Ask Your Preacher - Archives
FALSE WORSHIP
Weekend Warrior
Friday, February 16, 2018I want to join a new church, but this church has church on Saturday and Bible study on Tuesday; I thought church must be on Sunday and Bible study on Wednesday, or does it matter?Sincerely,
Calendar Keeper
Dear Calendar Keeper,
We can study the Bible whenever we want (Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, etc.), but the church is commanded to come together on Sunday to worship. Acts 20:7 gives us the example that the church took the Lord’s Supper on Sunday, and 1 Cor 16:1-2 shows us that the church should take up a contribution on Sunday. The church must come together on Sunday to do these two things if nothing else. We have further evidence that the church used Sunday as a day of worship because John used the term “the Lord’s day” in Rev 1:10. Numerous early christian writers and historians refer to Sunday as the Lord’s day. Sunday is a day that God has set aside for christians to come together, remember Jesus’ sacrifice, contribute to the work, sing songs of praise, pray, and study God’s Word. Any church that doesn’t meet on Sundays isn’t taking the Bible seriously.
Blasphemous Preaching Pt. 2
Monday, February 05, 2018(This question is a follow-up to “Blasphemous Preaching”)
Thank you so very much for the quick response. I left church early tonight and felt very guilty even taking communion to my Holy Father because I had to excuse myself right after communion, so I could leave. I just had to get out of there. The Sunday night service was worse than the morning. I am beginning to think that my pastor has serious mental problems, and I don't know what to do about it. I am teaching Sunday school, and I am able to teach one hour of truth, and I am able to sing worship songs to God. But the preaching is making my nerves shaky. He either tells news stories that he gets from the internet that are so far fetched it's like something from the Globe or the Enquirer, or he reads history books, or he shows videos on a big screen. This morning, when he said what he did about Jesus, it was about the worst! But nobody seems to mind. If they do, I don't hear it. I am wanting to get away and seek the Lord for wisdom as to whether or not to quit the church, but I am certain that the Lord has called me to work for Him. I just don't know what to do about this preacher. I e-mailed him the Scripture that proves that Mary and Joseph were married before Jesus was born, but he won't say anything about it. Would you please pray that God will show me what His plan is and what His will is? I need to sing, and I love teaching Sunday school. Thank you.Sincerely,
Horrified
Dear Horrified,
We appreciate your dedication to your congregation and your righteous indignation over false teaching. May we offer some thoughts on the issue? You have written to us on numerous occasions because of the unscriptural things that are coming from your church’s pulpit. You are trying to balance your desire to work for Christ and your desire to avoid false teaching. Have you considered that by leaving and going somewhere faithful, you would be doing both? God says that a faithful congregation should be “a pillar and ground of the truth” (1 Tim 3:15). In your own words, the church you are currently a part of isn’t – and the membership doesn’t seem to care about changing that. Your labors (which you intended to offer to the Lord) are being used to support false teaching and unscriptural practices. Since it seems clear that the congregation is at peace with their preacher’s sermons and teachings… you are now in the vast minority and propping up a sinking ship. Looking at the character and honesty your letters have conveyed – you simply aren’t with a like-minded group of people. We know of faithful, biblically-sound churches all across America… churches you could feel comfortable in, grow from the teaching of, and use your zeal and energy to support. Would you consider letting us recommend one to you? If so, e-mail us at askyourpreacher@mvchurchofchrist.org.
Hooked On A Feeling
Monday, December 18, 2017When I am playing the piano in our worship, I hardly ever feel the presence of God. But when I have the Sunday off, and I am worshipping, I feel God's presence. Why is this?Sincerely,
Not Feeling It
Dear Not Feeling It,
There are two parts to your question that must be dealt with. Before we answer your concerns about how and when you feel close to God, we recommend you read the post “Music to HIS Ears”. After reading that, it may make the second part of this question obsolete because it explains how using instruments as a part of worship isn’t a biblical practice.
The second half of your question deals with emotion. The Bible never talks about us feeling the presence of God. In fact, mankind hasn’t been allowed in the presence of God since Adam and Eve got kicked out of the Garden (Gen 3:8). The angels are in God’s presence (Lk 1:19), but mankind won’t be until the Day of Judgment. God is certainly close to us and affects our lives (Acts 17:27-28), but we don’t have direct contact with Him. So when we talk about “feeling the presence of God”, what we are really discussing is when we feel emotionally close to God. Emotions are fickle. There will be times when you will feel like God is far from you… but you are wrong because He is still watching over you (Ps 9:10), and there are folks that believe that they are close to God, but they are separated from Him because they are living wickedly (Matt 7:21-23). Simply put, we can’t trust our emotions to be accurate. The only way to confidently know that God is near you is to live faithfully by hearing and acting upon His instructions (Rom 1:16).
Out Of Africa
Tuesday, August 29, 2017I sometimes pray with a group of people on a prayer line. The leader calls in from Africa. The man calls himself a prophet. No one has ever seen him.The prophet is the leader of this prayer line. He seems to be a wonderful man of God with spiritual gifts… always praying in the name of Jesus. I’m very concerned and do not want to be deceived into any magic or anything that is against God.
He often asks the people who are having issues to bring oil, water, white handkerchiefs, stones, garments, shoes, rings, pictures, honey, sugar, salt, shirts, and many other objects. He would pray over them and tell us what to do with them (for example: wear it to bed, put it under your pillow, flush things down the toilet, place it in the Bible, and various directions).
Could it be that, in the background, he is working magic? Is this of God? Should christians be involved in this? Thanks for your honest answer.
Sincerely,
On The Party Line
Dear On The Party Line,
This man is definitely not of God. God tells us to test all teachers and compare them to the Scriptures (1 Jhn 4:1) because even false teachers disguise themselves as ministers of the light (2 Cor 11:14-15). This man is a great example of this.
God never teaches that we should do the things that this “prophet” is telling you to do. In fact, the Bible teaches that all behavior like this is occult and should be fled from. When the christians of the first-century converted, they burned their books of magic and fled from such occult practices (Acts 19:19). Paul tells us that all spiritual gifts have ceased (1 Cor 13:8-10). This man isn’t teaching or living by Bible principles; he has warped God’s Word for his own purposes, and that will get him in a lot of eternal trouble (Gal 1:6-8). This man has gone beyond the Scriptures (1 Cor 4:6). Don’t unwittingly become his accomplice by entertaining his false notions (2 Jhn 1:11). You are right to be concerned.
Can't Buy Me Love
Monday, August 14, 2017Hi. Hope you are having a wonderful day. I have a question. I know that if you sow financial seed, you can receive a harvest from God, but what I want to know is: can I also sow financial seed to receive a healing from God???Sincerely,
Medical Costs?
Dear Medical Costs,
Whoever told you that you are guaranteed a financial harvest by giving to God is misinterpreting the meaning of 2 Cor 9:6. The idea that we get financial gain by giving more to churches is a heretical teaching that very conveniently happens to sow financial prosperity for churches… regardless of what happens to the people they are preaching to. This teaching is often referred to as “the prosperity gospel” and is wrong (read our article “Cash Cow” for further details on that false doctrine). Suffice it to say, sometimes God blesses giving people with financial blessings, but other times, truly godly people suffer through great financial struggles.
We don’t know what physical ailment you wish to have healed, but more money in the contribution plate isn’t the answer, and if your church is telling you that it is – you need to find a new church! We can help with that if you’d like (e-mail us at askyourpreacher@mvchurchofchrist.org). God tells us to pray when we are sick and to have others pray for us as well (Jas 5:14). Righteous prayers do more good than we can ever imagine (Pr 15:29, Jas 5:16). Live faithfully and trust that God is in control (Ps 46:10).