“One day we’re going to have to question some of the things we have allowed in the body of Christ”, I heard him say. “Like some of the words we have allowed ourselves to use... The word ‘Denomination’, for instance...” Ohhh boy, it wasn’t about to be a fun session up in that Pentecostal church! No hollering and hooping to be heard. “The meaning of that word, by its very nature is divisive...” he continued. He could have very well stopped there, but he didn’t and by the time he was done, I was close to tears. All I could think was, "How could we have missed it so badly?!!!"
I’m reasonably proud of the ministry that I’m a part of. I’ve seen God move in unprecedented ways there and grown leaps and bounds spiritually just sitting under the teachings of many of the preachers we have. As believers, I think most of us would allude to some sense of pride in whatever ministry we’ve chosen to be a part of and my aim is not so much to detract from that, as it is to get us to consider ‘the big picture’ and maybe start to think a little differently. Bear with me on this one. Whenever I’m challenged by anything, I can’t help but offer up the challenge to someone else.
Apparently, people who take the time to study these things have found that every great revival in history has been preceded by a coming together of the church (read as ‘all of Christianity’ or ‘the body of Christ’, not just a building as the word is often used). If that’s really the case, I can’t say I’m too encouraged by the current state of affairs. In fact, we might as well forget all about it! Has the church ever been more divided than it is in the 21st century? Is it even legit to call ourselves the body of Christ at this point? In my opinion, it’s only a dysfunctional body that can have the left leg trying to go somewhere completely from the right leg, coupled with a head that’s really just laying down on a pillow - all at the same time!
Body parts are not designed to be completely independent of every other part of the body. So why do we find some of the Catholics, Anglicans, Presbyterians, Evangelicals, Baptists, Methodists and all the others on the endless list of denominations, comfortably operating in isolation and completely detached from everybody else? Don’t get me wrong here, I’m not saying that each one isn’t walking in some degree of divine revelation, but I would be hard-pressed to believe that any single denomination has all the pieces of the puzzle. That’s simply not how God works. He’s the master strategist when it comes to making sure that no man is an island. Everybody needs something from somebody else.