Sunday, January 16, 2011

The Simple Church


Our preaching series to begin this year has been about asking the difficult question – Are we the church God wants us to be? It's a chance to ReFocus our spiritual lens on the simple mission of the church – to love God and love people.

Sometimes in order to accomplish more we need to simplify and do less. It is possible that our approach in "doing" church (and life) has gotten so complex that we're not as effective as we can be. How can there be time in a follower's life to "go and be the church" if he or she is expected to attend church three or four times a week, be in a small group, serve in a ministry, etc.? The truth is that we're good at "doing" church, but are we good at "being" the church?

The church in Thessalonica became a "model to all believers" (1:7), a group of people "making it their ambition to lead quiet lives." Their lifestyle was—in a single word—simple: simple Christians living simple lives. In contrast, Moses was not living in simplicity, and was confronted by his father-in-law to change. Solomon in Ecclesiastes reveals a life of regrets. He pursued wine, women, work, wealth and wisdom, a complex life. Yet, in the end, he admitted the conclusion of the matter: fear God and keep His commandments for this is the whole duty of man. He admitted there was a more simple way to live.

Are we living lives in community that appear to be simple or complex? Like Solomon, will we realize that a simple life of pursuing God is what truly matters in life? Like Moses, will we take deliberate action to simplify our life?