Pastor John Collins, Wyoming Evangelist: Broken Christianity
What really pleases God? Is it the rituals that a church congregation
practices in worshiping each Sunday or Sabbath?
Is it the music that is sung by a choir or played by a worship band
before, during, and after the service?
Is it the offering that is taken?
Is it the sermon that has been written for a specific topic preached by
a seminary prepared pastor? The truth is that it really isn’t one of these rituals.
When it comes right down to it, the rituals of the Old Testament were replaced
with the coming, crucifixion, and resurrection of Christ Jesus. Jesus Himself cautioned against rituals that
brought recognition to men and women who performed them rather than the worship
of God. Rituals may be comfortable, but
they are not bringing us back to God.
Evangelist Pastor John Collins
began a revival in Wyoming to spread the truth of the Word of God, bring back
God, and to fix the brokenness of Christianity. Christianity is indeed broken. Christians are treating
faith as a buffet, caring for
others as a pick
and choose menu, treating the Holy Bible
as if it is a book of suggested
topics for life and choosing which passages
to follow instead of taking
it all in. Pastor John Collins calls
it like it is: the Bible was written by
people who were inspired to write it by God Himself. It isn’t fabricated, it isn’t randomly
written. The Bible ties everything together, Old to New
Testaments. What Jesus
Christ taught, He meant. He meant it when He said “Love your neighbor as
yourself, do to others as you would have done to you.” It wasn’t new and
those were God’s words from the Old Testament. Jesus
spoke them and taught
by action. That does not mean that
you ignore
the guy struggling to find a safe
place to sleep because he lost
his home
and can’t get work but turn
around and help out the
other guy who shows up asking for money.
It does not mean that you care for
the person
sitting next
to you in the pew but
not the woman
who is drinking to
kill shakes at
9:00 am. It doesn’t mean sing in the choir on Sunday, then Wednesday go into
the porn store. It means that Christians
act like Christians
EVERY day, ALL the time, not just when
it suits to do so. Christians
are not supposed to act like hypocrites, doing one
thing and saying another.
Pastor John Collins puts it all quite plainly:
“Now Jesus sat opposite the treasury and saw how the people
put money into the treasury. And many who were rich put in much. Then one poor
widow came and threw in two mites, which makes a quadrans. So He called His
disciples to Himself and said to them, ‘Assuredly, I say to you that this poor
widow has put in more than all those who have given to the treasury; for they
all put in out of their abundance, but she out of her poverty put in all that
she had, her whole livelihood.’” Mark 12: 41-44.
You cannot only be a Christian when
things are going good in your life and you cannot only be a Christian
towards those whom you like and approve of. The whole point of being a Christian is to be Christ-like and believe
me, Jesus was kind to those whom He
knew to be sinners and those whom He would not approve of, which is the reason
that He was sent to earth, to save those who were lost. Jesus
gave all that He had down to His last breath, for us.
Many people take their own lives and situations too
seriously and become defensive and ignore those who are around them. Many
people justify their self-absorption by claiming tragedy, turmoil, victimhood
and obligations. You cannot justify acting nasty or dismissive to others
because you are not in a comfortable situation or in a place of stability. God
tests you on how you behave under pressure, under stress and in the tough
situations. God tests you all of the time and if you really are interested in
how you are doing, just go and read the Sermon on the Mount and see how you
measure up.
The words of Christ when He spoke are not to be dismissed,
they are to be obeyed and that is how you will be tested. God doesn’t want you
to wait until you are happy and financially stable to help another. It is your
suffering that makes you able to have compassion and it is your willingness to
put another before yourself that makes you rich.
Be willing to be a follower of Christ when no one is looking
and be willing to open yourself up to another when they are in need. Not
everyone needs money as charity. There are so many lonely people in this world
that need love and faith. Be willing to offer both freely because God knows
that Jesus always will. “Therefore, when you do a charitable deed, do not sound
a trumpet before you as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets,
that they may have the glory from men. Assuredly, I say to you, they have their
reward.” Matthew 6:2”
It’s time for Christians, or those who call themselves
Christians to take a good long look at themselves and how they portray
themselves to others. People ARE
watching. People who have not been
inside a church for years do that because they don’t feel comfortable with the
double message that is so often delivered by those inside the church to those
outside the church. What little does it
take to offer yourself in truth, in kindness, and not be judgmental? Don’t offer your hand in kindness and
helpfulness then turn it over to criticize and withdraw from someone. Jesus
Christ came to save us all, He didn’t pick and choose to serve us from a buffet
of lesser sins. A sin is a sin in the
eyes of God, none greater, none lesser. It’s time for Christians to stand up
and take a fresh look at how they are measuring up in God’s eyes because that
is Who really matters, not the eyes of fellow church goers. Are we living a biblically correct life as a
Christian? Are we measuring ourselves
against the book that was given to us for that purpose?
We are all sinners, every one of us, pastors and congregations alike. We all need to get it right to get to heaven, to get back to God and to bring back God to others. We have to change how we are toward others in order to save ourselves. It’s time to come back to the Cross.