divisions in the church
Christian Power of Persuasion
11 Knowing, then, the fear of the Lord, we persuade people.
Recently, a friend asked me, “Johnnie, what do you know now, that you didn’t know before you got involved in politics?” It’s a great question. I think he meant was “What is the curse that comes with being a politician?”
At first blush, I would say knowing how inside politics really works is a curse of sorts. When I hear someone mouthing off about politics, I want to say, “Pal, you don’t know the half of it.”
Yet, the inside political experience is more than never seeing things the same way again. It’s the haunting knowledge that I am compelled to fight for the conservative movement every day for the rest my life - I have been persuaded.
Truthfully, I didn’t know that I would be come an ideologue, a ‘believer’ in the righteousness of the conservative cause, convicted to share the message of personal freedom and free market economics with others. It is life changing indeed, and being convicted, I try to persuade people.
Part of persuasion is telling your audience that they are going to be ‘glad to hear’ your message and that the listener will be ‘proud’ of his or her commitment to the cause. That is why the Ronald Reagan, the father of modern conservatism, became know as the ‘great communicator.’ The dynamic combination of his star power, self-effacing humor and palpable belief that government was not the answer, persuaded his listeners to believe and take pride in the conservative movement.
In 2 Corinthians 5, Paul continues to prove that he was the Christian ‘great communicator.’ Paul had established the church at Corinth, but in Paul’s absence dynamic, but shallow, group of teachers filled the void. As is typical, these false teachers attacked everything about Paul, even saying he was out of his mind. Beginning in verse 11, Paul is speaking mainly to those Corinthians who continued to follow his leadership, building them up and equipping his friends to defend Paul against the accusation that he was a crazy ideologue.
11 Because we understand our fearful responsibility to the Lord, we work hard to persuade others. God knows we are sincere, and I hope you know this, too. 12 Are we commending ourselves to you again? No, we are giving you a reason to be proud of us, so you can answer those who brag about having a spectacular ministry rather than having a sincere heart. 13
Thousands of ‘how to’ books on the ‘power of persuasion’ line the shelves of bookstores and pop up on an Internet search, but it doesn’t take an expert to know that sincerity is the key to persuasion. (That’s why Bill Clinton was a powerful persuader – because he was absolutely sincere about whatever he said at the time he said it, maybe not later, but when he said it!)
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Factions - Is Christ Divided?
Friday, June 04 , 2010 Filed in: Church unity | Bible Study | Factions | New Testament | 1 Corinthians | Paul
“Man is made to adore and to obey: but if you will not command him, if you give him nothing to worship, he will fashion his own divinities, and find a chieftain in his own passions.” Benjamin Disraeli
Just like a church, to say that there are ‘factions’ within any legislative body is an understatement.
For example, it is the tradition in the Florida Legislature that the legislators of each political party select one of their own as ‘speaker-designate’ to serve as Speaker of the House in the event that their party wins a majority of the 120 House seats in the upcoming election. In other words, the internal process of selecting the one who will rise to the office of Speaker of the House can go on for years with the members dividing into various factions supporting one candidate or another.
After I was selected as speaker-designate and even after I was elected Speaker, the contest to determine my successor narrowed down to a hotly contested campaign between Miami legislator Gaston Cantens and Panama City legislator Alan Bense. The process raged on for several years, but finally Bense won the approval of the majority of the Republican caucus. Unfortunately, the members remained so polarized that they continued to self-identify themselves not as Republicans, but as either being on the Bense team or the Cantens team.
Because of this disunity, the focus on a conservative agenda was ‘put on the back burner’ as the factions jousted for leadership within the Republican caucus. Eventually, the Democrats ... Read More...
