The Prayer Test

Prayer is the best test of an individual, and it is also the best test of a church. A church can be flourishing: she can be successful in terms of organizations, she can be tremendously active and appear to be prosperous, but if you want to know if she s a real church or not, examine the amount of prayer that takes place…So I ask you: how much do you pray? What evidence is there of prayer in your life? This is the way to discover where we are.

D. Martin Lloyd-Jones (1899-1981)

Suffering from the Hand of a Reconciled God

Your afflictions may only prove that you are more immediately under the Father’s hand. There is no time that the patient is such an object of tender interest to the surgeon, as when he is bleeding beneath his knife. So you may be sure if you are suffering from the hand of a reconciled God, that His eye is all the more bent on you.

Robert Murray McCheyne (1813-1843)

HT: A Twisted Crown of Thorns

Dont’ Be a Disembodied Christian

By becoming a Christian, I belong to God and I belong to my brothers and sisters. It is not that I belong to God and then make a decision to join a local church. My being in Christ means being in Christ with those others who are in Christ. This is my identity. This is our identity. If the church is the body of Christ, then we should not live as disembodied Christians.

Tim Chester and Steve Timmis, Total Church, (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2008), 41

HT: Of First Importance

Church: The New Community in Christ

The very purpose of [Christ’s] self-giving on the cross was not just to save isolated individuals, and so perpetuate their loneliness, but to create a new community whose members would belong to him, love one another and eagerly serve the world.  This community of Christ would be nothing less than a renewed and reunited humanity, of which he as the second Adam would be head.  It would incorporate Jews and Gentiles on equal terms.  In fact, it would include representatives from every nation.  Christ died in abject aloneness, rejected by his own nation and deserted by his own disciples, but lifted up on the cross he would draw all people to himself.  And from the Day of Pentecost onward it has been clear that conversion to Christ means also conversion to the community of Christ, as people turn from themselves to him, and from “this corrupt generation” to the alternate society which he is gathering around himself.  These two transfers — of personal allegiance and social membership — cannot be separated.

John R. W. Stott, The Cross of Christ (Downer’s Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2006), 249.