Some months back I wrote a post titled Peddling
Christ. I wrote that post because I was asked to do so. Someone gave me a few
verses and a general idea of what they thought about those verses. Because I
agreed with what this person believed I agreed to write that post. It was the
first time I had ever written anything like that…based off what someone else
wanted to see.
It was a challenge to write. Mostly because I
wrote it based off my own beliefs, what I saw in those verses, what I
understood, but always knowing I was writing that post for someone else. And in
so doing there was this underlying thought of how it should, hopefully, meet
that persons expectations.
When I finally finished that post the person that
had requested it was happy with the results. It said what they wanted it to say
and I…breathed a sigh of relief that I was able to pull it off.
Little did I know that only a couple of months
after that, the person that had asked me to write it would give me a bit of
follow up. Not so much feedback but more of a continuing the discussion. This
person didn’t ask me to write a follow up with what they said. I have taken it upon myself to do that.
Once again I don’t know if what I’m about to write
will convey the tone that this person was trying to get across. All I know is
that I’m going to take the verses and the little bit of comments I got from
this person on those verses and attempt to further the topic of Peddling
Christ.
Because this is part two of Peddling Christ I
highly recommend anyone thinking of reading this post read Peddling Christ
first.
In Peddling Christ I spoke of how those that teach
and preach the Word of God are doing so for their own gain and are doing it in
opposition to what Paul taught should be done. In Paul’s day there were men
that were ‘peddling’ the Word of God. They were lining their own pockets by
preaching to others.
Today we have many ‘church’ buildings and many
preachers that peddle Christ. After writing Peddling Christ I had someone tell
me that they have encountered many preachers that preached for the sole purpose
of sharing Christ with others. Supposedly this person has met preachers that
teach and preach of Christ with no financial compensation.
If that is accurate…then I’d truly like to meet
these preachers.
I personally have never met such a preacher. I
have met a few teachers that teach Scripture for the sole purpose of helping
others to learn and understand. I have also met a few others that naturally
teach Scripture, teach Christ, as they go about living out their lives.
What I have never done is meet a preacher that
spends their life preaching with no monetary reimbursement.
Are there such preachers out there? I suppose
there could be but I personally have never met one.
A couple years ago I went to a music performance
at a ‘church’ building. This performance was put on free of charge, no tickets
required, no admission at the door. That appeared to be a good thing. But then,
as so often is the case, at the end of the performance the audience was asked
to give a ‘goodwill offering’.
I understand that the music performers had
expenses with coming to the ‘church’. I understand that there were utilities used
during the performance. But where I ran into problems was the way the audience
was asked to give the offering. It was put across almost as if it was expected
and should be done.
Have you ever met anyone that used guilt trips to
control those around them? I have. A person that does this will take a
situation and twist it so that whoever they’re talking to winds up feeling
guilty for something. A ‘guilt trip’ is put on the other person until that
person does what this person wants them to. Usually the other person winds up
feeling bad for the person using the guilt trip and so does what they wouldn’t
have ordinarily done because the other person was somehow ‘wronged.’
It is a form of manipulation. That is what that
‘goodwill offering’ reminded me of. At the conclusion of the music performance
a story was given of what it had taken for the performers to be there that
night and how they needed the help of the audience to afford…whatever it was
that needed funding. There was no mention of how those performers were making
hundreds of dollars off the CD’s and other items they were selling that night.
That may not seem like all that much money.
Assuming they made even a couple thousand dollars that night…but the
performance was only about an hour long.
The reality is that in the music industry that
really isn’t that much money. I have a relative that recently bought concert
tickets to go see a popular band. This person paid over $550.00 for two
tickets. That was two tickets out of probably several thousand that were sold
for this concert.
I’m not opposed to money being given to the
performers, they did have expenses in being there and they do have to support
themselves somehow. Now…that said…it does get into the subject of whether or
not what they’re doing…because they are essentially sharing Christ through
their music…is peddling Christ.
If Paul and the apostles supported themselves by
means outside of Christ…should anyone support themselves with Christ?
And I ask that as a question because I truly don’t
know the answer to the question.
But what I do know is that most preachers operate
in exactly the same way that music performance was put on. When my relative
decided to go to that concert they knew that in order to go it was going to
cost whatever the price of a ticket was. They knew that should they go they had
to be prepared to pay the price to get in. This relative even thought out how
much they were willing to pay to get in and how much they could reasonably
afford to pay. And the moment the tickets went on sale…they willingly paid the
price, in advance, to go.
But that wasn’t what happened at the music
performance I went to. The one I went to was ‘advertised’ as being free. It was
a come enjoy the music kind of thing. There were no advance fees. No tickets
sold ahead of time. No admission fees. It wasn’t until the end of the show that
the audience was asked to give money to support the performers. It was much
like a story that was told to prey on the emotions of those that were there.
Once the music had been enjoyed the audience was told that if they enjoyed what
they heard, could they please help support the performers by giving money.
It put me in the mind of a person that uses guilt
trips to control those around them. It was manipulation. It was using Christ in
music to get to the emotions of those listening and then using those newly
touched emotions to get them to give money.
Preachers do much the same thing. Even in a
‘church’ that claims to never take up an offering there’s usually a hard to
miss offering box or something else designed to take the offerings being given.
Many times before the preaching is started there are announcements that speak
of all the things the ‘church’ needs. The youth group is usually in need of
funds for some reason, the children’s programs are often accepting donations
for this, that, and the other. The seniors programs usually need something. Or
some combination of all those things.
I have to wonder…if the ‘church’ receives any kind
of offering, why do any of their programs need more funding? Why isn’t the
‘church’ funding them through the offerings given?
And so…what I see is an organization that finds
ever more ways to peddle Christ.
Several years ago I heard about a man that was
riding his bicycle cross country for the sole purpose of spreading the Gospel. I
don’t know the details of his situation or why he did what he did. I don’t know
what gain he got from what he did. Maybe he simply did it to teach of Christ…I
don’t know.
What I do know is that if that man did what I
heard he was doing…he taught Christ without a building and without the need for
funds that seems to be never ending in the ‘church’ building.
There is an understanding among those that travel
in RV’s full time that living the way they do is much cheaper than living in a
home with rent payments, mortgage payments, home insurance, property taxes,
utility bills, upkeep, the need for things to fill the home… Those that live
full time in an RV say that living as they do is much cheaper than when they
lived in a real house.
How much cheaper would it be to share Christ if
the preachers gave up their ‘churches’? How much would it cost them to share
Christ wherever they were and with whomever the Lord put in their path?
What if they taught Christ instead of peddling
Him? What if they shared Christ instead of expecting to gain from what they’re
sharing? What if they simply lived for Christ and shared Him as they lived
their life instead of making a career of Christ?
That is what Paul did. That is even what Christ
Himself did. Strange as that may seem. Christ didn’t charge people for the
miracles He performed. He simply performed miracles out of the faith of those
doing the asking. What did He charge the woman that was healed because she
touched His clothes? What did He charge the blind man who was given sight? What
did He charge those who heard the Sermon on the Mount? What admission did He
ask of them? What guilt trip did He put on them so that they would give a
‘goodwill offering’ at the end?
In Acts 20:17
Paul has called to him a group of Elders from Ephesus…
From Miletus, Paul sent to Ephesus for the elders of the church.
These were
not ordinary everyday men, they were the leaders of the people of God. They
were the preachers, the teachers.
This was a time when people did not have a Bible
to turn to. They didn’t have the Scriptures in their homes…in fact the
Scriptures hadn’t even been fully written yet. Believers in that day had little
beyond other believers to guide them in their faith.
I have recently done some research into the
history of the Bible, have even written on that very topic. I have even gone so
far as to write out some of the Scriptures for the purpose of understanding
some of what it might have been like to be in a time and place where the only
way to have the Scriptures was to copy them down or to pay the rather high
price…it often cost a priest in the 1400’s, 1500’s, and beyond an entire years
wages to own a Bible…but this was in a time when there were no Bibles to be
had. And so these leaders…had to lead correctly. Their insight was valuable…so
was the need for it to be accurate.
And so Paul has called the elders…the
preachers…the teachers…to him. And he began to teach them, to guide them, to
lead them so that they might lead others.
18 When they arrived, he said to them: “You know how I
lived the whole time I was with you, from the first day I came into the province
of Asia. 19 I
served the Lord with great humility and with tears and in the midst of severe
testing by the plots of my Jewish opponents.
He begins by telling them how he served the Lord
with great humility and with tears even in the midst of great suffering. Anne
Dutton, a puritan writer, called the trials and tribulations we endure as
Christians the ‘cup of bitters.’ She says we should drink freely of that cup
because it is sweetened by Christ.
Something tells me that the way Paul served Christ
and the way most preachers ‘serve’ Christ is vastly different. There is a
reformed preacher that recently preached on the persecution. He said that
losing his tax exempt status was persecution. Can you see Paul calling a
financial issue persecution? Paul said… I served the Lord with great
humility and with tears and in the midst of severe testing by the plots of my
Jewish opponents. Somehow
I don’t think anyone that experienced the kind of persecution Paul did would
consider anything financial to be persecution.
Paul told the elders of Ephesus that he served the Lord with great humility and
tears in the midst of severe testing.
Notice the use of the word great before humility. He served with great
humility. What classifies great humility?
Years ago I found a supposedly Christian book on
humility at a thrift store. I bought it and took it home with all intention of
reading it. It sat on my self for years without ever being looked at.
Eventually I got rid of it, still without reading any of it. Today, we have books
written that can supposedly teach us how to be humble. Paul had no such books.
And yet he served the Lord with great humility.
What lessons the elders learned from Paul in just
those few sentences. They are lessons everyone of our time should continue to
learn…they are lessons our elders, those the modern ‘churches’ call preachers,
should learn.
20 You know that I have not hesitated to preach
anything that would be helpful to you but have taught you publicly and from
house to house.
Paul goes on to say that he has not hesitated to
preach anything that would be helpful. I recently read something online, said
by a reformed preacher, of how most preachers do not preach or teach or even
speak of the wrath of God. This preacher talked of how most preachers teach of
the love of God but they never speak of the anger…the hate…of God. This
preacher then went on to say how, as a preacher, it’s difficult to preach on
the hate of God. But Paul says that he didn’t hesitate to preach anything that
might be useful.
Ahh…but then comes the next part. I…have taught
you publicly and from house to house. Paul tells where he did his preaching. He
preached in public and in one house or another. He did not have a building
where he preached according to a calendar or a clock. He did not preach on an
agenda. He preached in public and he preached as he went from person to person,
house to house.
There is a reformed man that has a program online
where he goes into the public and challenges the beliefs of the people there.
While he is doing it he gives them the truth of Scripture straight from
Scripture.
When I think of a preacher teaching in public that
is what I imagine. Someone that goes out…into the public…and preaches to the
people where they are. I know that ‘church’ buildings are open to the public
and therefore could probably be considered public preaching. But I have to
ask…is that really public preaching? Is that preaching in public?
Is that what Paul did?
I think of the ‘church’ I sometimes attend…and
those sometimes are growing fewer and fewer…and I think of the people that are
there week after week. It is mostly the same crowd of people in the audience
every week, every sermon.
I am well aware of the fact that Christians need
to be edified and I know well the verses that tell us not to forsake the
assembly but…I must wonder if a preacher’s main job should be to stand before
the same people week after week, giving them bite sized pieces of
Scripture…Scripture that is often predigested so that it doesn’t upset them.
These are people that have heard the gospel…they
at least have heard that preachers version of the gospel. In our country it
would be near impossible for anyone to live out their life without hearing at
least the basics of the gospel. And yet…these ‘church’ building preachers stand
before their congregations, ‘leading their flocks’, week after week after
week. They give different sermons to
guide their ‘flocks’ through their lives while failing to give them much of the
basis of the true Gospel.
These preachers…stand before a collection of
followers…followers of themselves…giving them bites of Scripture that feed the
surface level of their belief and never feed them that which offends them.
And in the end…this preacher…this leader…usually
expects a money offering to be given. It is an often times outright spoken
expectation of going to a ‘church’ building.
How far these preachers are from what Paul was.
How much they could learn if they would stop peddling Christ and look instead
to the example that Christ set in how He preached His own gospel. How much they
could learn if they would read and listen to what Paul taught.
Instead they peddle Christ.
Even though Paul clearly laid out a foundation for
how to preach and lead. He even tells what they should preach…in case it was
missed when John the Baptist or Christ Himself preached it…
21 I have declared to both Jews and Greeks that they
must turn to God in repentance and have faith in our Lord Jesus.
There is the gospel. It is the
gospel as given by John the Baptist, it is the gospel given by Christ. It is
the gospel given by the disciples, and it is the gospel given by Paul.
Repent. Repent and have faith in
Christ. Repent and believe.
That is the gospel. There is
nothing in there about saying a prayer or making a ‘decision for Christ.’
Nowhere in Scripture does it say you should ‘invite Jesus into your heart.’
Repent and have faith…repent and believe. That is the basis of salvation. It is
the first step. It is what should be taught by all preachers. Instead they peddle
the ‘Christ’ that gains them the position they desire and lines their pockets
with the money they don’t work for.
22 “And now, compelled by the Spirit, I am going to
Jerusalem, not knowing what will happen to me there. 23 I only
know that in every city the Holy Spirit warns me that prison and hardships are
facing me.
There are missionaries that go into the world to
preach the gospel…whatever version of it they may believe in…and do so knowing
that they are going into places where prison, hardships and even death may
await them.
That is what Paul did. That is the life he led. He
went from town to town, warned by the Holy Spirit that hardship and prison may
await him, and still he went to preach in the public places and in the private
houses.
Why?
What prompted him to do such a thing? He gives us
that very answer…
24 However, I consider my life worth nothing to me; my
only aim is to finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given
me—the task of testifying to the good news of God’s grace.
Have you ever met anyone that
felt as if their life was worth nothing to them? I have. It’s a bit
disconcerting at first. I know that Scripture tells us that to live is Christ,
to die is gain, and yet…I am still a fallen creature, a person of the flesh
even as I am a person saved in the Spirit. And I am a wife, a mother, a
grandmother, a daughter, a sister. My mind, my heart, desires Christ, I long
for Him. But…I also know I’m needed by those entrusted to me on this earth. But
I know someone that looks forward to death and speaks of it as one might talk
of a long awaited vacation. I can’t do that. At least not at this point in my
life.
I live to Christ and my death
will be gain for me, but…I am flesh. I am fallen. I am weak. I have people that
love me, people I know would be hurt if I were to leave this earth. And that
prevents me from fully looking forward to death. But I love someone that has
reached the point where they can look to death in just such a way. I hear this
person say…this life doesn’t matter, we will soon be dead.
It puts me in the mind of a
sermon I heard once. This sermon was given by a reformed man. In it he said
something to the effect of if you knew you were only going to stay in a hotel
for a night or two would you start redecorating the room, buying new furniture
for it?
Death is imminent for all of us.
Every moment that we live brings us one step closer to death. We live…to die.
From the moment we are conceived there is no choice but that we will die. I
knew someone that once told me we have the power to control life and death. I
think I understood what this person meant…I think they were implying that we
have the power to control whether or not we have children, whether or not we
commit murder. We have the choice of whether or not to get an abortion. I think
that was what this person was referring to. And yet…if we stop and think about
it…we really have no power over death. A murderer may intend to kill someone
but they are only successful if it is that person’s time to die. How many people
survive violent attacks? How many of those people are told you shouldn’t be
alive, there is no medical explanation for why you lived? How many babies
survive an abortion?
When I was in my teens I met a
girl that was the result of an abortion. The abortion was successful. The woman
that walked into the abortion clinic pregnant, walked out with an empty womb.
But she left behind a living baby that was saved by a nurse working in the
clinic. That girl lived despite the procedure that should have ended her life.
Not all that long ago I read
about a young woman that went to an abortion clinic and had an abortion.
Several weeks later she discovered that she was still pregnant but that the
baby had no amniotic sack. There were other things that the baby didn’t have,
vital things, but I don’t remember all the details. Despite the attempt the
kill the baby within her, the abortion was unsuccessful and the baby survived
to be delivered…when it was missing vital parts of its support system. It
should not have survived the abortion…but it did. It should not have been able
to live without the system put into place to help a baby grow until it’s ready
for birth…but it did. That baby should have died…it didn’t.
It is believed by some that we
have the ability to control life and death. They say we can control pregnancy.
There are numerous products and medications out there that are supposed to
prevent pregnancy…but every one of them has been known to fail. I personally
met a couple that both the husband and the wife had undergone surgery to
prevent any future pregnancies. Despite being told by doctors that their
surgeries were successful…they continued to have babies.
The same person that told me we
can control life and death…eventually had a child despite their attempts to prevent
pregnancy.
People may believe they have the
ability to control life and death but…do they? Or are they mere instruments
being used to work out the Lord’s plan for someone’s life?
The belief that we can control
life and death is a belief that is held by many. It is…I guess…an important
belief among those living in the flesh. It gives them something to hold onto.
And there are many things that would make us think we do indeed hold that kind
of power. How many women walk into an abortion clinic pregnant and walk out the
mother of a dead baby? How many people never have a child, or have one on their
timetable, because they made use of something designed to prevent pregnancy?
It would almost seem as if we do
actually have that kind of power. But thinking that goes against the teaching
of Scripture. It goes against the Lord.
And yet it is that very need to
believe that we can control life that makes what Paul said so hard for some to
grasp. I consider my life worth nothing
to me… How many people in this world truly consider their lives worth
nothing to them? It goes against the human nature…the flesh…our very being…to
consider our life worth nothing. Paul would have gladly died for Christ. He
clearly said that his goal in life was to live for Christ. …my only aim is to finish the race and
complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me—the task of testifying to the
good news of God’s grace. That was Paul’s purpose in life. It is a purpose
that very few hold in life. Most people, even those that have been given new
life in Christ, put at least some value on their human lives. They worry over
those they love, they think of the struggles they endure, they even worry over
their very salvation…but Paul said his only goal was to complete the task the
Lord had given him.
If a person went through life
with no other goal than to complete a job that they have been given…how would
they look at life? Paul knew that his purpose in life was to spread the gospel
and he clearly put that purpose at the forefront of how he lived his life. So
much so that he went against his flesh to the point that he put no value on his
life and all value on Christ and the job he had been given.
How hard must he have worked to
spread the gospel? How much emotion must have been in the things he said? What
Truth’s must have been in everything he said. He lived to complete his job of
teaching of Christ. He taught because it was his purpose in life. He didn’t do
it because he expected or even wanted pay. He had no reason to peddle Christ…he
had a higher agenda. He worked for the spiritual side of life and his highest
pay was to plant a seed that was used to salvation. Or maybe his highest
payment was in seeing those the Lord had saved stay on the narrow path, seeing
them understand what they were to do as Christians.
I don’t know what he considered
to be his highest pay but his goal wasn’t something of the earth but something
of eternity. He worked for an eternal Lord and he worked for the eternal souls
of those that belonged to his Lord.
There is a thrift store that I
visit sometimes that has a sign on the side of their building announcing that
they have given over one million dollars in help to local people in need.
Inside the store there is a sign that says how many people they have helped
that week. The numbers are tallied and announced. I think the reason they put
those numbers up there is so that those who donate to the store and those that
shop there can see that their contributions are used toward helping those in
their communities but…the numbers are tallied and posted for all to see.
There are many ‘churches’, many
‘Christian’ organizations, many ‘Christians’ that tally the number of people
that they ‘led to Christ’ in much the same way. Their success is measured in
numbers and they take full credit for the number of ‘souls saved.’
Paul did not concern himself with
numbers. He concerned himself with completing the task that was given him by
the Lord. He didn’t say he was out to ‘convert’ as many as he could, he never
spoke of ‘leading someone to Christ’, never told how he had helped someone
‘make a decision for Christ.’ Because he wasn’t peddling Christ…he wasn’t
keeping count…he wasn’t selling Christ in a way that he needed to be able to
show his financers a return for their investment.
He was out to do the job assigned
to him by the Lord and his sole purpose in life was to complete that goal. So
much so that he considered his own life to be worthless.
25 “Now I know
that none of you among whom I have gone about preaching the kingdom will ever
see me again. 26 Therefore, I declare
to you today that I am innocent of the blood of any of you. 27 For I have not hesitated to proclaim to you the
whole will of God.
Paul clearly said that he told them everything of
God and therefore was innocent of their blood. He told them everything. He
wasn’t careful of what he told them because he was about the work of the Lord,
the work assigned to him. If even his own life was worth nothing…how much stock
would he put on keeping those he spoke to happy?
I think often of the sermon by Jonathon Edwards,
Sinners in the hands of an angry God. How much pain there is in that sermon.
Not pain of the preacher but pain for the person whose soul dangles over hell.
The fervency in that sermon can be felt as it is read. The preacher was
desperate to show the sinner exactly where they stood, how close they were to
spending eternity in hell. That preacher didn’t shy away from telling those
listening to him that they were on the verge of hell, he didn’t back off
because someone might be offended, he didn’t sugar coat the truth. He gave them
a heartfelt sermon filled with the anguish of someone that knows the torture
awaiting the person they are speaking to. He spoke to them as if it was his
only chance to show them what they were toying with.
It was a slap in the face, a hard shaking. A LOOK
at what is about to befall you.
Paul did not teach of Christ because he wanted to
make a living spreading the gospel. He taught of Christ because he had been
appointed that job by the Lord himself. He had nothing to lose in teaching the
Truth of the Gospel and teach it he did. So much so that he was able to say he
had kept nothing from them.
How many preachers today share the entire Truth
with those they are teaching? How many of them give them the wrath of God, the
hate of a holy God, along with the sugar coated love?
Not very many.
Too many of them are busy peddling Christ instead
of serving Him by desperately seeking to share the entire gospel so that they
might say ‘I told you everything. I gave you the Truth, wholly, fully. I put
your soul above my finances. I did not peddle Christ…I served Him.’
Instead of being able to say that, many of today’s
preachers look more like what Paul warned the elders of next…
28 Keep watch over yourselves and all the flock of
which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers. Be shepherds of the church of
God, which he bought with his own blood. 29 I know that after I leave, savage
wolves will come in among you and will not spare the flock. 30 Even from your own number men will arise and
distort the truth in order to draw away disciples after them. 31 So be on your guard!
The preachers in today’s ‘churches’
look more like what the elders were warned against than they do true teachers
of Christ. They distort the truth, whether they do it out of intention or
blindness, distort it they do.
And they do it for a paycheck
that is their main reason for what they do. Even if they claim they are serving
the Lord and would continue to do so without reimbursement most of them would
not continue to devote their lives to preaching if they had to give up their homes
and their tax exempt status…and their paychecks.
Remember that for three years I never stopped warning each of you night
and day with tears.
So much is said in that single
sentence. He didn’t just preach to them, didn’t just teach them, but he warned
them…for three years…night and day with tears. How he must have hurt for those
he was leading…teaching…preaching to. How he must have agonized, not over their
earthly lives because for someone who put no value on their own life…would he
have valued the earthly lives of others…but over their souls, their spirits.
32 “Now I commit you to God and to the word of his
grace, which can build you up and give you an inheritance among all those who
are sanctified.
Here he speaks of an inheritance. This isn’t an
earthly inheritance but their inheritance in the kingdom of God. And he gives
them over to God. He has just told them that he has done all he can for them,
now they are in the Lord’s hands.
And that brings us to the part of these Scriptures
that truly tie to Peddling Christ. The rest was mostly background information.
It was…context. Here is where we see that these verses tie to those that peddle
Christ.
33 I have not coveted anyone’s silver or gold or clothing. 34 You
yourselves know that these hands of mine have supplied my own needs and the
needs of my companions.
He tells them that his own hands supplied not only
for his own needs but for the needs of those that were with him. He has just
finished telling the elders that he spent three years of his life teaching them
and then he says he did not want anyone’s money…not even their clothing. He
devoted three years of his life to them…to their souls…and he wanted nothing
from them. He tells them that not only did he not want their money or clothing…but
he worked to provide for himself and others.
Even as he devoted three years of teaching and
tears to them…he worked to provide for himself.
Do we see that in the preachers of today? Do we
see that in the men that stand in the fronts of the ‘church’ buildings week
after week or do we see men that teach a watered down version of Scripture (at
best) and how they line their own pockets with the ‘work’ of preaching?
Today’s preachers can’t even say…I told you
everything of Scripture…as they peddle the ‘Christ’ that keeps the money flowing
into their pockets.
35 In everything I did, I showed you that by
this kind of hard work we must help the weak, remembering the words the Lord
Jesus himself said: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’ ”
In Paul’s own words…in everything
I did, I showed you…he set the example. He lived out the example. He counted
his life as nothing and he lived to preach of Christ. But he never once made a
career of Christ. He didn’t peddle Christ. He didn’t make the name of Christ
serve him by lining his own pockets with the ‘ill gotten gains’ that he took in
by cashing in the name of Christ.
There are those that will make
money off anything they can get their hands on. They will lie, steal and cheat
to line their own pockets. They will use and abuse those that love them most to
bring in money. In a lot of ways that is exactly what most, if not all, of the
preachers in our ‘church’ buildings are doing today.
They put on a good show, the
sermons…generally…sound at least half ways good. Their numbers grow. They can
show the number of souls they ‘saved’. They can show the number of people they helped.
But they did all that through
their peddling of Christ. They turn Christ into a career that is generally
pretty lucrative and they claim to be ‘called by God’ as they do so.
Look again to verse 35…
In everything I did, I showed you that by this kind of hard work we
must help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus himself said: ‘It is more blessed to give
than to receive.’ ”
Paul spoke of working hard to
help the weak and how it is more blessed than to receive. How many ‘churches’
are financially supporting the elderly that have no family? How many of them
are providing homes to the single mothers?
At the ‘church’ I sometimes
attend I overheard an elderly couple talking to others from the ‘church’. This
couple spoke of how they couldn’t afford a battery…costing about $100.00…for
the husband’s truck and how they needed it because the husband needed to pick
up a child from school and the wife usually had their only working vehicle with
her to be able to work.
I do not know that couple, nor do
I know anything of their situation, but I know that most weeks this ‘church’
takes in approximately $10,000.00 in offerings. Every single week. Why should
there be anyone in that ‘church’ in need of something so minor? With an income
of around $40,000.00 every month in only offerings…that isn’t counting the
money brought in through the ‘churches’ other ventures…why should anyone need
to suffer the inability to keep their vehicle running? Why should single
mothers need to worry over food? Why should the elderly struggle for
medications? Why…why…why…
The Church is the body of Christ…if
something were truly the church, it would be about its Father’s business…just as
Christ was. It would be serving others. It would take those funds that come in
every week…all $10,000.00 of it, and it would give it to those that truly need
it. If they gave so much that they couldn’t keep their building going…they
would find a way to meet without it.
This same ‘church’ runs a food
bank…and asks it’s congregation for donations of food.
Where does the money go? What do
they put their funds to when they aren’t getting single mothers into homes?
When they aren’t footing the bill for the food they give to the hungry? When
they aren’t helping their members with the most basic of needs?
If something wears the title of
church, shouldn’t it be giving more and receiving less?
If they’re serving Christ…and not
making Christ serve them…wouldn’t they be using all of their funds to help
others? Wouldn’t they be giving up much to serve Christ instead of gaining much
as they Peddle Him?
Oh the wisdom we can gain from
the above verses. What standards are set before us in those few verses. Paul
was speaking directly to the elders of Ephesus in those verses but his message,
his teaching, is just as applicable today.
In our modern day ‘churches’ the
word elder is interchanged with preacher. These men that Paul had before him
were the preachers in Ephesus. They were the leaders, the teachers. They were
the ones that today would wear the title of preacher, except…maybe they wouldn’t.
Because these men were truly preaching Christ and so in a country where ‘preachers’
are known by their associations with a ‘church’ building maybe these men would
not hold that position if they lived in America today.
Maybe they would be men that were
going about their lives, working, helping others, and in the course of their
lives…teaching of Christ. Because…these…presumably…were not men that were
peddling Christ. They were men that were being taught by Paul himself.
And Paul certainly never peddled
Christ.
Through Paul’s teachings we can
see that he seemed to put great importance on working with his hands, on
supporting himself, on not making a living off the task he was given by the
Lord.
Preaching, teaching, wasn’t
something he did…it was who he was.
Why do Christians today accept
peddlers when we should expect servants? Why do we sit in the congregations of
preachers that preach to line their own pockets while there are people in their
‘flock’ that are in need?
Why do we overlook this peddling
of our Lord as if it is normal when we have the greatest Teacher to point us to
how a servant should act?
Why do we nod our heads in
approval when a preacher speaks of the ‘congregation’ giving to help someone while
that same preacher still accepts their payment for that week? Why do we give
the preacher credit for the little helps offered while overlooking who it is
that is giving to make those helps possible?
Preachers stand in their pulpits
week after week, sermon after sermon, giving a, generally, watered down or
outright twisted sermon…and even if their sermon is doctrinally sound…they
willingly accept their payment for selling Christ to their audience at the end
of the sermon…or at the beginning.
Even when an offering plate isn’t
passed…that preacher is being paid for the service he is doing the people in
his congregation. His pockets are being filled with their ‘silver and gold’,
his clothes are paid for with their ‘donations.’
Christ is his career and more
often than not it pays well. He happily ‘serves’ the Lord because the name of
Christ is big business. People pay high dollars to ‘give’ to the Lord. They
believe their preacher is doing for them what they could never do for
themselves, they believe is he a worker of God and therefore when they give to
him…they give to God.
What they give to…more often than
not…is the pockets of those that run the ‘church’. They buy Christ with their
offerings and ‘donations’ because it is expected of them and often it is
something they believe they must do to have any hope of salvation. God wants
them to give to the ‘church’ is the general understanding and so…give they do.
And why do they give?
Because they have been
brainwashed by the many preachers that have passed through their lives peddling
Christ as if he was a set of dishes or a new stove.
Christ is where the money is and
therefore these men, these peddlers, these...hucksters…will do all they can to…
Peddle Christ.
Thank you, Lyn. It never fails to amaze me how Christmas always winds up being about giving but usually that giving finds it's way into someone's pocket. And it isn't necessarily the poor, the orphans, or the widows. I was recently reading the book of Matthew to a 10 year old and this child informed me that preachers cheat God out of His money by requiring/encouraging tithing. Out of the mouths of babes...although I will admit this particular child has overheard more than a few conversations to this effect. But this child made a very good point. The money that is put into the offering plate on Sunday is money that isn't put into the bellies of hungry children. The money that is used to pay the electric bill at the 'church' is money that doesn't pay many electric bills for widows. We cannot personally place money into the hands of our Lord but our Lord does tell us how to use the gifts, including money, that he gives to us. And he doesn't tell us to place it into the hands of preachers seeking to line their pockets and fund their buildings.
ReplyDeleteAgain, I thank you, Lyn. I love this. It says so much and takes in so many different denominations. I know the Lord uses today's 'churches' for His purposes but they fall so far from what they could be. It's hard sometimes to remember that they are what He allows them to be and those within their doors are where He wants them to be. Oh, if only they could be what they could be.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lyn. I will enjoy reading it.
ReplyDelete