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Gaining by Losing by J.D. Greear

J.D. GreearPastor, adjunct professor, and author Dr. J.D. Greear (@jdgreear) believes a Christian’s ministry is less about working for God and more about letting God work through the Christian. He says the greatest power of the church is when all members are equipped and sent out in the power of the Holy Spirit. He wants people to stop judging a church’s “success” by its seating capacity and put more emphasis on its sending capacity.

In his new book, Gaining by Losing: Why the Future Belongs to Churches That Send (Zondervan, 2015), J.D. Greear unpacks ten ‘plumb lines’ to use to reorient a church’s priorities around God’s mission to reach a lost world. He says, “Every church, every ministry, and every follower of Jesus Christ ought to be devoted to planting—giving away—what they have for God’s kingdom.”

Click to buy your copy of Gaining by Losing in the Bible Gateway StoreThe following article is an excerpt from Gaining by Losing: Why the Future Belongs to Churches That Send.

We Are Under Obligation

In Romans 1:14 (ESV) Paul uses a strange word to encapsulate his life and calling, one with enormous implications for both church leaders and members alike. “I am under obligation,” Paul says, to everyone who has not yet heard the gospel. Many translations render “under obligation” as “debtor,” because Paul is invoking language that describes a debtor’s relationship to his creditor.

When you are severely in debt, your life no longer really belongs to you. It belongs to the creditor. You can’t spend money however you would like anymore. If your boss gives you a $10,000 Christmas bonus, you won’t be able to use it to take a vacation to Hawaii or to buy new furniture. The creditor has first and final say in how the money is spent. I once knew a church that was so severely in debt that representatives from the bank literally stood in the back of the lobby during the weekly offering, taking the money straight to the bank, where bank officials would decide how much the church could keep that week. The church was no longer free; it was “under obligation.”

Paul thought of himself as a debtor to those who had not heard about Jesus. His future was not free. But why did he owe them? Because he knew he was no more deserving of the gospel than they were. He was not more righteous, nor had God seen more potential in him (see 1 Timothy 1:15). Paul saw God’s grace toward him exactly for what it was—completely unmerited favor. Paul knew that placed him under severe obligation to the grace of God. Paul’s future, bright as it may have been, having a great education and all the right connections, no longer belonged to him. Every spare resource—every ounce of energy, every moment of his time—belonged to his “creditor”: the grace of God.

Every person who knows and understands the gospel is under this same debt of obligation. As David Platt says, “Every saved person this side of heaven owes the gospel to every unsaved person this side of hell.” If you are saved, you are under obligation to leverage your life to bring salvation to the nations. Those of us called to be leaders in the church are under obligation to train you up and send you out.

We pastors are not free to build ministries that mainly make life more comfortable for us. Each of us is under obligation to do whatever we can to get the gospel to those all around the world who have never heard. And that means releasing—planting—the seeds we have been given. It means letting go and sending out our very best to bring a harvest in God’s kingdom, even—especially—when it doesn’t benefit our church directly.

The gospel is that Jesus Christ died as a substitute for sinners, offered now as a gift to all who will receive him in faith. Jesus has instituted a new kingdom, a kingdom that someday will bring final and ultimate healing to the earth through his resurrection, but one that begins now when sinners are reconciled to him through his death. God has given to us, the church, the mission of preaching his offer of reconciliation to all people everywhere—that Jesus lived the life we were supposed to live and then died the death that we were condemned to die so that we could be reconciled to God. We signify the message of that new kingdom through acts of healing and extravagant generosity, which depict for others the nature of the kingdom Jesus is establishing (2 Cor. 5:14-21). Everyone who has received the reconciliation is sent on that mission. Every believer is sent. You go from mission field to missionary.

Our God is a sending God. He sent his best into the world to save us. Jesus is referred to as “sent” 44 times in the New Testament. After his resurrection, Jesus passed on his identity to his disciples: “As the Father has sent me, I am sending you” (John 20:21).

To follow Jesus is to be sent.

Jesus’ command to every disciple is to “go” (Matt. 28:19). We may not all go overseas, but we are all to be going. This means that if you are not going, you are not a disciple; and, church leader, if the people in our churches are not “going,” we are not doing our jobs. A church leader can have a large church with thousands of people attending, but if people are not going from it “outside the camp” (Heb. 13:13), to pursue the mission and call of Christ, those leaders are delinquent in their duty.

Planting, investing, sending, and sacrificing are costly. It hurts. But the trajectory of discipleship is toward giving away, not taking in. As Dietrich Bonhoeffer famously said, “When Christ bids a man to follow, he bids him come and die.” Jesus did not say come and grow, but come and die. And he showed us what that means by his own example.

When Jesus laid down his life on that hill in Jerusalem, he had nothing left. Soldiers gambled for his last remaining possessions on earth. Everything he owned had been either given away or taken from him. But out of that death came our life. In giving everything away, he gained us. In Jesus’ resurrection from death, God brought unimaginable life to the world—to you and to me. Jesus was the first of many seeds planted into the ground to die.

Why would it surprise us that the power of God spreads throughout the earth in the same manner? Life for the world comes only through the death of the church. Not always our physical, bodily death (though it includes that sometimes), but death in the giving away of our resources. Death in the forfeiture of our personal dreams. Death in our faithful proclamation of the gospel in an increasingly hostile world. Death in sending our precious resources, our best leaders, our best friends.

When Christ calls any of us to follow him—whether he is speaking to us as individuals, or to our churches and ministries—he bids us, “Come and die.”

It is not through our success that God saves the world, but through our sacrifice. He calls us first to an altar, not a platform.

His way of bringing life to the world is not by giving us numerical growth and gain that enriches our lives and exalts our name. His way is by bringing resurrection out of death.

We live by losing. We gain by giving away. What we achieve by building our personal platform will never be as great as what God achieves through what we give away in faith.

It’s one thing to know these things, to believe they are true. It’s another to implement them. That is what this book is about. What does it look like to live sent—in your personal life, in your ministry, or in the church that you lead?

I will warn you: It’s relatively easy to nod our heads at this point and say, “Yes, like Jesus, we live by dying.” But to go to the next step—to invest some of your most cherished resources, or say goodbye to those whom you love as they go to begin something new—that is hard, and it never gets easier. Yet it’s how God’s kingdom grows.

We gain by losing.

The above excerpt is from Gaining by Losing: Why the Future Belongs to Churches That Send. Copyright © 2015 by J.D. Greear. Used by permission of Zondervan. www.zondervan.com. All rights reserved. Taken from pp. 16-19.

Bio: J.D. Greear, PhD, is pastor of The Summit Church in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina. The Summit Church has been ranked by Outreach Magazine as one of the fastest-growing churches in the United States. J. D. has a PhD in systematic theology from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. He is the author of Stop Asking Jesus into Your Heart: How to Know for Sure You Are Saved and Gospel: Recovering the Power That Made Christianity Revolutionary. He lives in Raleigh, North Carolina, with his wife, Veronica, and their four children.

How to Read the Context of a Verse on Bible Gateway

When you search and find individual Bible verses on Bible Gateway, very often you want to quickly see how those particular verses fit in to the flow, context, and understanding of the complete chapter where each one resides. It’s simple.

[Also see our blogposts: Read More Than One Bible Version Side-By-Side and The BE Commentary Series – New Study Feature on Bible Gateway]

Look up any Scripture verse (say, John 3:16) by typing the reference into the top search window and clicking the magnifying glass or the “enter” key on your keyboard:

Enlarge: Click to find a Bible verse on Bible Gateway

Now, to see that verse in its context in the full chapter where it’s found, click the stack-of-lines icon located next to the verse reference:

Enlarge: Click the stack-of-lines icon for the complete chapter

The result is the appearance of the complete chapter:

The complete chapter of your original Bible verse

Another fun feature is to see how your particular Bible verse is translated in all the English Bible versions on Bible Gateway. To do this, click the sentence at the bottom of your verse: “…in all English translations”:

Enlarge: Click to see this verse in all English translations on Bible Gateway

The result is the appearance of the Bible verse in all the English Bible translations on Bible Gateway listed alphabetically by abbreviation:

Enlarge: The listing of the verse in all English translations on Bible Gateway

How the Bible Created the Soul of Western Civilization: An Interview with Vishal Mangalwadi

Vishal MangalwadiWhat triggered the West’s passion for scientific, medical, and technological advancement? How did the biblical notion of human dignity inform the West’s social structure and how it intersects with other worldviews? How did the Bible create a fertile ground for women to find social and economic empowerment? How has the Bible uniquely equipped the West to cultivate compassion, human rights, prosperity, and strong families? What is the role of the Bible in the transformation of education? How has the modern literary notion of a hero been shaped by the Bible’s archetypal protagonist?

Bible Gateway interviewed Vishal Mangalwadi about his book, The Book That Made Your World: How the Bible Created the Soul of Western Civilization (Thomas Nelson, 2012).

Click to buy your copy of The Book That Made Your World in the Bible Gateway Store

Why did you dedicate The Book That Made Your World to Arun Shourie, a Hindu who is critical of the Bible?

Vishal Mangalwadi: In 1994, Arun Shourie, at that time one of India’s foremost public intellectuals, attacked Western missions and the Bible. He powerfully rehashed some of Thomas Paine’s arguments from The Age of Reason (1793-94). Mr. Shourie studied in the best Christian college in India before getting a PhD from an American university that had been founded by Methodists. I realized that this good and learned gentleman was clueless about what the Bible is and what it has done because his Christian professors in India and in America had no idea.

Therefore, moved by the Holy Spirit, I began responding to him with books such as Missionary Conspiracy: Letters to a Postmodern Hindu (1995), Fascism: Modern & Postmodern (1998—my intro to a book by Gene Edward Veith), and then The Book That Made Your World: How the Bible Created the Soul of Western Civilization (2012).

In spite of Western skepticism, many Chinese intellectuals sense that the Bible was the foundation of the West’s amazing development. In contrast, Hindus such as Mr. Shourie follow ill-informed, in fact, arrogant and foolish, Western repudiation of the Bible. They think that India can be made a great nation by returning to Hindu worldview, which destroyed India in the first place.

One book will not convince skeptics, but it can become a seed that multiplies into many PhD theses, popular books, TV shows, and films. I dedicated the book to Arun Shourie to help intelligent Indians discover the rock upon which India can realize its potential to be a great civilization—a blessing to all the nations.

You write that your book is not so much about the Bible as it is about great literature, art, science, technology, heroism, and virtues. Explain what you mean.

Vishal Mangalwadi: My book is not “Bible study.” It is a study of the global impact of the Bible and it’s worldview. The Bible was the book of the last millennium. No other book was translated, published, distributed, studied, or debated like it. What impact did it have on the world? That is the question my book explores.

Why do you call the Bible the soul of Western civilization?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Although the West has amputated its soul, I call the Bible the soul of Western Civilization because it propelled the development of everything good in the West: its notion of human dignity, human rights, human equality, justice, optimism, heroism, rationality, family, education, universities, technology, science, culture of compassion, great literature, heroism, economic progress, political freedom. Take, for example, democracy.

The myth that modern democracy came from Greece was invented only in the 20th century by John Herman Randall of Columbia College (New York) and Mortimer Adler and Robert Maynard Hutchins of the University of Chicago. The reality is that in his classic, Republic, Plato, the greatest of Greek philosophers, had already condemned democracy as Mobocracy—the worst of all political systems. Plato proposed that the ideal republic should be ruled by philosopher-kings. His disciple, Aristotle, trained Alexander-the-Great to be a philosopher-king, who turned out to be one of the most ruthless conquerors in history. In turn, Alexander inspired India’s first empire builder, Chandragupta Maurya.

Later Alexander inspired Machiavelli’s The Prince—which examines how a successful prince acquires and retains power. Machiavelli was the flowering of European Renaissance that produced tyrants such as Napoleon. The biblical Reformation led to the birth of modern democracy. Without the Bible, western democracy will become obnoxious as did the Greek democracies.

To give another example, the West’s confidence in human reason came not from Greece, but from the Bible via Augustine. Hinduism, Buddhism, and their products such as Greek gnosticism knew that unaided intellect cannot know truth. The Enlightenment corrupted western confidence in reason by (over time) separating it from revelation. After Nietzsche and Freud, everyone knows that here is no reason to trust human reason, unless it is made in the image of Logos and strives to conform to it.

Why do you begin your book recounting the suicide of rock musician Kurt Cobain and then contrasting him with Johann Sebastian Bach?

Vishal Mangalwadi: The first chapter uses music as an entry point into the West’s soul. It contrasts Christian West with (post-Christian) West without its soul. The chapter inquires: What made the West a uniquely optimistic and musical civilization, able to sing “Joy to the world (fallen, miserable and full of suffering)?”

Bach and Cobain were musical geniuses. Both lost their parents at nine. Bach’s parents died and Cobain’s separated. Bach’s faith in resurrection enabled him to celebrate “The Passion” (Suffering) of St. Matthew and St. John. Cobain inherited Bach’s musical tradition without its philosophy. Therefore, his music could only scream at suffering, making him an icon of a generation lost without a map of reality. Buddhism offered no hope to Cobain. Therefore, he cursed life and committed suicide.

Buddhism originated in India. Its pessimistic philosophy gave us great art and literature, but no hope, music, or musical instruments. Islam (and Orthodox Christianity) also ruled out music; therefore, it too pre-empted development of technology.

The German publisher published 10,000 copies of the first chapter as a stand-alone booklet. It is proving to be an excellent work of worldview evangelism. I hope someone will print it in Japanese, since Bach is Japan’s fifth evangelist.

How was the Bible “the force that created modern India”?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Why are “native” Americans Indians? Why are “native” Australians Indians? Why is Indonesia, Indian-Asia? Why were Columbus and Vasco de Gama looking for sea-routes to India (and not to “Spice-land”)?

The European mind was fascinated with India, because India, not Japan, Korea, or China, is the Eastern-most land mentioned in the Bible (Esther 1:1). By “India” the Persians meant “Sindustan,” the land around the river Sind (now in Pakistan). Up until the 1850s, no one living in Bengal or Kerala ever thought that he was living in “India.” That is why Michael Madhusudan Dutt (1824-1873), the pioneer of ‘Indian’ nationalism, actually wrote only about ‘Bengali nationalism.’

The pre-Columbus European concept of geographic India came from the Roman Catholic reading of the Bible. That is why Vasco de Gama’s coming to Kerala and Goa was the sea-route to “India.” Protestant reading of the Bible coined the ‘abstract’ concept of India as a geo-political nation state, half-a-century before England actually made India a nation in 1858. Prior to William Carey, no “Indian” had ever existed who started a paper (or organization) such as Friend of India (1818).

Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, persuaded British Parliament in 1833, that Britain must govern Indians in such a way as to train them to govern themselves as an independent nation. Macaulay grew up in the company of the evangelical member of Parliament, William Wilberforce, in the Calpham community. He followed up his rhetoric by coming to India to give us the ‘Indian Penal Code’ along with the Jewish-biblical idea of rule of law. He helped transform our education and civil services. He played a critical role in the establishment of our first universities in Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras in 1858. These began as examination-conducting institutions to fulfil the vision of Macaulay’s brother-in-law, Charles Travelyan. The latter had defined the mission of Christian education in 1838 in his classic On the Education of the People of India. The objective of that herculean mission, he said, was to prepare Indians to govern themselves as a free nation.

After Macaulay and Travelyan, it took five more decades before an Englishman could inspire a few graduates of Calcutta’s Christian education to create the “Indian National Congress” (1885). Then it took 70 more years to prepare leaders such as Gandhi, Ambedkar, and Nehru, who could, in fact, lead and govern a free India.

India became a free nation in 1947. It could have attained that status if it had even one Indian, who thought of India as a nation during the “Mutiny” of 1857. When Indian soldiers started killing Englishmen and liberated Delhi, educated Brahmins and Hindu merchants organized prayer meetings around the country to pray for British victory over Indian mutineers. This was partly because the rebels who succeeded in defeating the British in Meerut and Delhi decided to revive the Mogul Empire by declaring Bahadur Shah as their emperor.

Most Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh soldiers and rulers disapproved of the revival of that exploitative and useless empire. Many decided to fight against fellow Indians to defend the British Raj. This was because, contrary to current, ill-informed (or deceptive?) debaters such as Shahi Tharoor, most of the Indians who actually lived under the British, perceived it as better than all other options available to “India”.

Mogul Empire had been so corrupt and inept that in 1738-39, the Persian invader Nadir Shah, met hardly any resistance as he travelled 1000 KMs. within the Mogul’s (Indian) empire, from Ghazani to Delhi to plunder the Mogul capital. The Empire’s rottenness had encouraged the Marathas to conquer and plunder Hindu and Muslim kingdoms. This threat of the Marathas and/or invaders from the Khyber Pass had forced Hindu/Muslim kings to take refuge under the Company Raj. Most Indians opposed the 1857 Mutiny, now called the First War of National Independence, because they could not trust Indians to rule India with justice and equity.

While the Hindu and Muslim rulers, intelligentsia, and merchants preferred the Company Raj over Indian rajas, it was the Bible-shaped conscience that saw the Company as a “gang of public robbers” (Macaulay) and its rule as the “rule of evil genii.” Yet, Independent India chose to remain a member of British Commonwealth and import its political, economic, and social ideals and institutions, because the Bible succeeded in (a) transforming India’s governance under the British, and (b) training enough Indians to govern India as a modern, democratic, nation-state.

Dr. Babu Verghese’s massive study, Let There Be India: The Bible’s Impact on Nation-Building, details how the Bible translators created modern India by turning our dialects into literary languages, bringing modern education, printing, literature, and modern press, and the modern ideas of human equality, dignity, and rights (his book is available from ManagerGoodBooks@gmail.com).

How did the Bible trigger the West’s passion for medical advancement?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Mainstream Hinduism taught that matter (including the human body) was evil—illusion or maya. In contrast, the first chapter of the Bible declared the material realm, including the human body, to be very good. Genesis 3 taught that sickness and death came as a curse upon human sin. The Lord Jesus came to give us abundant and eternal life. His soul did not reincarnate. His crucified body was resurrected and glorified. The Bible teaches that God will resurrect our perishable bodies as immortal and glorified bodies.

Because of God’s high view of the human person, including his body, the Lord Jesus healed the sick and commissioned his disciples to a ministry of healing. Therefore, medieval Roman Catholic monasteries did not simply pray, preach, and practice piety. Many of them took care of the sick. They studied, and taught medicine. The Schola Medica Salernitana became the world’s first medical school in the South Italian city of Salerno. It grew out of a 9th century dispensary in a monastery. This monastic tradition blossomed into modern medicine after the 16th century biblical Reformation.

What is the biblical ideal of human dignity and how did it inform the West’s social structure?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Gautam Buddha, the founder of Buddhism, saw human life as suffering. Thomas Hobbes, the only atheist in English Enlightenment, viewed life as “nasty, brutish, and short.” Pope Innocent III detailed “The Misery of Man.” Secular intellectuals have no option but to see man as nothing more than an evolved animal.

Species, races, and individuals do not evolve equal. Evolution does not bestow any rights upon any animal. Western notions of human dignity, equality, and inalienable rights are the Bible’s unique contribution to the modern world. Pico della Mirandela (1463-94) articulated the Bible’s case for human dignity in An Oration on the Dignity of Man. His case rested upon (a) creation of man in God’s own image and (b) God’s incarnation in the Jesus of Nazareth.

God became man in order to save man, because man was made in God’s image – precious and immortal. Full implications of these doctrines are still being worked out. Yet, much of our future will be shaped by the question: Is man merely another animal (organic intelligence) or is he uniquely God’s image—so precious to God that He would come to this earth to save him?

How did the Bible equip the West to cultivate compassion?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Through parables such as that of the Good Samaritan, the Lord Jesus explained the command ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ He exemplified it by blessing those who cursed and killed him. Jesus courted the wrath of religious establishment by caring for the sick even on Sabbath. He reinforced prophets such as Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Amos, by teaching that God’s holy law was made for man’s good. Therefore, a religiosity that did not care for individuals was worse than worthless. It was obnoxious. What we do for the littlest of his brothers, we do for him.

What is your response to people who say the Bible subjugates women?

Vishal Mangalwadi: The women’s lib movement started in America because social inequality between men and women was obvious. Many women got paid less then men for the same work. They were allowed to serve coffee after worship, but not communion during the worship. They could play piano in a church but not pray. Yet, crucial questions are: who told America that men and women were created equal; that sin brought subjugation as a curse; that the curse was nailed upon the cross of Calvary? The question that triggered my reflections was: Why didn’t the Saudi women burn their burqas and their bras? What empowered American women to launch the women’s lib movement? Was it because American women were more oppressed than the Muslim of Hindu women? Or was it because something had already made American women stronger than other women around the world? My counter-intuitive discovery was that it was the Bible that empowered women.

No culture has ever required a husband to love his wife. Every culture, including Jewish and post-Christian Western cultures, have permitted husbands to divorce their wives and/or take other women. In 1831-32, French magistrate Alexis de Tocqueville observed that American women had become much stronger than European women because the biblical ideal of marriage had had the biggest impact in America. No country in the world will even try to impeach a president who lies about his private sex life.

The Bible emancipated Western women because it alone asserted theological equality of male and female and also because it defined God’s idea of marriage as a one-man one-woman lifelong and exclusive relationship. A woman is liberated to develop herself and to strive for her dignity when she knows that her fallen husband is not permitted to despise her, divorce her, covet his neighbor’s wife or to take another woman as a girlfriend, concubine, or wife. He has to love her, irrespective of the level of her intelligence, charm, abilities, and fallenness.

Roman wives were the victims of Rome’s playboy culture. Many of them followed and financed the Apostle Paul and (over time) won the Roman empire for Christ, because they understood better than modern feminists that Paul was emancipating them.

Men and women are equal, but husbands and wives (like parents and children and all other formal relations) have to live in a hierarchical relationship. No institution can function on the basis of equality-without-hierarchy. Christian marriages are being destroyed because the Western church has surrendered to the world’s folly that equality precludes authority. The Christian idea of marriage is unique. It can be sustained only if we take seriously the Bible’s idea of the fallenness of men and women and the necessity of wives submitting to fallen husbands, and husbands loving fallen wives.

How is human equality a biblical principle?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Sociologically, the modern idea of human equality was born when Martin Luther discovered the New Testament doctrine of the “priesthood of all believers.” Gradually, this truth began to challenge the West’s social/racial injustices.

George Whitfield was the first white revivalist in America, who began preaching to the blacks. His preaching evoked protests: “Do you really want us to kneel with our slaves and drink communion from the same cup?”

In order to counter deep rooted prejudices, in 1740, Whitfield began writing a series of articles. These explained how and why the Bible teaches human equality. Whitfield’s writings created the consensus which Thomas Jefferson articulated in the original draft of the Declaration of Independence as, “We hold these truths to be sacred and undeniable that all men are created equal.” By “sacred” Jefferson meant derived from sacred Scriptures. Under pressure from Benjamin Franklin, the Declaration was changed to read, “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal.”

To Indian sages, inequality was self-evident. That is why they invented the caste-system which still survives. Equality was “self-evident” even to American Deists because their worldview was shaped by the Bible. Now that evolution is shaping everyone’s intellectual lenses, only a fool will be able to assert that all men have evolved equal.

What role did the Bible play in the establishment of the university?

Vishal Mangalwadi: No Hindu ashram ever grew into a university. No Orthodox Christian monastery developed into a university in Eastern Europe, Greece, or Russia. Augustinian monasteries and Cathedral schools blossomed into West European universities such as Oxford, Cambridge, Paris, Prague, Heidelberg, and Wittenberg because St. Augustine taught that the human mind was God’s supreme gift to mankind. The mind was made in God’s image, therefore, in order to be godly, one had to cultivate the mind as well as piety.

These monasteries were different than every other center of religious education. Young boys came to a monastery to learn to pray and become a priest. But in these monasteries they had to study logic, literature, philosophy, mathematics, and rhetoric as well. This is what created the West’s uniquely rational religious leader, who prayed as well as studied birds and the solar system.

Following the Reformation, Christian thinkers realized that God wants all men to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth (1 Timothy 2:4-7). In order to know truth, man has to study three books: The book of God’s words (the Bible), the book of God’s works (in nature and culture), and the book of God’s reason (logic and mathematics that run the human mind and physical universe.) This insight was captured in Harvard Crest in 1643. VERITAS is written on these three books. Today, the university has degenerated into a factory producing laborers for the market and the state because, without God’s word, the university has been forced to shy away from the very concept of truth.

Since the Bible is not a “fax from Heaven,” explain how sentences written by humans can be considered the Word of God?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Prophet Elijah said to king Ahab, “As the Lord, the God of Israel, lives, before whom I stand, there shall be neither dew nor rain these years, except by my word” (1 Kings 17:1). By the end of the chapter, the Sidonian widow of Zarephath exclaimed, “Now I know that you are a man of God, and the word of the Lord in your mouth is truth.” (vs. 24). Eventually Ahab was forced to acknowledge that Elijah’s words—a man’s words—were, in fact, the word of God.

God said to Jeremiah, “Behold, I have put my words in your mouth…I am watching over my word to perform it.” (Jeremiah 1:8-11). God’s word includes the words He gives His men and also men’s words which He watches to perform, fulfill, and honor. Daniel and his friends were willing to go into the lions’ den and fiery furnace because 70 years of Jewish history had confirmed to them that Jeremiah’s words, disregarded by their fathers, were in fact God’s word.

The gospel is that Jesus Christ died “according to the Scriptures,” was buried and rose again the third day, “according to the Scriptures” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4). That means that Jesus didn’t have to die. In the Garden of Gethsemane Peter gave him the opportunity to evade arrest. During his trial, Pilate gave to Jesus plenty of room to escape crucifixion. The Lord Jesus sacrificed his life because he believed that the words of Scripture, written by fallen and fallible men, were in fact God’s words.

As you observe the West’s treatment of the Bible, where do you see western society headed?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Germany, the birthplace of biblical Reformation, became the arch villain of the 20th century, because during the 19th century, German theology undermined the Bible’s authority. I see post-biblical America as the greatest terror to the 21st century. I think the future of greed-driven American capitalism is best captured by James Cameron in his terrible, pagan, and commercially hit movie, Avatar.

Muslim nations cannot be the world’s biggest threats because while Islam can build a strong Caliphate, it does not and cannot build nations. Protestantism has built history’s greatest nations; therefore, the world has the most to fear from Protestant nations that destroy the very foundations of their morality and civility.

What are your thoughts about Bible Gateway as a way to reinvigorate civilization’s soul?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Bible Gateway is the only site I use to get into the Bible. (Though I am yet to cultivate the discipline to use everything that it offers.) I appreciate this interview because the new generation needs to learn why the Bible must be studied, trusted, obeyed, and applied.

Is there anything else you’d like to say?

Vishal Mangalwadi: Christianity has lost America because the church forgot that “God wants all men to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth…” for this reason Paul the apostle was appointed a “preacher” and a “teacher of the gentiles in faith and truth” (1 Timothy 2:4-7). The American church has the capacity to disciple the nation, but for over a century it has lacked the theology for discipling nations. It has been preoccupied with saving souls, not with discipling nations.

The good news is that the state of Minnesota just started an education revolution that can disciple America. Students will enroll in an accredited college, but go to the local church to study online as a cohort in a face-to-face mentorship with a credentialed Academic Pastor. A student will get a college degree for under $10,000 a year. Check out www.VirtuesCampus.com.

Bio: Vishal Mangalwadi, LLD, was born and raised in India. He studied eastern religion and philosophy in India, Hindu ashrams, and at L’Abri Fellowship in Switzerland. He is a dynamic and engaging speaker who has lectured in 35 countries. He is a social reformer, political columnist, and author of 14 books. Christianity Today calls him ‘India’s foremost Christian intellectual.’

Bible News Roundup – Week of July 26, 2015

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Travelling Exhibition in Ostrava, Czech Republic, Brings Together More Than 500 Bibles from Private Collections
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A Collection of Bible Museums & Exhibits

Papua New Guinea Parliament House Accepts 404-year-old KJV Bible as National Treasure
PNG LOOP
Read the King James Version Bible on Bible Gateway

Buenos Aires Gets Special Look at Rare Biblical Artifacts
Museum of the Bible

Exclusive Photos Inside the Bible Museum Construction Site
Curbed DC

B-I-B-L-E with a Lowercase ‘b’: Hey Wall Street Journal, What’s Up with That?
GetReligion

Retirees Help Asian Church Leaders Teach the Bible
Baptist Press
Read the Bible in a multitude of languages on Bible Gateway

The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Military Pocket Bible
The Federalist Papers

A Missouri Sheriff has Placed the USA National Motto “In God We Trust” on Patrol Cars
The Blaze

How USA-style Megachurches are Taking Over the World: 5 Maps & Charts
The Washington Post

See other Bible News Roundup weekly posts

Remembering Mary Magdalene, First Witness to the Risen Christ

The_Penitent_MagdaleneThis week, Christians from the Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, and Lutheran families took time to commemorate one of the most notable women in the Bible: Mary Magdalene. Going by the frequency with which she’s mentioned in the Gospels, Mary Magdalene was an important figure in the early community of Jesus’ followers.

Mary Magdalene was present at some of the most significant moments of early Christian history. We read in the Gospel of Luke that she traveled with Jesus after being freed from the oppression of “seven demons,” so she probably witnessed much of Jesus’ ministry. But most notably she was present at both the crucifixion and the resurrection of her Savior:

After the Sabbath, as the first day of the week was dawning, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to view the tomb. Suddenly there was a violent earthquake, because an angel of the Lord descended from heaven and approached the tomb. He rolled back the stone and was sitting on it. His appearance was like lightning, and his robe was as white as snow. The guards were so shaken from fear of him that they became like dead men.

But the angel told the women, “Don’t be afraid, because I know you are looking for Jesus who was crucified. He is not here! For He has been resurrected, just as He said. Come and see the place where He lay. Then go quickly and tell His disciples, ‘He has been raised from the dead. In fact, He is going ahead of you to Galilee; you will see Him there.’ Listen, I have told you.”

So, departing quickly from the tomb with fear and great joy, they ran to tell His disciples the news. — Matthew 28:1-8 (HCSB)

Here’s how Ann Spangler and Jean Syswerda describe the remarkable implications of the fact that Mary, a woman, was the first person to meet the resurrected Christ:

The risen Jesus had appeared, not to rulers and kings, nor even first of all to his male disciples, but to a woman whose love had held her at the cross and led her to the grave. Mary Magdalene, a person who had been afflicted by demons, whose testimony would not have held up in court because she was a woman, was the first witness of the resurrection. Once again, God had revealed himself to the lowly, and it would only be the humble whose hearing was sharp enough to perceive the message of his love. — from the entry on Mary Magdalene in Women of the Bible

Despite her presence at these important events, we know little else about Mary. Many Bible readers hoping to learn more about Mary Magdalene have identified her with Mary of Bethany or with the unnamed “sinful woman at the well”. However, there is little evidence in the Bible texts to make these connections, and the latter identification in particular has resulted in the widespread but biblically-unfounded belief that Mary Magdalene was a prostitute or that she led an immoral lifestyle.

Many Christian traditions today regard Mary Magdalene as a saint and remember her with an annual feast day; others regard her simply as an important and inspiring Biblical figure. Either way, it’s worth taking a few minutes this week to read about one of the most interesting women in the Bible. Click here to see a list of Bible verses in which she appears.

Learn What Bible Study Resources Are Keyed to the NIV Bible Translation

Click to visit the NIV Bible websiteWhen Bible scholars on the Committee on Bible Translation (CBT) were first commissioned in 1965 to translate the New International Version (NIV) Bible, their goal was to create a readable version for the entire English-speaking world. Translators from the United States, Canada, England, Northern Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand were involved in the process to ensure that it would appeal to all English-speaking audiences.

[See our blogpost: 50-Year Anniversary Celebration Continues with the NIV Bible: ‘Made to Study’]

A top priority for the CBT was that the NIV allow for future revisions of the text, as new scholarship would inevitably emerge that would provide fresh understanding of the original languages and texts. Because of its unprecedented readability and precision, the NIV has become the world’s most-read modern-English Bible translation with over 450 million copies distributed worldwide.

[See our blogpost: Zondervan to Release NIV Zondervan Study Bible]

Click to enlarge this NIV resource chart

Today the NIV is supported by Bible commentaries, concordances, biblical language books, and other Bible study resources based on or keyed to the NIV translation. The above chart groups these reference works into the following categories:

  • Inner Band: Resources for Beginning, Basic Bible Study
  • Middle Band: Resources for Pastors, Bible Study Leaders, and Serious Bible Students
  • Outer Band: Resources for Scholars, Pastors, and Bible Students working with the Biblical Languages

You’ll find all these resources in the Bible Gateway Store, where you’ll save money while supporting the ministry of Bible Gateway when making a purchase.

[Click to read The Truth About the NIV: Guest Post by Carl Moeller]

History of the NIV

Howard Long, an engineer from Seattle, was known for his passion for sharing the gospel and his love for the King James Bible. One day, he tried sharing Scripture with a non-Christian—only to find that the KJV’s 17th-century English didn’t connect.

In 1955, Long embarked on a ten-year quest for a new Bible translation that would faithfully capture the Word of God in contemporary English. Eventually his denomination, the Christian Reformed Church (CRC), and the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) embraced his vision for the NIV.

In 1965, a cross-denominational gathering of evangelical scholars met near Chicago and agreed to start work on a new, clearer translation of the Bible: the New International Version. Instead of just updating an existing translation like the KJV, they chose to start from scratch, using the very best manuscripts available in the original Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic of the Bible…. Read the rest of the NIV history in the Bible Gateway Store.

By the time the full New International Version of the Bible was released to the public on October 27, 1978, more than one million copies had already been preordered.

Those who had purchased the 1973 version of the NIV New Testament had eagerly awaited the publication of the full Bible, and the word was spreading in Christian circles about this new, contemporary English-language Bible. Retailers stocked their shelves, and everyone involved in producing the translation rejoiced, thankful that 13 years of effort was not in vain.

As the translation entered the market, it also gained popularity organically through the movement toward a more generic form of evangelicalism. Prior to the 1970s, churches were usually associated with a particular denomination—Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, etc. When the NIV was published, more churches were branding themselves as nondenominational or just evangelical. A faithful version of the Bible that wasn’t tied to a particular church, person or denomination was just what these churches needed…. Read the rest of this historical perspective on the NIV Bible website.

[Browse the Bible Gateway Store to see the many editions of New International Version Bibles.]

[Sign up to receive the free NIV (and other versions) Bible Verse-of-the-Day in your email inbox from Bible Gateway.]

[Download the free Bible Gateway App, on which is available the NIV and many other Bible versions.]

A Year of Living Prayerfully: An Interview with Jared Brock

Jared BrockHow far would you go to learn to pray better? While filming a documentary about sex trafficking, a producer and his wife felt a deep need for more powerful prayer in their personal lives. With the intent of learning more about prayer, the couple traveled the globe, exploring the great Judeo-Christian prayer traditions: in mountains and monasteries, in Christian communities and cathedrals, standing up and lying down, every hour and around the clock.

Bible Gateway interviewed Jared Brock (@jaredbrock) about his humorously-serious book, A Year of Living Prayerfully: How A Curious Traveler Met the Pope, Walked on Coals, Danced with Rabbis, and Revived His Prayer Life (Tyndale House, 2015). (The first chapter is available for reading (click “Excerpt”) in the Bible Gateway Store.

Buy your copy of A Year of Living Prayerfully in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

What prompted you to write this book?

Jared Brock: I was filming a documentary in the red light districts of Amsterdam. Hundreds of drunk men prowled the streets, the windows were filled with women, and there were police on horseback. In the middle of the district is the oldest building in Amsterdam: an 800-year-old church. Every hour, on the hour, church bells ring and men abuse women to the soundtrack of church bells. I stood in the middle of this and said, “God, I need your power in prayer to end this.”

What did you learn during your year of living prayerfully that you hadn’t learned from your previous years of praying?

Jared Brock: One thing I learned is that you become like the people you hang out with. If you have breakfast with Bill Gates every morning, you’re going to get better at managing your money. If you have lunch every day with Steven Spielberg, you’re going to watch more movies. If you spend time with Jesus in prayer every day, it’s going to make you more Christ-like. Prayer not only changes the world, it changes you.

What cultures and various expressions of faith did you encounter and how did they help you in your prayer life?

Jared Brock in Orthodox attireJared Brock: I went on a 37,000-mile prayer pilgrimage around the globe. I hung out with people across the Judeo-Christian faith family, including some of the “weird uncles” and “crazy cousins.” I hung out with Catholics, Orthodox, Hasidic Jews, Quakers, Baptists, Pentecostals, and so many more. I learned from monks and priests and rabbis and disciples and everyday people who love God and have committed to spend time with Him in prayer. Across everyone I met, including the Pope, there was a deep humility that really impressed me.

You had a chance to visit John Wesley’s house. What did you learn from your Wesley visit?

Jared Brock: Wesley lived in a very simple house, and off of his bedroom he built a small walk-in closet. But he didn’t put any clothes in his closet. It was his prayer room. He spent two hours every morning on his knees in that room, and it became known as the “Powerhouse of Methodism.” Wesley always prayed with a Bible open; he was always looking for a word from God on the things he was praying about. I had a chance to pray in Wesley’s closet, using Wesley’s Bible. It was a very cool experience.

The Bible says to pray without ceasing. How did you experience that principle during your year?

Jared Brock: Well, prayer comes easy when you spend time in North Korea or at Westboro Baptist Church! The idea of praying without ceasing really took root in Paris, France, after I discovered the home of Brother Lawrence, the man behind The Practice of the Presence of God. Standing in the same place where a humble monk, 300 years ago, cooked food and washed dishes and spent every waking moment communing with Christ, was powerful. It compelled me to do the same.

What is sortes biblicae and where did you encounter it?

Jared Brock: Sortes biblicae is this old and somewhat odd method of discerning God’s will, basically leaving it up to chance and/or a move of the Spirit. Basically, you sit down, open a Bible to a random page, stick your finger somewhere on that page, and whatever verse comes up is God’s word for you for that day. God can do whatever He wants, but I personally recommend a more systematic approach to working through the Word of God; that is, using some sort of reading plan.

Explain Ignatian meditation, Ignatian contemplation, and examen and where you learned about them?

Jared Brock: The spiritual exercises were created by St. Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits. Meditation involves slowly reading through a small passage of Scripture, quietly discerning what God has to say to you that day. It might just be one word, or one thought, or one action. Contemplation uses your creativity to imagine yourself immersed in the story of the Bible, picturing yourself walking with the characters and experiencing the events as they did. Examen, done at the end of the day, is a way to look back and see where God was at work in your life.

In A Year of Living Prayerfully you offer a brief list of seven ways to pray. Explain one.

Jared Brock: Let’s go with shalom. Shalom is the most powerful one word prayer in the world. It connotes a sense of peace and stillness and wholeness. Jewish people use it as a hello and as a goodbye. It forms part of many of their most sacred prayers. It’s one of the first things they’ll pray over the children before they’re born; it’s one of the last things they pray before they die. I pray shalom when I watch the news. I often sign my emails with the word shalom. Whenever I feel anxious, I pray shalom over my heart.

As a result of your global travels and observations, what conclusions have you made concerning the worldwide church and how Christians in different lands approach the Bible?

Jared Brock: I definitely think we in the evangelical west don’t revere the Bible like others do. Some denominations won’t even stay seated for the reading of the Word of God. The Bible is an important part of our prayer life. What is more important: one thousand words for us to God, or one word from God to us?

What do you hope readers will take away from your book?

Jared Brock: First off, I hope they laugh. I wanted to bring the joy of the Lord into a prayer book—which are normally quite dull and serious. Prayer is about relationship, and I hope readers walk away with a sense that prayer isn’t about religion or rituals; it’s about a constant communion with Christ. As we spend time with Jesus in prayer, God works in us, through us, and around us. Prayer changes everything.

How can websites and mobile apps like Bible Gateway help people achieve a more effective prayer life?

Jared Brock: I use Bible Gateway all the time, specifically for seeing other translations, for research, and for understanding the context of the passage. Passages of Scripture come alive to me as I read history and commentary; what others throughout history have said and learned about that particular verse. The Word really is living and active.

Is there anything else you’d like to say?

Jared Brock: All my author royalties are donated to charity.

Jared Brock in Quaker attireBio: Jared Brock is the author of A Year of Living Prayerfully, and the co-founder of Hope for the Sold, an abolitionist charity that fights human trafficking one word at a time. Jared is happily married to his best friend, Michelle, with whom he is the co-director and co-producer of Red Light Green Light. Together they have traveled to over 40 countries and have spoken in over 100 cities around North America. Jared’s writing has appeared in Huffington Post, Converge, Esquire, and Relevant Magazine, and he writes regularly at JaredBrock.com.

He says, “If I had to put myself into a denominational box, I’d probably have to call myself a non-denominational Christ-following ecumenical who tries to practice Quaker simplicity and silence, Catholic activism, Pentecostal passion, Evangelical outreach, Mennonite peacemaking and hospitality, Orthodox belief, Southern Baptist potluckness, Brethren community, and Ignatian discipline.”

Rachel Barach Talks About Bible Gateway’s Present and Future at Living With Faith

What countries use Bible Gateway the most? How many Scripture annotations do Bible Gateway users make each month? What are the site’s most-used features? Rachel Barach answers these and other questions in a new interview at Living With Faith. Here’s a short bit from the interview:

LWF: Our own sites are getting increasingly more visitors from Africa (especially Nigeria and Kenya), India and, just recently, Russia. What kind of patterns is Bible Gateway seeing in its much larger visitor base?

Barach: People from more than 200 countries come to Bible Gateway to search and read the Bible online. Most of our users live in the USA, the UK, Canada, Australia, Mexico, Philippines, Colombia, Singapore, and South Africa. Over the last five years, we, too, have seen a definite increase of users from India, Kenya, and Nigeria.

Visit Living With Faith to read the rest of the interview.

Living With Faith is a website and blog devoted to exploring and understanding what it calls “believing faith”—faith that both informs the Christian life, and that grows as it is put into practice. For an example of Living With Faith’s approach to the topic, you might take a look at their essay “Is Faith Reasonable?” Rachel Barach serves as general manager of Bible Gateway, and recently shared her thoughts on Scripture engagement and technology in an essay at OnFaith.

Bible News Roundup – Week of July 19, 2015

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Winning Bibles and Books Announced in 2015 Christian Retailing’s Best Awards
Christian Retailing
Browse these titles in the Bible Gateway Store

What’s Technology Really Doing to the Bible?
OnFaith
Read the Bible on Bible Gateway
Download the Bible Gateway App

Is the NIV Bible Translation Missing Verses and Selling Out to Secular Publishing?
Seedbed
Read the NIV on Bible Gateway
NIV website

Biblical References Are In Harper Lee’s Book Go Set a Watchman
RNS

Half of UK Christian Teenagers Don’t Read Bible More Than Once a Month
Premier

Deaf Bible Making a Change to Reach 75% of Deaf Community for Christ
EXTV

Bible Published in North Korean Dialect and English
NK News
Read the Bible in Korean on Bible Gateway

1500-Year-Old Scrap of Bible Found Near Dead Sea Deciphered: Verses from Leviticus 1
c|net
Read Leviticus 1 on Bible Gateway

Birthplace Of The First Hungarian Bible Marks 425 Years Since Completion Of Work Of “Epic Dimensions”
Hungary Today
Daily News Hungary
Read the Bible in Hungarian on Bible Gateway

Wycliffe Associates Launches God’s Word Print on Demand
Mission Network News

Ration List Offers Look at Life in Biblical Times
La Crosse Tribune

UNCC Archaeology Team in Jerusalem Unearths 1st-Century Mansion
The Charlotte Observer

A Bible Baked in a Loaf of Bread from 16th Century Southern France
Culture24

Knitted Exhibition Brings Bible Stories to Life in Barnard Castle Methodist Church, UK
Darlington & Stockton Times

‘Nones’ Changing Bible Belt
The Herald

Tests Reveal Quran Manuscript is Among Oldest in the World
CNN
BBC News: The Origins of the Koran
Browse books about the Quran in the Bible Gateway Store

See other Bible News Roundup weekly posts

Why is Bible Engagement Down in an Age of Digital Accessibility? Rachel Barach on Technology and Scripture

It’s easier than ever before to access the Bible. In addition to reading a print Bible in any of the dozens of versions and translations on the market today, you can read Scripture from any online computer, listen to it on your morning jog or commute to work, pull it up on your smartphone, and easily share it with hundreds or thousands of your social network acquaintances.

So why is Bible engagement—reading it, understanding it, embracing it—on a downhill trend?

In a new short essay at OnFaith, Rachel Barach draws on her experience as Bible Gateway’s manager to offer insight into why we aren’t engaging with Scripture despite our ubiquitous access to the Bible… and how we can rediscover the transforming power of God’s Word:

The truth is, all this digital accessibility, all the hours spent reading Scripture on our laptops and mobile devices, all of these verses broadcast out to our friends via social media may not be having the impact we might expect on Bible engagement and Christian maturity — on our understanding and application of Scripture, on biblical literacy, on our connection to church and Christian community, on our lens for seeing and serving a broken world.

Today, 79 percent of people believe the Bible is sacred literature — which is down 7 percent from 2011. And 61 percent of people say they wish they read the Bible more — down 6 percent since 2011.

With the Bible more digitally accessible and shared than ever before, why are these numbers going in the wrong direction?

Here are three possible reasons…

Click here to read the full article at OnFaith.