GCI Update

Pentecost and media

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Joe and Tammy TkachThe Day of Pentecost celebrates the coming of the promised Spirit and the day the church began to preach the gospel to the world. As the disciples spoke, the large crowd from all over the region were astonished to hear the message of “God’s deeds of power” in their native languages.

This was a remarkable miracle—a reverse of the confusion of tongues that happened at the tower of Babel. However, it might not seem quite so miraculous today. The technology exists for simultaneous translation, even taking into account regional accents and dialects. This is just one of the remarkable advances in communications technology.

How should we use these advances to spread the gospel?

I’m certainly not opposed to the use of media. The development of the Internet and the rapid progress in all forms of communications technology makes it possible to reach out in ways that we could not have imagined even two decades ago. What once needed dozens of employees working in large departments now can be accomplished by a handful of people, working out of their own homes. I can have frequent and almost instant contact with the people who work with me producing the church’s media, even though we live thousands of miles apart.

This is the trend of the future and we can follow it intelligently.

There is nothing wrong with using mass media, providing we remain true to the gospel message. Sadly, in order to attract attention in the competitive world of advertising, it can be tempting to present the gospel as something it is not. In the past, when we had a very different focus, we spent millions of dollars every year on television and print media. But it became obvious that, as production became more sophisticated and expensive, and as cable and satellite expanded the choice of TV channels, this was a bottomless pit of expense. So we now distribute our video productions through the Internet, allowing us to produce quality programming at a much lower cost.

We must be careful not to become so bedazzled with the potential of new media that we overlook the fact that the most effective advertising method for preaching the gospel is one of the oldest. In the nineteenth century, if you wanted to make your product or business known, you would hire a “sandwich board man.” He would walk the streets, wearing boards that had your advertising information written on them. This is what my dad had in mind when he used to say we should be “walking, talking advertisements for the kingdom of God.”

My “business,” and yours, is representing the kingdom of God. Suppose God asked you to walk around for a few hours each week wearing a big sign saying something like “Be kind, be loving, be graceful, be forgiving, be generous, seek truth, be a Christian.” You’d be pretty careful how you behaved while doing that, wouldn’t you?  Thankfully, God does not expect us to literally do this. However, he does expect us, through our behavior, to show there is an alternative to the vanity, selfishness, lust and greed that is the way of life in this world.

After the impressive “launch” of the church in Jerusalem on the Day of Pentecost, it does not appear to have been God’s plan to spread the gospel through huge media campaigns. Research into early church history shows that the gospel spread through the example of the believers who were moved by the Holy Spirit. The gentle, unselfish way of life of the first Christians was a striking contrast to the harsh realities of Roman rule. And it is the same today. The same Holy Spirit that Jesus promised to send his disciples then, enables us now to proclaim with our lives the good news of the renewing power of God. That same Spirit also prepares and enables others to hear and receive the message of God’s grace at work within us.

The best advertisement we can be for God’s gospel of grace is to let the love of God flow through us and reach out to others in the power of the Spirit of Jesus. This is why I pray daily that my life’s advertisement be a positive message. I believe we all want to follow the apostle Paul’s words:

For through the law I died to the law so that I might live for God. I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me (Galatians 2:19-20).

On the Day of Pentecost this year , let’s count on the Holy Spirit to be at work among us and encourage those we serve to launch their own “media campaign,” showing by the way we live the hope that we have in Jesus (1 Peter 3:15).

Your brother in Christ,

Joseph Tkach

Ray Meyer

Ray and CarolRay Meyer currently serves as the senior pastor of the GCI congregation in Kansas City, Missouri and as a district pastor.

Ray and his wife Carol both began attending WCG/GCI following graduation from high school in 1965. They had both heard The World Tomorrow program, read The Plain Truth magazine and were drawn by the message. They entered Ambassador College in Pasadena, California in 1965, which is where they met. They graduated in 1969, were married and sent to serve the congregation in Akron, Ohio, working first with David Antion and then Bryce Clark.

Carol grew up near Grand Rapids in western Michigan, living and working on a small produce farm where she learned the value of hard work. She responded to the gospel as a child and began following Christ at that time. She did not have the support of her family in many ways and had to swim upstream in order to follow the leading of the Holy Spirit.

Ray grew up near Kansas City in western Missouri, living first on a farm where he learned many practical skills and later in a small town where he worked in a grocery store and then as an apprentice electrician. Ray also responded to the gospel as a child and attended church regularly with his mother and siblings.

Ray developed a love for basketball in the seventh grade and this blossomed into a passion in high school where he lettered three years and was named an All American as a senior. This led to a college scholarship offer, which he turned down to attend Ambassador College. He went on to play basketball for four years at Ambassador.

Ray’s first assignment as a senior pastor was in a circuit that included Cincinnati, Ohio and Louisville, Kentucky. He was later transferred back to Akron to pastor the AM/PM churches there. After a sabbatical in Pasadena, the Meyers pastored churches in Houston, Texas; Louisville, Kentucky; Dayton, Ohio; Milwaukee, Wisconsin and most recently in Kansas City. They both feel this journey was the result of God’s call on their lives, and they believe it has been his blessing and grace that has enabled them to endure the ups and downs of ministry over the many years.

Ray said, “God has given us a deep love for our denomination and the people of GCI and that is what has fueled our drive.” Ray has always enjoyed serving in his area of giftedness: pastoring/shepherding with all that his gift entails. Ministry offers a wide variety of activity and responsibility, which they have always appreciated. But most rewarding for both of them is seeing people blossom as they’re transformed by their life in Christ. “That’s what it’s all about!”

What are their passions? Carol’s passion is working with people who have suffered abuse of one kind or another. These experiences led her to write the book, Project RenewalA Study Guide for Emotional Recovery (now published in three languages). Over the years, she has helped many people on the journey of recovery. Being a member of Heart of America Ministry Women has opened numerous doors for ministry, as has her employment with Avant Ministries (a missionary agency).  In addition to helping a number of missionaries and those they serve, Project Renewal is part of the women’s curriculum at a theological seminary in Bolivia. To read more, go to www.projectrenewal.info. Carol has also enjoyed leading the women’s ministry in GCI’s Kansas City church for 17 years, which has hosted 15 women’s retreats.

Ray’s passion has been developing leaders. Early on he used the Spokesman Club/Graduate Club format to develop leaders and wrote a manual on Christian Leadership from his Graduate Club experiences. Later this passion was expressed in mentoring men and women in the recognition and expression of their gifts and in providing opportunity and encouragement to put those gifts to use in ministry. Coordinating festivals also served as a great format for mentoring others and for leadership training and team building.

In response to the question, “When do you feel closest to God?”  Carol replied, “Amazingly, when we’re in a crisis. We discovered this when I was deathly ill in 1985 and again when Ray’s life was threatened by pulmonary emboli in 2000. God mercifully delivered us both. We also experienced this when the church was in crisis during the 90s. The song, “The Anchor Holds,” was especially meaningful for us during that time.”

When asked about their most significant mentor, Ray said, “We haven’t had just one good mentor. There were a number of men who positively impacted our lives, including Dean Blackwell, Ron Kelly, Richard Rice and several others.”

When asked, “What do they enjoy most about being a part of GCI?” Ray replied, “Seeking truth was always a prime motivator in the past and that continues today. It’s all about growing in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and the transformation this brings.”

During their tenure in ministry, Ray has served in a variety of responsibilities, including deacon, elder, assistant pastor, associate pastor, pastor, YOU District and Regional Coordinator, Festival Coordinator for 13 years at three different festival sites, district pastor, regional pastor, district superintendent and district pastoral leader. Ray commented, “The major lesson we have learned is that it’s Jesus’ ministry, not ours. He initiates and accomplishes it all—and he gives us the opportunity to participate!”

RayMeyerTurkeyFor diversion and recreation, Carol enjoys oil painting, playing Scrabble and reading historical fiction while Ray enjoys hunting and riding his Harley.

Now for some interesting ironies that Ray has recognized:

  • Little did I know that the minister who first came to visit me in 1965 (Rowlen Tucker) would be the man I would later replace as pastor in the Kansas City North church in 1994.
  • Little did I know that the pastor I first heard speak in Kansas City in 1965 (Bryce Clark) would be the man I would later work under in Akron, Ohio beginning in 1969.
  • Little did I know that the congregation I first visited in 1965 would be the church I would come to pastor in 1994 and would retire from in 2013.
  • Little did I know that the young man who will be succeeding me as pastor in Kansas City (Jason Frantz) was a youth in the Dayton, Ohio church which we pastored during the 1980s and 90s (Ray is retiring from employment as a pastor next month).

Ray and Carol are blessed with two children (Janna and Randy) and four grandchildren (Faith, Logan, Gavin and Ellora). They look forward to spending a lot more time with them during the years to come.

GenMin video

Here is an introductory video from GCI Generations Ministries, featuring GenMin director Anthony Mullins. The video was recently posted on the GenMin website homepage.

http://youtu.be/Yb2IriCMsVA

Cinco de Mayo celebration

GlendoraNew Covenant Fellowship, the GCI congregation in Glendora, California recently celebrated its 17th annual Hispanic Heritage/Cinco de Mayo festival.

Cinco de Mayo commemorates the Battle of Puebla in Mexico in 1862, in which the Mexican army defeated a French invading army. Cinco de Mayo has become a major holiday and is celebrated with great enthusiasm among the Hispanic population in the U.S. The congregation’s annual celebration has proven to be an effective way to reach out to honor members of the Hispanic community.

Glen Weber
Glen Weber
Saddie and Angie Tabin

Guest speakers were district pastor Glen Weber and church planters Saddie and Angie Tabin. Pastor Glen gave insights into how church planting efforts can renew and revitalize existing congregations as well as giving new or returning Christians a church family to worship with. The Tabins told about what it really takes to plant a church—meeting their neighbors, showing concern for them and  praying with them, forming small groups and holding neighborhood social events leading up to launching a new church.

After church, the congregation and guests enjoyed a festive potluck meal, followed by the children smashing a piñata filled with candy.

pinata

Scripture: God’s Gift, part 4

This article is part four of a six-part series by Gary Deddo on interpreting Scripture. For part one, click here; for part two, click here; for part three, click here.

Rules for Interpreting Scripture

As I said at the end of part three in this series, “With the Center of our prayer, faith, devotion and worship set, as a kind of North Star, everything else regarding listening to and studying the Lord’s Scripture then gets properly oriented.” So now, let’s explore some of those more general implications that can be expressed as certain kinds of rules, which keep us navigating in alignment with our North Star.

Interpret Parts in Light of the Whole

As you know, Jesus is identified in Scripture as the First One and as the Last One. He is also identified as the living Word of God or the Logos of God. We could say that Jesus is and speaks both the first word to creation and is and has the last word about creation. Everything was set in motion by him and the ultimate destiny of everything is established in relationship to him, its rightful inheritor.

Perhaps we don’t often think of it, but recognizing this about Jesus, our risen and ascended Lord, has implications for our hearing and studying of Scripture. In the past it has been put this way: always interpret the various parts of Scripture (verses, paragraphs, chapters, books, etc.) in terms of the whole of Scripture. No part of Scripture ought to be understood simply on its own, but only in the context of the whole. Some have said that every part of Scripture ought to be interpreted in terms of the fullness of its meaning (its sensus plenior).

You may have heard the good advice to not take verses “out of context.” That’s right. The context includes not only the verses immediately surrounding a certain text, but the chapter, the whole book in which it appears and, in the end, the whole of Scripture. Many false teachings down through the ages and even in our contemporary situation come from taking a passage out of context and then concluding what it means on its own. In reality we can then easily substitute our own context for the actual context provided for us by the whole of Scripture. Our context then becomes the interpretive North Star. So there is no substitute for taking a lifetime to study the whole of Scripture, that is, considering “the whole counsel of God.”

But the whole turns out to be not just all the books and verses of the Bible. It turns out that the whole includes Who is before, behind, surrounding and standing at the end of Scripture. This whole is what the Bible says as a whole about who God is. As the Logos of all things, including Scripture, Jesus Christ contains it all. So the whole involves all of what we learn through the whole history of revelation preserved in Scripture. And every part must be grasped in a way that it contributes to the whole (of who God is in Christ) and how the whole includes the parts. That “rule” will help us properly hear and interpret the meaning of Scripture as we listen to its various parts, for it all comes from one and the same whole God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. It ought to all sound like it belongs to one and the same God personally known in Jesus Christ.

Interpret the Unclear in Light of the Clear

Another “rule” often recommended in past ages of the church that will help us stay oriented to the North Star is to “interpret unclear passages in terms of the clear.” This is a good guideline. Much false teaching has derived from a fascination with the unclear, the obscure, or the opaque passages of Scripture. Teachers can take advantage of those cases because, given the ambiguity of their meaning, lots of meanings can be made to seem plausible. They’re not clear enough on their own to rule out a range of speculative understandings. So someone who can give a logical argument can often be persuasive, often actually reading in their own meaning. The rule to make use of clear passages to sort through the various options for interpreting the meaning of difficult parts guards against this danger. We especially should not let the unclear passages, and some particular understanding of them, be used to reinterpret the clearer passages!

But we can take this rule a step farther. Who or what is the clearest expression of the heart, mind, will and character of God? Jesus Christ. He is the Light of all light. All Scripture, in the end, should be understood in his clear Light. He alone shows us the face of God in person.

Let’s look at an example. The Pharisees of New Testament times had an understanding of God’s Law, the Torah. When Jesus came along they accused him of violating what they considered the highest priority of that Law, namely the keeping of the Sabbath. And they had worked out logically what must be implied in keeping the Sabbath. They interpreted Jesus and his actions in terms of their pre-understanding of the Law of God. How did Jesus respond to their accusations? Did he simply say, “I came to give you another interpretation of how the Law should be applied”? No, he said, “For the Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath” (Matthew 12:8). The Pharisees gave priority to their understanding of the Law, and interpreted Jesus in terms of it. But Jesus countered by telling them who he was in relationship to the Law and so said, “I created the Law, I gave it its meaning, I know how it is to be honored and when it is being violated. Interpret the Law in terms of me, its Lord, not me in terms of the Law. It is my servant. I am not its servant, to be judged by it.”

So Jesus puts the Pharisees at a crisis point. Will they recognize Jesus as the Living Lord, the Lord of the Law or will they continue to use the Law as “lord” to interpret and judge Jesus? What or who is the whole and what or who is the part? What or who is the clear and what is relatively obscure? We may not regard the Law as the Pharisees did, but we may have other truths or attitudes or viewpoints that we assume and use to interpret or understand Jesus and who God is. Recognizing Jesus as the Center of the center will challenge us to view everything in terms of his interpretation of things, in his light.

We can sum up: we interpret the parts in terms of the whole and the unclear in terms of the clear, and all in terms of Jesus Christ!

Interpret the Old Testament in Light of the New

Another implication that has been identified in the past is to interpret the Old Testament in terms of the New Testament. This too is a good “rule” we can follow and further expand. Jesus is the fulfillment of the revelation and provision of God. That is, he is the self-revelation and the self-giving of God for us and for our salvation. He fulfills all the promises of God set up and signaled in the Old Testament. The promises are to be understood in terms of the fulfillment, not the other way around.

But the Old Testament is about more than the promises themselves. It involves an ongoing relationship and interaction of God with Israel over roughly a thousand years, including interaction with numerous prophets at various points in the history of that relationship. God was taking Israel somewhere and Israel knew it. God had not given them the final word. They looked forward to having his Spirit poured out on all flesh (Joel 2:28) being given to reignite life in the dry bones (Ezekiel 37:5) and having new hearts (Ezekiel 11:19; 36:26). They looked forward to the time of God’s peace or shalom when they wouldn’t have to prepare for war anymore and not have blood on their hands (Isiah 2:4; Joel 3:10; Micah 4:3). They anticipated the completion of the sacrificial worship where they could be in the very presence of the living God and then truly live! The Old Testament revelation included the proclamation that there was much more to come, that God was not finished making himself known and providing everything for them. Even at the conclusion of the last words of the prophets, they knew they were not at the end of the story. The climax had not yet been reached.

The fact that God’s revelation involves a history of interacting with Israel and speaking through selected prophets means that we should interpret any passage in terms of where it comes in the story as it leads up to or down from God’s self-revelation and self-giving in Jesus Christ. This rule of interpretation is especially important for particular ethical or liturgical directives given to ancient Israel. What God commands of Israel in a particular instance is not God’s final or eternal word.

For instance while the “eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth” saying was far more compassionate than the code of revenge practiced by the surrounding ancient near eastern cultures of the time, it was not God’s final word to his people. Rather, the final word is embodied in Christ who loved his enemies to the end and directed us to do the same. So interpretation should take into account where in the story we find the actions, attitude or instructions given. God fills out and clarifies his revelation through a history of interaction with his people, so not every word in the Bible is God’s last word on the subject. Providentially, there are many places in the New Testament where significant change or discontinuity,is explicitly spelled out, such as keeping of the Sabbath.

This does not mean that everything said in the Old Testament will necessarily be radically reinterpreted later on. Some insight or instruction may remain largely unchanged, such as principles we identify as broad moral instructions that are linked to our human nature and take into consideration our fallen condition. About rather permanent and universal features of humanity such as marriage, sexual morality and the relations of parents and children that abide throughout history and across differing cultural contexts, we would expect significant continuity of teaching. The New Testament often does spell out particular continuities and redemptive development of expression.

Even if there are some practical or particular differences, at the level of fundamental principles that reflect God’s character we should expect to see some continuity between earlier and later application of that same principle in the New Testament. There seems to be a redemptive development in the way God’s more general purposes are to be applied in the life of the church after the fulfillment of God’s will is accomplished in Christ as compared to before this fulfillment. An example would be that although Israel is directed at times to go to war, she was instructed not to be vengeful and to look forward to a time when her swords would be beaten into plowshares. The Christian church is called to continue along that trajectory to finally be peacemakers and to not regard any human being as their ultimate enemy, but rather forgive and seek reconciliation and restoration.

The issue of slavery seems to fall along the same lines. What was allowed to Israel is no longer to characterize the Christian church. So Paul directed Philemon to emancipate his slave Onesimus (Philemon 16-17). Slavery is a practice that was “passing away.” So such instructions as were given Israel cannot be directly picked up by the church now with no regard for our occupying a different place in the story than was ancient Israel. The God of the Bible is a God of life, not death; a God of freedom, not slavery; a God of love, reconciliation and redemption and not enmity and revenge. While we certainly can find signs of these characteristics in the Old Testament, at times some significant ambiguity appears along the way in God’s history of interaction with Israel. We now, however, live to bear witness to the clear and complete fulfillment of God’s Word in Christ, not to its foreshadowing and preparation. In this way, we interpret the Old Testament in terms of the New.

There we have several guidelines for properly interpreting Scripture with Jesus Christ the Living Word at the center of the Written Word. In the next two articles in the series we’ll continue to offer some more guidelines to help us stay oriented to our North Star.

Jason Richards

Here is an update on Jason from his grandfather, GCI pastor Martin Manuel.

Since the last update, Jason had to be returned to the ICU with low blood oxygen levels. He was put on a ventilator, which stabilized him. Tests showed that he was battling a virus, which when added to the Legionnaires Disease he already was battling, created a very dangerous situation. This new development has deeply discouraged Jason, and so we are asking that you continue praying for him. We are confident that we will continue to witness answers from our ever-present, loving God.

Exponential West

Exponential-West-Square-LogoWe recently reported on the 2013 Exponential Conference held in Orlando (click here for the report).

Now we have learned that there will be a second Exponential Conference in 2013, held from October 7–10 in Orange County, California.

For information, go to  https://www.exponential.org/expo2013/.