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Oh Lord, Where Do We Go From Here? Current and former members (and anyone in between!)... tell us what is on your mind and in your heart. |
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09-06-2014, 05:06 AM | #1 |
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Repost: Advice on Making Leaving the LC Easier
I felt to repost these posts that I made about two years ago. They are a synopsis of the essential things I've learned about adapting to Christian life outside the LC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- My desire for posting on this forum has always been simply to help people over the hump of being able to deal psychologically with leaving the LC. Mostly I have done this by arguing that many LC teachings and beliefs are unbiblical, illogical and untenable. I hope that has been helpful, but I’d like to start a thread to provide some advice for people who are considering leaving or have left and are still having trouble moving on. Here are some things which I had to learn the hard way. I think they will help you make the transition more easily:
Stay positive and full of faith. I hope and pray you will find peace, joy and purpose in your post-LC life like you never dreamed of. With God's help I know you will. "I prayed to the Lord, and he answered me. He freed me from all my fears." Psalm 34:4 |
09-06-2014, 05:06 AM | #2 |
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Re: Repost: Advice on Making Leaving the LC Easier
I wanted to go on to talk about finding a new church after leaving the LC. I intentionally didn’t mention church much in my first post. The fact is, the view of the church is distorted in the LC, and in so doing the believer’s relationship to it is distorted as well.
The LC makes the believer’s involvement with the building of the church a matter of prime importance. But the Bible does not make this emphasis. In fact, Jesus himself barely mentioned the church. When the Bible does mention church-building, it is usually with the thought that God is doing the building, not us. If you really go back and view the overall thought of the NT, especially the ministry of Jesus, you see that two main matters are stressed--first, our devotion and service to God, and second, our attitude and actions toward other people. Jesus focused on a holy life toward God and people. (Again, love God and love people.) But he barely mentioned the church as a thing or goal in and of itself. This is not to say the church is not important, just that if you are supposedly taking care of the church while suing the pants off any other believer you please it’s clear you are way off the rails of what the NT is about. History and experience show that overemphasis on the church leads naturally to overemphasis and a defensive, even aggressive, posture about your particular church. This is precisely the error of the LC. I think this is the reason Jesus did not talk about the church much, because to him the point is God and people, not God and some ideal institution. Still, the Bible does reveal the church, so what is it about? The church is simply wherever believers are gathered in the Lord’s name. The church is all the believers through history. It’s also all the believers alive today. It’s also all the believers in the USA, and all of them in your city. And when thirty believers gather for worship and teaching in a rented storefront, that’s the church, too. None of us have the right or wisdom to look at a group of believers meeting and say they are not the church. The church is a place where believers encourage and support each other, and grow together. It’s also a place where outsiders can observe these believers and their relationship with God. So in a sense, churches are ministry stations, that is of Jesus’ ministry. They do not exist for themselves, but for the sake of others, both believers and non-believers. And they come in all shapes and sizes. After you leave the LC and are searching for a new church home, here are some things to think about:
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09-06-2014, 06:49 AM | #3 |
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Join Date: Aug 2014
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Re: Repost: Advice on Making Leaving the LC Easier
Very helpful and constructive. Thanks, Igzy.
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09-06-2014, 12:52 PM | #4 |
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Re: Repost: Advice on Making Leaving the LC Easier
Bro Igzy I didn't see anything about learning critical thinking.
Because in the local church thinking and reasoning are considered rebellion, the muscle of our brain becomes atrophied. So after leaving we're in need of brain therapy and exercise. While in we allowed the LC leaders to do our thinking for us. Our brain got lazy. So we need to learn to think for ourselves. This is not something that happens over night. It takes work and time. But no big deal. You threw all in, body, soul, spirit, and time, into the LC. Just rechannel that into learning to be a critical self thinker. God gave us a brain for a reason. We couldn't talk or write without it. Same for the ancients. We have scriptures because they had brains, and used them. Why insult God by not using the brain that he gave us?
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Cults: My brain will always be there for you. Thinking. So you don't have to. There's a serpent in every paradise. |
09-08-2014, 02:46 PM | #5 | |
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Re: Repost: Advice on Making Leaving the LC Easier
Quote:
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09-08-2014, 03:06 PM | #6 | |
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Re: Repost: Advice on Making Leaving the LC Easier
Quote:
Wouldn't that be inspired thinking? How thinking is informed is right up the alley of critical thinking. Example: How was Lees' thinking informed?
__________________
Cults: My brain will always be there for you. Thinking. So you don't have to. There's a serpent in every paradise. |
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09-08-2014, 03:19 PM | #7 |
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Re: Repost: Advice on Making Leaving the LC Easier
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