Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Apostolic Christianity

I have started this blog in order to have a format for expressing some of my thoughts about Christianity.  I have specifically declared that my passion is to explore, experience and export Apostolic Christianity.  You might be wondering why I have felt a need to qualify my use of the word Christianity with the word Apostolic.  Well there is a very good reason.  It is because I believe that there is much that goes by the name of Christianity that scarcely resembles what Jesus had in mind when He initiated a movement that was destined to alter the course of history.

My main focus is to simply highlight what I feel is the Lord's desire and ultimate intention for His people.

Let me say from the beginning that I love the church and I do not believe that God has any other vehicle for changing the world other than His Spirit filled people living out the authentic intention of the Lord through daily expressions of His heart.

When I use the word "apostolic" to qualify what I mean by Christianity, I probably could have used the word "authentic" as a synonym.  Apostolic Christianity is nothing if it isn't authentic.  The Apostolic will always insist on reality for a plumb line.  In other words, if the Christian faith is simply understood as a person's "perceptions" as opposed to "what really is", then it isn't apostolic.  It may be many things but it is not apostolic.  There is no faking the truth.  It is either genuine or it isn't.  By this I am not referring to the fallibility or infallibility of someone claiming to be apostolic.  I am only saying that Apostolic Christianity insists on the reality of God and His actual past, present and future impact upon the world.  

There is no place where the authentic is more significant than in the apostolic testimony to Jesus Christ and His resurrection.  The early apostles boldly declared that Jesus rose from the dead in His actual body.  There was nothing fake or fabricated about it.  His death was indescribably horrific and His resurrection was indescribably glorious.  It was real.  It was genuine.  It was a bodily resurrection.  It was an honest to goodness miracle of life from the dead.  Not mere superstition.  Jesus did not merely rise "spiritually".  His bodily resurrection was confirmed to the apostles "with many infallible proofs."  The Apostle John goes to great lengths to describe the reality of a living Jesus- "That which was from the beginning which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled concerning the word of life- the life was manifested and we have seen, and bear witness and declare to you that eternal life which was with the Father and was manifested to us- that which we have seen and heard we declare to you, that you also may have fellowship with us; and truly our fellowship is with the Father and His Son Jesus Christ." 

The apostle John is setting parameters as to what they were talking about when they were establishing the foundations of the faith.  The faith could not be reduced to a mere creed.  At the foundation of everything was a living, breathing person named Jesus who was raised from the dead, declared to be the son of God, sitting at the right hand of power, the judge of all mankind, the head of the Church,  the source of its life and the basis of its cohesion in fellowship.  If Christ be not raised, Paul cries, then you are still in your sins... and we are found false witnesses of God, because we have testified of God that He raised Christ up, whom He did not raise up if in fact the dead do not rise.   Notice how essential the reality of the resurrection was to Paul.  If Christ was not really raised then he says that he and the other apostles are "false witnesses of God."  That is no small accusation.   But it highlights how seriously the early church understood the apostolic testimony to Christ's resurrection.  Paul continues to list the horrible ramifications of a fabricated message of resurrection.  But then he concludes, But now Christ is risen from the dead and has become the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep.  1 Corinthians 15:15-20.

Here we see how intensely the early apostles contended for the message of the reality of Christ in his life, death and resurrection.  And it also reveals that mankind's future is contingent on the facts of Christ life actually having happened in real time.  It was not a mere myth.  It was not a fabricated tale of courage.  But it was an actual event that forever altered the very substance and the destiny of the entire cosmos.

And so when we talk about Apostolic Christianity we are not talking about mere myths.   We are rather insisting on the fact that God has broken into history, fundamentally altered its existence and has set it on a new course.  We are talking about a living God who has changed and continues to change real people and alter their lives through His grace and power.  Apostolic Christianity changes people at the core of their being because of the center of this faith is a resurrected man named Jesus who will never die.

The world is on a collision course with the God who still claims ownership of His creation.  He has already made provision for its complete restoration through His son who has been raised from the dead and is but the first fruits of many to follow.  Apostolic Christianity is a faith that produces genuine fruit in the life of its adherents   If it isn't real, it isn't apostolic. Apostolic Christianity is a force in the earth and when it manifests the world will not be able to ignore the sound of it.  Get ready for the real deal!

 more later.

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