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November
15, 2002, Vol.1, No.20.
Part
5 on Islamism
What
Is Christianity?
Bobby
L. Graham
Thank you for your interest. I commend your
reading of this material. Remember that spiritual matters are more important
than physical matters because the spirit or soul is enduring, while the
flesh or physical man is temporal (2 Cor 4:18). You will appear before
Christ in final judgment to give account for your life (2 Cor. 5:10). Give
spiritual matters the priority they deserve. Please read the Biblical
passages cited in this study for a deeper understanding of Christianity.
What is your attitude? Your answer to this
question will probably have more influence on handling this material than
any other single factor. Both the Old and New Testament provide evidence of
the monumental role that one’s attitude plays in all of life.
"Keep thy heart with all diligence; for
out of it are the issues of life." (Prov 4:23)
"But that on the good ground are
they, which in an honest and good heart, having heard the word, keep it,
and bring forth fruit with patience." (Luke 8:15)
If you read to find problems,
inconsistencies, or contradictions, because you wish to justify self in
present beliefs, then you will likely end your endeavor just as you started
it—believing whatever you began believing. On the other hand, if you study
to seek truth and to discard all else, you will likely find truth. I ask
again: What attitude do you bring to this study? What means most to you:
continuing your beliefs and practices, proving yourself right and someone
else wrong, or learning the truth of God’s Word? You hold the key to your
becoming a follower of Jesus Christ or not in your own attitude.
If your attitude is one of placing truth
above all else, then you can come to understand the fundamentals of
Christianity. You can learn that Jesus Christ is truly God’s final
prophet, attested by the miracles that God performed by Him on this earth.
You can come to see that the resurrection of Jesus places Him on a plane
above that of Muhammad, who is still in his grave. You can learn from the
testimony of God Himself that Jesus Christ worked on earth with His
approval, died and arose by His decree, and rules according to His will. If
you will listen to divine evidence, you can become a Christian. Remember
that your attitude toward God’s truth will determine where you spend
eternity. God will judge you according to your life on earth—a life
governed by your attitude.
Christ-Centered
All of Christianity is centered in Jesus
Christ. If you find any teaching or practice of people claiming to be
Christians that fails to harmonize with the teaching of Christ in the New
Testament, it is the "Christians" who are wrong, not Christ. Those
making such a claim sometimes misunderstand or misrepresent what Jesus
Christ taught or authorized the apostles to teach.
Because Christianity is the religious system
of Christ, it is imperative to know that the life, death, resurrection, and
ascension of Jesus to sit at the right hand of the Father form the
foundation of Christianity (1 Cor. 15:1-28). After His return to heaven, He
sent the Holy Spirit to guide the apostles in revealing all truth, which
became as authoritative as His personal teaching (Jn. 14:25-26; 15:26-27;
16:5-15). Jesus taught, proved His deity, demonstrated His authority, and
provided for continuing His work by apostles whom He had chosen (Acts 1-2).
Heaven-Ordained
Here we stress the approval of God resting
upon Jesus in His work to save people and to spread the gospel of salvation
to the world. God spoke from heaven twice to express approval of Jesus in
this undertaking—once at His baptism and once at his transfiguration (Mt.
3:17; 17:5). He gave Jesus His endorsement for His entire earthly mission
when He said "in whom I am well pleased."
Jesus had the Father’s sanction because He
came to do the Father’s will, to carry out His work (Jn. 6:38; 17:4). He
came from heaven a divine being—exactly like His Father in deity but also
clothed in human flesh (Heb. 1:3; Phil. 2:6-7). There he enjoyed association
with the Father, but He came here to complete the work of salvation planned
by the Father before creation (Jn. 1:1; Rom. 16:25-26). Jesus never asserted
His own will or initiated His own private agenda; His total life was always
in complete harmony with the Father (Jn. 5:19; 10:30). He is one with the
Father in nature, will, and work.
Resurrection-Proved
God never expected anyone to believe an
unconfirmed message or an unattested messenger. Just as He had enabled His
earlier prophets to prove their divine mission by miracles, so He did in the
case of Jesus Christ (Acts 2:22). The greatest sign was that of His
resurrection from the tomb, for by it God spoke to all people for all time
to come that Jesus was His son with power, His duly empowered ruler (Mt.
12:39; Rom. 1:4). No other human being in all human history bears the
credentials that Jesus has. No other one is so verified as God’s prophet,
priest, and king. Muhammad and all other human religious leaders, including
those claiming to be prophets, lack such attestation from God.
Imitation of Christ
The purpose of Christianity is to reproduce
followers of Jesus Christ. God has saved Christians so they can help save
others. In their lives they must live like Christ, reflecting His principles
and ideals in their thinking, their words, and their deeds. Paul could say,
"I have been crucified with Christ…Christ lives in me…"(Gal.
2:20). Observe that Christ will live in the crucified life—that is, in one
who has renounced himself in self-denial, for the sake of Christ (Mt.
16:24). He lives so that he might benefit others like salt and light (Mt.
5:13-16). In keeping with what Charles Colton said about imitation being the
sincerest form of flattery, in the life of a genuine Christian imitation of
Christ is the sincerest form of respect for God and love for fellow man.
Sacrificial in Nature
Christianity is can be summed up in the idea
of sacrifice. The Father sacrificed His Son to come to earth on the mission
of redemption (1 Jn. 4:14). The Son sacrificed the glory of heaven when He
emptied Himself to come to earth for the sake of human beings (Jn. 17:5;
Phil. 2:6-7). The apostles of Christ sacrificed human ties and earthly
welfare for the advancement of the gospel (Mt. 8:18-27; 10). All who follow
Christ must also be willing to sacrifice whatever would divert them from
loyalty to Jesus Christ (Mt. 16:24-26). In order to follow Christ, who
forfeited all for the sake of all people, His disciples must also forfeit
anything that would claim their loyalty.
Teaching—Based
Only as people learn from God can they follow
Christ (Jn. 6:44-45). Before leaving earth for heaven, Jesus provided for
such teaching by His apostles, guided by the Holy Spirit whom He would send.
Their work was primarily a teaching work—teaching all the gospel of Christ
and urging belief of the message (Mt. 28:19; Lk. 24:46-47). The teaching was
accompanied by miraculous confirmation, so the message might be credible to
the hearers (Mk. 16:20; Heb. 2:3-4). Some appointed by them as workers in
local congregations were also endowed with the power to work miracles for
confirmation (Acts 8:14-17; 1 Cor. 12:8-11). God has never saved anyone
apart from the exercise of his own free will in learning and obeying the
message of truth.
Initiated by God
The scheme of redemption was divine in
origin, for God purposed and planned it all before He even created the first
human being (1 Cor. 2:7; Eph. 1:4; 3:11). Christianity did not appear
evolutionally, as the product of many centuries of human development. It
first occurred in God’s mind, then in the various previews that God gave
in Old Testament revelation, and finally in the completed system of the New
Testament (1 Pet. 1:10-12; Heb. 10:1). Because the religion of Jesus Christ
began with God, man finds many warnings against altering the divine plan.
Accessible to All
Unlike other religions of earth, there is no
class/caste system in Christianity. God’s will is that all share alike in
the blessings of following and serving Christ. This is evident in His choice
of apostles from the working classes; in explicit statements about His
impartiality (Acts 10:34); in recorded examples of conversions from various
classes in the Book of Acts; and in directions to the apostles to proclaim
the gospel of Christ to all. There are no social, racial, educational,
gender, national, ethnic, linguistic, or other barriers limiting any person
from following Christ, or benefits that give any person an advantage with
the Lord (Gal. 3:28). There is no special clergy class in the religion of
Christ, for all Christians are priests empowered to serve God for themselves
without the need for any human mediator (1 Pet. 2:5,9; 1 Tim. 2:5).
Nothing without Faith
Christianity is not the mindless performance
of ritual, but the faithful observance of the will of Christ (Heb. 5:9).
Nobody can please God without faith (Heb. 11:6). The faith required by God
is always based upon the solid foundation of God’s word (Rom. 10:17). All
instructions regarding salvation and discipleship stress the role of belief
(faith), as do the examples of conversion to Christ in Acts of the Apostles.
God asks that we believe His confirmed word, not that we blindly follow the
precepts given by men.
Invested with Divine Authority
As a divine being in heaven Jesus had
equality with the Father (Phil. 2:6), but in coming to earth He voluntarily
submitted to the Father’s will, as we learned earlier. In the work that He
did and continues to do from heaven until time ends, He has all authority in
heaven and on earth (Mt. 28:18). God has made Him both Lord (Ruler,
Authority) and Christ (Acts 2:36). The work and teaching of the apostles
were by divine authority (Acts 10:40-42). They taught what the Lord in
heaven had already decreed (Mt. 16:19). Disciples of Christ are people who
have submitted to the authority of Christ (Mt. 16:24-26).
Tainted by Alteration
God designed a perfect system to benefit
His creatures (Eph. 1:3-14). The standard by which all human beings must
measure their thinking and actions is a perfect one (2 Tim. 3:16-17; 2 Pet.
1:3). Jesus is the perfect Savior, and the salvation that He grants is
perfect (Heb. 7:25-28). Why would human beings try to change perfection? To
change perfection is to destroy it! The warnings of God’s Word about
altering it through addition, subtraction, or substitution will preserve
divine perfection and will prevent soul-damning presumption (Deut. 4:2; Prov.
30:5-6; 1 Cor. 4:6; Rev. 22:18-19).
Yours for the Asking
The salvation
planned by God/implemented by Christ was never designed to be collective,
but individual. For this reason John His forerunner called upon individuals
to repent in preparation for the coming spiritual kingdom of Jesus Christ
(Mk. 1:1-8; Mt. 3:2). Jesus often taught individuals like the Samaritan
woman in John 4. The apostles taught and urged individuals to follow Christ
(Mk, 16:15-16). Conversion to Christ takes place in the individual heart and
life, as one believes that Jesus is who He claimed to be—the Son of God
and Savior of the world, confesses his faith in Him, and is baptized for the
forgiveness of sins (Acts 8:29-39). One can never hope that the faith/good
life of another will suffice for him, for the Bible does not teach proxy
salvation. If you yearn for the spiritual fulfillment that only Christ can
provide you, then we encourage you to seek the salvation of your soul by
learning of Christ (Mt. 11:28-30). Then you can respond as the Ethiopian in
Acts 8. You will then enjoy fellowship with God, because your sins will no
longer be a barrier. You cannot afford to risk your soul to a possible
accumulation of good deeds that will hopefully outweigh the bad deeds. Truly
there is no risk in seeking mercy from the Lord. He longs to save you and to
be with you forever in heaven.
Christ-centered
H eaven-ordained
R esurrection-proved
I mitation of
Christ
S acrificial
in nature
T eaching—based
I nitiated by
God
A ccessible to
all
N othing
without faith
I nvested with
divine authority
T ainted by
alteration
Y ours for the
asking
| The Eastside Church of Christ in Shortsville, New York strives to follow God's word. We are a non-denominational Church that has no written standard of doctrinal authority other than the Bible. |
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