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(Leading the Presence-Driven Church students, Faith Bible Seminary, NYC) |
We all need it, and need to learn it, and practice it.
Thoughts about God, culture, and the Real Jesus.
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(Leading the Presence-Driven Church students, Faith Bible Seminary, NYC) |
(I am re-posting this for a friend.)
For followers of Jesus, love is great. But love is not the greatest. First Corinthians 13 tells us that love is the greatest, among faith and hope. In the great triumvirate of faith, hope, and love, love takes first place.
As mighty as love is, love is not a thing. It is not a substance. It is not an entity. Love is not an object, nor is it a being, or a person. Therefore, love is not to be worshiped, since it is irrational to worship non-entities, be they physical or non-physical.
Love is a multi-faceted verb, manifesting itself in actions we call "loving," such as patience, kindness, gentleness, not easily angered, protective, trusting, and so on. While 1 Corinthians 13 appears to reify love, that's just a rhetorical device to elevate the behaviors associated with love. Love acts in certain ways, and does not act in certain other ways.
When the Bible says God is love, it is telling us that love is an essential attribute of the being of God. As an attribute of God, love is not to be worshiped. We don't worship attributes. Let's say, for example, that one of my attributes is weighs 170 pounds. (I wish this was true!) While weighs 170 pounds would be commendable, this attribute is not an entity or a substance which, in itself, is praiseworthy. We wouldn't expect someone, unless they are mentally incapacitated, to bow down and worship weighs 170 pounds.
Don't reify love. It's misleading, and false, to do that.
Don't bow before love and worship a verb.
Worship God who, in his being, is love.
(Wellspring Home, in Monroe, MI) |
(From Peter Scazzero, The Emotionally Healthy Leader: How Transforming Your Inner Life Will Deeply Transform Your Church, Team, and the World)
Four
Unhealthy Commandments of Church Leadership
Unhealthy
Commandment 1: It’s Not a Success Unless It’s Bigger and Better
Most of us have
been taught to measure success by external markers.
Numerical
growth is what the world equates with power and significance. It is an absolute
value — bigger is always better.
Jesus’ stunning
success in teaching and feeding the 5,000 at the beginning of John 6 is
followed just a few paragraphs later by a corresponding numerical failure: “At
this point many of his disciples turned away and deserted him” (John 6:66).
Unhealthy
Commandment 2: What You Do Is More Important than Who You Are
We cannot give
what we do not possess. We cannot help but give what we do possess.
We can give
inspiring messages about the importance of spiritual transformation and
enjoying the journey with Christ. We may quote famous authors. We may preach
rich truths out of Scripture and craft clever blogs and tweets. But if we have
not lived the truths we teach and been transformed by them personally, the
spiritual transformation of those we serve will be stunted. I am not saying
there will be none. Just not much.
Unhealthy
Commandment 3: Superficial Spirituality Is Okay
Just because we
have the gifts and skills to build a crowd and create lots of activity does not
mean we are building a church or ministry that connects people intimately to
Jesus.
I love the
Lord’s instruction to Samuel, “The LORD does not look at the things people look
at. People look at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart”
(see 1 Samuel 16:7). In other words, we don’t look simply on the outside; we
are concerned about the heart, beginning with our own.
Unhealthy
Commandment 4: Don’t Rock the Boat as Long as the Work Gets Done
Too much of
contemporary church culture is characterized by a false niceness and
superficiality. We view conflict as a sign that something is wrong, so we do
whatever we can to avoid it. We prefer to ignore difficult issues and settle
for a false peace, hoping our difficulties will somehow disappear on their own.
They don’t.
"An amicus curiae (literally, "friend of the court"; plural: amici curiae) often referred to as amicus brief is defined as the legal brief where someone who is not a party to a case assists a court by offering information, expertise, or insight that has a bearing on the issues in the case. The decision on whether to consider an amicus brief lies within the discretion of the court. The phrase amicus curiae is legal Latin and its origin of the term has been dated back to 1605-1615. The scope of amicus curiae is generally found in the cases where broad public interests are involved and concerns regarding civil rights are in question." (From Wikipedia)
One of the legal briefs accepted by the Supreme Court in the Dobbs case regarding abortion rights concerned the following.
(From the brief.)
"Amici curiae are biologists who work at colleges, universities, and other institutions in 15 countries around the world.
The fertilization view is widely recognized—in the literature and by biologists—as the leading biological view on when a human’s life begins... An international survey of academic biologists’ views on when a human’s life begins reported 96% of 5,577 participants affirmed the fertilization view.
Fertilization, generally, marks the beginning of a sexually reproducing organism’s life and, specifically, marks the beginning of a human’s life, as it is the point at which a human first comes into physical existence as an organism that is biologically classified as a member of the Homo sapiens species."
When someone asks me why I am against abortion, my response is: Because I am against killing an innocent, defenseless human being.
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(Michigan beach, on Lake Michigan shoreline) |
A 2-hour Zoom seminar (Register HERE.)
October 11, 2025
10 AM (EST)
“Healing a Church from Emotional and Spiritual Abuse”
- John Piippo, PhD
In this seminar we will: take a close look at narcissism and entitlement, not only in ministry leaders but also in church systems; offer compassion and hope for those affected by its destructive power; and impart wise counsel for churches looking to heal from its systemic effects.
I'll especially draw from these books.
Chicago |