Post by TheFirebrand on May 30, 2012 21:38:58 GMT -6
Matthew 6:1-9 (KJV) "Take heed that ye do not your alms before men, to be seen of them: otherwise ye have no reward of your Father which is in Heaven. Therefore when thou doest thine alms, do not sound a trumpet before thee, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that they may have glory of men. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward. But when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth: That thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which seeth in secret himself shall reward thee openly. And when thou prayest, thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are: for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and in the corners of the streets, that they may be seen of men. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward. But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly. But when ye pray, use not vain repetitions, as the heathen do: for they think that they shall be heard for their much speaking. Be not ye therefore like unto them: for your Father knoweth what things ye have need of, before ye ask Him."
I came to notice Matthew chapter 6 (The words of Christ Himself) in regards to tithing and praying and it suddenly occurred to me yet 2 more things the church of man does completely wrong ...
The following is a piece on the matter of prayer, but the same concept applies to tithing ...
Prayer Meetings By: K. B. Napier
How's about a little honesty? Hands up, all those Believers who think that the mid-week prayer meeting is the most boring meeting! Hands up, too, if you make all sorts of excuses for not attending...and then feel guilty because you don't attend! Then join the queue...for thousands feel the same way, but are too afraid to say so! (Peculiarly, this Outline applies even if you think prayer meetings are exciting).
You have probably been told - as I was - that the "prayer meeting is the very core of local church life" or that "without a lively prayer meeting, a church is spiritually dead". Or, something along those lines. Yes? Let me throw a bomb into these claims by saying that:
(a) I gave up attending these 'vital' meetings some years ago
(b) Prayer meetings, as we know them today, are not found in scripture
Before you emit gasps of horror and consign me to the 'heretic' bin, let me show you why I say these things. For over twenty years I dutifully attended prayer meetings. Most times I attended I came away more depressed than uplifted. I listened to those fluent 'prayer-warriors' who could pray birds down from the trees! By contrast, I could hardly ever think of anything to say...and when I did say something, it was often halting and feeble when put against the words of the 'warriors'. And if there was one of those terrifying 'circular-prayers' going on, where each person prayed in turn, inevitably I would be one of the very last ones to pray - and by that time everyone else had said it all! Come now, friends...does all this ring true in your memories? Of course it does! (No - I am not trying to be clever or sarcastic ... just honest).
Then, something changed. A bit of truth entered my head and I admitted that what I was doing did not, somehow, tie-in with what I thought scripture said. I started to examine what the Bible says about prayer and the results were eye-opening. Let me summarise what was discovered:
It seemed odd to me that the most 'vital' meeting of all was the one which was the least attended! Not only that, but the problem appeared to be widespread. Now, if a doctor is faced with the same symptoms in different people over a wide area, he will naturally and quickly try to find out what is going on. He will instigate research or inform the proper authorities, because the disease had assumed epidemic proportion. The cause will, hopefully, be found and rooted out and the disease can be controlled or even eradicated. So - why doesn't that happen in our churches?
Strangely, this most common and widespread 'disease' is not dealt with. Instead, few churches face it and it is rarely brought into the open. After all, to admit that your prayer-meeting is badly attended, consistently, is to admit that there is something radically wrong with the members/pastor. Or is that true? No, it is not necessarily so...
In the Bible, which should be the source and check-list for all our actions and beliefs, we do not find prayer meetings! That's right...no prayer meetings. Ah! you may shout - what about this or that instance, when the apostles met and prayed together? With much respect I would ask you to read those texts again, for they do not speak of 'prayer meetings' as we know them today. Rather, they speak of special, impromptu gatherings of people with a like mind. That is, God prompted each one of them to meet for a specific purpose. Something urgent and important was going on and the people concerned all had the overwhelming, God-led desire to deal with it, by going direct to their Lord in prayer. Not weekly, but as and when needed. Now, that is not what happened in any prayer meeting I have ever attended! And I doubt very much if many of you have experienced such a dynamic and powerful thing, either! (What many call 'dynamic' is really emotionalism). Am I saying that the modern prayer meeting is useless? Yes! (I do not speak of true prayer, here - only of false prayer).
...
Be aware that it is in Scripture that church is to be a "house of prayer" Matthew 21:13 and Isaiah 56:7
...
Look at prayer meetings...firstly, they are duly slotted into the regular weekly routine - and that is the biggest mistake. Prayer is meant to be impromptu and offered at any time. Secondly, at these prayer meetings, the 'prayer warriors' always take pride of place. But are they all prayer-warriors...or are some just people with golden tongues who love to speak out in public? The question is tough but necessary. Thirdly, these prayers are either very broad or very personal - the first is useless and the second is not for public ears. Indeed, Christ instructed us to pray in private!
When the apostles and others prayed together, they prayed with one accord about a single urgent matter. Once said, the prayer 'meeting' was over! We are not told that there were regular meetings. To have regular meetings is to say that we can all pray to order, without God's prompting. Men love to organise everybody else - hence the regular meetings (of any kind)...and if somebody does not attend, they must be at fault - maybe even backsliders! Could it be, simply, that people instinctively realise something is amiss, and that is why they do not attend prayer meetings? I know that this Outline will touch on many honest doubts - now is the time to face them. If, however, you feel uncomfortable or even angry - then ask yourself why.
K. B. Napier ...
Church attendance is meant to serve just one purpose. To go and hear the word of God preached. Any other activity is of man's doing and many times of pagan origin ...
I came to notice Matthew chapter 6 (The words of Christ Himself) in regards to tithing and praying and it suddenly occurred to me yet 2 more things the church of man does completely wrong ...
The following is a piece on the matter of prayer, but the same concept applies to tithing ...
Prayer Meetings By: K. B. Napier
How's about a little honesty? Hands up, all those Believers who think that the mid-week prayer meeting is the most boring meeting! Hands up, too, if you make all sorts of excuses for not attending...and then feel guilty because you don't attend! Then join the queue...for thousands feel the same way, but are too afraid to say so! (Peculiarly, this Outline applies even if you think prayer meetings are exciting).
You have probably been told - as I was - that the "prayer meeting is the very core of local church life" or that "without a lively prayer meeting, a church is spiritually dead". Or, something along those lines. Yes? Let me throw a bomb into these claims by saying that:
(a) I gave up attending these 'vital' meetings some years ago
(b) Prayer meetings, as we know them today, are not found in scripture
Before you emit gasps of horror and consign me to the 'heretic' bin, let me show you why I say these things. For over twenty years I dutifully attended prayer meetings. Most times I attended I came away more depressed than uplifted. I listened to those fluent 'prayer-warriors' who could pray birds down from the trees! By contrast, I could hardly ever think of anything to say...and when I did say something, it was often halting and feeble when put against the words of the 'warriors'. And if there was one of those terrifying 'circular-prayers' going on, where each person prayed in turn, inevitably I would be one of the very last ones to pray - and by that time everyone else had said it all! Come now, friends...does all this ring true in your memories? Of course it does! (No - I am not trying to be clever or sarcastic ... just honest).
Then, something changed. A bit of truth entered my head and I admitted that what I was doing did not, somehow, tie-in with what I thought scripture said. I started to examine what the Bible says about prayer and the results were eye-opening. Let me summarise what was discovered:
It seemed odd to me that the most 'vital' meeting of all was the one which was the least attended! Not only that, but the problem appeared to be widespread. Now, if a doctor is faced with the same symptoms in different people over a wide area, he will naturally and quickly try to find out what is going on. He will instigate research or inform the proper authorities, because the disease had assumed epidemic proportion. The cause will, hopefully, be found and rooted out and the disease can be controlled or even eradicated. So - why doesn't that happen in our churches?
Strangely, this most common and widespread 'disease' is not dealt with. Instead, few churches face it and it is rarely brought into the open. After all, to admit that your prayer-meeting is badly attended, consistently, is to admit that there is something radically wrong with the members/pastor. Or is that true? No, it is not necessarily so...
In the Bible, which should be the source and check-list for all our actions and beliefs, we do not find prayer meetings! That's right...no prayer meetings. Ah! you may shout - what about this or that instance, when the apostles met and prayed together? With much respect I would ask you to read those texts again, for they do not speak of 'prayer meetings' as we know them today. Rather, they speak of special, impromptu gatherings of people with a like mind. That is, God prompted each one of them to meet for a specific purpose. Something urgent and important was going on and the people concerned all had the overwhelming, God-led desire to deal with it, by going direct to their Lord in prayer. Not weekly, but as and when needed. Now, that is not what happened in any prayer meeting I have ever attended! And I doubt very much if many of you have experienced such a dynamic and powerful thing, either! (What many call 'dynamic' is really emotionalism). Am I saying that the modern prayer meeting is useless? Yes! (I do not speak of true prayer, here - only of false prayer).
...
Be aware that it is in Scripture that church is to be a "house of prayer" Matthew 21:13 and Isaiah 56:7
...
Look at prayer meetings...firstly, they are duly slotted into the regular weekly routine - and that is the biggest mistake. Prayer is meant to be impromptu and offered at any time. Secondly, at these prayer meetings, the 'prayer warriors' always take pride of place. But are they all prayer-warriors...or are some just people with golden tongues who love to speak out in public? The question is tough but necessary. Thirdly, these prayers are either very broad or very personal - the first is useless and the second is not for public ears. Indeed, Christ instructed us to pray in private!
When the apostles and others prayed together, they prayed with one accord about a single urgent matter. Once said, the prayer 'meeting' was over! We are not told that there were regular meetings. To have regular meetings is to say that we can all pray to order, without God's prompting. Men love to organise everybody else - hence the regular meetings (of any kind)...and if somebody does not attend, they must be at fault - maybe even backsliders! Could it be, simply, that people instinctively realise something is amiss, and that is why they do not attend prayer meetings? I know that this Outline will touch on many honest doubts - now is the time to face them. If, however, you feel uncomfortable or even angry - then ask yourself why.
K. B. Napier ...
Church attendance is meant to serve just one purpose. To go and hear the word of God preached. Any other activity is of man's doing and many times of pagan origin ...