Re: dialogue
[quote author="Warren Bird"][quote author="Glenn Slaven"]As I mentioned, the church is most powerful (that is most effective, not powerful in a political sense) when it is under persecution. If we look at the 1st few centuries of the church, it was most authentic before Constantine authorised it, from then on there was a corrupting effect on the mixing of church and state.
I can’t claim to have studied church history in great detail, but I wonder if this comment is actually correct. The church has been very effective at other times. The Reformation, for one, was not a time of persecution in the sense that I think we have in mind in this discussion. The English revival of the 18th Century was similarly not a time of persecution, but was a time of great spiritual power in the visible church.
What I meant was that it was more authentic before Constantine at the time. I didn’t mean to say that the church has been going downhill from there, the reformation & the many revivals are obvious evidence of the church being authentic & effective. That was a sudden change that was due to a dramatic change in the status of the church. The church has progressed since then. Sorry I may not have been totally clear what I meant. Chris, as Jeremy mentioned if you want to debate whether the church was corrupted by the freedoms that Constantine gave we can start another thread. Let me just say that the evidence is there for this. The texts from the More College subject on Early Church History make good reading here.
[quote author="Warren Bird"]It limits God to say that His church is “most powerful” only under certain circumstances. He can and does empower the church in many different situations, exercising His sovereign freedom to carry out His purposes in His time and His way.
I never said He can’t do it any other time & we know that He does. But the history does show that while revival has not always come from persecution, persecution has regularly brought revival.
[quote author="Warren Bird"]It’s just that I have heard others say over the years things like “what the church needs is a good dose of persecution” and I simply cannot accept that.
I wouldn’t limit God to say that He wouldn’t use persecution to fix His church, He’s done it in the past. But I’m not saying that that is what we need here.
[quote author="Warren Bird"]I take it from this (and other passages such as 1 Timothy 2) that we should work and pray for a society in which the church is not persecuted.
Absolutely, but as long as there are non-Christians there will be persecution, to one degree or another.
[quote author="Warren Bird"]I don’t know if that is going to be humanly possible in Iraq. Hopefully Iraqi Christians will be pro-active about their role in a future government or their place in the future Iraqi society. I hope it is just media “story telling” that gives the impression that they are simply weeping and cowering because the “freedoms” they had under Saddam are now gone. The freedom to keep silent when your countrymen were being tortured and slaughtered hardly seems consistent with Biblical injunctions not to abuse Christian freedom as an excuse for evil. Anyway, I don’t know much about Iraqi Christianity and, like I C Dimly says in another forum, you can’t trust what you read in the papers, so I don’t want to be too judgmental - they need encouragement and support over there, not accusations about how they behaved under that tyrant. I really have no idea what it must have been like and don’t want to contemplate some of the pressures they would have been put under to make compromises - “Support Saddam or your daughter gets raped” sort of pressure.
Agree 100%
[quote author="Warren Bird"]What I do know about is Australia, where I think we do face some threats to our freedoms as Christians. I think we take them for granted and risk having them slip away from under our noses if we aren’t careful. The Bible tells us to be at prayer for our governing authorities and I fear that we don’t do this enough any more. I’d like to finish this post by sharing a prayer that I have written and used sometimes in church on this very issue:
Heavenly Father, please grant that we will be governed by men and women who respect and cherish freedom of speech and worship, so that Christians in Australia will always be allowed to meet and to preach the gospel of Christ without breaking the law or being regarded as undesirable. Protect us from the tyranny that is spreading around the world as Islam and post-modern thinking gain influence and power. May our society be ordered peaceably, so that truth and justice will be the hallmarks of our governing institutions at all levels – Federal, State and local. In the name of the one before whom every knee will one day bow, the Lord of all, Jesus Christ. Amen.
Amen to that, that is beautiful Warren, we need to pray for our leaders, Christian & non-Christian.
Glenn