Saturday, July 7, 2007

Ministry Update – July 07

I’m writing a response to my earlier entry where I mentioned a topic that some consider “taboo.” I questioned the spiritual discernment of some Christian leaders I know and some friends offered a lot of wisdom and it really helped me confront this issue better. But I still am finding it difficult to reconcile several obvious aspects. Before I go any further, perhaps I need to attempt to “clear the air” a bit. I was referring to an outreach work across the bridge in the main land.

Most Christians would think that to question spiritual authority is an act of non-submission. I agree to a certain extent. I’ve been in the pastoral ministry before and I’m well aware of how leadership is often bombarded with criticism from all sides. But we need to differentiate helpful criticism from harmful criticism. There is no place for spectators in the Christian journey, only participants. Because of that, I consider an opinion is only of value if it comes from a participant, not an observant (in any ministry). And through my few limited years of Christian pilgrimage, I have acquired quite a bit of discernment to distinguish spirit-controlled ministry vs. human-abled work. I think most Christians who seek after God would have similarly acquire such “ability.” I doubt any of us can feel nothing when confronted with something that is spiritually not right. All of us should re-act. It’s a matter of how we re-act. God did not make us to be like robots, instead, we are created in His image. I can be honest to question Him and raise my doubts because I am limited in my understanding. And I see no reason not to raise similar doubts concerning other fellow creators.

I believe that when God gave us brains, we are meant to be thinkers. And to think Christianly is no easy task when we are surrounded by worldliness. This is a challenge for the church today. This is a challenge for the maturing church in Malaysia…to think for ourselves, and to self theologize so that the Malaysian church is authentically Malaysian. Christians must definitely learn to think Christianly or the world is going to do the thinking for the church!

1 comment:

Alex Tang said...

hi sb,

I am responding to your post as I do not have all the facts of the situation you are referring to.

First,Most Christians would think that to question spiritual authority is an act of non-submission . I do not think this is correct teaching. I do know leaders uses 'do not touch the Lord's anointed' quoting David and Saul. That is an abuse of exegesis as it does not refer to leaders today. Paul confronted Peter in Gal 2:11ff and Peter is supposed to be the more senior leader. If leaders are not walking with the Lord, it is our responsibility to challenge them.

Second, this is where discernment comes in. Is it spirit-led leadership or human-led leadership? It is an unfortunate state of affair that most ministries are human-led.

Finally, I am all for thinking Christians, especially in Malaysia

Shalom