I served this nation for five years in the US Army.  Thankfully, it was during a time of peace.  The mission of a peacetime army was to be properly equipped, trained, and ready to defend this nation.  This is what combat readiness meant. 

As a soldier you got used to inspections.  They happened quite frequently in artillery units, which is what I was stationed in.  Inspections were sometimes announced, so we could prepare.  Most of the time they were not.  We really hated surprise inspections.  No matter how many there were, the hatred of them never dissipated. 

But these inspections were designed and executed, to teach discipline, and to determine our state of combat readiness.  If a soldier had a torn gas mask, worn out socks, and only one pair of boots; he was not combat ready.  A torn gas mask would not only allow you to get killed, but it could put a whole platoon at risk because everyone depended on each other. 

Another aspect of combat readiness was training.  This training consisted of the proper use and maintenance of our weaponry, our military tactics and strategy, and the tactics and strategy of our enemy.  As these things changed on the enemy’s side we had to respond with effective change ourselves. 

I have written about the spiritual warfare we are all in and the tactics of our enemy here and here.  In this post I want to take up the task of putting forth some ideas for change, in the area of our own tactical response.  As I have been discussing, our enemy is constantly changing tactics, and I have used as examples seven areas I believe he is currently working in.  Here is the first of them again, but with my thoughts as to how we may be able to defeat him.  

Acceptance.  As I said, we all want to be accepted.  Pentecostals were not accepted in the beginning but now we go out of our way to explain away some of our gifting to the world.  Just so we will not be looked at as too weird.  Other denominations attempt to be accepted in their own ways also.  Just look at what we sometimes call seeker sensitive churches.

These churches proclaim themselves to be beacons of light for the lost.  Safe havens where no one will ever be judged.  Cool, and in touch with the culture.  Jesus loved the sinner and we have to also.  And all of this would be fine, if it was about the sinner. 

Jesus did reach out and go out of His way to reach that lost soul.  And He did it for them.   So, while I sympathize with the thought behind these types of churches, I have to ask, is it about the lost being accepted into our Kingdom, or is it about the church wanting to be accepted into the ungodly kingdom of this earth.

Just ask yourself who we want to be accepted by.  The world would seem to be the answer.  When a nationally recognized pastor gets on a TV interview and says he does not preach about abortion because it is a “political issue”, I have to ask, when did that happen?  Since man is so divided on the issue, is God confused also.  It seems, according to His word, at one time He was against the murder of innocent children.   

Do we really want to do as God says, or man?

This brings me to a couple of questions I have about about this concept of acceptance. Do you think the Pentecostals are concerned with Baptists accepting them?  What about Methodists and Catholics? How many times have you heard a Calvinist call an Armenian a brother?  We want acceptance from the world but not our own family.   Within the family of God the names called are usually heretic, apostate, miscreant, unbeliever.

Where is the concern we have for what the other denominational brothers think of us?

Jesus said the world hates us because we are like Him (Joh 17:14) and for His names sake.  (Luk 21:17)  Yet He said that we owe each other, those other adopted family members we have, love.  (Rom 13:8)

The world will never really accept us.  They may pretend, but if we are who we are supposed to be, they have, I repeat, they have, to hate us. 

So our new strategy has to be, to do everything possible to become who we are supposed to be, to start accepting our adopted brothers and sisters of faith instead of the world, and to once again declare our allegiance to our King and His kingdom only.

So I ask…Who loves ya baby?  For Christ’s sake and our own, it better be Jesus and the other denomination down the street.

Who loves ya baby?  I do.

Love you all

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This entry was posted on Saturday, October 4th, 2008 at 2:28 am and is filed under Acceptance, Love, Spiritual Warfare, Strategy and Tactics, Unity. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

6 comments so far

 1 

I moved into my first year of university on Monday, and I just wanted to say that this post and your thoughts have been convicting me and keeping me relatively true. Thanks.

October 9th, 2008 at 4:41 am
Sonny
 2 

Hin-Tai

Congratulations on the college start. I appreciate your support and hope you do well and achieve everything God has planned for you. I thank you for the opportunity to dispense something from our Lord into your life. If you want, tell us about yourself in the Introductions page.

Love you

October 9th, 2008 at 1:30 pm
 3 

Greetings Hin-Tai, our family will keep you in our prayers as you embark upon your first year of university.

Sonny, your post reminds me of a statement by one of our profs. He said (in reference to the baptism with the Spirit) – “Speaking in tongues may be the ‘initial’ evidence, but love is the essential evidence.” He was speaking in reference to the work of God’s sanctifying grace which changes the disposition of hearts (from self-centered love to God-centered love).

Jesus said, “By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another” (Jn 13.35 ESV).

Blessings

October 9th, 2008 at 3:03 pm
Sonny
 4 

The whole concept of seeking love and acceptance from others is seriously flawed and can lead to extreme disappointment. There is no one on this planet that can love you enough to never hurt you or betray you. I know that sounds extreme but it is truth.
I am not saying that everyone who loves you will hurt you. Just that they can.

I wonder if we really understand that God is the only one who loves us and will never betray, hurt, abandon, or leave us?

Love you

October 9th, 2008 at 3:12 pm
 5 

Good points. We tend to seek the love of others (affirmation) rather than actively love the “other” (compassion). If we are to reflect God’s (Trinitarian.. dance-like) love, then we must actively love in the face of resistance (bigotry). God overflows in love (reciprocated or not). It is his essence.

What a worshipful witness such love is, as the life (intra/inter-relations) of the church replicates the life of God.
:)

Peace

October 9th, 2008 at 4:02 pm
Sabrina
 6 

Those nearest to me have hurt me before when I gave them my trust. And I know that God is the only one who will never betray me, go back on His word, or lie to me. I think if more people put their absolute trust in God and not in others they would be happier.

October 10th, 2008 at 11:53 am

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  1. Combat Readiness 2…Now That’s Entertainment! | A Sonny Disposition    Oct 20 2008 / 4pm:

    [...] I decided to expand the thought on our response and what is needed to combat each area specifically.  I hope some of you actually [...]

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