The Not-Very-Persecuted Church
eBook - ePub

The Not-Very-Persecuted Church

Paul at the Intersection of Church and Culture

  1. 124 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Not-Very-Persecuted Church

Paul at the Intersection of Church and Culture

About this book

How do we live distinctively in communities embedded in the world around us? The Not-Very-Persecuted Church provides church leaders, pastors, and Christians interested in community development with principles for evaluating culture in light of mission. Since we are called to live in community, the processes that build group identity can help us understand how to live together well. Paul addressed some of the problems that can occur in not-very-persecuted groups in the first four chapters of 1 Corinthians, and he shows us the way suffering forms identity in that context. With discussion questions and stories from personal interviews, this book offers both fascinating glimpses into the world of the first century and practical applications for Christians today.

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Information

Year
2011
Print ISBN
9781610976060
9781498261418
eBook ISBN
9781621894070
1

Who Are the Not-Very-Persecuted?

The Lord prompted Valy and his friends to cut the meeting short. ā€œWhen the last person left the apartment,ā€ he said in an interview, ā€œpolice knocked on the door.ā€ As they searched for illegal Christian materials, Valy’s wife Elena prayed, ā€œLord Jesus, please blind them so they won’t look in the cabinets.ā€ The books and pamphlets hidden there could send them to jail. The police eventually had to leave, apologizing. ā€œI guess there is nothing in this house.ā€
Valy Vaduva led Christian discipleship groups in Communist Romania. Despite brushes with the law such as this, ā€œChristians were getting closer and closer to the Lord, and they were hungry for Bible study and prayer meetings because the persecution made them determined to get closer to the Lord in order to survive spiritually and also in order to be able to witness.ā€ Trust in the Lord and in each other was key.
Now Valy lives in the United States but returns regularly for ministry in free Romania. His radio broadcasts cover the country on nine different stations. He sends out flyers by email. He posts advertisements on buildings. But people have many choices of entertainment, and Christians blend with the rest of the culture.
ā€œBefore, during the persecution, churches were packed, and even the young generation was eager to pray more and learn more,ā€ Valy says. Now he sees greater superficiality.
ā€œGod does not prefer one culture versus another, but God would like us to say, ā€˜This is the culture of the church: we practice disciplines, we appreciate prayer and Bible study, we do evangelism and witnessing to the culture around us, because we are Christians.ā€™ā€
~from an interview with Valy Vaduva,
Upper Room Fellowship Ministry, http://www.urfm.org/
In the 1980’s, I read the stories of Brother Andrew and his ministry to Christians like Valy behind the Iron Curtain.1 Today, we hear about the suffering of Chinese house churches. We get prayer updates from the Voice of the Martyrs. We can imagine, although never really know, the way Christians through the centuries have huddled together in secret, praying, studying, praising the God to whom they had given their lives.
This is not, however, our experience. Oh, we may get laughed at sometimes. Some may call us intolerant, irrelevant, old-fashioned, fundamentalist stick-in-the-muds, or even hint that such strongly held faith leads to fascism, terrorism, crusades, and war. But our lives, our families, and for the most part our jobs are not threatened because we identify ourselves as Christians. We are the Not-Very-Persecuted Church.
Sometimes I’m a little jealous of those times and places where communities have experienced persecution. Meeting in the catacombs, dedicated to God to the point of martyrdom, all that danger and adventure seems like a much more romantic, much more passionate expression of love for God than my mortgage payments, grocery shopping, and Sunday school—at least from the safe couch in my living room! I know better, of course. I have experienced other kinds of pain that let me know how silly it is to wish for real persecution. Still, I long for the kind of community I read about, where people trust and depend on each other as they live their lives in total dedication to God.
Persecuted Followers of Christ
Social science tells us that persecuted people behave in somewhat predictable ways. Members with a low level of commitment, for instance, will leave the community if they can. In the third century in North Africa, some Christians gave in to their Roman persecutors and declared that Caesar, not Jesus, was Lord. Later, when the persecutions were over, they wanted to rejoin the church. The leaders struggled with this. If you can leave and come back with no penalties, what good is perseverance? Then again, should Christians who deny the faith in a moment of weakness really be excluded forever? Didn’t Jesus reinstate Peter after his denial (John 21:15–19)? The church eventually resolved these questions, but the point here is that under persecution some people leave.
On the other hand, people with high levels of commitment connect with the community even more strongly. Their loyalty increases. They may join together and respond to the situation as a group, maybe writing petitions, forming delegations, or, in more extreme circumstances, living underground or going together into exile.
Persecution, then, changes the makeup of a group in two ways. The less committed people leave, and the strongly committed people become even more loyal. This creates a tightly-knit community with a clear, shared focus. Wouldn’t we all like to belong to a community like that?
Questions:
1. What stories have you heard about Christians under persecution?
2. Is there anything about those groups that you envy?
3. Have you ever experienced persecution?
4. How could your community pray for Christians who are being persecuted today?
Not-Very-Persecuted Followers of Christ
Persecution is not the reality for everyone, though. Not-very-persecuted Christians also have some predictable behaviors. Let’s look at two imaginary people who represent four different tendencies of church members in non-persecuted areas.
Joe just joined Crossroads, the church down the street from his house. He is passionate about his relationship with Jesus, but he doesn’t know anyone in this area. He chose this particular denomination so that he could walk to church and save money on gas. His ties to the church community, at least at first, are not strong. He wants his Sunday mornings to run efficiently. What efficient means to him depends on his priorities, and it includes a concern for accuracy, as well. He may value anything from no snow on the sidewalk or no mistakes on the worship slides, to an atmosphere that helps him connect with God and a sermon that challenges him to further Christian growth. He will also be watching to see how accurately the beliefs of this church line up with his own. Each ā€˜Joe’ will have a different set of efficiency requirements, and some of them may show his deep faith. But without strong ties to the community, when there is no persecution, he will especially value the efficiency of his own worship experience.
But let’s say that the situation changes. One kind of threat that we do experience as members of the Not-Very-Persecuted Church is an attack on us as individuals based on our church affiliation. If one of Joe’s coworkers starts teasing him, not for being a Christian but for going to a church that is too charismatic, or too traditional, or too liberal, or too conservative, Joe is likely to respond by distancing himself from Crossroads. He may not quit the church, but he will begin to emphasize to himself and to others the ways that he is different, the ways that he doesn’t quite fit in, the ways that he’s a Christian but not really one of them. So when a loosely connected person feels threatened by outsiders, he will probably respond by stepping back a little from the group.
Now Sally has been a member of Crossroads since it started. Her parents belonged to First United, the church that founded Crossroads, and the whole family helped to get the new community started. Sally is proud of how much Crossroads has grown, of the work they are doing in the city and the new podcasts she helps to produce. She wears Crossroads tee shirts on Saturdays and Sunday afternoons and puts flyers for Crossroads events on the bulletin boards at work. When a person with strong ties to a group does not feel persecuted, she often makes decisions that express her identity as a member of that group. She wants to emphasize Crossroads’ uniqueness especially as compared to other Christian communities.
If her coworkers make fun of her, she does not really care. But if another church member hints that her contributions to the Crossroads ministries are not particularly important, she will find a way to respond. She may work harder to uphold the community’s values and to demonstrate that she measures up to them. She may point out how poorly other churches or even certain other members of her own community live out their faith especially in the specific ways that Crossroads emphasizes. Sally expresses her group identity by pushing away people outside or on the fringes of the community and by stepping closer to the people in the center. A person with strong group ties, when made to feel like an outsider, responds by working harder to fit in.
Sally, strongly connected
Joe, loosely connected
No threats
Expresses group identity
Concerned with
accuracy and efficiency
Individually threatened
Heightens group behavior
May attack others
Distances from gro...

Table of contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Foreword
  3. Preface
  4. Acknowledgments
  5. Chapter 1: Who Are the Not-Very-Persecuted?
  6. Chapter 2: Who Are We?
  7. Chapter 3: Who Was Paul?
  8. Chapter 4: Who Were the Corinthians?
  9. Chapter 5: Who Are Followers of Christ?
  10. Chapter 6: Are Followers of Christ Respectable?
  11. Chapter 7: Are Followers of Christ Mature?
  12. Chapter 8: Followers of Christ Belong to God
  13. Chapter 9: Followers of Christ Belong Together
  14. Chapter 10: The Not-Very-Persecuted Church Today
  15. The Not-Very-Persecuted Church: Accountability Questions
  16. Bibliography

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