Wheels of Glory! Blog

Christian Unity

Posted in Teaching & Musings | July 23rd, 2020 | by

Unity is probably one of the most contentious issues in the Body of Christ today.  One quick Google search reveals this, and spending much time on social media makes it painfully clear just how un-unified the Church is today.  Arguments and petty disagreements proliferate.  Differing points of theology have split churches, communities – even families.  It’s heartbreaking, but how, in a divided world, do we practically apply the command of unity to our lives?

Clearly, it’s an important thing to God – the word appears in a number of different passages of Scripture, from various authors, in both Old and New Testaments.

woman reading Bible with pen and journal

“I appeal to you, brothers, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree, and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be united in the same mind and the same judgment.” – 1 Corinthians 1:10

“Finally, all of you, have unity of mind, sympathy, brotherly love, a tender heart, and a humble mind.” – 1 Peter 3:8

“Behold, how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity!” – Psalm 133:1

“Complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind.” – Philippians 2:2

Even Jesus said it when he was praying for His disciples – “That they may be one, even as we are one – I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me.” – John 17:23

But what is it really?  And how can we practically apply it to our own lives?

Purple and yellow flowers in child's hand

Merriam-Webster defines unity as being oneness, accord, unification.  Often, I think that we get unity and being carbon copies mixed up.  Christian unity does not look like stamping out all individuality.  It is oneness despite the fact that we are different.

I’ve heard a lot of people wax eloquent on how to get church bodies to unify – how to get the Church as a whole to become one.  Usually, they attack what has been known as the “Identity Movement,” which has recently been a popular message encouraging people to find their identity as sons and daughters of Christ.  (I’d just like to note here that their main argument is that the Body of Christ is supposed to be a family, not a lot of individuals.  More on this in a second).  The “Identity Movement” is creating selfish people, they protest.

And they aren’t wrong – when identity is preached apart from Jesus.  When it is preached within the confines of our humanity, it really can be a very harmful message because it does create a lot of selfish individuals.  It can tear down, rather than build up, unity in the Church.

Six men skydiving

We have to face the hard fact that oneness will never come out of our focus on unity.  We are utterly incapable of achieving it.  So how, you ask, do we get unity if Jesus Himself commanded us to be one?

The answer is a lot more simple (though perhaps easier said than done) than it first seems.  The answer is Jesus.  We will never become one if we focus our efforts on unity, but when we all focus our eyes on Jesus instead, unity is a direct result.  It’s actually a natural progression.  The same thing is true of any of the fruits of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, etc.  When our gaze on the face of Christ is unwavering, these things will happen naturally because we will begin to emulate Him.

But this unwavering gaze starts in our own hearts – rarely does it begin in a group setting, and even when it does, it usually is between God and the individual.  In his book The Pursuit of God, A.W. Tozer states it this way.  (Note that when he refers to ‘religion,’ he is using an old-fashioned term for ‘faith.’)

Heart made out of stones

“Someone may fear that we are magnifying private religion out of all proportion, that the “us” in the New Testament is being displaced by a selfish “I.”  Has it ever occurred to you that one hundred pianos all tuned to the same fork are automatically tuned to each other?  They are of one accord by being tuned, not to each other, but to another standard to which each one must individually bow.  So one hundred worshippers meeting together each one looking away to Christ, are in heart nearer to each other than they could possibly be were they to become “unity” conscious and turn their eyes away from God to strive for closer fellowship.  Social [corporate] religion is perfected when private religion is purified.  The body becomes stronger as its members become healthier.  The whole Church of God gains when the members that compose it begin to seek a better and a higher life.” – A.W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God.

I have successfully managed to live in relative unity with a number of other individuals for the duration of my personal walk with Christ.  These people are members of my family, and let me tell you, when our private walk with Christ is purified, our unity grows.  When one (or several) of us are drifting from that close walk with Christ, we have more trouble being one with the people around us.

The Kingdom of Heaven does look like a family, as those who condemn the “identity movement” pronounce.  But that’s the beauty of being a family – though we are massively different, we can be one as we run after the same goal – Jesus.  And as our personal identity in Christ grows, our corporate identity in Christ grows as well.

And that’s unity in a nutshell.  It’s oneness that comes from the gaze of our individual souls upon Jesus.  Running after the same goal (any goal) is one of the best ways to connect with someone.  Look at the number of sports fans, coffee connoisseurs, etc.  So if we run after Jesus, who is the Author of unity, how much more will we become one if our wholehearted devotion is toward Him?

All photos courtesy Pixabay.com

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Unity vs. Love – VOTD.05.28.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | May 28th, 2018 | by

Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity. Colossians 3:13,14

I’ve watched churches and individuals struggle with the unity thing for most of my adult life. And I’ve watched the grapple to build unity. If I’ve learned one thing from all this observation, it’s that if our goal is unity, we’re doomed. But if our goal is love, unity will grow out of that.

The key to true unity is to make sure that unity isn’t the goal—love is the goal. So, rather than seeking unity, we should seek love, and then we can let love be the key to unity.

Love forgives when we are wronged. Love chooses to ignore differences of opinion. Love overlooks variations in behavior. When we truly love people, differing political opinions and theological persuasions become all part of the diversity of the Living Organism we call the Body of Christ, rather than opportunity for taking offense which leads to division and strife.

This way, even if a unity of beliefs/behavior is not possible, a unity of love is. Unity is not sameness. It is love lifting us above our differences in order to pursue our common goal, the glory of God. This is crucial: God loves us unconditionally, and He calls us to love our siblings in Christ unconditionally. This kind of love never demands the casting aside of convictions or truth. In fact, it leaves that sort of thing in the hands of the Holy Spirit who is the author of unity. (more…)

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Our Harmonious Response to God’s Children – VOTD.05.22.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | May 22nd, 2018 | by

I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received.  Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace. Ephesians 4:1-3

We’ve already seen that unity isn’t about identicality, it’s about like-heartedness. So how do we cooperate with God to live in unity and how is it maintained? It depends a lot on our character in Jesus. Paul lists 5 characteristics that Christian unity depends on: humility, gentleness, patience, mutual forbearance, and love.

No big surprise that he begins with humility. Humility is essential to unity. Pride almost always results in discord and discord is almost always the result of pride at some level. Humility is the attitude that Jesus displayed in becoming a human being in the first place (Phil 2:3-8). In fact the word Paul used here is actually “humility of mind”—Humble-minded. That it’s an attitude that recognizes the worth and value of other people and allows for their diverse opinions.

Think about it for a moment. The people we tend to like to be around are people who show us respect even though they may not agree with us in many areas. The ones we don’t like to be with are the ones we sense disrespect or feel smug superiority from. Rather than maneuvering for the respect or esteem of others (which is the nature of pride), if we give them our respect, because we recognize their inherent God-given worth (which is the nature of this humility of mind that Ephesians is talking about), then we’ll be promoting harmony in our relationships; and result will probably be that they’ll respond to us with the same respect they’ve received. (more…)

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Our Harmonious Response to a Fathomless God – VOTD.05.21.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | May 21st, 2018 | by

(Present yourselves) as one united body living in perfect harmony. Form a consistent choreography among yourselves, having a common perspective with shared values.
1 Corinthians 1:10

Last time we were talking about the variety of metaphors God uses in His Word to describe Himself to us:
Potter – Clay (clay is a lump, simply receiving)
Shepherd – Sheep (sheep at least have some ability to respond)
Master – Slave (slaves work, they do their duty)
Father – Children (now we’re talking relationship, but it’s a pitched relationship)
Friend – Friend (we’re on the same playing field)
Lover – Lover (we’re in each other’s arms, entwined)
One heart, one mind (supernatural oneness, where it’s hard to define where one leaves off and the other begins)
Even deeper and deeper (the list never ends)

The diversity of metaphors exist because He is a Big God, beyond our understanding, but He wants to connect with us in ways we can fathom. (more…)

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Clean Honors Clean – VOTD.03.14.17

Posted in Verse of the Day | March 14th, 2017 | by Wheels of Glory

The voice spoke to him a second time, “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.” Acts 10:15

You’re probably familiar with the story today’s verse comes from. Peter was about to be called to minister to some people who were “unclean” by his estimation, but he didn’t know it yet. To prepare Peter for this major paradigm shift, Jesus sent some animals to him in a vision—these animals were sinful to eat—and told him to eat them anyway. It says this happened 3 times and Peter rebuked the idea all 3 times.

Ahh—what to do when our personal ideas about people are stiffer than Jesus’. God knew what to do—how to prepare Peter for a giant leap into the infinite extent of His grace as it extended to people he considered “unclean”. He didn’t call Peter out, He simply led His ex-fishing buddy to a more complete understanding of the word “Clean”.

If we had even a glimpse of the extent Jesus went to make each of us clean, we might be easier on each other. If we could internalize today’s verse—don’t call impure what God has called clean.

Notice that the Centurion sinner and his family and friends had not even turned to Jesus yet. When Peter showed up at their house they bowed down and worshiped him. Apparently worshiping people was not outside their list of sins. Not great prospects for ministry. But Jesus had already declared them to be “clean”.

Among other things, that meant that all the shaming, guilting, dishonoring that Peter held toward them was missing the point. Jesus still loved them and wasn’t willing to see them miss out on knowing Him, Peter wrote later (2 Pet 3:9). (more…)

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Unity vs Peace – VOTD 03.07.17

Posted in Verse of the Day | March 7th, 2017 | by

Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace. Ephesians 4:3

Last time we saw that rather than seeking unity, we should seek love, and then love will be the key to unity. The same thing is similar for peace. When unity becomes the goal, we may end up with some kind of ceasefire, but we will never find true unity (or even real peace).

Often we confuse peace and unity. Peace does not lead to unity; unity leads to peace. When we get this backwards we end up like a church I was a part of for many years. It thought it had unity because it carefully suppressed any problems rather than dealing with them. It ended up disintegrating over time because despite the appearance of peace and unity, the people had little binding them together.

Or another way we confuse peace and unity is when there is no freedom to disagree or have personal convictions. Many cult leaders see ‘no-disagreement’ as unity, so they invoke a no “boat-rocking” policy. You even see this in churches sometimes. They mistake no-visible-dissent for “unity”. To make sure there are no dissenters usually requires that they resort to hardline control-freak tactics. This is often the backdrop for all sorts of scandals and cover-ups, not real unity.

It is so tempting to pursue peace as a means of achieving unity because we mistakenly think unity and conformity are pretty much the same thing. If you and I are Christians and our understanding of unity is askew, then we will soon be pursuing conformity and at that point control/unquestioning submission become the tools of this kind of false unity. (more…)

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Unity vs. Love – VOTD 03.06.17

Posted in Verse of the Day | March 6th, 2017 | by

Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity. Colossians 3:13,14

I’ve watched churches and individuals struggle with the unity thing for most of my adult life. And I’ve watched the grapple to build unity. If I’ve learned one thing from all this observation, it’s that if our goal is unity, we’re doomed. But if our goal is love, unity will grow out of that.

The key to true unity is to make sure that unity isn’t the goal—love is the goal. So, rather than seeking unity, we should seek love, and then we can let love be the key to unity.

Love forgives when we are wronged. Love chooses to ignore differences of opinion. Love overlooks variations in behavior. When we truly love people, differing political opinions and theological persuasions become all part of the diversity of the Living Organism we call the Body of Christ, rather than opportunity for taking offense which leads to division and strife. (more…)