The Auburn Beacon
Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works
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Building a Biblical  Faith
Wednesday Evening College Bible Class Download the current outlines:

Lesson 1 - Make Your Faith Sure

 

Lesson 2 - Protect and Nourish Your Faith

Lesson 3 - Choose To Let Faith Control Your Emotions

Lesson 4 - Let Faith Mold Your Character

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For the watching world, we ourselves serve proof that God is alive. We form the visible shape of what he is like. 

 


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University church of Christ

 

Assembly Times

 Sunday

   Bible Classes (9:30)

   AM Worship (10:20)

   PM Worship (6:00 pm)

 Wednesday

   Bible Classes
(7:00 PM)

 

Location

449 North Gay Street

Auburn, AL 36830
Click Here for Specific Directions

 

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Larry Rouse
1174 Terrace Acres Drive
Auburn, AL 36830

Cell:    (334) 734-2133
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 University
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449 North Gay Street

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Sermon Series on the Book of 1 John
by Robert Harkrider

Sermons:

A Sin Often Overlooked

PowerPoint
Audio

1 John 1 - Actions  Speak Louder Than Words

PowerPoint
Audio

1 John 2 - The Love God Hates

PowerPoint
Audio

1 John 3 - The Love That God Commands

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1 John 4 - Truth or The Consequences

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1 John 5 - Things a Christian Knows for Sure

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Audio

Click Here for Audio and Other Files

 

 

 

Me-Centered Religion

by Bobby Graham
 

It has become increasingly fashionable to hear people protest organized or institutional religion in recent decades, as they have sought to invent their own religious systems, based on what they desire and think. This writer also finds much in current systems to protest, but for vastly different, biblical reasons.   Their protests are grounded in their own selfish notions, and mine are based on the teaching of God’s Word. One main impetus giving rise to the community churches of recent decades has been the emphasis on selfish desires rather than the will of God. When human beings begin to view themselves as equal to God, they begin acting so by asserting their own will over His will and arrogating to themselves divine prerogatives. The importance of the individual truly has become the central organizing thread around which so much of the thinking and teaching of our time has clustered. For this reason there has been much discussion of “The Me Generation.”

Out of this emphasis on self, an entire “theology” has evolved, giving rise to me-centered religion. From beginning to end, however, such a religion is similar to those religions so often decried by “The Me Generation,” in its fundamental traits, to which we shall call attention in this article. Those traits form the basic tenets of the theology undergirding this religion.

1.                  I am my own person; nobody tells me what to do.

Expressed in this assertion is the autonomy or independence of the individual from God and all others. Of course, such thinking runs into a brick wall when civil government is involved! To think that people can become so proud that they banish God from their concerns and lives in the thought that they are capable of directing their own course and that they are answerable to no one except self is the outrageous conclusion from this statement. Involved also is the idea of the authority of the individual, who views himself as supreme. He no longer is accountable to God, if there is a God. The Humanist Manifesto I and II from the last seventy years well express what has become dominant thinking with many.   Many of this stripe believe that humans are the only “deity” involved in this world.   Such thinking enthrones man and dethrones God. It is difficult to appeal to such thinking for self-denial, humility, lowliness, and trust in God (Mt. 16:24), or even for compassion, mercy, and kindness in human relations, when such arrogance prevails.

The entire record of divine revelation demonstrates man’s amenability to God.   By reason of creation God has ever had dominion over His creation. Early He directed Adam and Eve in their lives, though they soon manifested the spirit of self-sufficiency and autonomy that we here condemn. Whenever human beings have obeyed the Lord, whether as individuals or as nations, they have benefited greatly. On the other hand disobedience to God has always brought troubles.   The Christian belongs to God in a special sense, having been bought by Him for a price (1 Cor. 6:19-20). He is obligated to live to God’s glory in both body and spirit. Any doubters need to consult the inhabitants of Sodom, Jonah, or the nation of Israel to learn the value of seeking the guidance of God in their lives.

Be yourself.

Guided by the basic understanding of individual autonomy, legions have fallen victim to the appeal of one strain of modern psychiatry to live out their own individual dreams, to actualize their own potential in an effort to maximize their self-realization. The most important person is “you,” and the most significant culture is self-development along lines of one’s own choosing. Nothing that hinders the developing of self is allowable; all else become secondary.

Against this incorrigible spirit of self-determinism lies the demand of God for the alteration of self (Gal. 2:20). Only when the old self is crucified and the new self is formed in one’s life, according to the image of Jesus Christ, does one become spiritually useful to this world. To remain in the old mode of sinful living is to remain a spiritual drag and part of the world’s principal problem. The changes wrought by the Lord through the power of His Spirit-given Word produce a life that is both salt and light (Mt. 5:13-16). Only in subordinating oneself to the will of Christ does one escape the slavery to sin that captures the old self (Rom. 6:10-18).  

  1. Your own self-realization is more important than any externally imposed creed.

 

With the dominance of self imbedded in the modern psyche, the groundwork is likewise laid for rejection of creeds (any religious idea or ideal that infringes upon what the individual desires or conflicts with it). The stubborn will of the individual becomes the impenetrable wall guarding the person against any Biblical concept of God or man. As the Gentiles rejected the idea of God, so have many today similarly repudiated Him. Lip service is too often the only service offered, and that until conscience no longer cries out for something more. No one knows you better than you do, and nobody thinks more highly of you that you do. Thus one reasons himself into a stance of rejecting all that affords not the pleasure, contentment, or satisfaction that self demands. He then forms attitudes, speaks, and acts on the basis of what will promote his own self-realization (or self-actualization).

The value of the benevolent will of God should never be set aside. God has never spoken from whim but for man’s earthly and eternal good (Deut. 6:24).   God’s own selfish pleasure has never been the motive behind the divine mind or plan, and man’s own selfish pleasure is always the motive that short-circuits the divine plan (Jas. 4:3; Mt. 6:24). 

  1. Express the deity (god) within you.

 

Though the materialist does not believe in any deity, he acts as if man is deity.   He worships and serves the creature—both idols and self— rather than the Creator (Rom. 1:25). Others seem to think that the human being is somewhat divine, though they fail to believe in God in any genuine Biblical sense. The outcome of this endeavor is the defying of God and the deifying of man. The saddest reality of the present is that many live their lives as if there is no God.    In doing so, they impede their own spiritual development and, to some degree, obstruct the salutary influence of the Bible.

Sources of me-centered thinking

Every major stream has its tributaries; this “stream” of thought is no exceptions.   Into it have flowed the influential contributions of many decades, thus gradually conditioning the minds of people for an acceptance of what once was unthinkable. What are these sources?

  1. Denominational creeds: They have fostered the idea of diversity of thought about God and His service is acceptable. They have also encouraged people to believe what they wish, making humans the final arbiters of what they choose.
  2. New Age Thought/Eastern Religions: Being a hodgepodge of religious thought, it offers people something they want, encourages people’s autonomous view of themselves, and presents a view of humans as divine.
  3. Secularism: Possibly its major contribution has been its “Don’t Worry—Be Happy” thinking.
  4. Pluralism: This concept has become a major contributing stream in its stress on there being many paths to God.
  5. Ecumenicalism: Recent decades have witnessed the merging of different religious bodies by the surrender of convictions and beliefs.   In such a climate, it becomes acceptable to surrender God-required teaching to the preeminence of the individual.
  6. Segmental Role of God: Too often God has been assigned His place in life, which has usually been some small part of life or some particular time in life, instead of the totality of one’s life.  Such thinking motivates one think of himself as superior to God.

It is easy to see the convergence of these varied sources into the stream of me-centered religion. How many of have not been victimized to some extent by the thinking here reviewed. May all of us guard out hearts diligently, that we might subject ourselves to God. We must view ourselves as bondservants of Jesus Christ and even speak of ourselves in this way.   What a difference between the way we have viewed such matters and the way Paul frequently spoke of himself!

Bobby L. Graham

24978 Bubba Trail

Athens, AL 35613

(256) 233-3509

bobbylgraham@juno.com

 

Other Articles by Bobby Graham
A Salvation Issue
Why No Instruments of Music?

 

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Student Sunday Night Home Study and Singing

 

 

Realizing Your Spirituality by Jonathan Perz - May 2, 2010
Outline
Audio of Lesson
Audio of Singing

Common Moral Challenges on Campus by Larry Rouse - April 18, 2010
Outline
Audio of Lesson
Audio of Singing

Overcoming Spiritual Sickness by Blake Edwards - April 3, 2010
Outline
Audio of Lesson
Audio of Singing

Encouraging the Heart by Larry Rouse - March 21, 2010
Outline
Audio of Lesson
Audio of Singing

Overcoming Self-Doubt by Ryan Hasty - March 7, 2010

Audio of Lesson
Audio of Singing

Trust in God! by Seth Buchanan

Outline
Audio of Lesson

For Additional Information and Past Audio and Outlines Click Here

 


University church of Christ

 

Assembly Times

 Sunday

   Bible Classes (9:30)

   AM Worship (10:20)

   PM Worship (6:00 pm)

 Wednesday

   Bible Classes
(7:00 PM)

 

Location

449 North Gay Street

Auburn, AL 36830

Click Here for Specific Directions


 

Overcoming the Present Apostasy

Sermon Series by Larry Rouse

Piscataway, NJ Nov 20-22, 2009

 

 

Friday Night 7:30

Lesson1 - How Do We View the Bible?

Outline
PowerPoint
Audio

Saturday Night 7:30

Lesson 2 - How do we View the World?

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PowerPoint
Audio

Sunday Morning 9:15
Lesson 3 - How do we View God's Order for Leadership?

Outline
PowerPoint
Audio

Sunday Morning 10:00
Lesson 4 - How Do We View the Local Church?

Outline
PowerPoint
Audio

Sunday Morning 11:00
Lesson 5 - How Do We View God's Instruction on Fellowship

Outline
Audio

For Additional Information, Audio and Outlines Click Here

 


Recent Bulletins:

The Auburn Beacon - May 9, 2010 Edition

The Auburn Beacon - May 2, 2010 Edition

The Auburn Beacon - April 25, 2010 Edition

The Auburn Beacon -
April 18, 2010 Edition

The Auburn Beacon -
April 11, 2010 Edition


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