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"Take
Heed" Ministries
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Cecil Andrews, PO BOX 13, Ballynahinch, BT24 8AL, Northern Ireland. Telephone/Fax 028 9756 5511. E-MAIL - takeheed@aol.com WEBSITE - http://www.takeheed.net |
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The Gospel
According to by Pastor Gary Gilley |
No one has exemplified the
market-driven approach better than Rick Warren, pastor of the huge
This brings us to his most
disturbing alteration, the gospel itself. To charge
In the video that accompanies the
“40 Days of Purpose,”
"Dear God, I want to know
your purpose for my life. I don't want to base the rest of my life on wrong
things. I want to take the first step in preparing for eternity by getting to
know you. Jesus Christ, I don't understand how but as much as I know how I want
to open up my life to you. Make yourself real to me. And use this series in my
life to help me know what you made me for."
Does
On page 58
John MacArthur is on target when
he writes, “Listening to a seeker-sensitive evangelical preacher today, we’re
likely to think it’s easy to be a Christian. Just say these little words,
pray this little prayer, and poof! you’re in the club.” [i] Admittedly, salvation is received by
faith alone in Christ alone, but it is not received by mouthing a little prayer
lacking in biblical content and understanding, with the hopes that you will
find purpose in life. As a matter of fact, one evangelical leader is
reported to have entitled a sermon in response to the seeker-sensitive gospel,
“How to Fill Your Church with Tares.“
MacArthur warns, “People are
breezing through those wide, comfortable, inviting gates with all their
baggage, their self-needs, their self-esteem, and their desire for fulfilment
and self-satisfaction. And the most horrible thing about it is they think
they’re going to heaven.” [ii]
Ladies Home Journal
Warren’s popularity with the
masses has risen to such levels that he has now been asked to write a monthly
column for the Ladies Home Journal. While some may question why a
secular magazine would be interested in what an evangelical pastor has to say,
certainly we can rejoice that Warren has been handed a worldwide forum
(readership estimated at 14.5 million) in which to proclaim God’s truth,
including the gospel, to a largely unbelieving audience. What a
privilege. He has been given a platform from which he can herald the
excellencies of Christ. But, unfortunately, Warren has not done
that. Rather than preach Christ, Warren’s message, as reflected in the
title of his article is, “Learn to Love Yourself.” In his March, 2005
article the man who opened his book with the words, “It’s not about you,” shows
that he really thinks it is. He tells his readership, “To truly love
yourself, you need to know the five truths that form the basis of a healthy
self-image.” What are they? (All the following are direct quotes from
Warren’s article)
Accept Yourself
God accepts us unconditionally, and in his view we are
all precious and priceless. Focus on this and you will not waste any time and
effort trying to be someone you’re not.
Love Yourself
[Warren’s wife affirms], “God really does love me
without strings attached.” [On this basis we apparently have been given the
freedom to love ourselves]
Be True To Yourself
Discover, accept and enjoy our unique
"shape" [which refers to Warren’s S.H.A.P.E. program] ….Be content
with them [our weaknesses].
Forgive Yourself
God doesn’t expect perfection but He does insist on
honesty. When I honestly admit my errors and ask forgiveness in faith, He
doesn’t hold a grudge, doesn’t get even, and doesn’t bring it up again.
We should practice such a forgiving attitude with ourselves.
Believe in Yourself
Start affirming the truth about yourself! The
truth is God has created you with talents, abilities, personality and
background in a combination that is uniquely you. It’s your choice.
You can believe what others say about you, or you can believe in yourself as
God does, who says you are truly acceptable, lovable, valuable and capable.
What a disappointment! Not
only does Warren not share the gospel, the glory of Christ or any theological
truth, he muddies the waters by offering anaemic pop-psychology none of which
is supportable from Scripture. Briefly, remember that Warren is not
writing to believers but to the general populace, which he would have to assume
is largely unsaved. With that in mind consider:
·
To this audience he tells them
that God accepts them unconditionally. Nothing could be further from the
truth. We are unacceptable to God in our natural state. It would
take the death of the Son of God to provide the means whereby we could be
accepted by God and only those who are in Christ are acceptable to the Father
(Ephesians 1:3-14).
·
Nowhere in Scripture are we ever
told to love ourselves. We are told to love God with all of our heart,
soul and mind. We are also told to love others as we love ourselves
(Matthew 22:37-40). Some jump on this phrase, “as yourself,” as proof that
God commands us to love ourselves. That is not true. The Scriptures
tell us we already love ourselves (Ephesians 5:28-29); we do not need to be
encouraged to an inordinate self-love that amounts to self-centeredness.
As a matter of fact, the only passage in the New Testament that actually speaks
of self-love considers it a sinful sign of the last days (2 Timothy 3:2).
Christ calls us to deny self (Luke 9:23) not love self.
·
To tell the unbeliever to accept
and be true to himself is to condemn him eternally. Should one who is
dead in his trespasses and sins (Ephesians 2:1) be told to be content with his
weaknesses? Warren may be attempting to soothe the troubled hearts of his
readers, but he is not pointing them to the Saviour.
·
Not a word can be found in
Scripture about forgiving ourselves. This is a modern psychological
invention, not a biblical principle. God calls us to confess our sins to
Him and He will forgive us (1 John 1:9). We lack the ability and
authority to forgive ourselves; that is God’s prerogative.
How can this evangelical pastor,
who has emerged as the most recognized Protestant leader in the world, one who
is looked to for spiritual insight and guidance by millions, miss the mark so
widely? Perhaps the key is in his view of doctrine. In The
Purpose Driven Life Warren wants us to have no doubt that, when we stand
before the Lord, “God won’t ask about your religious background or doctrinal
views. The only thing that will matter is, did you accept what Jesus did
for you and did you learn to love and trust him” (p. 34)? On the
contrary, what we believe is of utmost importance. Did the Holy Spirit
inspire the Bible for us to ignore what it teaches? Are the words of
Jesus insignificant? Are the doctrinal truths of the New Testament epistles
nothing more than filler? Concerning salvation, it does matter what you
believe about Jesus, the cross, the resurrection, sin, judgment, the gospel and
so forth. Warren is doing a great disservice to the church of God. As
he minimizes the content of the gospel, trivializes Scripture, belittles
doctrine and replaces them with psychology, mysticism and worldly wisdom we are
reminded of Paul’s warning in Colossians 2:8, “See to it that no one takes you
captive through philosophy and empty deception, according to the tradition of
men, according to the elementary principles of the world, rather than according
to Christ.”
My wife and I recently attended
that worship service of an evangelical church, which has adopted the purpose-driven
model, popularised by Warren. The service was disturbing on a number of
fronts, including irreverent worship, unbiblical musical selections and a
general attitude of apathy. But what was most troubling was the
sermon. The pastor, surely a well-meaning and sincere servant of God, had
no clue how to exegete the Scriptures. In his topical message he pointed
the congregation, by means of PowerPoint slides, to dozens of passages.
But in astounding fashion he managed to misinterpret, either through
spiritualising, missing the context, reading a poor translation, etc., every
single passage. Not once did he provide the correct interpretation of any
verse of Scripture, yet as far as I could observe no one seemed to notice or
care. This provided for me further insight into what I have been
suspecting and observing. Warren’s philosophy of ministry, misuse of
Scripture, weak gospel message, infiltration of psychology and disregard for
theology is being embraced by evangelicalism because that is where much of
evangelicalism is already residing. Warren is not so much an initiator as
he is a product of his time. I believe he has caught the wave of what was
already happening in evangelicalism. What he has done successfully is connect
the dots – develop methods, programs and a message that seems to work.
Pragmatism has become the final arbitrator in our society and increasingly in
our churches. “If it works it must be of God,” so goes the common wisdom. But
pragmatism is an unreliable trailblazer. In our more reflective moments few of
us are willing to believe that success can always have the final word. For
example, Mormonism is the most successful “church” in the world today.
Yet, none of us is willing to believe that God is blessing the Mormon Church.
If pragmatism is our guide, we will be hopelessly tossed about by every wind of
doctrine (Eph 4:14). We need something more stable – a true foundation.
Back to the Bible
I Timothy 3:15 describes the
mission of the church as being the pillar and support of the truth. Whatever
else the church does, it must take this commission from God seriously. No one
but God’s church is interested in such a project – it falls on God’s people,
the true church, to be the one place where truth is believed, upheld, and
gloriously proclaimed. Of course, the truth that the church has to offer has a
source – the Word of God. All the church does must emerge from the Scriptures.
Every method, program, evangelistic effort, and message the church declares
must find its roots firmly planted in biblical truth.
This leads us to Warren’s, and his
imitators’, Achilles’ heal: Warren does not begin with the Bible. At first
glance “The Purpose-driven” programs and message are quite attractive. They
seem to speak the language of the people; they are successful; they are
saturated with Scripture, much of its teaching is on the mark, and many
promoting and involved in The Purpose-driven Life are sincere and
well-meaning. But upon close examination there is a fly in the soup. It is no
ordinary fly either – it is a huge, quarter-pounder filled with deadly poison.
We can attempt to ignore the fly, hoping all will be well, but ultimately we
must either deal with the fly or allow it to alter our soup to something
altogether different.
What is the fly? It is this –
Warren does not begin with Scripture, he begins with people. His church was
started on the basis of a survey asking people what they wanted in a church. He
quizzes the congregation on the kind of secular music they like and provides
that kind of music. He starts with the felt-needs of people and then crafts a
message to meet those needs. He determines what he believes people need to hear
and then goes to Scripture to find support for his philosophy of ministry.
It is right here that we need to step
back and carefully examine the Purpose-driven philosophy. I have found if you
skip the foundation undergirding any system that the superstructure can appear
beautiful – for a time. Again take Mormonism. Its outward emphasis on family
values and morals is certainly winsome. It is its foundation which is faulty.
By the same token we need to examine The Purpose-driven Life’s
foundation. Has it been laid after careful study of the Scriptures? Or are its
building blocks made of secular fads, philosophies and pragmatism, mortared
together with careless use of Scripture? If the latter is your conclusion, as
it is mine, what are we to do?
Believe it or not, there is an
alternative to PDL and other such programs. It sounds simplistic and old
fashioned but it has God’s stamp of approval. It is a return to the Bible. Our
pulpits need to return to the unabashed exposition of Scripture. Our Sunday
school classes and Bible studies need to toss the manuals and guides written
about the Bible and open the Bible itself. In our local church we have
dropped all commercial Sunday school curriculum -- which has been watered down
to the point of uselessness – and simply teach the Bible. Our 4-5 years old are
being taught selected biblical stories. Ages 6-7 will go through the Bible from
Genesis to Revelation in those 2 years. Ages 8-9 will go through the Bible yet
again. Ages 10-11 are being taught hermeneutics and Bible study methods and
applying those methods to the study of the epistles. Ages 12-13 are taught
Bible-college-level courses on systematic theology. High schoolers are taught
straight Scripture with emphasis on biblical discernment. At this level
many of them begin to teach children as well as their peers. All adult courses
are focused on the study of Scripture, along with classes on church history,
theology, and biblical living. All sermons are verse-by-verse expositions
of the Word. Certainly our teachers use commentaries and Bible study aids but
it is the Scriptures themselves that are studied.
I have found an amazing thing –
when people are fed a steady diet of biblical truth they have little craving
for cotton candy fads. Why would anyone trade in the fountain of life for
cisterns that can hold no water (Jeremiah 2:13)? Of course many have and
do, but the solution is not to crawl into the cistern, it is to showcase the
fountain.
But this “return to the Bible”
approach has one fatal problem – we are in the midst of a crisis of confidence
in the sufficiency and authority of Scripture. If we do not believe that God’s
Word is sufficient, then we will not showcase it. If we do not believe in the
final authority of the Word then we will look for alternatives. What the church
and the world need today are men and women of God who believe with all of their
hearts in the sufficiency of His Word. We need a church that is not ashamed of
Christ “and His Word” (Luke 9:26); and who will boldly proclaim it from the
housetops. It is reported that Charles Spurgeon once said, “There is no
need for you to defend a lion when he’s being attacked. All you need to
do is open the gate and let him out.” With Spurgeon I believe it is time
to once again open the gate and let the Word do its work.
[i] John MacArthur, Hard to Believe,
(Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2003), p. 12.
[ii] Ibid., p. 13.
Pastor Gary
Gilley is the pastor of Southern View Chapel in Springfield, Illinois, USA.
In the will of the Lord Pastor Gilley will be the guest of ‘Take Heed’
Ministries for a series of meetings in Northern Ireland from Sunday
19 March 2006 – Tuesday 4 April 2006. Closer to the time [DV] his full
schedule of meetings will be posted to the ‘Take Heed’ website at
www.takeheed.net.