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Future Church
2 Timothy 3:16-17 • Romans 10:12-15
Today is the beginning of a sermon series I’m calling “Future Church”.
This will be a challenging series.
It will challenge some long-held ideas of what Church is and what Church is not.
The foundation of the entire series is this passage:
Verse 17 says that the purpose of this is “so that the man of God may be fully capable, equipped for every good work.”
Future Church
We know that church is different today than it was in Jesus’s day, right?
We know that church is different today than it was in Paul’s day, right?
We know that church is different today than it was in Martin Luther’s day, right?
We know that church is different today than it was in John Wesley’s day, right?
We know that church is different today than it was in Dwight Moody’s day, right?
We know that church is different today than it was in the 1950s, right?
We know that church is different today than it was in the 1980s, right?
We know that church is different today than it was in the 1990s or the 2000s, or even the 2010s, right?
So, what does the church of tomorrow look like?
Lots of people throw around words like “relevant” and “post-Christian” just like they used to throw around “post-modern” and “rational” to try and change the church the way they think is best.
Maybe we’d be wise to return to what we know.
The only thing we really know is the Scriptures … and if we’re honest, we don’t know them well enough … HEARD?!
The series “Future Church” will be based on this passage,
2 Timothy 3:16 (NASB 2020)
16 All Scripture is inspired by God and beneficial for teaching, for rebuke, for correction, for training in righteousness;
where Paul teaches in his letter to Timothy that the Scriptures have particular uses
and the purpose is that we would be fully capable, equipped for every good work.
2 Timothy 3:17 (NASB 2020)
17 so that the man or woman of God may be fully capable, equipped for every good work.
Future Church
If there is to be a Church of tomorrow … a “Future Church” ... the Truth of Scripture will not change even if our methods do.
So, today, I want to tell you the first use for Scripture is to teach us.
Teaching, reproof, correction and training are closely related, but Paul used them all because they are slightly different from one another.
So, what does it mean to teach?
Well, the original title of this sermon was “Filling in the Gaps”
Filling in the Gaps
Think of the smartest person you know.
Maybe the biggest know-it-all you know.
Now that you’re thinking of that person, let be say:
No person knows everything.
Heard?
Which means every person has gaps in their knowledge.
Heard?
“Gaps in knowledge” is a nice way to say “ignorant”.
Thinking of other people, it’s easy to say they’re all ignorant about something or another.
But we all have to acknowledge WE are all at least partially ignorant about our faith, too.
[quietly: “heard”]
Teaching in its simplest form is “filling in gaps” of knowledge.
Just doing devotional reading is not sufficient for our need to STUDY God’s Word, and if everyone has gaps in their knowledge … let me say that not being engaged in a Bible study of some sort is a mockery of real faith.
[“Ooh, Harold, that one hurt a little!”]
In any area of knowledge...Regarding ignorance, you...
know everything there is to know (or)
are studying to fill your gaps (or)
don’t care about your ignorance enough to engage it
Which is it with you?
Before I move on, let me remind you that Paul tells us the purpose of these uses for Scripture are so that you would be “fully capable, equipped for every good work.”
So, if you reject the notion of engaging your own ignorance, you are saying you’re okay continuing to live (by definition) “INcapable, AND ILL-equipped for GOD’s good work.”
Every year, I teach about various topics throughout the liturgical year.
I haven’t been here 2 years yet to observe this phenomenon at Temple, but at every other church, I had the same people who would tell me, “I’ve never heard that before” (when I know I taught the same thing last year and the year before that).
Every year I explain:
why we use Ashes on our forehead on Ash Wednesday
why we traditionally ‘give up’ things during Lent
Lent is 40 days not including Sundays because Sundays are little Easters
We call Good Friday “good” because Jesus’ death makes salvation available to us
Pentecost is considered the birthday of the Church
the wise men were not kings
we don’t know how many wise men there were
the wise men didn’t appear at Jesus’ crib, and they didn’t likely arrive until he was around 2 years old
Every year, some people walk out of those services and express how surprised they are that they didn’t know these things.
Yet, many of those same people were here last year … when I taught the same thing.
This doesn’t make these people bad people.
It demonstrates that we (THE CHURCH) have grown content with our current level of ignorance.
We passively tell God, “I know enough about you now.
I don’t need any more.”
Future Church
If the Church has any future, if THIS Church has any future, we have to grow discontent with any level of ignorance about our faith!
Otherwise, we devolve into just another social club with weekly gatherings where we pat each other on the back and go home unchanged.
For many of us … that’s what we already are.
We’ll move to rebuke next week, but for this week...
2 Timothy 3:16 (NASB 2020)
16 All Scripture is inspired by God and beneficial for teaching, for rebuke, for correction, for training in righteousness;
I walked you through the back door of acknowledging we all have gaps in our knowledge.
After that admission, let me ask:
Are we using Scripture to fill those gaps?
Or are we using Scripture only to defend what we already believe?
After confessing to those gaps, let me repeat myself...
not being engaged in a Bible study of some sort is a mockery of real faith.
Are you satisfied with that?
Or are you ready to commit to fill those gaps with Scripture?
The future of the Church depends on your answer.
Future Church
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