When sin is cast out of our lives, it must be replaced with the holiness of God, which is another way of saying, ‘We must practice the presence of God.’ “Christ is all, and in all” (Colossians 3:11 KJV). Nature abhors a vacuum, and so our heart finds necessary the presence of God. Humanity was never created to exist apart from God. Our greatest liberty is to dwell with God. In past, this has often been called simply the ‘Providence of God’ or ‘walking in the Spirit’ (Romans 8:1; Galatians 5:16), but is now referred to as “keeping in step with the Spirit” (Galatians 5:25 NIV). Elementary Christianity deals with the first “principles of the doctrine of Christ” (Hebrews 6:1 KJV) of repenting of the “dead works” (6:1) of self-trust, returning to confidence or “faith toward God” (6:1), “baptisms” (6:2) to confess our repentance and to oath our loyalty to Christ, “laying on of hands” (6:2) to give and affirm the presence of the Holy Spirit and His gifts, teaching our hope of the “resurrection of the dead” (6:2), and certainty of “eternal judgment” (6:2) of reward for the righteous and punishment for the damned. But, we are commanded, “Let us go on unto perfection” (6:1). And, who is the Perfect One, but God? We are commanded to go on unto the maturity of practicing the presence of God, and “this will we do, if God permit” (6:3). Father, let us elevate our thinking in returning to practicing the presence of God. In Jesus’ name, we pray, return quickly, amen.
Maturity
Like Jesus
Growing up as a teenaged, American youth in the late 1960s to early 1970s, I witnessed from a Middle America, Southern California perspective, the counterculture’s effect upon mainline, evangelical Christianity. Pianos and organs of traditional Christian music were introduced to guitars and drums of popular music. White shirts and ties gave way to leisure suits. Hal Lindsey’s “Late, Great Planet Earth” (1970) was preparing for the Rapture. The Charismatic Movement was promoting the Baptism of the Holy Spirit in both Protestant and Roman Catholic circles. Chuck Smith’s Calvary Chapel movement was making headway in emphasizing personal evangelism, planting local churches, and promoting Bible study. Fundamentalists were resisting the tides of change. The Crossroads Church of Christ (FL) — later the ICOC — was emphasizing the necessity of baptism to be saved, partly responding to an emphasis on Easy Believism Salvation. Anti-war (Vietnam), drugs, sex, and rebellion were responses not only to society’s morality, but the Professed Church’s failure. Not all change was bad; and, upon reflection, the Jesus People (sometimes called Jesus Freaks) seemed to best epitomize that period’s struggle to return to a more primitive Christianity. “These that have turned the world upside down are come hither also” (Acts 17:6 KJV).
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