
February Edition
Tuesday September 07, 2010
| 8 Mistakes the American Church Made... |
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That I hope you don't repeat When in 2002 I was in Nigeria conducting interviews, I was invited to speak at a growing Church that meets near a University in Lagos. Knowing that future Church leader would be in the audience that Sunday morning, I wanted to deposit something that could shape the destiny of Africa. My message was titled "Eight Mistakes The American Church Made That I Hope You Don't Repeat". I don’t have the kind of pulpit savvy that gets people shouting ‘amen' and waving handkerchiefs. Yet this sermon struck a chord not only with my new Nigerian friends, but also with Americans who heard about it when I returned. I am sharing the gist of the message with you because I know it's not too late to learn from our blunders. Here's my list of the American Church's all-time biggest goofs: 1. We made unbelief a doctrine: While Christians in China, Latin America and Africa were casting out devils and healing the sick, we were teaching seminary Students that the Holy Spirit doesn't do miracles anymore. That's really bad theology. Who needs the devil when Christians are perfectly OK with hating one another in the name of denominational loyalty? Why should the world listen to us teach about 'family values' when the family of God is so fractured? We taught converts that Christianity is all about daily Bible reading, Church attendance and avoiding cigarettes and beer. Genuine faith became drudgery. Christians trapped in dry legalism lost their joy because they thought intimacy with God could be achieved by their performance. We elevated ministers to celebrity status, and some of them actually believed they deserved the titles, the pedestais, the grand entrances and the first-class seats next to Jesus' throne. They stopped modeling servant hood, and as a result the Church forgot that Jesus washed feet and rode on a donkey. 7. We stayed in the pews and became irrelevant: 8. We taught people to be escapists |
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This maiden edition of The Nigerian Anglican (TNA) is based on the exigencies of an enlightenment cum educative and entertainment medium for the Anglican faithful in Nigeria, most especially at a time of Pentecostal pandemonium and the unprecedented crisis rocking the Anglican Communion worldwide. There is indeed an urgent need to prevent our youth from misunderstanding the situation and misinterpreting the true position of the Church of Nigeria in the prevailing crisis.
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