Food Struggles

Oof, I've eaten like crap over the past four or five meals. I'm really feeling sluggish and weak because of it. I must get back to eating smaller and healthier but I'm still so full from my IHOP breakfast that I just can't fathom eating anything else right now.  It's so easy to slip from eating well to eating poorly and yet so difficult to slide the other way.

Let this be a lesson to me, please. You'd probably never know it by looking at me but I think that food is something I've struggled with over the years.  It's a definite weakness of mine and I find myself (after the fact) eating out of desire and for comfort rather than hunger or need. I've only stumbled like this a million times and yet it feels inevitable that I will fail again in this regard. How can I struggle with something when I know better both intellectually and through experience?

I suppose that "the Spirit is willing but the flesh is weak."

What about you?  Do you struggle with food?  Do you have any tips for overcoming this sort of thing?  Leave a comment and share your advice.

Church Series Entry 2.0 - What does 'church' mean?

So, a couple of production notes before I get started.

This study has been hard. Like many other subjects, the amount of extra-Biblical text written about this topic far outweighs the amount of text that the Bible itself actually devotes to it. People have written entire books on a word study of 'church'. Blog posts are supposed to be...shorter!

There are some sharply contrasting viewpoints out there about what the Bible means by some of the passages I've researched and I'm sure to ostracize some by tackling a subject like this. That being said, I firmly believe that the meaning of the Scriptures is to be discovered, not interpreted. In other words, Biblical commentary and interpretation can be misled and wrong even though the Bible itself cannot be. In the end, this exercise has made me realize how difficult it can be to discover someone else's meaning when the original text was written many years ago in a different language and in a dramatically different culture. Let that be your proverbial grain of salt...

Let's start with a word study...

Surprisingly, the word that is translated into today's English word 'church' in the New Testament is not a religious term at all. Transliterated 'ekklesia' and shown in the original Greek above, the word was originally used to denote a group of people who answered a calling to assemble for some civic purpose, perhaps similar to a jury summons in modern America. The most common use of the word in the first century is probably better translated as 'legal assembly' as in Acts 19:39. The Bible, however, translates the word 107 times out of 118 as 'church' or 'churches' according to Strong's Exhaustive Concordance. This is mainly due, in my opinion, to the first usage of the term in Scripture.

Jesus uses the word 'ekklesia' twice in the Gospels, both appearing in the book of Matthew. In fact, Matthew 16:16 is the first time this word appears in the Bible. It's a well-known passage where the disciple Peter confesses that Jesus is the Christ and Jesus responds with "...I tell you that you are Peter and on this rock I will build my church..." We'll get in to what that 'rock' is in a later post. Let's focus for now on the 'my' in that sentence. Jesus says that he will build an assembly that belongs to Him! This is actually a great definition. The church today is the assembly that belongs to Jesus Christ. It's easy to understand why Bible translators would use a more religious term, like 'church' to denote Jesus' assembly of believers.

The word takes on additional shades of meaning even within the rest of the New Testament. Sometimes it's used in reference to scattered groups of Christians over a wide area as in the "churches of Galatia" (Gal 1:2). Sometimes it's used in reference to a body of Christ followers living in the same immediate area such as the "church at Antioch" (Acts 13:1). It's even used to refer to a small body Christians meeting under one roof to worship together in Romans, First Corithians, Collossians and Philemon. Have you heard 'church' used in these same ways today? While it's important to see the range of meaning for the word, it's also very important to note that 'church' is never used in Scripture to refer to a building or a place to worship. The word 'church' was only and should only be applied to people.

While this is a New Testament word, the concept exists in the Old Testament as well with the Hebrew word translated 'synagogue'. In fact, 'synagogue' was also only used originally to refer to the group of Israelites called together to worship. It was much later that people began to refer to the building where that worship took place as the 'synagogue'. This shows a couple of interesting things. First, the use of this concept shows that both the early Christians and the Jews were eager to show their historical connection to the congregation of Israel which was, in effect, the 'church' of the Old Testament. Additionally, I find it interesting that both the Jewish culture and the modern Christian culture have begun to refer to the 'church' as a place rather than a group of people. I believe that this, at its heart, is an attempt to push God back into his box and squeeze him out of our every day lives. It's a cultural erosion of the truth.

So, for our purposes I propose that the church of Jesus Christ is defined in its broadest sense as the company of those belonging to Christ throughout the world. It ranges down to its most narrow sense referring to the smallest of fellowships as well. I will try to keep that definition in mind as we continue the study.

Next, we'll begin to look at the origins of the church, again focusing on the description of church formations in the New Testament.

I welcome your feedback, questions and criticism.

What is the church...or should that be Church?

Today marks the first of a series of posts on the Christian church. This is also the first of hopefully many posts to fall into the 'Faith' category on this site. I've been turned on to this topic by some studies I've done in the past by Christian authors like Francis Chan, John Eldredge, and David Platt. Each one of those authors seem to say, in one way or another, that when you get really sold out for Jesus you start to realize that the things you might learn from "the church" could be...well...wrong. They could be things that you were raised to believe by your family or by the society you grew up in or even by your current fellowship, but we have to be ready to challenge those beliefs in order to define and pursue the true faith. So my first challenge is to define the church as Jesus would have it defined.

 

I intend to cover some very basic questions over the next several posts like the following:

  • What is the church?
  • Where does the church come from?
  • Why does the church exist?

But I also want to get into some other, more difficult questions, for instance:

  • Who comprises the church?
  • Can any one group of believers or denomination claim to be the true church?
  • Is the church that we know today in the 21st century the same church that Jesus spoke of?

Now, let me be clear about something from the very beginning: I'm no Bible scholar. I'm a layman. Like the majority of Christians today I make my living doing something else. I study the Bible when I can, certainly not as much as I should. Admittedly, there are times when I'm not even sure that I want to learn anymore about my Savior. I know that I want to want that though, if that makes sense. At this point in my relationship with Jesus and in my research on this subject I'm not even sure whether to capitalize the word "church". The point of this exercise is obviously not to show you how much I know but for you and me to learn from each other and from those who have come before.

I will focus this study on the Bible itself and supporting study materials like concordances, dictionaries, and a few commentaries. I've been going through a study of "Grasping God's Word" by Duvall and Hays with some other Christ following men (Hi Guys!) and will try to stick to its methodology of reading and interpreting the Scriptures. I'll try to explain that methodology organically within the posts where needed. That may require a whole new series of posts someday though. The GGW study has been very enlightening to say the least.

Finally, I want to encourage your participation with this series (and this blog in general!). I'm much more interested in a dialogue than a monologue because, frankly, I just don't feel like I'm all that interesting on my own. Tell me what you like, what you disagree with, maybe you could even tell me what questions you'd like answered in a series like this. I'll sure someone out there has some answers that they'd love to share with us!

First up is "What is the church?" Stay tuned...