From the very beginning, people have seen and witnessed the power of God in many different ways. Notable occurrences would be the Flood in Noah's time and also the plagues that God brought against Egypt preceding the Exodus of His people out of the land. In the days of Jesus, the people experienced God's power through miraculous provision and creative miracles. There are many stories in the four gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John that describe Jesus healing all kinds of diseases and even restoring the ability to hear, see, and walk.
Time and culture may have changed, but God hasn't. He is still the same miracle working God that He was two thousand years ago, and He continues to encounter people in ways that really do change their life. For people who grow up in a more Christian nation, encounters with God often seem more "standard" or "normal" but it's still incredible to think that the Creator of all things desires and pursues relationship with the beings He created. For others who grow up with no Christian witness, it is much more mind boggling when they encounter the Living God. Whether it's someone who grew up with some level of exposure to Jesus, or someone who had never heard His name, it is suffice to say that Jesus changes everything. One encounter with Jesus can completely redefine one's purpose in life. Simon Peter is a great example of this. When Jesus first calls him and his brother, Andrew, he tells them that He will make them fishers of men and invites the pair of brothers to follow Him. They immediately obey. And Jesus was true to His word; He would later tell Peter that, "on this rock, I will build My church." In the book of Acts, we see the crucial and foundational role that the Apostle Peter played in establishing and fathering the early church. What led him there? An encounter with the Man Jesus. An encounter with Jesus also reveals to us the deep things in our own souls that we may not want to deal with, but truly He knows us better than we know ourselves. There's a story in the gospels that tell of four friends carrying their paralytic friend to Jesus. There was a crowd gathered in someone's home to hear His teaching and so the friends dug a hole in the roof and lowered their friend down to Jesus. Before He heals the man, Jesus tells the man that his sins are forgiven. The obvious need was that their friend needed to be able to walk again; the not so obvious need was forgiveness. Jesus freed that man not only of being crippled, He freed the man's soul. Jesus isn't afraid of our sin and our lack; He knows why He created us and the giftings and callings He's placed on each one of our lives. Just like the parable of the shepherd leaving the ninety-nine other sheep to go after the one that was lost, Jesus consistently pursues the least, the last and the lost. One look in His kind eyes is enough to mark a person for the rest of their life.
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Salvation is central to the message of Jesus. He also preached about healing, both physical and spiritual, and the restoring that comes with it. Jesus became known throughout the region because of the signs and miracles he did. He also was known for caring for the outcast and restoring people to society through the ways he healed them and set them free. Christian ministries today are still known for following the example that Jesus left. Even though they mostly focus on spiritual growth and healing, social justice and freedom have always been something that Christians take responsibility for.
Jesus said to his disciples in the gospel of Matthew that when he returns, he will say to believers that "When I was in prison you visited me and when I was hungry you gave me something to eat." He continued by saying that he would say to others that when he was in prison they did not visit him. Jesus said that he would tell some of them that if they didn't do that to the least of his brothers, they didn't do it to him. Because of the teachings of Jesus, the early church highly valued caring for the sick and the outcast. They chose upstanding people who served as leaders in the church, and their job was to make sure that members of the church and the people who weren't members were cared for. The history of the early church also records that Christians made sure that non-Christians who were fleeing the plague in Alexandria were looked after and provided for. In addition to that, the church also cared for those who were sick. By the year 500 AD, Christian monasteries started creating places for healthcare. These places carried the responsibility of caring for the sick, regardless of their faith. They made sure that they all had access to free or affordable healthcare. During the middle ages, Europeans were flocking to the region of Palestine. Many of the Europeans became ill with several unknown sicknesses. This then resulted in a need to establish hospitals. One of the most notable of these was called the Hospitallers of St. John of Jerusalem. At the beginning of the 19th century, churches were the ones who provided free education in various locations across Asia and Africa. These Christians also established hospitals and hired staff members who were qualified and at the same time they also trained locals so that they could also work in these hospitals. In 1831, Amalie Sieveking created a sisterhood and they took responsibility to take care of anyone who had Cholera during the Hamburg epidemic of 1831. Also, in 1836, a man named Theodor Fliender established the first protestant hospital in Kaiserswerth. The Kaiserswerth Diakonie was not only a hospital, but also a place of training that was foundational in creating modern nursing schools. One of the world’s best known nurses, Florence Nightengale, came from Kaiserswerth. Fliender also gathered a group of nurses and formed them into a team that was fondly called, the female diaconate who made a forming impact around the world. The idea of the Red Cross originated with a Swiss man called Henri Dunant. It was his Christian upbringing that inspired Dunant to provide medical aid to people who were the victims of war and natural disasters. In modern day, the same as before, the central calling of the church is to obey the command of Jesus to preach the gospel and call people into the salvation that is ours through faith in Christ. In addition to preaching freedom and salvation in Christ, the church cannot ignore the many needs of those in the world today. There are so many needs and opportunities to speak up for social justice while injustice continues to abound. Christians today should continue to promote public safety and welfare. A group of individuals in a team will most likely have different ideas on how to conduct activities and execute projects. It is up to the leader to understand how to diffuse negative situations and reduce the emergence of conflict. Conflict management deals with differences that arise in a group due to differing opinions and interpretations.
Ineffective communication is the primary source of conflict in a team. It is the leader's job to ensure that the team works cohesively. While the leader must communicate in an easy to understand manner in a team, the leader must also ensure they can preempt communication issues among the team to prevent or resolve a conflict and ensure the smooth running of the project. There may be external causes of conflict that are not the fault of any party, and a good leader will consider this during conflict management. For instance, a new employee of the company may be adjusting slowly to a company's operational style, which may lead to a dispute among team members. There are different steps in conflict management that a leader will employ to resolve a dispute. The first is assessing the situation. A good leader evaluates the problem by having both sides describe the issues as they see them before determining whether to intervene. The leader is, however, mindful of potentially counterproductive intervention. Team members in an organization are for the most part adults capable of resolving minor conflicts among themselves without their leaders' input. A forward-thinking leader spots patterns that may lead to conflict among their team members, and employs conflict prevention tactics to anticipate problems in the team. For instance, if a conflict arises in a team due to a member's energetic way of working in a calm environment, a leader with conflict management skills resolves the conflict. They then follow up with the individual to ensure that they do not disturb the rest of the team with their work process. In situations such as these, creating work guidelines that cover work processes will go a long way toward keeping a team running smoothly. Another example of conflict management skills is the reduction of stress, both on the workforce and the leader. The instance above of workplace guidelines already reduces the chances of conflict among the employees that can lead to tension in the work environment, and the leader can better focus on supervising the team to achieve the organization's goals. When a leader mediates two conflicting parties, both are allowed to express their reasons for the conflict. While analyzing the situation, any leader could get insight into measures that can improve the processes and interaction of the team, insight which may not have been possible without the dispute. Conflict management can engender improved teamwork among members of the team. When a leader successfully diffuses conflict between two parties, it may boost morale and collaboration between the conflicting parties as well as the team. While conflict management is essential in leading a team, it also sharpens the leader's patience and exposes them to the psychological patterns of their employees and the people around them. It also has the added benefit of promoting a composed and organized image of the leader, which are qualities admired by many organizations, and may push the leader upward in their career. Christianity is a religion that emerged in the Middle East, specifically Israel, in the first century AD. Christianity now constitutes a minority among the population in the Middle East, but this was not the case in the Old World. Despite the persecution that welcomed the religion in the Roman Empire and other places, it maintained considerable followership in the Middle East. However, the population of Christians in the region witnessed a significant decline through emigration and conversion over time.
Middle East Christianity is diverse, as witnessed by several denominations of churches. This is directly linked to the Nestorian schism of the 5th century. It was a doctrinal dispute which led to Christological debates in the 4th and 5th centuries. It happened in Constantinople, the Roman capital at that time. Alexandrians condemned the Antiochians for extremism in their claim that the nature of Christ as a God is separate from his nature as a man. This belief is called dyophysitism- the belief in the dual nature of Christ. The Alexandrians won the debate. The victory of the Alexandrians in the First Council of Ephesus in 431 would therefore lead to wide adoption of the doctrine of monophysitism (the belief that the nature of Christ as a God is not distinct from his nature as a man) and a decline of traditional Antiochian tradition in the Roman Empire and beyond. However, the Council of Chalcedon of 451 found a compromise between the two doctrines but favored the Antiochian position. After two thousand years of historical and doctrinal evolution, there are now four great families of churches in the Middle East that follow either monophysitism or dyophysitism. The most notable family is the Oriental Orthodox family, consisting of the Coptic Orthodox Church, the Syrian Orthodox Church, the Assyrian Church (or Church of the East), and the Apostolic Armenian Church. This family of churches separated from the other churches in the 5th century and did not accept the dyophysite Christological doctrine. There is also the Orthodox (Chalcedonian) family, which four churches in the Middle East represent. These churches have roughly one million members in total. The churches separated from the Catholic Church in 1054 after the mutual ex-communication of the Church of Rome and the Patriarchate of Constantinople. The ex-communication resulted from strained relationships between the two patriarchal churches and their leaders. This family of churches believes in dyophysitism. The churches in this family believe that full humanity and full divinity exist in the person of Jesus Christ without any confusion or contradiction. The Catholic family in the Middle East comprises seven churches, including Maronite, Chaldean, Melkite, Coptic Catholic, Armenian Catholic, Syrian Catholic, and the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem. These seven churches are under the Catholic Church of Rome and recognize the authority of the Pope. The fourth family is the Reformed Family. It has been in existence since the 19th century and consists of 13 different Protestant denominations. These include Lutheran, Evangelical, and Presbyterian churches. The total number of followers is 81,000, and they are prominent in Lebanon, Syria, and Egypt. Despite its strong historical roots in the Middle East and its rich diversity in the region, the population of Christians in the Middle East is rapidly reducing. In 1900, 12.7 percent of the region’s population were Christians, but in 2020, only 4.2 percent of the entire population were Christians. Meanwhile, comparatively, followers of Islam had grown from 86 percent to 92.4 percent within that period. Recent projections based on the current rate of Christian emigration claim that by 2050, Christianity will have lost more followership in the Middle East. Pentecostalism is a Christian doctrine of worship that puts great importance on the baptism of its followers and their relationship with the Holy Spirit. The manifestation of this relationship with the Holy Spirit is speaking in tongues. The Pentecostal movement has over 400 million followers and is the fastest expanding Christian doctrine globally. The movement runs a heterogeneous system, with hundreds of independent churches coming up every day.
Charles Parham and Williams Seymour are notable figures in American history because theologians recognize them as the fathers of Pentecostalism in the United States. The Pentecostal doctrine of Christianity began with Charles Parham's teachings in Texas in 1905. William Seymour was Charles Parham's apprentice, and he urged Seymour to attend one of his church services. Seymour came from a religious background before meeting Parham. He was instrumental in spreading a widely believed notion that speaking in tongues was a manifestation of the Holy Spirit in a Christian. In 1906, Seymour moved to a town called Azusa in Los Angeles, where he began to spread the Pentecostal gospel. He created so much influence that in the same year, he hosted the Azusa Street Revival, which was the first major public broadcast of the Pentecostal way. Both Seymour and Parham agreed to belong to the same denomination. In October 1906, Seymour began catering to members of different races, while Parham's members stayed predominantly white. However, due to ideological differences, and Parham's dislike for the enthusiastic way black people worshiped in Seymour's church, the men split up the Pentecostal denomination into two, with Seymour taking mostly the African American members to his church called the Church of God in Christ, while Parham took the white members to his church called the Assemblies of God. The Pentecostal doctrine thrived in the south but was much slower in Los Angeles due to skepticism from the residents. Both churches were also very interested in missionary work, especially in the global south. The Assemblies of God renounced segregation in the church in 1995. The governing body announced that the church had committed discrimination offenses and resolved to take steps to repent. An interracial Christian event preceded this repentant act called the Miracle in Memphis, where Black and White ministers tried to reconcile the Black and White worshippers. A.G Garr and his wife were the first international missionaries Seymour baptized and sent to India and Hong Kong to spread the gospel. Seymour's influence also reached a Norwegian Methodist pastor on a church tour in the United States called T. B Barrat. Theologists state that T. B Barrat was responsible for spreading the Pentecostal doctrine in Norway, Germany, Sweden, and France. Most of the other Christian denominations in America initially ridiculed Pentecostalism. The World Christian Fundamentals Association called the movement "fanatical' and "unscriptural." However, in 1942, the narrative had changed so much that the Pentecostals were a part of the Christian establishment called the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE). The NAE is an association of all churches, missionary schools, and organizations. |
AuthorGlobal Catalytic Ministries - Spreading the Message of Jesus Worldwide. Archives
June 2023
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