Caleb Levi أُعيد تغريده

Some of you might be inspired by the Theopolitan vision, but find yourselves in churches that are indifferent or hostile.
You want the church to sing Psalms, but the pastor and congregation prefer sappy but familiar hymns.
You want weekly communion, but the pastor is worried it will become rote.
You’re looking for a church where the congregation is vigorously active in the worship, but every church has a praise band that performs before a passive congregation.
What should you do?
If the church is faithful to the gospel, start by giving thanks for the congregation, pastor, and church you already attend. Thank God for their faithfulness, for their ministries and evangelism, for the truth that is communicated.
Thankfulness isn’t complacency. You can give thanks and also criticize and offer suggestions. But without thankfulness, even legitimate criticisms and suggestions will arise from an ungodly, embittered spirit. If you can’t find anything to give thanks for, you shouldn’t be there. If the church has betrayed the gospel, protest. If the protest fails, leave.
When you do criticize, do it directly to the church’s leaders. Don’t start talking to other members to form a sub-congregation of complaint, what Pastor Douglas Wilson (@douglaswils) calls a “fellowship of the grievance.”
Grievance is a powerful force for forming bonds, but the bonds are demonic.
Whatever criticisms or suggestions you offer to the pastor or other leaders, remember that they are your shepherds who are charged by Jesus to keep watch for your soul (Heb 13:17).
Remember that you are called to obey them and honor them (Heb. 13:17). You don’t have to agree with them. But you must honor them as Christ’s appointed shepherds. Appeal, don’t demand. Suggest, don’t give orders. And pray that the Lord will lead the leaders into a deeper appreciation of biblical worship. And remember that, however feeble the church seems, it is contributing to the work of building God’s city. However pathetic, it is the city of the living God, heaven sent to earth.
- Peter Leithart
The Theopolitan Vision

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