Is Church for Believers Only?

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Reading an intriguing post about Ted Haggard and his return to the role of pastor triggered a long-held belief of mine:

Church is meant for believers only.

When I consider the state of the American Church, I’ve got to think that our emphasis on encouragingSainte-Chapelle church stained glass lost people to come to our church meetings has only succeeded in diluting our ultimate effectiveness. As it is said: The good is often the enemy of the best.

The early Church model was to send believers out, beyond the doors of the assembly. They shared Christ out in the streets. When the lost outside responded to the message and became believers, they were brought into the church assembly proper.

Today, though, we have believers bringing the lost into the church assembly with the hopes that the church leaders will convert them.

I believe this is a grave error for the following reasons:

1. All teaching and preaching within the church ends up dumbed down. Whether intentional or not, the tendency is to preach and teach to the lowest common denominator—which in this case are the lost. This robs the believers of their opportunity to “go to the next level.”

2. The church remains in justification mode and never moves into sanctification mode, so long-term discipleship suffers. Momentum for mission is lost when unbelievers in the seats cause problems within the church assembly, especially if they have been attending a long time and remain steadfast in their unwillingness to repent and come to Christ. They drain resources that may best be spent elsewhere.

3. The believers in the seats can punt their need to understand the salvation process and how to present the Gospel to others, instead relying on their leaders to do that work through the Sunday meeting. This robs everyone of growth and aborts one of the major bedrock gains of the Protestant Reformation: the priesthood of all believers.

I see this time and again, yet the modern model remains.

What if we made it known that our church was meant for believers only ? How would it change the way we function, grow, and meet the needs of the lost?

Best of Cerulean Sanctum 2009

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Yep, I’m a bit late to this. Forgot that I had not done a Best Of for last year. But as it is almost July, think of this as a sort of Christmas in near-July!

If you are new to Cerulean Sanctum, the Best Of links in the sidebar are a great place to start if you wish to review what’s been written here in the past. I continue to get emails from people who find this blog, then hit those links and write much how they blessed them.


The Great Unconfession

When finding meaning to life proves elusive.


The Rules of Attraction (Spiritual Edition), Part 1

The Rules of Attraction (Spiritual Edition), Part 2

The Church is beautiful and must be attractive, letting the cross alone serve as the barrier to lost people.


The Hell Birds

Birds threatened Abraham’s sacrifice and thus his blessing from God. How the Enemy threatens to steal our blessing, and how we must fight him for it.


Tragedy in Three Acts: A Revolution, a Theory, and a Theology That Devastated Western Christianity, Part 1

Tragedy in Three Acts: A Revolution, a Theory, and a Theology That Devastated Western Christianity, Part 2

An essential primer to understanding how the Western Church’s poor choices in the 19th century have left us flailing today.


The One Ingredient Essential for a Successful Church

It really can be this simple.


Who Is My Neighbor? (Community & Economics Edition)

Imagine a world where people sought their neighbors’ good…


A Dozen Sayings of Jesus That Will Change the World—If Christians Ever Believe Them

One of the most Googled posts here at Cerulean Sanctum. Find out why.


Wicked Systems

Evil doesn’t always have a face.


Is the American Church Too Macho?

We’re always hearing how the American Church has become too feminine. But what if the opposite is true?


Purpose—And Why Christian Men Don’t Always Live Theirs

The factors that work against men living out their destiny in Christ…


Killed All the Day Long

Is living by the sword truly the Christian way? Or are we merely running from martyrdom?


Farewell, Shekinah

If the glory of God departed, would we Christians know it?


Is American Evangelicalism on the Verge of Collapse?—A Response

In which I respond to the ARIS Report’s dire news for Evangelicalism and to the debate between the late Michael Spencer and Leith Anderson over its significance.


The One Who Left the Gate Ajar

What one sheep wandering away says about us.


The Real Sins of Sodom

We all know why God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah. Or do we?


Finding the Center—The Response

We Christian talk a lot about our “center.” But where should it be?


Fumbling the Gospel

The Three Marks of Genuine Power Evangelism

How to mess up power evangelism and how to do it right.


The Error of the Unstrung

What we lose when we go hopping from church to church or when we shun the assembling of the saints…


Equipping the Saints: Request for Reader Info

Equipping the Saints: Too Many Questions?

Equipping the Saints: What We Must Expect…and When

Equipping the Saints: That Catchy Tune

Equipping the Saints: Murder in the Church

Equipping the Saints: Stepping on the Brake

Equipping the Saints: The Simple Genius

Equipping the Saints: The Synergy of Spirit & Word

Equipping the Saints: The Totality of Knowing God Begins Here

Equipping the Saints: Blessed Are the Educated, For They Shall Know God

Equipping the Saints: How to Have a Sweet Hermeneutic

Equipping the Saints: Leaders, Doers, and Community

This series examines how the Church can best equip the saints to be the saints. If you read only one post, check out “What We Must Expect…and When.”


Jumping from Bridges

A church that preaches safety first accomplishes little for the Kingdom.


The Finger in the Mirror

All this hand-wringing in American Evangelicalism about what other people are doing wrong, yet so little wondering whether our mistakes abetted those wrongs…


Bank Account of the Living Dead

For the Christian, whose money is it really?


The Church and the Halloween Alternative Party

When trying not to look like the world ends up looking exactly like it…


The Problems with Christian Fiction

Yep, it sure could get better.


Why Christianity Is Failing in America

Why Christianity Is Failing in America—Further Thoughts

The titles say it all.


How to Fix the American Christian—Lightening the Load

How to Fix the American Christian—Unifying Faith and Praxis

All is not lost if we are prepared to lose ourselves for Christ and His Kingdom.


The Church Amid the Economic Storm

What happens when the offering plate is empty? And why did we not prepare for that eventuality?

Indoctrinating for Heaven or Hell

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I once read about a pastor who was criticized for telling people he was baptizing that when they came up from the water not to be surprised if they were speaking in tongues—which was the case for many. Critics would argue that this set a false expectation.

But in thinking about this, I have to come down in favor of the pastor.

You see, each of us is receiving indoctrination. Just being alive means that a perpetual stream of thought patterns assaults us 24/7/365. Some of that stream is obvious; some is not.

Three responses to indoctrination exist: We can embrace an idea, ignore it, or counter it.

When we look at the American Church today, we have to ask just what kind of indoctrination we are receiving. By and large, the message coming out of our churches sounds like this:

Jesus loves you, even though you sometimes sin. You can rest in His grace and not be worried about doing things for Him except to read your Bible and pray. Show up on Sundays and to the occasional church event. If you are young, go to a good college and get a degree that ensures a solid job working for a reputable company. Find a good-looking Christian mate from among the right kind of people, buy a house, and have 2.2 kids. Make sure those kids are loaded with activities and skills so they can get into an even better, more expensive college. Live in the right neighborhood with the right kind of people who can help you advance in life and build your career. Go on vacations and enjoy yourself. Give some money every once in a while to worthy causes. And most of all, be happy with your Christian experience, even if you sometimes wonder whether it’s really all it’s cut out to be.

Seriously, isn’t that the indoctrination most of us Christians receive from childhood until the day we die?

In stark contrast, here is the Bible’s true indoctrination:

You have been crucified with Christ. Any pretense you had to living like worldly people is dead. Jesus Christ, the Lord of All, dwells inside you. Greater is He that is in you than he that is in the world. You are being changed from one degree of glory to another, moving from sinner to saint. You are seated in the heavenlies with Christ and are empowered by His Spirit. Therefore, nothing is impossible for you. The Christian life is filled with miracles; they should be expected. You overcome the world because Christ did. Take dominion. Make disciples of all nations and tear down strongholds. Worship Christ with your entire being, even if that puts you at odds with the establishment. Pray at all times and in all places, and expect those prayers to come to great fruition.

You will be hated for Jesus’ sake. Because you have counted all things lost for the sake of knowing Christ, you will live a countercultural life that will be misunderstood by most people. For this reason, many of you will be martyred for the Gospel because Christ is in you, is transforming you, and compels you to speak about Him.

Your love will be for all men, no matter race, creed, or color. You will care for the downtrodden and weak. You will repay good for evil and will love and pray for those who persecute you. Your life is now hidden with Christ, therefore, you are not your own. You only do what the Father is doing, not what you want. Your life is expendable for the cause of Christ. Therefore, you should not think too highly of yourself, but in humility you should value others as much as yourself and your family, if God in his graciousness gives you a family. Your primary family is the family of God, and building up the community of faith through the supernatural gifts God has implanted in you is one of your primary reasons for existence. Meet with the community of faith as much as possible and ensure that no one among you lacks for anything needful, even if that means you personally do without the trappings of worldly class and culture. And no matter what kind of life you end up living, you should give thanks to God at all times.

Most of all, never stop laying ahold of Christ and abiding in Him.

We don’t set that kind of expectation in our churches, though, do we?

The Church in America bears little to no resemblance to the Church of the 1st century because our indoctrination is lukewarm or nonexistent. Period. 'The Christian Martyrs' Last Prayer' by Jean-Léon GérômeSome may argue that they do try to indoctrinate people into that more Biblical model. But the fact is that we hear it rarely, and surely not enough to compete with the nonstop message the world gives. And a worldly message abhors a vacuum, too.

As a Church, we have got to get serious about speaking truth to each other. We have got to stop watering down our indoctrination. If we don’t, the world is all set to step in and give us its own deviant set of expectations.

In closing, imagine what the next generation of Christians would be like if we set just the one expectation that they would be martyred for Christ because they love Jesus so much. Too strong? I don’t think so. For too long we’ve been preaching a watered down message that asks nothing. Why then should we be surprised at the powerless outcome?