Wednesday, July 04, 2007
Thessalonians: an 'Adventist' Epistle
Happy 4th of July!
This past weekend at Epicenter, we read I Thessalonians, the whole book. I enjoyed the the broad overview and hearing some common 'sound bytes' in context such as, "But I would not have you be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow not, even as others which have no hope" and "The day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night."
Primarily because of these two themes and the enigmatic apocalyptic language in II Thessalonians, it struck me that the message of Thessalonians is very 'Adventist.' Then came my moment of conviction.
Paul is thrilled with Timothy's glowing report from the church in Thessalonica not because they are proclaiming Christ's soon return or because they understand the finer points of the nature of man but because of "the good news of your faith and love." He affirms them not for their doctrinal purity or their evangelistic zeal but for that same love saying, "Now concerning love of the brothers and sisters, you do not need to have anyone write you, for you yourselves have been taught by God to love one another."
Why did this focus on love not cause me to think of this as an 'Adventist' message? Some may say that is because we lack love; and, this may be true. However, it seems to me that a lack of love may simply be the result of how we define community. Our community tends to be based on intellectual beliefs and correct doctrines rather than relational love and practical actions.
For this reason, I am very excited about Campmeeting 2.0: Bloggin' the 28 Adventist beliefs sponsored by the Spectrum Blog. This series of posts hosted on various blogs seeks to answer a simple question: how do each of our Seventh-day Adventist fundamental beliefs translate into habits or actions today? I see this as a way to help us move beyond theory and into praxis. Maybe Thessalonians is 'Adventist' after all.
Here are links to the first three posts:
Ron Osborn on The Life, Death and Resurrection of Christ
Johnny Ramirez-Johnson on Applying Trinity to human relationships
Johnny Ramirez on The remnant and its mission
Enjoy!
This past weekend at Epicenter, we read I Thessalonians, the whole book. I enjoyed the the broad overview and hearing some common 'sound bytes' in context such as, "But I would not have you be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow not, even as others which have no hope" and "The day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night."
Primarily because of these two themes and the enigmatic apocalyptic language in II Thessalonians, it struck me that the message of Thessalonians is very 'Adventist.' Then came my moment of conviction.
Paul is thrilled with Timothy's glowing report from the church in Thessalonica not because they are proclaiming Christ's soon return or because they understand the finer points of the nature of man but because of "the good news of your faith and love." He affirms them not for their doctrinal purity or their evangelistic zeal but for that same love saying, "Now concerning love of the brothers and sisters, you do not need to have anyone write you, for you yourselves have been taught by God to love one another."
Why did this focus on love not cause me to think of this as an 'Adventist' message? Some may say that is because we lack love; and, this may be true. However, it seems to me that a lack of love may simply be the result of how we define community. Our community tends to be based on intellectual beliefs and correct doctrines rather than relational love and practical actions.
For this reason, I am very excited about Campmeeting 2.0: Bloggin' the 28 Adventist beliefs sponsored by the Spectrum Blog. This series of posts hosted on various blogs seeks to answer a simple question: how do each of our Seventh-day Adventist fundamental beliefs translate into habits or actions today? I see this as a way to help us move beyond theory and into praxis. Maybe Thessalonians is 'Adventist' after all.
Here are links to the first three posts:
Ron Osborn on The Life, Death and Resurrection of Christ
Johnny Ramirez-Johnson on Applying Trinity to human relationships
Johnny Ramirez on The remnant and its mission
Enjoy!
Labels: community, Epicenter, evangelism, gospel, Thessalonians
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