Category Archives: Church Tracks

Church. When you come together, everyone has a hymn, or a word of instruction, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation.
(1 Corinthians 14:26)

Hope in a Pope, Celebrity, and Pastor Disaster

About the only time I get a glimpse of news via one of the old warped media outlets is while watching some local news when they ruin their local newscast by parroting something from their national affiliate news feed. Recently I have taken note of all the hoop-la over the new Pope of the Catholic Church. While I seldom spend time trying to analyze the Catholic Church, I can’t help it now because of the enormous ceremony, large crowds, and watchful eyes looking for a smoke signal… that alone is laughable…sorry if I offend any Catholics who might read this. The Pope, be he the outgoing or the incoming IS A MAN, for heaven’s sake. The older I get the less I accept human behavior that puts excessive attention on a single man, or woman. That goes for those who excel in sports, those who draw big crowds and lots of money at music concerts, Obama worshipers and big time preachers.

Man Centered Religion. What really pierced me deep in my spirit concerning the Pope is the fact that so many people in the world put such adoration toward a single man. I know a number of people who I consider to be, in my words, low-level heroes, people who I admire more than the average man on the street, but none would cause me to get fired up like it appears multitudes do when a Pope enters the spotlight. I wouldn’t really care so much if he did not supposedly represent a huge group of Christians. That does nothing in my opinion to advance the cause of Jesus Christ.

Some say Martin Luther didn’t go far enough when he protested all the shenanigans and evil deeds in the Catholic hierarchy. From my studies, I would say that is true. Luther translated the Bible, only available in the Latin language to the Germans, into the German language, which was a very good work. However, Luther started his own congregation, and from that point forward he and the other reformers discarded one hierarchical head, the priest, only to put in another, the pastor. Protestants do not have anything equivalent to the Pope, and that is good. However, we have thousands of pastors, most of who are considered to have some kind of rank or authority above everyone who is a part of that particular congregation. There are pastors of mega-churches and thousands of want-to-be’s. The New Covenant is not a top down hierarchy, but we have many men acting that way.

In Old Testament times, the elders of Israel decided they wanted to be like other nations and have a king rule over them. (1 Sam 8:4) They made their appeal to Samuel, he took the matter to God, and was told that the people wanted a king because they were rejecting God. I have read the opinions of several Christian writers who basically say man is inclined to “want a king.” I have been a part of church congregations where the pastor was elevated to “king-like” status as evidenced by the behavior of many of those in the congregation. Some of those pastors rejected that idea and remained humble. Some took the mantle and cultivated the idea. God, speaking through the prophet Jeremiah, basically said that priests and prophets often act on their own, without God’s input, AND the people love it that way. See Jeremiah 5:31. So it appears that as long as men seek power and authority over others, there will be a group of people who love to be ruled that way. From a practical standpoint today, people come and go in congregations. If a pastor has that authoritarian mentality, then those who reject it, leave. Most of those who remain are likely ones who love it that way. Think about the last part of Jeremiah 31 “My people love it like this, but what will you do at the end of it?”

Access to God. I often think about the biblical account of the curtain between the holy place and the holy of holies that split from top to bottom when Jesus died on the cross. (Matt 27:51) The New Covenant was ushered in, and Jesus, the Messiah became high priest in a greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with human hands. Jesus entered the holy of holies as a one-time sacrifice. (Heb 9) Jesus is our high priest. We have direct access. No more blood sacrifices are needed; mere men are no longer to serve as conduits so we can have access to God.

I spent many years beginning at six years of age sitting in classrooms under the teaching of other people. I did some quick calculation and found that the number of hours was 12,000 in elementary and secondary (12 yrs), 1000 in undergraduate college (4 yrs), and about 500 (5 yrs) in grad school. (This doesn’t include the many years sitting in Sunday school and in church sanctuaries. Anyway my secular schooling added to 13,500 hours in class, listening to someone talk. That’s painful just to think about now. Then I had about 2000 hours (11 yrs) when other people suffered the pain of listening to me. There is a point I want to make here. My best learning did not come inside a lecture room; it came when I was alone with books and notes. It takes effort to learn.

In this era I listen to some excellent teachers at times, but my best Bible learning is with God, the Holy Spirit, and His Book, no one else around, and no noise from a radio or TV. The Bible says, “Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” (2 Tim 2:15) If we have direct access to God then we need to study, not depend on someone to teach us.

Commitment, Celebrity and Discernment. Christian pro football player Tim Tebow is a young man to be admired, a low-level hero of sorts. He made a lot of headlines recently because he cancelled a speaking engagement at a church congregation in Dallas, TX. I won’t throw any stones at him because I want to save them all to throw at the leadership at the congregation in Dallas. This congregation in downtown Dallas, established more than 100 years ago has a brand new campus, billed as a “spiritual oasis” with a total cost according to reports, somewhere between $115 and $130 million. The grand opening announcement listed some big name speakers including Tebow. Why? Yes, it is quite an accomplishment to build a campus that costly, but why did they need the celebrities? It amuses me when the religious guys do this type thing and then say, “to the glory of God.” I know they may mean well, but it just smells like, “LOOK WHAT WE DID, to the glory of God.” Some people would say I am being carnal by criticizing them. Let me say this about unsaved carnal people; they can often pick up on hypocrisy quicker than believers do. Some Christians are just as sold out to ‘MY CHURCH & MY PASTOR” in the same manner that many are sold out to Obama, because he’s our man. There can be cult-like blindness that clouds one’s discernment. My personal opinion is that discernment is a quality severely lacking in the Body of Christ today. You can find a lot of Christians who are committed, but to what or whom?

In the days of Noah, after the flood, God told the people to scatter throughout the earth and populate it. However, when the people found the plain, or valley in Shinar, they prospered and got some different ideas. They were apparently the first to learn how to make brick and then build with them. While we don’t know why they started building the Tower of Babel, we do know they said, “ let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven; and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth.” (Gen 11:4) Bad idea.

My bellwether for Congregations. I have an issue that serves as a bellwether concerning the health of a church congregation, particularly its leadership. You are free to disagree. Does the congregation, specifically its elders, pastor, or whoever is calling the shots, promote Christian schooling? If not, the congregation is severely lacking. Why? If there is ANYONE, in 2013, who honestly thinks government-run schools are acceptable indoctrination centers for our children, seriously, that person needs some down time alone with the Lord. Notice I didn’t say people who have their children in government schools are the problem. The problem among Christians is clearly the leadership. (click here for details) Christians want to please God, and many believe they are doing so by following the leaders of their congregation. I love how Bruce Shortt put it in his update reports concerning the “Continuing Collapse” (of public schools). At the end of each report he had this question (may not be his exact quote) “If your pastor is not promoting Christian schooling, then why is he still your pastor?

Follow the Money. The $115 million campus in Dallas has a sanctuary that seats 3000 people. That’s a lot of money per seat. I wonder how well the widows are taken care of, or is that the responsibility of governments? Do they have young struggling families who can’t afford to enroll in that congregation’s school? They do have a Christian school and that’s a plus with my bellwether. If one has young children the cost is just under 10 grand per year per student, but high schoolers are charged over $14,000 per year. Who are we kidding here? This congregation is some kind of elitist organization, and I bet they don’t publish the salaries of the pastor/CEO and other staff either. I don’t have a profile on the people who attend, but $14,000 per high school student? Two of our five children have four children each. I’d be happy if it were 10 each. Anyway, with four children in a family with perhaps two in high school and two younger, that would be close to $50,000 per family, to send them to that private Christian school.

If the new campus in Dallas is a spiritual oasis, I have to ask, “Are the leaders in that congregation satisfied that it is likely that most of the children who attend Sunday morning services are held as prisoners in a desert far from any “spiritual oasis” five days a week as Caesar provides them with propaganda drawn from a poisoned well?

If the congregation in Dallas in any way serves as a microcosm of the rest of America, it is no wonder that most children from Christian homes are found in the clutches of government-run schools because true Christian education five days a week is not a priority of so-called church leadership throughout America. And the people in Dallas call their new complex a “spiritual oasis”? It reminds me of the controlling big shots in D.C.; you know those with fatter wallets when they leave than what they had when they first ascended to seats of power and authority. They are not representing average people; their function is to serve themselves and other fat-wallet elites.

Often you can find a predictable scenario of mind control and manipulation that comes from these type leaders in church congregations when they tell the pew-sitters they are robbing God if they fail to give generously to the multimillion dollar fund that will provide needed trimmings planned for “the oasis!” …..“So come on in and sit in the plush environment, put your tithes and generous seed money in the bucket passing under your nose because it is your gift to God that ensures he will bless and not curse you. And tomorrow morning you should say a prayer over those four children of yours just before they board the big yellow paddy wagon. Of course, if you have an extra $50,000 lying around you can enroll them at the Oasis Academy. Praise God.”

Tebow caught a lot of flack from Christian writers and radio talkers for backing out of the speaking engagement, but I never noticed anyone making an analysis of the congregation’s elitism. At this point, I might be more inclined to criticize him for agreeing to speak there in the first place. It was his celebrity they wanted as a part of their window dressing at the oasis.

Noah’s descendants in the plain of Shinar were apparently the first to use brick and mortar. They started building a tower because they COULD. America has been prosperous like no other country. Do we construct large meeting places so Christians can gather once or twice a week because WE CAN?

Meeting in Towers Above Ground Versus Meeting Underground. Here is a side bar assignment for you; do an Internet search for “China underground church growth.” Or, do it for North Korea. You may even find some comments like I did, comments from Christians in China about America’s large church buildings… revealing for sure.

There is scarcely little evidence in the New Testament that congregations were to be formed into large groups and lead by a single priest, pope or pastor. To the contrary, men were instructed to meet in groups where anyone with a psalm, a teaching or revelation could speak up. The model can be found at 1 Cor 14:26-40.

I have been predicting for several years now that the Church in America will go underground. We are well on our way, because the trend has been gaining momentum. By trend, I mean the Christian bashing by media, the actions of a tyrannical government that continually sticks their proverbial finger in the eye of all things Christian, and even the attitudes of many businesses. As our civil lawmakers and bureaucrats decide parts of the Bible are hate speech, it is just a matter of time before the whole Bible will be censored. It is already banned for use in some places.

One last ominous image. As a part of the celebration of the Dallas church congregation, a video on their web site shows three men, the pastor, the mayor (a member) and chairman of the board I think, pressing on a big red button to start. Start what? When they pushed the red button the implosion of all the old buildings of that congregation began. The new campus was built on a different spot. On one level, it was neat to watch the old buildings fall from controlled explosions.

However, on a different level I had this gut wrenching feeling; I saw those buildings fall, and immediately had visions of the Twin Towers, and building Number Seven in New York City on September 11, 2001. Like a flash of lightening, I then had the image in my mind of the new campus I had seen on the video, with the glitz, glamour and the high tech things for which they were proud as per their narrative. Like a second flash of lightening, the thought came to me, “How long will this stand before it too implodes?” These were uncontrolled thoughts; they were there and in rapid fire.

The next thing that came to my mind was the Scripture: “However, the Most High does not dwell in sanctuaries made with hands, as the prophet says: Heaven is My throne, and earth My footstool. What sort of house will you build for Me? says the Lord, or what is My resting place? Did not My hand make all these things? (Acts 7: 48-50)

Is the new campus in Dallas a spiritual oasis, or is it something more akin to the actions of the people in the plain of Shinar, who suffered from prosperity, pride and stupidity?

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On Choosing Leaders by Dan Smithwick

Below is a letter written by Dan Smithwick and forwarded to me by one of the recipients. Seldom have I seen anything written with which I so completely agree. I would support Smithwick at more than 100 percent were it possible, and that goes for the entire letter including the brilliant Ps at the bottom. If you think you lack the time to read it all, at least scroll down and read the Ps. – Dennis Rowan

On Choosing Leaders
Dan Smithwick
President, Nehemiah Institute

November 7, 2012

A good friend died this week; he was simply known as “Republic.”

Exodus 18:21 (KJV)
Moreover thou shalt provide out of all the people able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, and rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens.

Romans 13:4 (KJV)
For he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid; — for he is the minister of God, –.

These verses of scripture have long been used by the Christian Church to foster an attitude of how people of any faith should select civil leaders for providing an orderly, God-fearing society based on objective truth for the way life is to be done. For decades in America, we have ignored the commands of these verses- to be a Bible-based community of people. This week, in my opinion, we struck bottom. We chose an administration that will not base public policy around the axiom of ‘hating covetousness,’ but rather will likely promote it at every turn of society. There can hardly be anything more threatening to a nation’s liberty than such an action.

Yet, we must remember, God is sovereign. He was neither surprised nor disappointed with the results of this democratic selection of leaders. I say this because of another ‘proverb’ that Christian philosophers have stated for eons: God always gives His people the type of government they deserve.

We simply do not deserve liberty and prosperity. What would you point to over the past 40 years to convince God that liberty and prosperity should be the ‘fruits of our labors?’ Or that because of our faithfulness to His Word we are deserving of good things? I would like to see your list.

What convinces me that we ‘got what we deserve’ this week, are the results of biblical worldview understanding that I have been observing from a front-row seat for over two decades. Most of the recipients of this short essay know of our worldview assessment program called, The PEERS Test. It measures a person’s basic worldview beliefs in five areas: Politics, Economics, Education, Religion and Social Issues (PEERS). The results are then categorized into one of four worldview classifications: Biblical Theism, Moderate Christian, Humanism, or Socialism. Please note: Socialism is based entirely on the attribute of covetousness.

For a quarter of a century of PEERS testing, with approximately 100,000 tests of youth from Christian homes, we have been observing results move away from a mature Biblical Theistic worldview, toward a Socialist worldview. Let me share a very recent example:

Last week we conducted PEERS testing for a pricy Christian school in one of our nation’s largest cities. This is a large school with the following claim in its mission statement:

[name] is an independent, Christ-centered college preparatory school that integrates learning with biblical faith — for the Glory of Jesus Christ.

Note: I am not criticizing the statement per se, all Christian schools have similar such statements about why they exist. What I am criticizing is that the mission statement does not fit with their results.

The rating of worldview understanding of the PEERS test is based on the following numerical scale (+100 to -100):

70—100 Biblical Theism

30 – 69 Moderate Christian

0 – 29 Secularism/Humanism

-100 – 0 Socialism

About 5% of Christian schools score in top category, over half score in the bottom two categories, with the trend dropping about 2-3 points per year for 25 years.

The school I referred to above had a composite PEERS score of 13.88, well on the way to Socialism as a desired worldview.

The outcomes at this school are extremely relevant to what happened in America this week, politically speaking. Here is why:

There is a sixth index on the PEERS Test called, Limited Government. This index includes all test items (out of 70 total) that have any view with the question, “What is the role of civil government regarding the topic being addressed?” This school (with testing from two high school grades) scored -1.30 in the Limited Government category, ranking them in the Socialism category of the PEERS test. Yet, 75.4% of the students marked themselves as “Republicans.” I am convinced that they selected Republican because their parents have been telling them for years, “We are REPUBLICANS!” But what these kids want is a Republican president who offers a Socialist view of life.

Here is one example from the PEERS Test that cause them to think in this direction:

“In a democratic society, citizens have a civil right to an education and this right must be protected and enforced by civil governments.”

Both constitutionally and biblically speaking, this statement is wrong. Education is not a “right,” (entitlement) and civil government does not have responsibility for education, certainly not at the high school level. Note: I am happy to provide a detailed Position Paper on this test question if you care to read further.

But for this Christian school, 94.7% of the student body missed this test question, siding with the Humanist/Socialist view- “education is my right.”

If our young people (Church attending families) believe that they are “owed” an education which others are obligated to provide, guaranteed by our civil government, it is a very short step to also view things such as a job, housing, health care (the good life!) as a “right to be guaranteed.” May I say Greece?

This is Socialism; this is covetousness.

But this is not the worst of why we (the Christian community) deserved the political results that we received. In spite of all the rhetoric from the Christian community about the need for godly values and principles, 85% of church families still send their children to the government’s school system, an officially Socialist institution where entitlement thinking is the norm. Yes, we are just getting what we deserve. The political results of this week in America were simply the result of decades of educating youth that government is there to “ensure quality life.” The winning party presented this argument better than the losing party.

So, what now?

I don’t pretend to have a clear answer on where we go from here- how to once again become a nation based on Exodus 18:21 and Romans 13:4, and all that that means. But this much I do know; we don’t need a 4-year plan to right the ship; we (the Christian community) need something like a 24-year plan. We need to think long-term, very hard and very carefully. Before thinking about ‘who we will nominate next time,’ we MUST rethink our views about leadership. And we MUST educate our youth with this view of life.

I have been working at Nehemiah Institute for 25 years; a ministry we founded in 1986. Our mission is all about doing just what Nehemiah of the Old Testament did: rebuild a fallen city. We are a fallen city today.

If you share the views I have expressed here, and want to help, and I do mean HELP, then I would like to hear from you. I want to take Nehemiah Institute to a new level, very likely into new hands that can truly result in a rebuilding of America. It will be hard, long and expensive.

Like Nehemiah of old, I want to start building a team of people who are willing to rebuild “in front of their own house,” (Nehemiah, chapter 3). If this is your heart today, send me a note, please:

dan@nehemiahinstitute.com

If you would like to discuss this matter in person, give me a brief summary of your views and a phone number.

Dan

Ps- If it is your ambition to simply find a way to help get more Republicans elected to civil office, let’s not waste my time or yours.

Also, please circulate this article to others as you like.

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Filthy Lucre: Part 3 – How Money Has Produced Cowards in America’s Pulpits

This may appear to be an article describing how pastors are afraid of the federal government, more specifically the Internal Revenue Service, the fear of having their tax-exempt status yanked should they speak out about certain issues, or their fear of criticizing certain people and agencies. The answer is no, it is not about fear of the IRS, because that fact has already been aptly demonstrated ever since President Lyndon Johnson painted the church into that tax-exempt corner several decades ago. Besides, if a church very simply drops the tax-exempt status and pays the taxes on church contributions it could solve that problem. It would honor God by showing that we fear Him more than man, and then possibly God would honor the pastor and his congregation by providing extra revenue to pay the IRS. He is a big God, right? I wonder if the “Word of Faith” people ever preach on that topic.

There is one common thread between what I wrote above and what is to follow below; the fear of man rather than God. Pastors fear those who sit in the pews, fear that people might close their wallets when certain topics are breached, specifically public schools and the harm they do to our children. And I am not talking about closing the wallets on a given sermon; it could be that some people would leave the congregation permanently and go look for a church congregation that is more seeker-friendly…where have I heard that term before?

Oh, now I remember, seeker-friendly means something like this: people (some Christian, some not) are seeking a congregation that will give them what they want to hear… the Bible calls it itchy ears. I plead guilty to that charge; I’ve done it multiple times. There is one concept worth noting at this point. Truth never changes while lies have to be told in an attempt to cover previous lies. Another way to put it is that truth-tellers have one message while liars have multiple stories, building lie upon lie.

Let me point out two truthful things at this point:
1. A pastor who tells the truth (all, not part) will drive some people away because for some reason they do not wish to hear it.
2. A pastor who drives many people away will likely encounter reduced income into the church coffers.

I could just stop here and say, “There you have it folks, preachers do what they do to keep the money flowing into the church collection vessels (when I was a kid they were plates whereas today’s big men of faith use buckets). Of course coins won’t roll out of a bucket as they could from a plate.

I hesitate to call half-truths a lie, but that is one definition of half-truths. No pastor can preach on every single verse or topic in the Bible, although meeting and doing nothing but reading the Scriptures would at the very least be the Truth. I am more than a bit troubled (irritated is more accurate), that so many topics clearly shown in the Bible are all but ignored as I have witnessed while listening to thousands of sermons over seven decades. My wife will verify that I get irritated when I hear half-truths from the pulpit. I tell her it is “tweaking the Scriptures.” It is one thing to tweak the Scripture to make a valid truthful point, and yet quite another to use the tweaks of truth to tell a lie…I have seen it happen from the pulpits.

Public schools are not specifically mentioned in the Bible. Neither are hand held mobile phones. God did not institute public schools. I do feel confident that God did not institute the church and then expect her to put her children in public schools that reject all things Christian. I tell in all honesty, that I have NEVER heard a message from the pulpit about Christian schooling…NEVER.

I am lead to believe by my own observation and the testimony of many others that the primary reason pastors do not preach about the merits (mandate might be better) of Christian schooling versus the dangers of public schooling is because most of the adults in the pews are a part of public schools as parents and/or teachers. Such messages could offend people and reduce church income.

Cowards!

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