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Horizontal Christianity

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Horizontal Christianity by J. Lee Grady

God is not a fan of skyscrapers. The Bible says that in the days before Abraham, men tried to build a looming tower on the Babylonian plain. You know the rest of the story. God confused their language, frustrated their plans and scattered humanity (see Gen. 11:1-9). Instead of going vertical, they went horizontal. Instead of forming a big crowd, they went in all directions.

And instead of speaking in one uniform language, they suddenly discovered cultural diversity. There were more languages being spoken at the Tower of Babel than you would ever hear on a New York City subway. The confusion must have been deafening--and there were no translators! What's happening? Que paso? Hva skjedde? Was ist passiert?

God revealed in that moment that He wants us to build out, not up. He confirmed this in the New Testament, right before the early followers of Jesus experienced a linguistic miracle on the day of Pentecost. Jesus said: "You shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth" (Acts 1:8).

That seems clear enough, but human beings tend to crave the Babylonian model. The disciples continued to build the church in comfortable Jerusalem--until persecution scattered them throughout Judea and Samaria (see Acts 8:1). They had to leave the familiar. Soon a healthy congregation had been planted in what is now Turkey. Within a few years, the gospel had spread to Greece, Italy and North Africa, and Paul set his sights on Spain. God was building His kingdom horizontally.

We often think of God as a builder. But do you know Him as a scatterer? The same Christ who said, "I will build My church" (Matt. 16:18) also said, "Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations" (Matt. 28:19). His ways are not our ways. He builds to reach humanity with His love, not so humanity can see our impressive structures.

I believe God is in a scattering mode these days. America's churches are in flux. Denominations are dying while others are being reborn, reconfigured and painfully overhauled. Many Christians feel confused and unsettled. We are being required to scrap our Tower of Babel blueprints because God has very different plans. As I go through my own painful shifts, the Lord is telling me to make these changes.

Make disciples, not crowds.
I've enjoyed many opportunities to preach in nations such as India, Nigeria and Indonesia. There are big audiences there--and it's tempting for a guy to think that he's making an impact if he can get 10,000 people to jump and shout for an hour. The roar of an audience can be deceiving. I can have a more lasting influence if I invest my life in a handful of leaders--and then let them touch the crowds. If I want to make more than just a shallow impact, I must do more than deliver drive-by sermons. In the kingdom of God, less is more.

Build relationships, not customers.
The apostle Paul--the ultimate horizontal builder--wasn't into market share, audience manipulation or any of the other stupid gimmicks employed to build monstrous "ministries" that really don't help people. Paul didn't hypnotize people to get offerings--he suffered beatings for them. In this new season of the church, there will be a no-tolerance policy for anything fake or phony. Church leaders must be genuine. Hucksters have been put on notice: Stop the circus and get off the stage.

Inspire character, not ego.
Just as God opposes tall buildings, He also resists pride. No wonder He is scattering the charismatic movement! Somewhere along the way we forgot that the Holy Spirit empowered us so we would take the gospel to the world. We elevated people in true Babylonian style, forgetting that the only way up in God's kingdom is down the path of humility.
 
Love the article Fairlight!

Fairlight said:
Make disciples, not crowds.
Fairlight said:
Build relationships, not customers.

These two bits reminded me of a dear friend of ours. He accepted Christ at a Billy Graham function, along with a couple hundred other people. He said it was wonderful, life changing, and then he went home. Someone contacted him once after that, to give him a list of local churches, and that was it. He was on his own for several years after that. His faith went up and down and then very nearly totally out.

It wasn't until we met him, befriended him, and invited him to our small home church that he really began making leaps and bounds in his walk with God. It was that personal face to face, small group relationship that helped him. We became the Christian family he was needed.

Smaller is better! :-)

WomanSeekingGod
 
Awsome find right there! :D
 
Thank you, Fairlight. That was very thoughtprovoking, as well as making huge sense.
 
Such a good word! Fairlight, are you familiar with Rick Joyner's "Prophetic Vision For The 21st Century Church?" Sound rebuke re: all the things you mentioned, and we need to allow the wrecking ball to hit so He can finally have the temple made without hands.

Especially in America, I might add. Thanks for sharing this.
 
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