I attend many secular/atheist discussion groups. I am an
alien there, but I do not feel alienated. Why not? I have no expectation of
making connections and am content to be an alien in their midst. Of course,
when I do manage to build a bridge of mutual understanding, I am glad about it.
However, my experience in Christian groups is entirely
different. I come in hope of finding fellowship, an elusive commodity. I don’t
come as an alien, but it is far more likely that I will feel alienated there than
at an atheist discussion group.
Why? I enter with the hope that I will become an integral
part of the discussion but painful distance is often our lot. Loneliness is
most painful among others with whom we hope to connect. In contrast to this, we
seldom feel lonely walking down a crowded street alongside of complete
strangers.
How then do we make our groups warm and welcoming? Another
way to ask this same question is, “How can we express and build upon the unity
created by the Spirit?” (Ephesians 4:1-5). We have to speak to one another in
our common and unifying language, the language of the Scriptures:
·
What then, brothers? When you come together,
each one has a hymn, a lesson, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation.
Let all things be done for building up. (1 Corinthians 14:26)
This will do more to unite us than any talk about politics
of the football game. The Scriptures must provide the soil from which
everything grows (2 Peter 1:2-4). It is the flag around which we must rally to
experience the unity of the Spirit:
·
And he [God] gave the apostles, the prophets,
the evangelists, the shepherds and teachers, to equip the saints for the work
of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until we all attain to the
unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood,
to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, so that we may no
longer be children, tossed to and fro by the waves and carried about by every
wind of doctrine, by human cunning, by craftiness in deceitful schemes. Rather,
speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the
head, into Christ, from whom the whole body, joined and held together by every
joint with which it is equipped, when each part is working properly, makes the
body grow so that it builds itself up in love. (Ephesians 4:11-16)
The Word must be ministered until we “attain to the unity of
the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God.” This something that will not
be completed until our Savior returns for us.
This also suggests our ministry doesn’t start in the community but at home,
within the Body of Christ, where we impart growth to one another “speaking the
truth in love,” as “each part [member] is working properly.”
We all have a role to play, and the HF has a duty to help the
brethren discover their Scripture centered and prescribed role, the perfect antidote
to feelings of alienation.
Charles White, professor of Christian Thought and History at
Spring Arbor University, wrote about the role that the small groups played in
the Methodist revival:
·
The Methodists made such an impact on their
nation that in 1962 historian Elie Halevy theorized that the Wesleyan revival
created England’s middle class and saved England from the kind of bloody
revolution that crippled France. Other historians, building on his work, go
further to suggest that God used Methodism to show all the oppressed peoples of
the world that feeding their souls on the heavenly bread of the lordship of
Christ is the path to providing the daily bread their bodies also need. (Mission Frontiers, Sept-Oct 2011, 6)
·
Coming to Christ through the Methodist movement
changed the loves of a million people in Britain and North American in the
eighteenth century….most of these people and their children moved from the
desperation of hand-to mouth poverty to the security of middle-class life as
they made Christ their Lord and experienced the impact of His power on their
economic lives. As these people moved up the social ladder, they began to
influence the political life of their nation. They helped to transform Britain
from an eighteenth-century kleptocracy – where the powerful fueled their lives
of indulgence by exploiting the poor into a nineteenth century democracy –
which abolished slavery and used its empire to enrich the lives of every
subject of the crown. (9)
Before this glorious movement of the Spirit, England had
been in turmoil. White explains:
·
The police were also overwhelmed by the fighting
and killing of the mob. The law executed people for 169 capital crimes, but the
regular march to the gallows did nothing to make the streets safe at night.
Sexual immorality was common at all levels of society, and the nation was overwhelmed
with illegitimate children. (7)
What made the difference? Wesley had formed the people into
small groups where they would pray, confess their sins, and pledge to follow
Christ in all His teachings and fundamentals (Matthew 28:19-20)!
The small groups were serious stuff. All were accountable to
one another. All had a voice and a role to play. With such important business
at hand, there was little room for alienation.
What happened to the Methodist Church? With their increased
affluence, the requirement for membership in a HF was dropped and they “progressed”
to a professional clergy instead of appointing leadership from within their
groups.
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