image-title

It’s time for our Laurel Ridge Congregational Worship and Potluck Lunch on the mountain.

If you aren’t able to go to Laurel Ridge, join us at the church for a single 10 AM Worship & Service of Holy Communion.

We hope you’ll make plans to join us Sunday, August 9 from 10 AM until you need to leave at our Moravian Camp, Conference and Retreat Center.  If you’ve ever wondered about “our mountain place set apart for making disciples of Jesus Christ,” this is a great chance to come and explore with our church family.

Activities at Laurel Ridge:
10 AM-11AM > Fellowship
11 AM > Worship & Holy Communion with the Rev. David Guthrie
12 PM > Potluck Lunch
1 PM > Hiking/Fellowship/Games

Activities at Church:

10 AM > Worship & Holy Communion with the Rev. Dr. Worth Green

What to bring to Laurel Ridge:
One or two potluck dishes (meat, vegetable or dessert)
Lawn Chair(s) or a blanket for our Worship service at the Overlook

Tea, lemonade, and water will be provided

Do you need directions to Laurel Ridge?

Take Hwy 421 N. from Winston-Salem. Follow 421 N. to Hwy 18 N. & turn right on to Hwy 18.  Laurel Ridge is located in the Blue Ridge Mountains, 2 miles off Hwy 18 between N. Wilkesboro & Sparta.  Turn left on Darnell Woodie Rd. (State Road 1620), travel 1 mile & look for signs to Laurel Ridge Facilities.

 

Read More
image-title

2nd in the Series: “Living with the Hard Texts of Scripture”
Exodus 34:29-35
2nd Corinthians 3:1-18

We are talking about the Hard Texts of Scripture. My purpose is not to tear down Scripture, but to establish the Moravian position regarding its proper relationship to Jesus Christ, the Word of God Made Flesh. I do this so you will be able to better explain the hard texts of scripture, as a part of your witness to your friends.

Last week we contrasted “weakness,” in Moses and Jesus and his followers, especially in the person and work of St. Paul. We saw that the text from Leviticus 21:16-24 was both pre-Christ and sub-Christ. Moses thought that a physical weakness or blemish disqualified a man from service at the altar. St. Paul understood that “God’s strength is made perfect in weakness.” (2nd Corinthians 12:7-10) Let me give you another example of a hard text that does not measure up to God’s revelation in Jesus Christ. In Deuteronomy 23:2 we read:

“No bastard shall enter the assembly of the Lord; even to the tenth generation none of his descendants shall enter the assembly of the Lord.”

This is another of those texts that is both pre-Christ and sub-Christ. Can you imagine Jesus Christ saying:

“Come unto me all you who labor and are heavy laden, except those of you born out of wedlock, or those of you who happen to be the child, or grandchild, or great grandchild, or great-great great great great great great, etc. grandchild of one born our of wedlock, and I will give you rest.”

I will say it again. This text is pre-Christ and sub-Christ. Indeed, we might even say that is is sub-Ezekiel, for in Ezekiel 18:20 we read that “…the son shall not suffer for the sin of the father.”

Regardless of what some Radio preachers and popular authors might say, the Bible itself clearly teaches that God’s Revelation is progressive, and that Jesus Christ is the apex of that revelation, and that every text of scripture must ultimately measure up to Him.

In the days of his flesh, Jesus dealt with some of the hard texts of scripture directly.

In John 8:3-11 the scribes and the Pharisees brought a woman who had been caught in adultery to him saying, “Teacher, this woman has been caught in the act of adultery. Now in the law Moses commanded us to stone such. What do you say about her?” The author of the 4th Gospel writes that they said this to test Jesus, that they might have some charge to bring against him. Jesus bent down and wrote with his finger in the dirt. And as they continued to ask him, he stood up and said to them, “Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a stone at her.” And once more he bent down and wrote with his finger in the dirt. But when they heard it, they went away, one by one, beginning with the eldest, and Jesus was left alone with the woman standing before him. Jesus looked up (Jesus looked-up to her not down upon her!) and said to her, “Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?” She said, “No one, Lord.” And Jesus said, “Neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more.”

Jesus deals with some of the hard texts of scripture directly, and he deals with some of the hard texts of scripture indirectly. Thus in Matthew 7:12 he says:

12 “So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets. (Matthew 7:12)

And in Matthew 22:36-40 Jesus responds to the question of a Pharisee about which is the great commandment of the Law.

“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. 38 This is the great and first commandment. 39 And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. 40 On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.” (Matthew 22:36-40)

Scholars tell us that Jesus used the phrase, “the Law and the Prophets,” to refer not just to the Law of Moses, and the books of the Major and Minor Prophets, but to the whole Hebrew Bible, our Old Testament. Thus Jesus says that everything in the Hebrew Bible is based upon just two commandments: The commandment to Love God, and the commandment to love our neighbors as we love ourselves. I think it pretty clear that he interprets all the hard texts of the scripture—-including those he set aside, in light of these two powerful commandments, just as we interpret the hard texts of scripture in light of him.

Because of Jesus Christ, we see all of scripture in a different light. This is what St. Paul was getting at the text before us this morning. He says that Moses was a part of what he calls “the dispensation of death” and “the dispensation of condemnation.” Paul speaks of the dispensation of the Law in negative terms for, as he says in Romans 3:20 “no human being will be justified by works of the Law.” The Law can condemn us—-it makes us aware of sin, but the Law cannot forgive us our sins and give us life. Only Jesus can do that. Still, the dispensation of the Law had a certain glory. Paul says that when Moses went before God, his face shone with the glory of God, until it faded away. Paul says, and admittedly he is reading much out of or into the text of Exodus 34, that in order to keep the people from seeing his fading splendor Moses put on a veil. Paul says that this same veil still lies over the minds of the Jewish people when they read the Law. Only when someone comes to Christ is the veil taken away. Because the Spirit of Christ takes the veil away, and because with unveiled faces we are beholding the glory of the LORD in the face of Christ Jesus, we read scripture very differently than our Jewish brothers and sisters.

There are many examples of this. In Isaiah 53 we read:

He was despised and rejected by men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief… he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that made us whole, and with his stripes we are healed…as a lamb led to the slaughter, or a sheep before its shearers is dumb, so he opened not his mouth, in his humiliation justice was denied him… (selections)

A Jew reads that text and he applies it to the prophet, or perhaps to the whole nation of Israel, as did Rabbi Abraham Henschel. Certainly these two truths were a part of its original meaning. Never the less, looking back through the glory of God that is revealed in Jesus Christ, a Christian reads this text and knows immediately that it is a perfect description of Jesus Christ and what he did for us on his cross. In Acts 8 the Ethiopian Eunuch is reading from Isaiah 53 when the Holy Spirit urges Philip to join him in his chariot. The Ethiopian asked, “Pray sir, about whom does the prophet speak, about himself or another.” And the text declares that “beginning with this scripture, Philip told him the Good News about Jesus Christ.”

Let me give you a few other examples of things that the New Testament says have changed for us because we know Jesus Christ.

I will start with an easy example, one that most of you give thanks for at least several times each week: The Dietary Laws. In Acts 10:12-16 Peter has a vision in which a sheet is let down by its four corners upon the earth, and in it were all kinds of animals and reptiles and birds of the air. And a voice came to him saying, “Rise, Peter; kill and eat.” But Peter said, “No, Lord; for I have never eaten anything that is common or unclean.” And the voice came to him again a second time, “What God has cleansed, you must not call common.” 16 This happened three times, and at last Peter knew that the dietary laws of the Hebrew Bible, our Old Testament no longer apply to us. Several weeks ago I ate a sandwich at Calabash that Moses called “an abomination before the LORD.” I did not loose any sleep over it; indeed I gained a little. I am allergic to seafood, and took two Benadryl tablets for safety’s sake, and very near slept the afternoon away!

Let me give you a little harder example: The commandments and ordinances of the Law. Moses used the law of commandments and ordinances to make Israel stand out from the nations that surrounded her. Jews wore odd clothes, and Jewish men did not “round the corners of their head,” so that they had dreadlocks dangling down and framing their faces; and they ate only special foods, specially prepared, and one day a week they refused to do work, or anything that resembled work, even when a little work would have made their lives much easier. .These “ commandments and ordinances” of the Law were a real hardship on the people of Israel, but they made the people of Israel powerful witnesses. The peoples who surrounded Israel may not have believed in the Lord God of Israel, but they knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that the people of Israel believed, for no one would make the sacrifices the Jews made without great faith.

The “commandments and ordinances” of the Law no longer apply to us. I can prove that from Scripture. In Ephesians 2 the apostle writes that there were two kinds of “men” in the world, or two people groups, the Jew, the circumcision, and the Gentile, lacking circumcision. The Jew stood close to God, for he is the recipient of God’s promises and the covenants. By contrast the Gentile stood far off, “without God and without hope in the world.” The temple in Jerusalem was a visual reminder of the distance between the two men. A wall separated the outer, Gentile court of the temple from the inner courts of the temple which were reserved for the Jews. There was a sign on the wall that read: “Whoever is captured (beyond this wall) will have himself to blame for his subsequent death.”

In Ephesians 2 the apostle announces the good news that Jesus has broken down the dividing wall of hostility between Jews and Gentiles:

15 abolishing in his flesh the law of commandments and ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, 16 (that) he might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby bringing the hostility to an end.

As Christians, we are no longer bound by the law of commandments and ordinances; but we are bound by the deeper truth of the cross, and that separates us from the world in the same way that the law of commandments and ordinances separates Jews from the world. We worship a God whose weakness is stronger than the strength of men. In the person of his Son, God allows himself to be driven out of the world onto a cross. And the Son of God told us that we cannot follow him unless we are willing to take up a cross of our own. In this we are even odder than the Jews. As Paul says in 1st Corinthians:1-22-24:

22 For Jews demand signs and Greeks seek wisdom, 23 but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, 24 but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God

Let me give you one more example: Male Circumcision. Circumcision was the sign of the Old Covenant just as Baptism is the sign of the New Covenant. It is commanded in the Hebrew Bible, and that command is taken seriously. In Exodus 4, we read that when Moses did not circumcise his own son, God almost killed him. Yet in Romans 2:28-29 St. Paul says:

28 For he is not a real Jew who is one outwardly, nor is true circumcision something external and physical. 29 He is a Jew who is one inwardly, and real circumcision is a matter of the heart, spiritual and not literal.

In Acts 15 we read that at the First Apostolic Council that was held in Antioch the apostles decided that Gentiles did not have to become Jews before becoming Christians. They published this decision saying, “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us.” This is a clear example of Jesus keeping his promise of John 16, wherein he says that the Holy Spirit would lead us, members of his body the church, into all truth. It is a good thing they were sensitive to the Holy Spirit, despite the literal letter of the Law. Today there are 20 million Jews in the world and 2 billion Christians, one million times more Christians than Jews. I wonder if the church would have fared so well had the First Apostolic Council insisted we become Jews before we become Christians?

Let me sum up. The late E. Stanley Jones was a Methodist missionary and evangelist. He wrote that when he first went to India he found himself defending a long line that stretched from Genesis to Revelation to the history of the Christian Church, to Western Civilization, and beyond. He said spent all his time bouncing up and down behind the line defending this and defending that. He said most of the time the non-Christian world drew the line at something in the Old Testament, or, perhaps, at something in Western Civilization. He felt the heart of the gospel was being left out. He knew that there were many points of question about Scripture and our faith, but only one point of decision. We don’t really decide anything when we decide what we believe about some point of question. God decided those things long ago. We make a real decision when we decide about Jesus Christ, a decision that affects us in time and eternity. So Stanley Jones decided to shorten the line and take his stand at Jesus Christ. When a non-Christian objected to something, he would always ask them to view that thing in light of Jesus Christ. Where he had been a failure, broken in body and in spirit, he became a success. He went on to become one of the most successful evangelists of the 20th Century. Jones’ method is still valid today. When we are forced to defend our faith before the non-Christian world, we must bring everything, including the hard texts ofscripture, to Jesus Christ. This does not make us weaker and less effective in faith; but stronger and more effective. There are many hard texts in scripture, but the splendor of those texts have long since faded like the face that Moses hid behind a veil. Today many of them no longer bind us; but they still serve to highlight the unfading glory that God has revealed in Jesus Christ. If the dispensation of death, came with splendor, the dispensation of life comes with much more splendor, and we are invited to share in it. As the apostle writes:

18 And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being changed into his likeness from one degree of glory to another; for this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit. 2 Corinthians 3:18 RSV

Finis

Read More
image-title

All interested parties are invited to join Circle 2 as they host an informative program called Navigation by Salemtowne. This is a non profit program focusing on health, wellness, and maintaining independence while remaining in ones home. Mark your calendar for Tuesday, August 4 at 10AM and join us in the Banquet Room. Light refreshments will be served.

Read More
image-title

This sermon is one of a series that is still developing. My purpose is not to put the Bible down, but to establish Jesus Christ as the standard by which Moravians interpret and understand all scripture. I find I cannot say all that I want to say in each sermon. I will try to say all that I need to say in the series. It may help the reader to know that I believe that the Bible is infallible, in the sense that it will accomplish all that God purposes for it to do. I also believe that the Bible that we have is the Bible that God intends us to have. (Isaiah 55:10) I say that knowing that there are thousands of manuscripts of the New Testament alone, and more variations in those manuscripts than there are words in the text. It is my conviction that even this variety of texts has meaning for us. Likewise, I believe that even the hard text of scripture, those that are absolutely contrary to what we know of God as revealed in Jesus Christ, have valuable lessons to teach us. For instance, in Psalm 137:9 we read, “Happy shall he be who takes your little ones and dashes them against the rock.”The Psalmist is referring to the children of the Babylonians who have destroyed the children of his own people. This does not mean that we will be happy when we destroy the children of our enemies. It does mean that God understands the cries of the human heart even when they are unworthy!

Many of us are in the habit of overlooking the hard texts of scripture, as we might overlook occasional episodes of bad behavior in a normally well behaved child. We are so confident in the everyday goodness of the Bible, that we forgive those texts that seem somehow contrary to the whole without giving them too much thought.

Those who have yet to settle the issue of faith and discipleship are less forgiving. Let me see if I can illustrate.

I remember a Sunday at my last church when the wife of a good friend got up and walked out of the sanctuary while I was reading the Old Testament lesson. The text that offended her was from Genesis 22. It told the story of how God tested Abraham’s devotion. At God’s direction, Abraham took his son Isaac up a mountain in the land of Moriah to offer him as a sacrifice. Abraham bound the boy, and laid him upon a makeshift altar. He took his knife in his hand and was preparing to strike when, at the last possible moment, the angel of the LORD stayed Abraham’s hand, and he looked up to see a ram caught in a thicket. Abraham had obeyed God, holding nothing back, not even his son, and God had provided the sacrifice.

Devout Jews and Christians hear the story of Abraham and Isaac and we pay tribute to the faith of the man we know as “the father of all who have faith.” My friend’s wife heard the same story, and she had just given birth to her first son, and she thought of him, and she was aghast that God would put a parent like herself to such a test.

I knew immediately why she had walked out, and later that week I met with her. I tried to explain to her that, in the context of the Ancient Israel, the story of Abraham and Isaac was not just a story about how God tested the devotion of Abraham, but it was also a story about how the LORD God of Israel did not require child sacrifice.

That may not seem so very important to those of us who have lived in 20th and 21st century America, but it was exceedingly important to the ancient Jews. Jewish parents often lived in the same vicinity with those who worshiped other gods like Molech, who did require child sacrifice. Molech was a larger than life-sized idol often fashioned of bronze. He had the head of a bull, or a cow, and the body of a man. His arms were extended and joined so that they could temporarily bear the weight of a child. Molech stood over a fire, and his arms were heated red hot, and a child was placed in them by the child’s mother, or father, and the child was immediately burned, and for a few seconds the child screamed and fought against the pain, and then the child dropped into the flames that burned at the idol’s feet to die, quickly, we hope. I told my friend’s wife that Molech made the God of Abraham seem about as threatening as a glass of warm milk at bed time, but the damage was done, and though he remains a friend, and she remains one of the best people I have ever known, she never did come back to church.

Some hard texts of the Bible are easy to explain—at least to believers. Others require more effort. Take the text from Leviticus 21 that is before us this morning. Therein Moses tells Aaron that when considering his descendants for service at the altar in the Tabernacle, only the cream of the crop will be good enough. Moses told Aaron that no man could serve as a priest who had a blemish, or a mutilated face, or a limb that was too long, or too short, or who was blind, or lame, or who had a hunchback, or crushed testicles, or who was a dwarf, or who had an itching disease, or scabs. This text seems to suggest that the prophet of God we know as Moses could have used a little sensitivity training. Both the government of the United States, and the government of the Great State of North Carolina have made provisions for people with disabilities to have ingress and egress to our public buildings, and the people who planned and built New Philadelphia have tried to make it easy for people in wheel chairs to get in and out of our sanctuary, and fellowship hall. And I cannot imagine that you would overlook the opportunity to call a well qualified pastor because he, or she, had a limp, or had impaired vision. Does that make us somehow superior to the prophet of God, Moses?

To even begin to explain this text (and others like it) to people like the wife of my friend, we must once more look closely into the historical circumstances of the time in which it was written. At the very least, this text is a guarantee that children who were born into the community of ancient Israel, who were less than “perfect,” were not killed at birth, but were allowed to grow-up, and continue to be a part of the community. They could even share the meal from the altar, they just could not serve there. To our modern sensibilities this may seem an unworthy compromise, and no doubt it is; but it was a huge step forward over the practices of the peoples that surrounded ancient Israel. Ordinarily, perfect children were offered to Molech! If a child was less than perfect, and often, the only acceptable perfection was the perfection of being a male child, then the child was often taken into the wilderness and exposed to the elements, and left to die, or else they were tossed over a cliff to die in a trash heap at the bottom of a gully.

Of course, this explanation is weak tea for many people like the wife of my friend, and I would suggest a stronger brew. I have told you before that God’s revelation of himself is progressive. God’s revelation of himself in Nature is progressive, or at least, progressively understood. We know more about natural world than did any of the human authors of the Bible. .King David looked at the heavens with his naked eye, and saw tens of thousands of stars, and he said, “the heavens are telling the glory of God.” We look at the heavens through powerful telescopes born millions of miles beyond the earth by satellites, and we see billions of stars, and we know that, “the heavens are telling the glory of God, AND HOW!!!” Likewise, the Special Revelation of the Bible is progressive, and progressively understood. Moses knew more about he Law than Abraham, because Abraham lived before the Law was given. The prophets who spoke of the coming of the Messiah, including John the Baptist, glimpsed the glory of God, but they did not see it with the same clarity as the disciples who beheld the glory of the LORD in the face of Christ Jesus, risen from the dead. The progressive nature of Special Revelation means that God was not content with speaking the word though his prophets, priests and kings, like Moses, Isaiah, and David. Nor was God content with writing down the word in the Law and the Prophets. God ultimately had to fix the Word, and let it live in the person of Jesus Christ. A picture is worth 1,000 words; and the value of a living Word is incalculable. That is what St. John is getting at when he wrote:

“And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us.”

That is what the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews was getting at when he wrote:

12 For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and spirit, of joints and marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. 13 And before him (did you get that “before him!”) no creature is hidden, but all are open and laid bare to the eyes of him with whom we have to do. Hebrews 4:12

If you want to see what God is really like, you cannot be content with Leviticus 21, you have got to read the rest of Scripture, particularly the gospels. You have got to see for yourself how Jesus reached out to the poor, and the lame, and the blind, and the deaf, and the leper, and restored them to their families and communities, even before he healed them. It is interesting that one of the greatest of the Old Testament prophets, Isaiah, predicted that the Messiah himself, whom we know to be Jesus, “had no form or comeliness that we should look at him, and no beauty that we should desire him.” (Isaiah 53:2 RSV)There are other texts that need be to considered also. In 1st Corinthians 12:20-22 St. Paul considered those who belong to Christ’s body the church. Infused with the Spirit of Jesus, Paul takes an approach completely opposite that suggested by Moses to Aaron in Leviticus 21. The apostle writes:

20 …there are many parts, yet one body. 21 The eye cannot say to the hand, “I have no need of you,” nor again the head to the feet, “I have no need of you.” 22 On the contrary, the parts of the body which seem to be weaker are indispensable.

In case you doubt the relevance of this passage, in 2nd Corinthians 12 Paul talks about his own weakness. He says that to keep him being too elated by the abundance of revelations he had received from the Lord, he was given a thorn in the flesh. Some scholars think this thorn in the flesh was weak eyesight. Others think it was epilepsy, which was common among the Caesars, too. There have been many suggestions. It matters not; what matters is how Paul bore his weakness. He says that, three times, he asked the LORD to take it away; and three times he received the same answer: “My grace is sufficient for you; for my strength is made perfect in weakness.” And Paul said, “I will all the more boast in my weakness, so that the power of Christ might rest upon me.”

How many times have you known someone who suffered some terrible illness, or disadvantage, who yet rose to be one of the most remarkable and effective people you have ever known? Samuel Logan Bengal, the founder of the Salvation Army was told he was going blind. He said, “I have served God with my sight, I will serve God with my blindness.” Fanny Crosby wrote hundreds of gospel songs. Who knows whether she would have written so much and so well had she not been blind? And who knows whether Stephen Hawking would have been the scientist he has been apart from his battle with ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease? And who knows whether Franklin Delano Roosevelt would have been the great president that he was if he had not suffered with Polio? The Bible seems to be on the side of the underdog. The book of Judges tells us Gideon was chosen to be a Judge over Israel because he belonged to the least family of the least clan in the least tribe in Israel. God alone made Gideon a mighty man of valor. God anointed Saul as the first king of Israel because he looked like a king, he stood a head taller than any other man in Israel; but Saul was a colossal failure. When Samuel anointed David king over Israel in Saul’s stead, he was the least of Jesse’s sons, and the one who looked least like a king. David was certainly the underdog when he went out against Goliath of Gath, the champion of the Philistines.

God’s strength is made perfect in weakness. No where is that any more obvious than in the person of Jesus the Messiah himself. The Jews wanted a conquering king. They wanted a Messiah who would rout the Romans, and drive them from Jerusalem, and from the Holy Land, and rule the nations with a rod of iron. Jesus was the Messiah Israel waited for; but not the Messiah they expected. Jesus said that he came not to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many. Jesus was rejected by the majority of the people who waited for him, given a mockery of a trial by the Romans, and crucified between two common criminals. Yet, the cross of Jesus has become the single most remarkable and powerful symbol in the history of the world, a symbol not of failure but of victory. When we look back at the cross we do not see the bad end of a good man, we see a road traveled once for all by a now risen and victorious Savior. It has often been said that the Risen Christ trampled the cross under his feet. There is a senses in which he did, but a sense in which he did not. There is a sense in which Jesus still rules from that cross, the most winsome and attractive revelation of God in the history of our planet. From the cross Jesus stretches out his arms to welcome all those who are conscious of their need for a Savior, and it matters not if we are down and out or up and coming, it matters only that we know we need him..

Let me sum up with a story. Some years ago I was participating in a dialogue between the Moravian Church and various reformed denominations. They style themselves “Sola Scriptura,” or “Scripture Alone,” and they try to fit the Bible into a single system of doctrine. We Moravians style ourselves, “Christ Centered,” and, in The Ground of the Unity, we confess that we do not look for a single system of doctrine in the Bible. One day, after lunch, a representative of one of the Reformed Churches brought in a copy of a new book by Bishop Spong that dealt with the hard texts of scripture, like some of those I have mentioned this morning. The book was a best seller, and he assumed our familiarity with it. He said, “How would you Moravians deal with these texts?” Herman Weinlick and I put our heads together for a brief moment, then we answered. We said, “Well, we would simply say that some texts of Scripture are pre-Christ and some texts of scripture are sub-Christ, they don’t measure up to the fullness of the Revelation of God that we see in Him.” Without exception, very head in the room nodded their affirmation, and many faces expressed an envy at the simplicity with which we Moravians could sweep aside what for them was a huge theological debate. Now here is the kicker. Herman and I were perhaps the most conservative people in the room, yet since we belonged to a church that had always made Christ central, and everything else, even the Bible, secondary or ministerial, we could deal with the hard texts of scripture with a simplicity that other children of the Protestant Reformation could only envy. Now some people will be troubled by our Moravian simplicity. I would point out that we are not completely alone. Luther, the father of the Protestant Reformation, maintained that the Scripture was inspired in direct proportion that it preached Christ. Where people are devalued, and Christ ignored; he questioned inspiration; where Christ is preached as crucified, and Risen, that is where people were lifted-up, as Christ himself lifted us up, he thought inspiration was doubly potent. Let me give you an even more remarkable example. In 1963 the Southern Baptist convention adopted the standard that the Bible was the Word of God, with one proviso: “The criterion by which the Bible is to be interpreted in Jesus Christ.” Unfortunately, in the 1970’s, when the literalists took over that denomination, they dropped this criterion from the confession. Though I value my Southern Baptist brothers and sisters, I see this commission as just one more reason why God needs a little denomination like the Moravian Church. We may be the least of the least, but God has given us a message about Jesus Christ, and his role among us, and his role regarding scripture, that is more needed in the critical and sophisticated world of today than ever before.

Finis

Worth Green, Th.M., D.Min.

Read More
image-title

Moravian Children’s Festival
Save the date for a provincial Children’s Festival on Sunday, August 16, 2015, at Bethania Moravian Church, 5545 Main St., Bethania, NC 27010. This festival commemorates the Moravian children’s spiritual renewal in Herrnhut in August 1727. Children’s activities are from 2:00pm-3:45pm and include: storytelling, music, games, candle making, quilting, hayrides, horse rides, & face-painting. A special children’s lovefeast service will follow at 4:00pm. Bring a picnic lunch to enjoy with your family or group on the historic grounds of Bethania prior to the activities! For more information contact Beth Hayes at bhayes@mcsp.org or 336.722.8126.

Read More
image-title

 

We will continue our Sew-a-Dress projects on the 2nd and 4th Wednesday of each month in the Women’s Fellowship Craft Room.
So mark your calendars and join us from 9AM until 12 N. Donations of rickrack, buttons, pillowcases, etc. are always needed (collection box is in the library). Come help iron, sew
and enjoy fellowship while we make dresses!

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 

Read More