I Prayed have prayed
Father, give us love and patience for one another. We need You, Lord.
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Chuck Colson liked to say that the Kingdom of God will never arrive on Air Force One. It’s still true. Any reprieve in the last few years in the areas of religious liberty and the sanctity of life is coming to an end, and recent events should make the truth of Chuck’s statement obvious. Whether politics are upstream or downstream from culture (and the right answer is that it’s really both), it is not the vehicle for lasting cultural change.

 

In fact, the history of Christianity shows that lasting cultural change rarely comes about in ways we are expecting. Christian influence requires that Christians cultivate virtue in both our private and public lives. One virtue that once changed the world is patience.

In his book, The Patient Ferment of the Early Church, the late Mennonite historian Alan Kreider explained Christianity’s extraordinary rise from a beleaguered sect to the movement that transformed the Roman Empire.

As one reviewer of Kreider’s book put it, “Christianity probably shouldn’t exist.” Not only did its Roman contemporaries hate the Church, but Christians didn’t make it easy to join up. With a stringent moral code and an extended period of catechesis prior to baptism, which only happened one a year around Easter, the Early Church wasn’t very “seeker friendly.”

Yet, it grew.

Why? Surprisingly, it wasn’t because of an emphasis on evangelism, public preaching, or other missionary activities. The Church Fathers seldom wrote about those subjects, perhaps because they didn’t need to. But they did emphasize patience, which Kreider defined as “not controlling events, not anxious or in a hurry, and never using force to achieve [their] ends.” . . .

Patience, enacted in habits such as teaching and worship, produced the “ferment” of Kreider’s title. People lived lives that were not only in marked contrast to the lives of their neighbors but were better than those practiced in the larger society. Christians ran towards the plague when others ran away from it. They didn’t kill their children, and even adopted children left to die. They treated their spouses and children with love and respect while others treated their own families as little more than household slaves.  . . .

As Crouch put it, instead of “fermentation,” we often prefer “carbonation,” hoping a quick shot of power or a new clever church-growth method will do the trick. There might be some fizz, but the effects are short-lived. The Early Church understood that long-lasting change requires long-lasting effort. It requires understanding that the fruit of our labors may not be seen until after we are gone. It requires that we live for faithfulness, not success.

Now none of this means that Christians should abandon the public square or the political process. It certainly doesn’t exempt us from speaking the truth at every level, and it includes speaking, when necessary, those very hard truths our culture won’t tolerate right now.

A prime example of cultural fermentation was British Parliamentarian William Wilberforce. Wilberforce and his committed band of Christian co-laborers worked for decades to abolish the slave trade and restore virtue in the British Empire. Yet, neither he nor his children lived to see the full fruit of their labors. Why should we expect things to be different? . . .

Why should we be exempt from the need for patience?

We shouldn’t. And to think otherwise is to confuse carbonation for fermentation and Air Force One for the Second Coming.

(Excerpt from The Christian Post. Article by John Stonestreet and Roberto Rivera. Photo Credit: Unsplash.)

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Linda S
January 28, 2021

Excellent! Thank you fir this article.

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Cheri Romain
January 28, 2021

Ah spiritual maturity! The lost virtue. I pray Lord Jesus as you lead the church back to you, that each of us starting with me, return or discover what the fruits of the spirit are and Longsuffering is revived to a virtue, along with love.

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Rolanda Shrader
January 28, 2021

Almighty God, You are FAITHFUL in all things. We declare we trust YOU in all things.
We turn over to You the wicked, evil and darkness that wants to take control. Nothing is to difficult for YOU.
You laugh at Your enemies. We will not walk in fear of man but in the fear of the LORD.
Grant your church courage, strength and the FIRE OF YOUR SPIRIT to fight this spiritual battle.
HOLY SPIRIT COME AND INFUSE YOUR CHURCH.
Help us to fight this giant with Your word and our actions. In the Name of Jesus.-

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