Acceptance is currently a big issue in
the lives of many churches around the world. It involves a serious review of
what is acceptable to the 21st century Christian community. It’s an
important component of who we are and how we effectively witness to the wider
world around us. Every generation has to wrestle and struggle with this; every
congregation has to work through these tough issues.
Sometimes we get so busy defining the
rules and regulations that we neglect to see where the Holy Spirit is actually
working in our communities. We get so caught up in the theological civil war
that is going on, that we forget about the healing work that the Holy Spirit is
ministering to a much greater broken world.
This is not new or unique to our current
generation. It happened in the First Century in Jerusalem where the Christian
Church was initially started. The fifteenth chapter of Acts reveals to us the
dilemma between Traditionalists and Transitionalists. Some Jewish Christians insisted
that all male Gentile converts needed to be circumcised. Others, like Paul and
Barnabas, fiercely argued that Christianity had progressively moved on from
adhering to Jewish traditions.
Eventually, it was Peter who settled the
dispute which threatened to divide and destroy the Young Church. Instead of
looking back to the past or seeking a new paradigm, the Big Fisherman reminded
everybody to look for the Holy Spirit and to seek to come alongside wherever
the Holy Spirit was working among the people. Grace and salvation, acceptance
and mission were meant to be discovered, encouraged, and supported wherever, whenever,
and however the Holy Spirit chose. It was not a matter of keeping up with
tradition; it was essential to keep in step with the Holy Spirit.
As we celebrate Pentecost this coming
Sunday in our churches, congregations, and Christian communities, we should ask
ourselves these important questions: where is the Holy Spirit working in my
community? How can I serve alongside the Holy Spirit in my community?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, help us to seek Your
Presence in our communities. Enable us to truly know Your works and to support
them fully. Grant us a new spirit of discernment and give us the courage to
face the challenges and apply the changes that we need to embrace and employ.
In the Sacred Name of Christ, we pray. Amen.
John
Stuart is the pastor of Erin
Presbyterian Church in Knoxville, TN. If you would like to comment on today’s
message, please send him an email to traqair@aol.com.
Today’s
image is one of John’s latest Pentecost drawings called ‘Caingis.’ Caingis is
the Gaelic word for Pentecost, so the image features the Holy Spirit descending
to Earth at dawn beside a Celtic Cross. If you would like to view a larger
version, then please click on the following link: http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7432/8724021938_12912b6f54_b.jpg
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