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  • Abbe Reformed Church 595 Clymer Sherman Road Clymer United States (map)

WILLIAM WILBERFORCE – REAL CHRISTIANITY, WEEK 5

Adult Class, Abbe Church, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2023, 11:30 A.M.

I. Opening Prayer

II. True Standards of Christian Behavior (Ch 4, pp. 63-130)

A. Section One: How Belief Influences Behavior

1. “Those who hold to the biblical doctrines of the work of Christ as

the basis of acceptance tend also to take the Bible’s instructions

concerning righteous living more seriously. Those who have created a

system of their own tend to water down what is required in the

practice of their faith. They also tend to create standards of behavior

that fit their own lifestyles; standards that they know they can meet

without the need of super natural assistance. The outcome is a way of

life that is characterized by ignorance and conceit.” What do you

think? Would you agree with WW?

2. “It is my conviction that the problem (Christian morality differs

little from non-Christian) lies with a faulty understanding of what

God requires of us in terms of practical Christian living.” “Christian

character is to be a reflection of living in relationship with a holy

God.” “…God has called us to be the sworn enemies of sin. We are to

wage war against it and strive to give it no opportunity in our lives.”

Do you agree with WW? What to you see as the “faulty

understanding”?

B. Section Two: The Behavior of Cultural Christians

1. “True faith is something that so pervades our lives that is affects

everything we do. It is a matter of the heart, where its reality becomes

our supreme influence. It seeks to root out anything that is contrary to

its truth and attempts to bring all the heart’s desires and affections

under its control.” How do you define “true faith”?

2. “I fear this this is more the rule than the exception among us. The

general state of Christianity is much more cultural than authentic. The

advancement of the kingdom of God and His glory are scarcely

embraced as the objects of our greatest passions. The pursuit of these

treasures is no longer what we strive for. Christ is not Lord over all

our lives.” “…To live our lives and miss that great purpose we were

designed to accomplish is truly a sin.” Is this a legitimate fear? Is our

Christianity more cultural than authentic? What evidence supports

these statements in America during the 21st century? Do you agree

with WW last statement?

3. Behaviors where faulty beliefs may show up:

* recreation *sensual pleasures *health/exercise

* attitudes toward possessions, prestige, power, position

*money/ambition *work/business *religion/spirituality

*sin becomes character flaws *sin becomes whitewashed

*Sunday observance

4. “The true state of the heart is of ultimate importance to God. If the

heart is good, the external behavior will reflect this.” “…Cultural

Christianity is primarily concerned with externals.”

5. “It would seem that to the cultural Christian, faith and pleasure are

contradictory. This is not the picture we get in the Bible. On the

contrary, it speaks of the way of Christ as the path of peace and joy.”

C. Section Three: The Concern About What People Think About Us

Compared to the Attitude of Authentic Christianity

1. “There is only one way this principle legitimately operates. This is

when our desire to please is not directed at other men and women, but

at God. To please God is a wonderful motivator toward that which is

good and lovely. The desire to please man [and woman] is full of

dangers. The Bible has much to say about the subject.” Do you agree?

Is pleasing God a wonderful motivator? What does the Bible have to

say?

2. “If the outcome of obedience to God leads us to a lower estimation

in the eyes of our peers, we often choose reputation over obedience.”

“…We seek to serve God in ways that enable us to keep earthly gain

and avoid worldly disapproval. Or we simply quit attempting to serve

God fully.” “…The essence of the practice rests on the belief that a

person’s reputation is to be guarded at any cost and that a person’s

disgrace is to be avoided with the same fervor.” “…The most

effective way to keep all this in balance is to make the pleasure of

God our overriding desire.” Invitation to share examples from one’s

personal life.

D. Section Four: Faulty Thinking About “Good” Lives and “Good”

Deeds as Substitutes for Authentic Faith

1. “Hannah More has written, ‘Christianity is a religion of motives

and principles.’ God is concerned about the heart as well as the

outward action. Only an action motivated by love of God is truly a

Christian action. Even earthly fathers look for a proper attitude to

accompany their children’s actions. Proper action performed with

poor attitude does not please us as parents. Neither does it please

God.” In your mind, what is the relationship between one’s heart and

one’s behavior?

2. “The acts of true faith flow from a heart devoted to God that

continually is governed by the desire to know and do His will so that,

ultimately, He will be glorified.” As you reflect on your life, does this

seem impossible? (Read last paragraph at the bottom of page 101 on

to page 102.)

E. Section Five: Other Problems with Cultural Christianity

1. * Inadequate understanding of true guilt/the evil of sin

*Two classes of sin: little/big *One is not born a Christian

*Lack of love for God *No delight in service/worship of God

*Crude/off-color entertainment is acceptable *Philanthropy

motivated by greed, not love of God

2. “It seems we have forgotten that our work as Christians is to

attempt to live according to the pattern Christ gave us and under the

influence and enabling of the Holy Spirit.” Are we guilty of having

forgotten?

F. Section Six: The Big Problem with Faulty Thinking About

Christian Theology

1. “…[A]ll of the defects of the practitioners of nominal faith in our

day can be traced back to the radical misunderstanding or lack of

understanding they possess of the distinctive doctrines of the faith

they profess: the true state of human nature—the truth of what Christ

accomplished on the cross—and the transforming influence of the

Holy Spirit. Right here is the watershed between the faith of nominal

Christians and those who practice the faith that Christ came to make

possible.” Do you agree with WW? Do you notice the parallel to

Calvinist doctrine and Reformed worship?

2. “If we are going to walk worthy of Christ, we have to practice one

central discipline. As the writer of Hebrews exhorts, we are to fix our

eyes on Jesus. We are to run our race LOOKING UNTO JESUS as

our motivation. This is the key. If we do this one thing, we will be

unable to treat our faith in the superficial way most cultural Christians

do in our time. They want to live their spiritual lives on their own

terms. It doesn’t work.” What do you think? Is there anything you

would add or subtract?

III. Next Sunday, Chapter 5-6, Arguments for True Christianity, and

Practical Hints About Authentic Faith

IV. Closing Prayer

Earlier Event: February 19
Sunday Worship
Later Event: February 22
Ash Wednesday