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Why I Don’t Want To Be A Denominational Christian

denom

Most of us who claim to be Christians are part of Christ and also part of a denomination, that is a specific brand of Christianity. We are known and identified as being Catholic, Baptist, Methodist or Church of Christ.

But, did you know that “For the first thousand years of Christian history, there were no ‘denominations’ within the Christian church as there are today. (Read a brief overview here.)

Paul wrote, “Let there be no divisions in the church. Rather, be of one mind, united in thought and purpose” ( 1 Cor. 1:10).  This is why I don’t want to be a denominational Christian.

I don’t want a brand of Christianity.

I don’t want a denomination of Christianity. I don’t want written or unwritten creeds of man. I want “pure and undefiled religion” (Jm. 1:27).

Maybe I am a naive idealist, but I think, even 2000 years later, it is still possible to have pure and undefiled religion.

I want to determine my own faith.

I want to “work out [my] own salvation with fear and trembling” (Phil 2:12). I don’t want anyone else to do that for me.  I don’t want to fall in line with the status quo. I want to read the bible and do it without the constraints of what the Pope says or what my grandpa did.

I want to strive for unbiased bible study.

I believe I have  a grave responsibility to give the scriptures an honest examination. I don’t want to examine the bible through 100 or 1000 year old traditions. I want to keep moving toward a real, true biblical perspective.

“Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth” (2 Tim. 2:15).

I want the right gospel.

“But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed” (Gal. 1:8).

Wow! The stakes are high. If another gospel is preached, no matter who preaches it or blogs it, he will be cursed. I want to make sure what I am taught and what I teach is not a contrary gospel to the first one preached.

I don’t want to be deceived.

I don’t want to drink the kool-aid. I don’t want to go along with it just because a guy behind a pulpit say so. There’s was already false religion during the writing of the New Testament. There is a lot more out there today. I don’t want to be part of it.

“See to it that no one takes you captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the world, and not according to Christ” (Col. 2:8).

I don’t want to be pigeonholed.

No matter how fair and unbiased I have ever try to present myself, the moment the label goes on so do a lot of wrong, preconceived ideas. Paul said, “Yes, I try to find common ground with everyone, doing everything I can to save some” (1 Cor. 9:22). I much rather start with common ground rather than all the disagreements I have with someone.

I want radical religion.

A lot of what I observe is a passive, spectator, preacher driven religion. One day a week people show up to consume. I want a passionate, discipling,Christ driven every day of the week, turn the world upside down religion.

“They dragged Jason and some of the brothers before the city authorities, shouting, ‘These men who have turned the world upside down…'” (Acts 17:6).

This is not my dogma. This is not a debate. This is just me.  I am simply a Christian.

Jul 21, 2014Serena
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Why I Am Not Church of ChristThe Diary of a Mad, White, Vacation Bible School Teacher
Comments: 7
  1. A
    8 years ago

    “Paul said, ‘Yes, I try to find common ground with everyone, doing everything I can to save some’ (1 Cor. 9:22). I much rather start with common ground rather than all the disagreements I have with someone.” (Love this point.)

    “But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed” (Gal. 1:8).

    “Wow! The stakes are high. If another gospel is preached, no matter who preaches it or blogs it, he will be cursed. I want to make sure what I am taught and what I teach is not a contrary gospel to the first one preached.” (Also like this point.)

    It’s interesting because for many of us, the first gospel preached to us was the wrong one. And if it was wrong, we won’t come to realize it until the Holy Spirit enlightens us to what His Word truly intended. I haven’t grasped the gospel of grace until recently.

    What I need to do is to look past denominations when I encounter people and seek to know their heart. Just like man looks at the appearance, God looks at the heart. Some of our hearts are deceived and could be seeking truth. The body of Christ is here for each other to grow in Him and have grace.

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  2. Joan
    8 years ago

    Maybe I am a naive idealist, but I think, even 2000 years later, it is still possible to have pure and undefiled religion” if it were not possible God would not have told us to do it. God used James to tell us that “pure and undefiled” was more than a “passive, spectator, preacher driven religion.” Thank you for encouraging me to live for Jesus. Lets look up together and never grow weary. Heart hugs from your sister in Christ.

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  3. Sandi Rog
    8 years ago

    It hurts me to see the churches of Christ labeled as a denomination here, especially when those who are a member of the Lord’s body know that our “doctrine” is completely based on scripture alone and NOT on “man-made” creeds or doctrine. Coming out of the dominational world, I can tell you, the churches of Christ are the only ones who know their scripture and teach the complete, unadulterated truth.

    I’d really like to know what teachings are taught in the church that label it a denomination. This means that the teachings are from man. Please tell me, what teachings in the churches of Christ are from man? I sincerely want to know. Perhaps I’m missing something?

    Blessings,

    Sandi

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  4. Beckye
    8 years ago

    there are churches of Christ and then there are Church of Christ churches. In Church of Christ churches, they require conformity while giving lip service to autonomy , they preach about how every one else is going to hell becuase they aren’t “Church of Christ” instead of what God’s word says about issues such as instruments in worship, baptism, singing, divorce etc., they make their preachers defacto pastors, they don’t allow discussion or questions of anything because they have no knowledge and can not give an answer for the hope with in, they require conformity of all churches who identify as a church of Christ or brand them as heretics, they proudly brag about their status as the One True Church and resemble the Pharisee in Luke 18 more than the Tax Collector.

    There is a difference- one is a local group of Christians trying to help people get to heaven, the other is a social club for people who have been dunked in water to meet and feel good about themselves while excluding those aren’t special 3 John 9-11.

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    • A
      8 years ago

      girl, you named much of my frustration. ever since I encountered much futility in my mind regarding what you referenced, God always brought me back to Jesus’ prayer that all BELIEVERS be one as Jesus and God are one. He didn’t pray that “all perfect, in-perfect-order, perfect-obeying Christians” be one in unity. He knows we’re a mess when we’re left to our human effort. Anyhoo, this is such a good discussion if believers are open to be challenged in what we’ve been taught. All the while, seeking to maintain unity in His Spirit.

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  5. Steve Wolfgang
    8 years ago

    While parts of this article are true and state some lofty goals, other parts of it misrepresent or are just plain factually incorrect (evidently derived from that most unreliable information source, the InterWebz).

    What came to be called “Churches of Christ” had no affiliation with Baptist churches in 1801, as the chart you put on the blog portrays. Indeed, the only denominational relationship that many of those who became members of churches of Christ in the 19th century had was that they renounced and LEFT Presbyterian, Methodist, Catholic, Baptist, and other creed-bound, humanly-organized and denominated religious sects.

    Even more disturbing, however, is the outright equation in your opening paragraph of those who renounced a “specific brand” of “Christianity” (in reality “Christendom”) to be simply Christ-followers and wear His name only, with those who by contrast openly and proudly sport their human brand names -– and encourage others to do likewise.

    It is hard to see how anyone who truly seeks to serve Jesus would perpetuate such misconceptions.

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    • Serena
      8 years ago

      Fair enough Steve. Thank you.

      ReplyCancel

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Serena
8 years ago 8 Comments American Church, Christian Life, The Churchbeing a Christian, christianity, denominational Christianity640
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