Author: Lynn Green

  • ARE YOU NERVOUS?

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    32,900,000 people are.

    “Life’s too short. Have an affair.” That is the motto of Ashley Madison, the website of choice for people who want to cheat on their wife–or husband. (Predictably, 5 out of 6 subscribers are men.)6497720551_79c434a2a0

    So, with the assurance that confidentiality would be thoroughly protected, nearly 40 million people signed up and made confidential information available to potential sexual partners.  They took the risk because the illusion of safe, clandestine adultery was too much to resist.  Now hackers have broken into Ashley Madison and have begun to make all that information available and lots of people are very nervous.  Journalists are combing through the information hoping to find celebrities, politicians and other public figures whom they can “out” and further their own careers.  (I wonder how many of them hope their Ashley Madison profile is safe?)

    I have watched this story unfold over recent days and have taken an interest in how it has been analysed.  One commentator today claimed that the main issue here is web security.

    No it isn’t.

    The main problem here is integrity.

    A futurist recently claimed that, in the near future, it will be almost impossible to avoid being on the web–but the price we will have to pay is transparency.  I don’t like the fact that Google and others have a lot of information about me.  It leads to unwanted ads–and occasional concerns that messages to and from friends can be hacked into. Some of my friends have very important security concerns.  But transparency is not a bad thing.

    Transparency is closely related to integrity.  Some sources define integrity as “adhering to a set of morals or principles”, but the root meaning is closely related to integer.  That means a number that is not a fraction.  A person of integrity is one who is whole, not a sum of fractions, the same at all times, whether in private or in public, No matter when you might see them, even if you have hidden cameras and microphones so everything they do is captured, there will be no surprises, no inconsistencies.  What you see is what you get.

    If there is any one reason for the disillusionment and cynicism about our politicians and other public figures today it is the lack of integrity.  We see the image that their public relations experts project, but we don’t know who they really are.  The flood of scandals involving public figures undermines any confidence that we might have had.  Does it make us long for the days when information was not so readily available, when public figures could safely project an image that would not be shattered by some investigative journalist?  I don’t think so,  We want real integrity.  But is it possible?

    We are made in the image of God and He has given his Spirit to live with us and work with us so we become more and more like Christ Jesus.  He was the very essence of integrity.  His disciples lived with him in every circumstance, under unimaginable pressure and stress, in adulation and vilification.  But they saw what a human being is created to be.  And they so believed in him that they were willing to be martyred rather than deny him and what he represented–the one true human being. They gave their life and breath to be like him.

    I can be a person of integrity.  So can you.  It does not require perfection, but it does require humility.  I will not be free of error, shortcomings, failures and sins.  But I can aim high and readily admit when I have failed–not covering up my imperfections, but exposing them to the light.  The Apostle John wrote, ” God is light and in him there is no darkness at all.  If we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another and the blood of Jesus cleanses us from all unrighteousness.”  That is the path to increasing integrity.

    I am sorry to read that there have already been suicides related to the exposures from the adultery site, Ashley Madison, but these tragedies are not primarily about internet security, they are about integrity.  The lack of integrity and heart-fidelity leads to countless betrayals and tragedies every day.  Sad as the suicides are, their numbers are dwarfed by the vast numbers of broken marriages, betrayed husbands and wives and damaged children.

    Let’s be radical.  That means we get to the root of an issue.  Let’s not focus on protecting our private details, let’s concentrate with all our hearts on integrity!  By the grace of God and the Holy Spirit with us, we can increasingly approximate Christ-likeness.

    Lynn Green

  • SHOULD YWAM EXIST?

    SHOULD YWAM EXIST?

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    Local Churches and Missions Agencies: Competitors or Partners?

    YWAM

    One of my sons and his wife attend a very good local church, one that has provided a spiritual home for this former YWAMer, a place to grow and exercise their spiritual gifts and to find friendship with like-minded Christians.  I am delighted with the church they have found and recently attended, along with other members of my family, a very good Sunday meeting there.

    But his loyalty was tested a bit by a recent article in the magazine that is produced by the network that his church belongs to.  In it, an author made an argument for all mission agencies and other “para-church organizations” to close down because they are a hindrance to the health of the Church.  That old argument gets re-cycled every few years and I will come back to it later in this article.

    Not long after that I spoke with a friend of mine who told me about a book that was recently co-authored by a YWAM leader in which he apparently says that he sees no reason why he or other YWAM staff and students should attend church.  I haven’t managed to get a copy of the book yet, so I won’t comment on the book itself, but the subject clearly needs to be addressed because that is a violation of one of the foundational values of YWAM.

    I am not surprised that this tension between local churches and mission agencies continues to surface from time to time, because the healthy cooperation of local church and global mission is a major threat to the kingdom of darkness.  So I think it is important to lay a foundation of Biblical and historical thinking for the existence of these two major branches of the Church and why their partnership is so important and has such potential for power.impressive church

    Any discussion on this subject must begin with an attempt to define what church is.  This undertaking is fraught with pitfalls and ambushes because no subject has created more division in the history of Christianity.  Nevertheless, here is my attempt!  “The Church is people obeying Jesus together.”  My friend, Roger Forster, Bible scholar, teacher and apostolic leader gave me that definition many years ago and I have not heard anyone improve on it.

    Our tendency, however, is to add conditions and especially organizational or structural prescriptions to that definition—and  that is when we begin to take sides and argue with each another.  When you stop to think about it, many denominations are founded upon some prescription about how the Church is meant to be organized.  Should it have elders or just pastors and deacons? Should it have bishops, archbishops and synods or is each local church sovereign?  Should local churches be governed by all-male leadership teams, or can women exercise governmental authority?  Should the entire congregation participate in important decisions or should the elders or pastor make those decisions?  Is the pastor subject to the elders or the elders subject to the pastor?  The list of issues is probably endless and periodically another movement emerges with a “new revelation” about how church should be organized or structured.  They usually think, by implication, that all other expressions of the Church are, at best, second rate.

    There is a reason why we have so many different opinions on this subject.  Jesus specified almost nothing about how the Church should be organized.  Then, when we read the narrative about how the disciples went about “doing Church”, there aren’t many instructions.  We read the stories in the book of Acts and then the letters to the churches, but we don’t get very many commandments about how to organize the Church.

    I think there is a very important reason for that:  The Church is about people obeying Jesus together, not about how it is organized.  All organization is para-church.  (Para means alongside, so para-church means something that works alongside church.)  I believe God meant the Church to be adaptable to all cultures and all stages of social development so He designed great flexibility into how the Church can be structured.  In some times and some periods of history, vast congregations can be very fruitful with their large buildings and complex staff and management structures.  At other times, small groups meeting in homes, linked together by traveling pastors or teachers have been the most effective structure.Chinese Bible Study

    Any time people try to do anything together, some organizational structure is required.  But the nature of that structure is not the essence of the Church.  People obeying Jesus together is the essence of the Church.  Structure is simply meant to serve the Church’s purposes.  In fact structure is always at its best when it is pragmatic and flexible.  When we get hung up on structural prescriptions, history suggests that the structures become idolatrous and hinder the growth and maturity of God’s people and more often than not, become a source of division in the Church.

    To state it even more clearly, you are in the Church and I am in the Church, not because I go to a particular kind of organization.  We are being Church when we obey Jesus together.  We cannot be so arrogant as to say that one kind of structure is “better church” than another because of the way it is organized.  It is “good church” when it helps people come to faith in Christ, grow into maturity and express the life of Christ to the world.  Organizational structures that help achieve that end are good.  Organizational structures that hinder that end should be changed.

    We might picture it like this:  The way we organize a group of believers can be compared to the scaffolding set up around a building in need of repair.  The scaffolding enables us to strengthen and renew the building where ever it is required but the scaffolding is not the building.Bible Study

    Having said all that, though, the world-wide Body of Christ down through history has been expressed in two broad streams that have quite different organizational structures.  Their structures are different because their purposes are different.  We probably see them most clearly in the scriptures in Acts 13 when the Holy Spirit instructs the prophets and teachers at the church in Antioch to “set apart Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them.”

    From that time on they traveled as a team—sometimes a large team and sometimes a small team—preaching the Good News, establishing churches, strengthening them but working within a team structure rather than the organization of any one local church.  They were often temporarily within a local church as they built it up, but then they moved on in their team.

    Some would say that they remained submitted to the leadership of the church at Antioch, but there is scant evidence for that given the fact that Paul returned to that city and church only twice over the next 20 years and any leadership communication to and from the church in Antioch would have been almost impossible

    From New Testament times, God’s people have been found within two broad streams, local churches and trans-local organizations such as evangelistic associations, mission agencies, aid agencies etc.  In the Roman Catholic and Orthodox expressions of the Church, parishes and orders have existed from the fourth century.  It is important to note that the protestant reformation did not have a significant trans-local (or extensive) expression for the first 200 years.  During that time it did not grow beyond the geographical confines of Europe.  Then, with the advent of denominational mission agencies and then interdenominational agencies, protestant Christianity has grown dramatically around the world.  Today, many very large local churches, sometimes called super-churches, are initiating mission’s efforts from their own congregations.  Like Youth with a Mission four or five decades ago, they are new, have great potential and will learn a lot.  YWAM and other agencies should welcome this development, and offer partnership where ever we might be of assistance.

    Toward the end of the 19th century, a dynamic spiritual renewal movement emerged and became know as the Brethren.  Like many other renewal movements, they emphasized certain organizational characteristics (lay leadership, plural eldership and local church sovereignty) and taught that the only valid organizational expression of the Church was local churches of their particular type.  Although their movement is not numerically strong in the 21st century their ideas about the structural nature of the Church have been widely influential.  As a result, many Christians today have been taught that only local churches are Biblically legitimate and that all other organizational expressions of the Church should be disbanded.

    Although this view claims a Biblical rationale, any effort to find prescriptions for Church organization in the Bible will quickly cast doubt on the validity of any and all expressions of the Church today.  Although it is fair to say that the Bible does not describe anything like today’s missionary societies, neither does it describe the existence of many different local churches within a given town or city, or denominational structures, or networks of churches, or Bible training colleges, or even church buildings…the list goes on.

    I will summarize all this by saying that the Church today, as throughout history, has a very wide range of organizational expressions, but they fall into two very broad categories:  those whose aim is to work out the Christian faith locally and those who aim to spread the Good News to new places around the world.  Given that these two broad streams exist, the important thing is how they serve one another.

    The Church is always at its best when the local churches send their best to take the Good News to what the Apostle Paul referred to as the “regions beyond”, and when the extensive expressions of the Church focus on establishing and strengthening local churches.  This partnership is the one that God has chosen to change the entire world!small church

    So that is why it is important that YWAMers and any other members of Christian organizations should be active members of local churches.  Even though their travel schedules and other ministry obligations might limit their participation, they should demonstrate a sacrificial commitment to the health of their local church.  Their faith should be expressed in the place where they live through a local body of believers.  And that sacrificial service should, hopefully, make it easier for local church leaders to see the importance of sending those who are called out from their church to world mission.

    YWAMers have no reason to be unsettled by those who question the validity YWAM.  But we also have no excuse to not be committed to a local body of Christians!
    Lynn Green

  • THE PARTYING MESSIAH

    THE PARTYING MESSIAH

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    So, I am fasting for a few days.

    I want to see some breakthroughs in my personal life and in some ministries I am responsible for, so I am fasting.  Coincidentally, my New Testament reading today was in Matthew 11 where Jesus refers to the reputation of John the Baptist contrasted that with what people were saying about him.  I like the way it is stated in The Message.  Jesus said,

    “John came fasting and they called him crazy.  I came feasting and they called me a lush, a friend of the riffraff.”

    What if Jesus had lived like John?  I think the world would be a different place.  If he had been an ascetic, like John, Christianity would be focussed on seeking God’s approval via self-denial and hardship.  Of course, there have been those Christians who pursued lives of great sacrifice and self-denial.  One of my favourite sites during the Reconciliation Walk was the ruins of the monastery of St Simeon the Stylite in Syria.  (I wonder if it has been destroyed by ISIS.)  He denied himself to an extreme; he lived on top of a fifty-foot-high pillar for 36 years and was reported to have stood on the top of the pillar, without eating or drinking or sitting down, for the entire duration of lent every year.  But if we all focussed on such extreme austerity and hardship, there would be few, if any followers of Jesus today.

    Self –denial was not a significant part of my church background, but when I first joined YWAM, several of our teachers at the School of Evangelism recommended fasting as one of the means of grace towards spiritual growth.  One of those, Arthur Wallis, wrote a classic on fasting entitled, “God’s Chosen Fast”, taken from Isaiah 58.  I was inspired to begin to fast from time to time.  At one point, a friend and I decided to go on a fasting retreat for ten days.  In all of human history, no period of ten days has passed so slowly!  We would rise early, read our Bibles and have our personal prayer times, then get together for worship, then go for a prayer walk, then talk for a while then look at the clock—we had just managed to get to mid-morning!  Time crawled.

    If you feel that the pace of life is too hectic and the days, weeks, months and years are whizzing by, try taking a fasting retreat.  You will feel you have all the time in the world!

    They called Jesus a lush, a party man, a heavy drinker and eater.  Don’t you find that amazing?  John the Baptist lived in the desert and wore rough uncomfortable clothes and existed on locusts and honey.  (I could do the honey, but haven’t tried locusts yet and have no plans to.)   AND he was powerfully anointed.  So we might expect Jesus to adopt the same life-style, but he didn’t.  Time and again, we read in the gospels that Jesus was at a feast or a party.

    That is not to say he was a stranger to fasting.  He prepared the way for his ministry by first being baptized and then the Holy Spirit led him into the wilderness where he fasted for 40 days and nights.  Then he first began to demonstrate who he was by attending a wedding reception and helping out the host by transforming drinking water into the finest wine.  So what can we conclude from these contrasts?  That God blesses a life lived in obedience and that He has unique purposes for each life and, when it comes to sacrifice and hardship, there is a wide spectrum of callings and grace.

    So why fast, and what do we mean when we use the term?  When I first learned about fasting, I understood it to mean that I should stop eating any food, but I could drink water.  Later I learned that there are different kinds of fasts with varying degrees of sacrifice.  Some people fast sugar, or other treats.  Sometimes we speak of the “Daniel fast”, which means eating only vegetables and drinking water.

    I think fasting has a few purposes and benefits. Firstly, it strengthens our own will and self-discipline.  To many modern people that seems a strange idea, but the ability to deny ourselves is a vital part of becoming all that we can be.  Fasting is also about sacrifice and it has often been said that “sacrifice precedes the Glory.”  If we want more of God in our lives, then sacrifice is one of the paths to more.  We also fast to promote the growth of our spiritual capacity and abilities.  The scriptures speak of “crucifying ourselves” so that Christ can live in us and that means, in part, supressing physical desires to increase spiritual desire.

    I have a friend who fasts all food and water until 5 p.m. each day for five days a week. Before I met him,  I would have considered that to be too extreme, but this man’s life demonstrates that it is his calling and he has grace for it.  He has an intimacy with God that is amazing and I have no doubt that the fasting has been an essential part of developing that closeness with his Father in heaven.

    But not many of us are called to that kind of life.  However, all of us should be acquainted with the benefits of sacrifice and fasting is an important way of choosing to embrace sacrifice.

    In another place in the gospels, people were questioning Jesus and the life-style he and his disciples were leading.  They pointed out that John’s disciples fasted but his followers didn’t.  This was his reply,  “Do wedding guests mourn while celebrating with the groom? Of course not. But someday the groom will be taken away from them, and then they will fast.”

    He has been taken—for the time being—so we fast.

  • Mugged by an Apology

    Mugged by an Apology

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    A few people have asked for a copy of the covenant that was made between Japanese, Korean and Chinese church leaders when we were in Japan a couple of months ago, so I have copied it below.  It was only possible because we were in a spiritual atmosphere where all our hearts were softened by God’s presence.  We were experiencing the joy of family love, which is a gift from the Holy Spirit.  I suppose it might have been made possible by other means too.  If we had gathered to review the history of conflict  (and that would have taken many days) and if that review had been done in a spirit of honesty and deep humility, we might have come to a point of trust that was deep enough to risk an act of reconciliation.  But there is always the risk of adding further offense if any part of the process is flawed.

    I will come back to that, but first, here is the covenant that was made:

    “On this day, May 4th 2015, people from 31 nations gathered to worship and obey God. Father God called His people together as family. Chinese, Japanese, and Korean believers agreed to a binding contract that they will love, honour and uphold one another for the sake of the nations. Each agreed that they would no longer allow the pain of past events to blind them to the pain of the other. In mutual contrition and forgiveness they embraced one another in covenantal love initiated by the Holy Spirit. This alignment of God’s people restored authority and power in the heavenlies.

    They returned to their mother countries and the many nations where they live, determined with the power of the Spirit to remain connected in love. That love will not be swayed by politics, media or any other divisive influence. Rather, their love for one another will spread to all believers that God may bless their nations and give them peace.”

    Just a few weeks later, a Chinese person contacted me to ask some questions.  She had been in a meeting with a few Japanese and Koreans where the goal was reconciliation between the three peoples represented.  But she came away from the meeting having to work hard to not be offended at the way she was treated.  So what went wrong?

    Actually it reminded me of a funny conversation I had with a nationally recognised leader of Afro-Caribbean churches some years ago.  There was a period of a couple of years in the 1980s when we seemed to be “discovering” reconciliation and there was a lot of dialogue between Christians about slavery.  There had been race riots in Liverpool, Bristol and London and these were three of the cities that had prospered, at least partially because of the slave trade two centuries earlier.   I was in meetings where the Holy Spirit had worked deeply and there were tears and apologies and forgiveness.  But not all reconciliation attempts were successful.  The Afro-Caribbean leader said,  “If one more white Christian stands up in a meeting and asks me to forgive him for slavery, I will punch him on the nose!”

    We talked further and I understood what he was saying.  Apologies that cost nothing mean nothing.  In fact, they can turn out to be another offense.

    My Chinese friend felt that she was expected to forgive the Japanese people who stood before her, but she wasn’t ready.  She had a lot of questions about what they understood in relation to the Japanese occupation of China during the Second World War.  She wondered if they understood what a deep wound that was in the identity of the Chinese people.  She also needed time to think about the implications.  Maybe some of her family members would hear that she had expressed forgiveness to Japanese people and they would be angry at her for doing that.  There were many thoughts running through her mind.

    Unfortunately, she had a Japanese person kneeling before her and asking forgiveness and there was a small crowd of people waiting for her answer.  She had to say “You are forgiven.”  But, didn’t seem right to her and she left the meeting deeply conflicted.  She had been mugged by an apology!

    Reconciliation within the Body of Christ is vital and it is one of the main things that the Holy Spirit is doing today, but there are a few principles that, if adhered to, will make reconciliation deep, meaningful and lasting.  The first one is this:

    If we feel we are to apologise for an historical offense, the person whose forgiveness we are seeking must be able to feel that we are an appropriate representative of the offending people and that we understand the issues and that our apology has cost us something.

    Well that is a start on an important and interesting subject.  But this is long enough.  More later.