Monday, August 30, 2010

The Cult of American Patriotism

I am amazed at how many Christians and even leaders are buying into Glenn Beck and the inadvertent play toward eccumenicalism. No one listened to me for the last several years and no one listened to the prophetic men of God who have been extolling the warnings of the scriptures and the times that are coming and these times are ushered in in the name of eccumenicalism. I call what is happening the cult of American Patriotism.

People: these changes are not announced and come in with a flash bang and fanfare warning. y These deceptive changes are suttle. So many wolves in sheeps clothing are deceiving people in the name of Jesus Christ. The mainstream media and news media slowly but surely fulfill the agenda of lowering your resistance to poor moral choices to the point you no longer have any morals. Your ability to judge right and wrong is repressed and those who have the Holy Spirit of God have so grieved Him that their lack of fellowship with God is evident in the things they watch, listen to and attend in the form of entertainment.

Worse than losing judgment on how you are entertained, America you cannot discern accurate spiritual choices. Oprah is considered a top spiritual leader by 82% of American women. I guess now Glen Beck will come to that same pinnacle in American culture and Glenn, like Oprah denies the deity of Jesus Christ. Oprah and Glenn make the same mistakes in different ways because they are led by the same deception. They want you to rally around tolerance of each other's faith and the cult of American Patriotism.

In recent days my American patriotism has been challenged and I welcome the the challenge. Yes, I love America. if given the directive by the government, I would glady defend this great nation. We must in our patriotism, never loose sight of this truth I am about to share in the next parapgraph.

Truth: Just as the period of time in history known as Pax Romana was established by God for the promotion of the gospel message of Jesus Christ to be spread further across the known world, so has been the great and wonderful period of American history wherein the gospel has been spread to this continent and from this continent to almost every tribe and tongue. There was a time in history when Great Britain was the world superpower and the gospel spread as a result. Great mission works began under the Brittish empire and now Islam is the fastest growing religion in England.

Truth: Genn Beck is more patriotic than I am. Glenn Beck says many, many things that all make sense to Americans. Glenn Beck is correct on many issues. BUT Hear me when I say Glenn Beck is wrong about who Jesus is and Glenn Beck has a gospel different from the gospel of Paul because Glenn Beck is a Latter Day Saint AKA Mormon and mark my word the truth about Glenn Beck's faith will be revealed one day and he will be astonished.

What you can expect to see more of in the coming months: People will denounce what I am saying and what other pastors like me are saying and they will call us haters of people of faith, and say that we are not accepting of others. Well I don't hate and I do not advocate hate or viloence but I do advocate being passionate about the truth. They will even say we are not patriotic.

I will not not compromise the truth to make religious people feel comfortable in their unbiblical beliefs. People, I cannot be eccumenical because I have integrity. If you are a fully devoted follower of Jesus Christ beleivng the Bible is the absolute authority on the nature of God and God's plan for man; you cannot at the same time cast your lot in with Mormons, Jehova's Witnesses, Oprah followers and every "faith" under the sun and keep your integrity. when you do, you compromise.

I can hear it now, people blasting me saying why cant people of faith come together. People of faith in the ONE TRUE GOD through JESUS CHRISt can come together. I insist that we do and we do not need to come together to save the Constitution of the United States, we need to come together to call the elect to saving faith in Jesus Christ baptising them in the name of the Father, The Son and The Holy Spirit teaching them to obey all that Christ commanded.

Patriotic...? What about your loyality to the only Kingdom that will still be standing when all of these things come to pass. God is not worried about the Constitution. When America has outlived it's usefulness as the protector of Israel and proclaimer of the Gospel according to God's plan; American will cease to exist. I suspect we are not far from outliving our usefulness even now. Other countries are sending Christian missionaries to us.

People hear this. GOD IS NOT AN AMERICAN AND THERE IS MORE REAL CHRISTIANITY GOING ON IN COMMUNIST COUNTRIES THAN THERE IS IN THE SO CALLED: "ONE NATION UNDER GOD." I was saying that when David Platt was still in highschool.

TRUTH: All nations are under God, under His authority, under His plan, under His control. There are no nations that are for God. However, there is a Nation of God that calls it's citizens from every tribe and every tongue and they are loyal to the Kingdom of God and Christ the King. Remember the song tells us: "He shall reign forever and ever."

I love America, but it is not the America, today, that the Tea Party is decieved into thinking it will be again. America was "home" and Thomas wolfe told us, we can never go "home" again. It is not a dream and we have no ruby red slippers.

You want the nightmare to end. There will be no real justice and no real peace until the King of Kings establishes peace on the earth. Oh, I know you will scoff at me and you will laugh and call me a fool when the FALSE peace comes and then you will know tribulation.

There is one way out of this mess, turn to Christ. America will pass away like Rome and soon the whole earth with its trees and tree huggers, with its whales, seals and polar bears. Global warming is not here yet...but it is coming and it will blow Al Gores mind. It is the consuming fire of the judgment of God and all of this earth will pass away.

So Go ahead mock me, scoff, even laugh at me. I weep. Not because of what you do to me, but because you are gullible and easily deceived, lacking spiritual discernment grasping on to whatever feels spiritual and anything that asks nothing of you in return. Whatever agenda fulfulls your groin or your gullet..pretending all the time that I am am a religious zealot, wacked out and intolerant.

Well I love you in Jesus name and Jesus is calling you to repent, come away from Glenn Beck and Oprah and the many others like them and comeinto the light of the Holy Word of God.
People it truly is time to repent, time to pray for this country, but pray for revival when you pray. Realize this great nation would be worse than Bolivia has God not needed it to be the powerhouse it was for so long.

Good night Johnboy...the "innocent days" of America we all love are gone but Great News... the KIngdom of God will endure for eternity you can be a part of it give your life to Christ today repent, call to Him.

Andy Goode
Acts 20:24

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

"Great Omission"

Matthew 28:19-20 (NASB)
19 "Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit,
20 teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age."

Why is there such an emphasis on baptism by the church leaders? The emphasis came from Christ himself, as quoted above.

Isn't salvation the most important thing? Yes, baptism does not save us but is does have significant value because Christ himself initiated it with His own baptism and commanded us to baptize in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.

Discipleship is also important for the same reason, Jesus said to: "teach ...to make disciples..."

So as a church leader why would you want to some, all or half of the instructions that Christ gave to us Himself. You wouldn't of course. As a church leader you want to be obedient and lead others to be obedient.

Why have an evangelistic event without making baptism available? Yes, we need to make sure that the person is genuinely repentant. Yes, the person needs to understand what it means to follow Christ and absolutely yes we need to start our discipleship process with an act of obedience.

Looking at churches across Southern Baptist life, I see we can plan the lighting and sound of an event better than we can plan to have baptism available. Why? I think we are afraid of being accused of placing too much emphasis on baptism and be labeled like those denominations who hols an unbiblical view of baptism. Well go ahead and laugh because Baptist is in our name...hello.

So, do not put an unbiblical emphasis on baptism but let's do put a biblical emphasis on baptism. By being biblical on baptism we can fulfill the Great Commission.

Also, let's really make what we are doing a Co-Mission. See above where the words of Christ are quoted? Christ says:...lo I am with you always..." He promises to go with us, as we go to make disciples. The very thing we are commanded to do is the very thing most Christians are afraid to d and are inept to do....make disciples.

When we get our focus on quality, God will bring the quantity. Are we doing QUALITY Ministry or just concerned about QUANTITY ministry? Are we checking the box or fulfilling the Great Commission?

QUALITY means follow up, quality means discipling people towards obedience beginning with baptism and moves forward with increasing life change.

Let's not just focus on conversion but on conversion, obedience and spiritual growth.
With Spiritual growth we will see the church fulfill the Great Commission and get out of the rut of great omission.

Monday, May 17, 2010

An Unforgettable Day in Ministry with Mrs Etta Edwards

There are many things I cherish about my first pastorate. Pastoring is the Lord's work, but it is the people business. If you cannot deal with people, accept people, love people, admonish people and lead people, do not think you will have an easy pastorate because that is what pastors do; deal with people.

Some pastors would have you believe that pastoring is 95% horrible and 5% rewarding. This is so misrepresented, especially in those smirking comments that some pastors make too often. Men who shouldn't be deacons can kill a pastor and crush a thriving ministry if the pastor runs from them or fails to lead them. True enough, some pastors never truly get a chance to lead because a church is deacon possessed rather than Christ centered and biblically led, by the pastor.

To encourage you,I want to share with you one of the most wonderful mornings I ever spent as a pastor. To set this up, it will sound discouraging to say that I was asked to make a home visit to plan a funeral with a senior saint. She did not want to tell me how to conduct her funeral, she just wanted me to know her story and her testimony. That day, this precious follower of Jesus Christ impacted my life. Some of the younger guys in ministry are missing moments like these and this is a shame. So, I share it here as a tribute to Mrs. Etta Edwards and a reminder to all in the ministry, that we are to be about serving the Lord and ministering to people.

I was invited to sit in the living room, honored to see a picture of this dear lady and myself taken at the church on the day we honored her for sixty years of service to 2 Baptist churches, as a Sunday school teacher. At the time, she was still teaching her class of ladies all of whom loved her dearly.

Ms. Etta, as I called her, began her story in a graceful and dignified manner; weaving a beautiful tapestry of a life well lived. Etta explained: " I was saved at age 13, joined Traveler’s Rest Baptist Church in Baker County, Georgia. I was baptized in the creek near the bridge on HWY 91 down toward Colquitt, by Brother Tedder"
I could see the slight change on her face as she explained how her mother died when she was only seven years old, leaving her older sister the age of 10 and a baby brother just four years old without a mother. Etta continued:" We grew up through the Depression, our family lost everything when I was 9 or 10. My dad farmed on halves, and I worked in the fields: Cotton and Peanuts. I carried water by hand ½ mile for house water."

As Etta sat thinking of the things she wanted to share I realized her story is a great American story of growing up in the south and I am privileged to hear what she had to say. "My grandparents came to help out after mother died and we all moved to El Model, Georgia. That is where I went to school in an one room school house. I was ten years old doing 6th grade work."

I remarked that she must have been pretty smart, she just smiled and nodded in the affirmative. The rest of the story came when Etta explained that after the new school was built up by the highway, the teachers held her back to put in her in the grade suitable for her age. Etta played basketball in school, finished school and went on to business school to learn English and shorthand.

Etta continued; " In 1936 I married Mr. Carl, I remember we farmed on halves on year and got fifty dollars at the end of the year. Carl started working with horses after that."
Etta smiled as she told me about her children: "In 1941, Wayne was born and by 1942 we had Larry, then Delores in 1944 and Gary came along in 1946.Wayne was the good student, he got a scholarship to FSU. Larry was hired to train horses in Mississippi."
Speaking fondly of all her children and sharing various memories, Etta began to talk about her church life. " I started attending First Baptist Quincy,Florida. Gary was a baby, and after I attended for a while, I was asked to be superintendent of 4& 5 year old Sunday School where I served for 6 years before Mrs. Faircloth, who taught a ladies Sunday school class groomed me to take it over and I did." This was the humble beginning of many years of Christian service that we celebrated with Etta while she was still here on the earth.

When we talked about serving in the church, Etta began to also talk about WMU at Central Baptist Church Albany, Georgia. Etta recounted:" WMU. we visited the sick, shut- ins and made real good friends: Mary Sikes, Margaret Knighton, Linda Davidson, Helen Bullington, Sara Stocks, Aileen Spurlin, Lois Varner…and others. We had prayer, visitation and we loved lunch at Ryan’s."
Etta made an indelible impression on my life that day and many other days, like when she would bring her Acts commentary to my Acts Bible study and check me against the commentator. She was never pushy or rude, but would often add insightful comments after each class. Etta left me with a quote that day that spread through our church, especially on the day of her home going celebration, which was a well attended event in the life of our church. You can tell alot about a person and their family by how many people attend the funeral. The only reason more people were not there, at her funeral, is because Etta survived many of them.

That quote was simply this:“The Love of Christ in you will make you want the best for everybody.”-Etta Edwards. This writing certainly doesn't do the life of Etta Edwards justice and certainly there is more to the story. Etta, Carl and their children even survived a collision with a freight train that split their automobile into two halves with no major injuries. In fact the only injury occurred from steeping on broken glass with bare feet, after the accident.

So what is the point? A tribute to Mrs. Etta Edwards, a thank you to God for allowing me to be in the ministry, otherwise I would have never met her. Also, a message of love to Delores, Roy and the Edwards family as well as a lesson to ministers and pastors. Take the time and make the time to know the people and know that they have saving faith in Jesus Christ.

You might go to them in an effort to be a blessing, but you will see the blessing is in knowing them, knowing their stories and knowing the testimony they give to the Lord Jesus Christ.

Another one of those lessons they don't teach in seminary. I will see Ms. Etta again one day and we shall worship the Lord as brother and sisters in Christ for eternity. What about you? Surrender to Jesus today and know forgiveness and the peace that passes all understanding.

To Christ alone be all Glory.
Andy Goode, Acts 20:24

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Get Biblical on Giving

Permission to use this article is given by the author and is listed in the last praprgraph of this post.

Posted in: Tithing and Giving, Questions and Answers
By Randy Alcorn



Over the last ten years, I've been suggesting that we learn how to share testimonies about giving in order to help the body of Christ grow in the grace of giving.


I once objected to this type of disclosure—as many still do—because Jesus says, "But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving may be in secret. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you" (Matthew 6:3-4).


When one man received an automated tax receipt from his church indicating he'd given no money the previous year, he was outraged. He said he was obeying Scripture by not letting his left hand know what his right hand had given. Giving was to be so secret, he thought, that even he shouldn't know how much he was giving. (Apparently he didn't know he hadn't given anything.)


A closer look at this passage, and the rest of Scripture, demonstrates this is not a valid interpretation.


In Matthew 6, Jesus deals with motives, something the religious elite often failed to examine. He starts with the broad category of "acts of righteousness," then moves to three such acts—giving, prayer, and fasting. This is not an exhaustive list. In their teaching, rabbis often spoke in groups of threes. Jesus could have added Bible reading, feeding the poor, or raising children. Today, we might include going on mission trips or attending a particular college or church. The idea is that any "act of righteousness" (or badge of spirituality) can accord us spiritual status in the eyes of others.



The most important verse, the one that sets up the entire passage, is the first: "Be careful not to do your 'acts of righteousness' before men, to be seen by them" (Matthew 6:1). The operative phrase is "to be seen by them." This is not a prohibition against others becoming aware of our giving, prayers, fasting, Bible study, feeding the poor, missions work, or church attendance. Rather, it's a command not to do these things in order to receive the recognition of men. Jesus continues, "If you do [that is, if you do good things to win human approval], you will have no reward from your Father in heaven." The problem isn't doing good things with reward in mind—it's looking for the reward from men rather than from God.


Then Jesus says, "When you give to the needy, do not announce it with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be honored by men" (Matthew 6:2). Trumpet blowing may seem silly. There's no record that this was actually done. It seems to be satirical or humorous, a caricature of less obvious (to us anyway) things we do to get attention. But Christ's focus is the reason for which hypocrites draw attention to what they've done: "to be honored by men." Again, Christ's argument is not that our giving should never be seen, but only that we should never divulge it in order to get human recognition. When that happens, "I tell you the truth, they have received their reward in full" (Matthew 6:5).


If we give in order to get men's praises, we'll get what we seek—college wings named after us, dinner invitations from heads of ministries, our names inscribed on pews or bricks, appointment to boards, or seeing our names on a plaque and in the newspaper. But in getting what we seek, we will lose what we should have sought—God's approval.


Let's look at the verses we started with: "So when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving may be in secret" (Matthew 6:3-4).


This is a figure of speech. It's hyperbole, a deliberate overstatement, which would have been immediately clear to the hearers. That Christ's command cannot be literal is self-evident, because a hand lacks the ability to know anything, and besides the person's brain would know what both the right hand and the left hand were doing. There is no center of intelligence in one hand as opposed to the other, nor is there an ability for the brain to withhold information from one hand while disclosing it to the other. We aren't able to throw a switch so that we don't know we're giving or that we have given.


So what's Christ's point? Do your giving quietly, unobtrusively. Don't cough loudly just as you're giving. Don't slam-dunk your offering in the plate. Drop your check in the offering or send it in the mail without drawing attention to yourself. Fold the check. Keep the envelope sealed. Give in a spirit of humility and simplicity, as an act of worship. Don't give in order to get your name on a list. Don't give in a spirit of self-congratulation. Don't dwell on your gift, fixating on it, building a mental shrine to yourself. In other words, don't make a big production out of it, either in view of others or in the privacy of your own heart.


This verse cannot mean that we should—or even that we can—be unaware of our own giving, any more than we could be unaware of our praying, fasting, Bible reading, or evangelism. To suggest that it does would remove the discerning, thoughtful elements of giving, praying, fasting, and all other spiritual disciplines.


But can this verse mean it's always wrong for others to know that we've given? No. Acts 2:45 tells of Christians selling possessions and giving to the needy. Did other people know who had done this? In many cases, the answer would be obvious. These people knew each other. If you no longer had your prize camels, coat, or oxcart, and Caleb ben Judah did, people would figure it out. Acts 4:32-35 tells us about more people liquidating assets. Most names, which would mean nothing to us, aren't recorded, but they were surely known at the time.


But some givers were named even for our benefit. Acts 4:36-37 tells us that Barnabas sold a field and brought the money to the feet of the apostles. If Barnabas was looking for status and prestige, his motive was wrong. But it's certainly false to say that it was wrong for others to be made aware of his gift, because Scripture itself reveals it! Barnabas's act of generosity was commonly known among the believers and was publicly and permanently recorded in Acts. This was good and right, and did not violate Matthew 6's warning about bad motives.


Did public recognition tempt others to give for the wrong motives? Absolutely, as we see in the very next passage (Acts 5:1-11). Ananias and Sapphira gave for the wrong reasons. Then they lied to make their gift look better than it was. But the possible abuse of something doesn't nullify its legitimacy. The body of Christ can benefit from seeing open models of generous giving such as Barnabas's. The world can benefit from seeing the generosity of the Church as an attractive witness to the grace of Christ. The risks of disclosing a person's giving are sometimes outweighed by the benefits of disclosure.


Earlier in the same sermon in which he warns against flaunting your giving and prayers and fasting, Jesus says, "Let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven" (Matthew 5:16). Here we are commanded to let men see our good deeds—and not to hide them. Giving is a good deed, isn't it? This passage and Matthew 6 balance each other. There's a time for giving to be seen, but only at the right time and for the right reasons.


We need to stop putting giving in a class by itself. If I give a message on evangelism, biblical interpretation, or parenting, I run the risk of pride. But it may still be God's will for me to share with the church what God has taught me in these areas.


Paul speaks of himself as a model: "Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ" (1 Corinthians 11:1). I could write books and do public speaking for the wrong reasons. I could send e-mails with wrong motives, to seek man's approval, not God's. But I write books and speak and send e-mails anyway, partly because if we were to refrain from doing everything we could do with a wrong motive, we'd never do anything at all. (If your pastor only preached when there was no temptation to pride, he'd never preach.)


If Christ established a principle in Matthew 6:2-4 that other people should never know what someone gives, then the members of the early Church violated it in Acts 4:36-37. There's no way around it. Numbers 7 lists the names of donors to the tabernacle. First Chronicles 29 tells exactly how much the leaders of Israel gave to build the temple, then it says, "The people rejoiced at the willing response of their leaders, for they had given freely and wholeheartedly to the Lord" (1 Chronicles 29:9). Philemon 1:7 is likely a reference to Philemon's generous giving, and 2 Corinthians 8:2-3 is definitely a reference to the Macedonians' generous giving. As we seek to understand the meaning of Matthew 6:2-4, we must consider the full counsel of Scripture.


In Matthew 6, it's clear that whatever's true of giving is also true of praying and fasting. Jesus says in verse 6, "When you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen." He's swinging the pendulum away from the self-conscious, self-serving, image-enhancing prayers for which the Pharisees were notorious. But did he mean that all prayer must be private? No. Scripture has many examples of public and corporate prayer. Every time a pastor or worship leader prays in church, every time parents pray with their children, or husbands pray with wives, or families pray before dinner, or someone prays with the person being led to Christ, it demonstrates the falseness of the notion that it's always wrong to be seen or heard by others when you pray.


Jesus tells us to pray in secret, and God will reward us (Matthew 6:6). Yet gathering for group prayer is certainly important (Matthew 18:19-20). God wants us to pray secretly sometimes but not others. And so it follows that he wants us to give secretly sometimes but not others. It all comes down to the motives of our hearts and the purpose of disclosure.


Just as Matthew 6:6 doesn't mean it's always wrong to let others hear you pray, Matthew 6:3-4 doesn't mean it's always wrong to let others be aware of your giving. Because Jesus groups giving, praying, and fasting as the three acts of righteousness in this passage, whatever applies to one applies to the others.


When the poor widow gave, she gave publicly—Jesus could actually see the two coins. He used her as a public illustration (Luke 21:1-4). So, it was right that she gave in public, and it was right that people were told the exact amount of her gift. Her motives were right. The public disclosure did nothing to nullify her good heart.


Though confidentiality in giving records makes sense, it creates another temptation. Many believers take advantage of the veil of privacy by using it as a cloak for their disobedience in not giving. With all of today's talk about accountability, what are we doing in churches to hold each other accountable to generous giving? People may notice if you don't obey the command in Hebrews 10:25 to attend church, but how will they notice if you fail to give? How will they be able to help you grow in this vital area?


The body of Christ needs to let its light shine before men, and we need models of every spiritual discipline. We dare not let the risk of our pride keep us from faithfully disclosing God's work in this area of our lives. And if we must be silent to avoid our own pride, we should support others who can humbly testify to Christ's faithfulness in their giving.


God looks at the heart. He alone knows the real motives for our giving (1 Corinthians 4:5). Scripture never says that a giver receives no eternal reward simply because others know about his gift. Donors could be known yet still have given to please God not men.


Our motive for not talking about our giving is not always humility. Sometimes it's fear, doubt and, yes, even pride. To vulnerably express to others where we are on our pilgrimage to generous giving can be an act of humility. We must always check our motives, but it certainly doesn't have to be an act of pride.


We shouldn't brag about our Bible study, prayer, evangelism, parenting, or giving, but neither should we cover it up. It's easier for people to follow footprints (what we do) than commands (what we say). If we aren't willing to openly and humbly discuss our giving, how can we expect to raise up givers? The church has plenty of examples of consumers—we need to see examples of givers. Hebrews 10:24 tells us to "spur one another on toward love and good deeds." We can only be spurred on by what we can see.


R. G. LeTourneau was a great inspiration to me. He gave away 90% of his income, motivating me to raise the bar of my giving. I'm eternally grateful that he told his giving story.


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