Holding True to The Gospel
by
Mark Beaird
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Mark Beaird has been a credentialed
minister (presently an Ordained Bishop) for the last 17 years. He
has served as an evangelist, an associate pastor, then as a pastor
for 9 years. He now serves as the Associate Pastor of
Life Church
International in Huntsville, Alabama.
He is a graduate of
Lee University where he
earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Christian Ministry.
Presently, he is pursuing a Masters Degree from the Church of God
Theological Seminary in Cleveland, TN.
He and his wife, Elaine, reside in
Huntsville, Alabama and have been married for 21 years. They have
two daughters, Sarah and Hannah.
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Images of
people from third world and war torn countries tear at the heart of all
who feel compassion for those who are in dire circumstances and desperate
need. These images stand in stark contrast to the images that come to
the minds of most Americans. Although America has its share of
impoverished people, we remain an extremely prosperous country as a
whole. However, our American prosperity--despite all the good it has
brought into our lives--has nevertheless led to some problems with the
perspective of some. The blending of our prosperous society and our
Christian faith has caused some Christian people in America to take a
somewhat distorted view of the Christian faith.
This negative influence of
cultural thought on theology is something that must be addressed. It has
been called the “Americanization of the Gospel.” This is not a gospel
that you will hear preached at most churches, yet it so dominates the
airways that one might think that it is what all churches believe. Some
call it the “hyper-faith” movement. Some call it the “prosperity
gospel.” But no matter how one tags it, it has the indisputable sound of
a gospel that has its origins in prosperous society. It sounds something
like this, “Christians are supposed to be wealthy and healthy or
something is wrong with their faith!”
I was reminded
of how unscriptural and odd that this must sound to millions living
outside of a prosperous nation when I heard what a fellow seminary
student from war-torn Bosnia had to say. He was commenting on the
recent onslaught of broadcast in his country featuring a well-know
American “prosperity” preacher. The student said that the people of his
country—Christian and non-Christian alike—found these broadcasts to be
humorous. Actually, they literally laugh at the man and make jokes about
his “message” that tells them that if they had faith they would be
enjoying a life of prosperity.
The reason for
such a reaction is that this televangelist is telling people from a
war-torn country, filled with poverty and suffering that is pretty much
inescapable, that if they will truly have faith that they will have
wealth and be free from sickness and suffering. If they do not experience
this, then their faith is defective. Ironically, this so-called message
of liberation results in oppressing the very ones that it is meant to
liberate because it makes one’s financial and physical condition the
measure of one’s spirituality. It is enough to make the skeptical, not
to mention the hopeless and hurting, want to say, “If that is the Gospel
(good news) of Jesus Christ, then I guess it is not for me.”
It reminds me
of something that I learned early in my ministry concerning the content
of one’s message, “If you can’t preach it everywhere, don’t preach it
anywhere.”
There is, however, a
message that can be preached everywhere because it is a message that
offers hope for a better future without equating “gain with godliness.”
It is the message that Jesus preached. We find it in Luke 4:18-19. “The
Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to preach good
news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and recovery of sight for the blind, to release the oppressed, to
proclaim the year of the Lord's favor."
The true Gospel is a
message of hope to the hopeless, a message of help to the helpless and a
message of freedom for those who are oppressed by their sin. The beauty
and rightness of this message is that there is something for everyone who
is in need. The emphasis of this gospel is on the necessity of knowing
Jesus Christ, not on the necessity of possessing material goods.
I think the young minister
from the Ukraine expressed his love for the true Gospel message best in a
prayer that I heard him pray. He asked God to help his country come to
know Christ because, as he put it, “It is better to die without bread in
your stomach than to die without bread in your heart.”