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If we were to ask various Christians from
different churches and denominations what the most important doctrine of
Scripture is, what the target of the Christian walk is, we would get quite a
few differing responses...
Mainstream Evangelicals understand
the universal need to be born again –which is, of course, important. Those of the Reformed persuasion understand
the awesome sovereignty and majesty of God –which is important. Mainline denominations understand our obligation
for social responsibility –which is important.
Mission minded denominations understand the urgency of the Great
Commission –which is important. Bible
churches understand the primacy of Scripture –which is important. Charismatics understand the need to be filled
and empowered by the Holy Spirit –which is important. Each of these paradigms is Biblical. And certainly most churches understand that
all of these are necessary to one degree or another in a healthy, Biblical
church. Nevertheless, no church that I
know of considers all of these things equally important. We all have a theological bent -a specific way we look at Scriptures and assign varying degrees of importance to each of
the areas. Each of these theological paradigms
becomes a lens through which we look at life and interpret Scripture. But, maybe there is a bigger target than most
of us realize, and maybe the bull’s-eye is something else altogether.
Before I go further, let me clarify
what I believe about Jesus Christ because this will help you understand the
lens through which I am looking at life and interpreting Scripture. I believe that Jesus is part of the Triune
God –the Three-In-One God comprised of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. I admit that I don’t completely understand
how that all works, but I have no problem believing that what Scripture teaches
is correct. I don’t have to understand
something completely in order for it to be so –I don’t completely understand
how electricity is generated or how it works, but I know that it is real. So, I believe that Jesus is the Son part of
the Three-In-One God. I believe that He
was with the Father in eternity, and willingly chose to lay His deity aside as
He took on flesh and blood and came to His creation. He left eternity and stepped into time and
space and lived among us. I believe He
lived a perfect human life and died for our sins, clearing the way for us to
have a right relationship with God. I
believe Jesus rose again from the dead and returned to God the Father. I’m hoping that we are on the same page with
this –this is basic Christianity.
Now, if Jesus came from the Father
and returned to the Father and is, in fact, part of the Godhead -if He is, as
Scriptures clearly teach, God –then I think it is safe to assume that what Jesus
taught, and what He focused on, and what He modeled for us is incredibly
important. If anybody in the history of
the earth had His priorities straight and understood how things really are, it
has to be Jesus. I know that the Old
Testament is Scripture. And I know that
the writings of Paul and Peter and John and the rest of the New Testament are
Scripture. But if God became man and
made His dwelling among us and explained to us how things really are, that has
to become the lens through which we interpret the rest of Scripture. The actual teachings of Jesus, who was and is
God, must be the key to unlocking the rest of Scripture. We can’t do it the other way around. We can’t take the writings of Paul and
interpret Jesus. We can’t take the
prophets and interpret Jesus. We must
use Jesus to interpret everything else –because Jesus is God.
With that in mind, lets look at some of what
Jesus taught: “The world must learn that
I love the Father and that I do exactly what my Father has commanded me.” (John 14:31)
"If you knew me, you would know
my Father also." (John
8:20)
“I speak of what I have seen with my
Father.” (John 8:38)
"I tell you the truth, the Son
can do nothing by himself; he can do only what he sees his Father doing,
because whatever the Father does the Son also does.” (John 5:19)
“Jesus said, ‘When you have lifted up
the Son of Man, then you will know that I am the one I claim to be and that I
do nothing on my own but speak just what the Father has taught me.’” (John
8:28)
“Whatever I say is just what the
Father has told me to say." (John 12:50)
So, basically Jesus said that He only
did what He saw the Father doing and He only said what He heard the Father
saying because He and the Father are one.
If we are anywhere near being on the
same page here, let’s move ahead. One
day, a man asked Jesus which commandment was the greatest commandment –what is
the most important thing of all-and Jesus didn’t even hesitate in His reply. "Love the Lord your God with all your
heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment.
And the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets hang on
these two commandments."(Matthew 22:36-41)
In other words, Jesus said that the
most important thing is love. First, to
love God –and then to love one another.
This is so important, according to Jesus, that it supersedes the entire
law. If we actually learn to love,
everything else takes care of itself.
"As the Father has loved me, so
have I loved you. Now remain in my love.” (John 15:9)
“My command is this: Love each other
as I have loved you.” (John 15:12)
"Love one another. As I have
loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are
my disciples, if you love one another."
(John 13:34-35)
This is clearly the heart of
God. This is the bulls-eye of the
target. This is what makes Christianity
different than any man-made religion.
This is it. Jesus taught and
modeled love. Authentic Christianity is not
religion, it is relationship. The mark
of Spiritual maturity is not how much of the Bible we have memorized, it is not
how many people we have led in the “sinner’s prayer,” it is not how much
spiritual power or anointing we operate in.
The only authentic mark of Christian maturity is how much we love God
and how much we love others. This is
what Jesus taught. This is what Jesus
modeled. This is the bulls-eye of the
target. Other things are certainly
important, but they are secondary to learning to love God, accepting His love,
and sharing His love with others.
-Written by Steve Pennell, By His Stripes Ministries-
Questions To Consider:
Why do the teachings of Jesus have to be the lens through which we interpret all other Scripture?
Being born-again, being filled with the Spirit, understanding the sovereignty of God, participating in world missions, being involved in social justice and grasping the importance of Scripture are all necessary to spiritual health -but what is the ultimate goal and the only legitimate mark of spiritual maturity?
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