About basic teachings of Christian faith :: Christians
http://christians.what.cc
We grew up in various denominations or in atheistic surroundings
but we have all come to realise, that different paths do not
lead to one and the same destination. There are so many ways out
there to choose from, so many people offering answers;
Protestants, Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses, Adventists,
Methodists, Pentecostals, Buddhists, Moslems, atheists, ... The
question is:
What is the right way, what is truth?
The answer you often hear is "Everybody has his own truth", or
"No one can really know it". In our opinion, such statements
contradict the fact that there is a reality. Either the earth is
round or it is flat. It cannot be both. The one reality remains
absolute and unchanged regardless of the way you look at it. It
is the same with religious questions. When it comes down to it,
it is not possible for two opposing and contradictory
alternatives to exist simultaneously, one for you and one for
me. If the reality is that there is a resurrection after death
then there cannot be reincarnation. You cannot have both eternal
life after death and annihilation of the soul. If matter was
created by God it cannot have existed from eternity. Or let us
consider some other questions to which contradictory answers
cannot both be right: Is Jesus God, or is he not? Does God
predestine people to condemnation, or does he not? Can a man
fall away from God, or can he not? Is man sinful by nature, or
is he not? Does hell exist, or does it not?
Do not such questions and others like them inspire everybody who
wants to get to know God's nature to have a standpoint? Can we
remain indifferent to these questions if we are interested in
finding out how to live according to God's will?
To find answers to these questions we think that we need neither
a new revelation nor a new special method of interpreting the
Bible. Nor do we think that we are the source of the truth - we
are far from being arrogant or from being perfect - but we
believe that truth is accessible, because Jesus revealed it to
the mankind.
The majority of people hold the opinion that there is no
absolute truth. In our society, the view that the truth is
relative is the predominating ideology. Many people have become
accustomed to this stream of thought and think that one's idea
of truth is relative and has no validity for others, "What seems
good to me is what is right!" However, if everything has the
same validity, then in the end nothing matters; the standard
according to which good and bad, right and wrong are measured,
is completely missing. Everyone can find something to suit his
own personal taste and needs. People paint their own picture of
heaven, choosing the colours from a palette of their own desires
and wishes, creating their own religion, which seems to fit well
enough for the time being... In fact, religion is widely treated
as yet another branch of the arts, like the world of fashion in
which people shape trends and trends, in turn shape people.
However, God's way is different:
So Jesus was saying to those Jews who had believed Him, "If you
continue in My word, {then} you are truly disciples of Mine; and
you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free."
(John 8:31-32)
In God's eyes, all people who do not seek the truth are
captives. He wants to set us free from selfish desires and
sexual sins, from vanity and envy, from the feeling of
inferiority and pride, from arrogance and the urge to win the
favour of other people. He wants to set us free from misleading
teachings, which lead people to concentrate on themselves even
more in the effort to save themselves. But he also wants to set
us free from wrong ideas which people call Christianity, where
people devote vast amounts of time and energy in striving for
social justice but neglect the spiritual fight against sin. He
wants to free us from teachings, which provide an assurance of
God's forgiveness but forget that discipleship means to follow
Jesus. He wants to liberate us from doctrines, which promise
God's grace, but renounce obedience as legalistic. For this
reason, we seek the truth, searching for God's will in both our
lives and teaching.
This search for God's will led us to the question:
How does God want me to use my life? What should Christian
community look like?
In the case of the first Christians in Jerusalem, it looked like
this:
They were continually devoting themselves to the apostles'
teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to
prayer... Day by day continuing with one mind in the temple, and
breaking bread from house to house, they were taking their meals
together with gladness and sincerity of heart,... (Acts 2:42 and
46)
For Christians in that time it was natural to meet and to deal
with the teaching every day. It was a testimony of their great
interest in, and love for God and their brothers and sisters. We
too have this great wish to share our lives with our sisters and
brothers in faith, to read the Bible together, and to take part
in the joys and sorrows and spiritual fights with each other. We
are very thankful that we can live in a time in which good
transport and convenient working hours make daily community
possible. Daily community is for us an expression of love and a
result of the wish to live out what we believe, to devote our
time to God and our brothers and sisters in faith. We use our
time for what is important for us.
If someone says, "I love God," and hates his brother, he is a
liar; for the one who does not love his brother whom he has
seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen. 1 John 4:21 And this
commandment we have from Him, that the one who loves God should
love his brother also. (1 John 4:20-21)
This intensive fellowship helps us much to be able to strengthen
one another in our struggles and practice the principle
expressed in the Bible:
But encourage one another day after day, as long as it is
{still} called "Today," so that none of you will be hardened by
the deceitfulness of sin. (Hebrews 3:13)
We do not want to build superficial relationships or put on a
good front for one another and by doing so avoid revealing the
reality about ourselves. Instead, we confess our sins and
weaknesses to one another in order to help one another in the
fight for holiness according to Jesus' example.
A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even
as I have loved you, that you also love one another. (John
13:34)
This is the kind of love we want to live - not just on Sundays
or at celebrations but every day alike; not only with particular
friends but with anyone who wants to live in the truth.
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