And I hear another verse out of heaven, saying, "Come out of her, My people, lest you should be joint participants in her sins, and lest you should be getting of her calamities
The unveiling of Jesus Christ 18: 4, Concordant New Testament
A good friend of mine sent me an article this week detailing the seven reasons that people are leaving the modern church. Having left the mainstream church years ago, this piece caught my interest. I wanted to know if any of the reasons they came up with actually agreed with why it is that I left the church of my youth. There were a few reasons which factored into my decision, but the real reason that I left the church was for theological differences. I came to question the message which I has been receiving from those within the church. I questioned how it is that the pastor of the church I had been attending for a good number of years could speak of the truth of our forgiveness of sins in the death of Christ Jesus one minute, and in the next proclaim that there was still unresolved sin within us. To me it seemed like a zero sum game, what good was it to believe in the forgiveness we find in Jesus if sin still remains in us? In my opinion, someone was not telling me the truth. Either it was those within the church, or God had misled me all of those years. Since I knew in my heart that God had never in my life lied or misled me, I decided that those in the church had lied to me. Therefore, it was an easy decision for me to leave the organized church to seek the truth of the Lord on my own. I have been fortunate, as the same friend who forwarded me this article is also the same friend who has spent years in the role of pastoral leadership within the church. Dare I say that I have become closer to God in the years I've been absent from the church than I ever had while sitting in those pews every Sunday. To me, that's a problem. For I see the purpose of the church to not only lead people spiritually, but to guide them into the truth of our life within the Father. This is a truth I've never heard spoken from any pastor in any church I've ever been in. So, is it really truth if the church never speaks of it? Or, do those in the church disagree with this truth and willfully choose not to speak it? The truth of our life in the Father is not some radical new concept. There are scriptural references to support it. Yet when I attempt to speak of this truth to well meaning believers, I'm accused of cherry picking the scriptures to support my beliefs.
The author J Preston Eby stirred something within me not too long ago when, in his Kingdom Bible series, he proclaimed that the scripture which we find in Revelation 18:4 was a direct command from the Lord to abandon the organized church. One look at this passage and one could understand what Mr. Eby is referring to. The article which my friend sent me is loaded with a number of reasons for which so many people are leaving the church. From moral disagreements and issues with teachings to the conflicts and internal politics involved with the modern church. Having spent a good deal of time in discussions with my friend, I'm well aware of the inner workings of the church he spent so many years leading. Not only that, but I have witnessed the inner workings of this house of cards too many times myself. The personal conflicts and the board room like atmosphere that personifies so many churches today. It doesn't take long before those only interested in a closer walk with the Father say ENOUGH! We're all aware of the disdain which Jesus had for the behavior of the scribes and Pharisees of His day {Matthews Account 23-33}. I've always wondered, if Jesus were to confront those pastors of todays church, would we hear Him declare "Woe to you pastors?" I believe that He would do just that. The issues I have with the modern church involve their false teachings of the Lords children continuing to carry sin which Jesus has already forgiven with them. This is the lie spoken by those within the church. Now, do I believe that well meaning believers could continue in the church for the purpose of fellowship? Absolutely. But I also believe that the value of church attendance stops there. I chose to abandon the house of cards years ago, and I've seen that I'm not alone in that decision.
The God Who makes the world and all that is in it, He, the Lord inherent of heaven and earth, is not dwelling in temples made by hands, neither is He attended by human hands, as if requiring anything, since He Himself gives to all life and breath and all. Besides, He makes out of one every nation of mankind, to be dwelling on all the surface of the earth, specifying the setting of the seasons and the bounds of their dwelling, for them to be seeking God, if, consequently, they may surely grope for Him and be finding Him, though to be sure, not far from each one of us is He inherent, for in Him we are living and moving and are, as some poets of yours have also declared, 'For of that race we are.'
Acts of the Apostles 17: 24-28, Concordant New Testament
~Scott~






