved (Eph. 4:30).
All of the Christians in the "seven congregations in Asia" (Rev.
1:4) received the Spirit when they were baptized, but they
had no leading by him until they had received the book of Revelation.
When that book arrived, they had the words of the Spirit
telling them how He was going to strengthen them mightily in their inner
persons: "Let
him, who has an ear, hear what the Spirit
says to the congregations (Rev. 2:7, 11, 17, 29; 3:6, 13, 22).
A person given to "spiritual things" (Rom. 8:5) learns that he must
be reborn of "water and of Spirit" in becoming a "new
creature" (John 3:5; 2 Cor. 5:17). He knows that his fleshly nature
is not reborn, only his spirit inside of him (John 3:6).
With his spirit regenerated (Matt. 19:28; Tit.
3:5), he is ready "to
offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through
Jesus Christ" (1 Pet. 2:5). Immediately afer his "bath of the new
birth" he volunteers eagerly to make his whole body and spirit a"
living sacrifice" for the rest of his life as a "spiritual service" (Rom.
12:1; Tit. 3:5).
However, if he sets his mind on "fleshly things" (Rom. 8:5),
as did Amnon (2 Sam. 13:1-17), and as did a church member
at Corinth (1 Cor. 5:1), he is not spiritual. On the other hand, if he
sets his mind "on spiritual things" (Rom. 8:5), as did Joseph
(Gen. 39:9), and as did a black man from Ethiopia (Acts 8:26-40), he
is a spiritual
man.
A spiritual man saves time for daily Bible
reading (Psalm 1:1-2; 119:97-105; Colossians 3:16) and for daily
praying (1
Thess. 5:17). Occasionally he feels the need to miss a meal to undergird
his praying with fasting (Matt. 9:15). He enjoys fellowship
with other Christians (Acts 2:42). He is cheerful and a liberal contributor,
not only to the church, but to "every good work" (2 Cor.
9:6-7; Tit. 3:1).
He loves to sing praises to his great God,
both when he is alone (Jam.
5:13) and when he is in the church assembly (Eph.
5:19; Heb. 2:12). It is his delight to tell all who will listen what
Jesus has done for him (Mark 5:19), and to "proclaim the
excellencies of him who" has called him "out of darkness into his
marvelous light" (1 Pet. 2:9).
A spiritual exercise of his every Lord's Day
is to discern the Lord's bleeding body as he partakes of a tiny piece
of bread
and swallows a sip of the fruit of the vine (Acts 20:7; 1 Cor. 11:29).
The spiritual man loves to meditate, not on "fleshly things," but on "the things above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of
God" (Col. 3:1).
[Brother McCord may be reached at,
5535 E. Evergreen, # 7505
Vancouver, WA 98661 11-22-02]
Remember
1. August 18 Fall Semester begins. For catalogue or assistance, contact
the office.
2. January 19-22, 2004, The Annual Florida School of Preaching Lectureship
3 Lectureship Theme: "Do You Understand the Grace of God?"
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