It is a strange feeling here at the Bible College in Athens. When you quote 1 or 2 Corinthians, you realize Corinth is just a couple hours drive away. Same with Thessalonica. Athens, where Paul confronted and began to destroy the fate-based civilization that controlled the thinking of the much of the ancient world, is just down the road.
When Church goes wrong
Church is lots of things. In one aspect it’s an army, in another sense a hospital, in yet another a school. But above all, church is family.
Family is a wonderful thing, and none of us would ever want to lose it. Family is the place of closest trust and relationship. But the places of closest trust are also the places of deepest hurt.
That’s why we need to be so watchful about the health of the family of God. Church is God’s family. It should be the place of closest relationship, but when things go wrong people get hurt. And badly.
Connected
Nothing in God’s economy ever goes to waste.
And if relationships are at the heart of that economy, then it is God’s heart to use the relationships he has given us for his purposes.
It is a tragedy when relationship breakdown occurs among Christians. That applies in particular to marriages but also in a more general sense. We can make light of church divisions and splits, but they must break God’s heart.
The inconvenience of truth
We live in a culture obsessed with not causing offence. Sensitivity training has become big business.
This leaves us Christians with a problem. Jesus described the gospel as a skandalon - something which would offend people.
It’s a good thing to be sensitive to people, and it’s certainly a good thing to respect each person as a unique creation of God. And we have a mandate to offer the unconditional love of Christ to everyone we meet. But while we need to be caring and respectful for people, we do not need to respect everything they believe, say or stand for. Dietrich Bonhoffer was not sensitive to Hitler, even though it cost him his life.
Your witness is more powerful than you think
Jesus talked about sowing seed. The seed fell all over the place and a lot of it was lost - at least three quarters of it if you take the parable literally. He could have looked at the results and felt discouraged. But instead he chose to look at the small portion of the seed that actually produced fruit, and that is what he focussed upon.