Which church, Which Bible, Which doctrine???
I was fortunate to have moved around a lot when I was a young Christian, and because of that, I attended many churches.
I found each church always had a core group of true believers actually living out the faith in ways that I saw as Biblical.
They were always loving, caring, active, living simply, and free of extreme dogma.
In addition I was fortunate to have a fella hand me a Christian Classic to read as a devotional;
It created a hunger in me, and from that day forward I read the Bible as well as the Christian Classics and biographies which broadened my spiritual horizons, caused me to question my narrow and pinched beliefs and helped me immensely by grounding me in the faith,
but also recognizing the height, depth and width of Christian thought.
If you had asked Henry Drummond to what school of thought he belonged, he would have told you that
"He never wore ready-made clothes."
I like that.
"The classical instance of the contemptuous rejection of ready-made clothing was, of course, David's refusal to wear Saul's armor."
I learned when I felt bound or "cribb'd, cabin'd, and confined" by a teaching,
I needed to search it out and find out what the teaching was that robbed me of Christ's liberating words of life.
I also learned if I find some special phase of truth powerfully attracting me, I must, without shunning it,
pay increasing attention to all other aspects.
'The Lord has yet more truth to break from out His Word!' said John Robinson;
and I must try to find it.'
To illustrate that -
"Mr. Goodman is a splendid fellow; but he fell in love with one lonely little truth one day, and now he never thinks or reads or preaches of any other."
Reading the classics of faith and biographies also motivated me because the heroes of the faith were men and women of action!
They involved themselves with the marginalized, the downcast, the oppressed, the addicted, and the afflicted.
I soon realized that a faith consisting only of Christian study and doctrine was but half of our calling.
The other half—however it is expressed—
is serving the least, the last, and the lost, "cheek to jowl," up close and personal.
There, in the lives of those we serve, is the true school of Christ.




