Institutional Christianity is concerned with organization, authority,
order, offices, titles, etc. Non-institutional Christianity is concerned with
relationship, life, freedom, function, etc. Institutionalized Christianity
tends toward patriarchy while non-institutionalized Christianity tends toward
equality.
I was confronted with the difference shortly after
graduating from Bible school and marriage to Sue. We had moved to Canada and
were staying with her parents and two brothers until we found a place of our
own. Being a Bible school graduate, I was looking for an institutional ministry
position that would offer me a position, a title, a salary, and a group to whom
I could preach and teach. One morning, during my prayer time, God clearly spoke
to me through Acts 20:28, “Take heed to yourself and to all the flock among
which the Holy Spirit has made overseer.”
I knew immediately that God had called me to pastor a group
of people, consisting of Sue’s immediate family, her aunt and uncle, and a few of
other people. Some of these were not Christians and most would have thought this
newly arrived Texan was a little “wacky” if I announced, “I am your pastor.” There
was no position, no title, no salary, and no “church” meetings. etc. “Pastoring”
was completely relational, taking place around the dinner table, going to the
beach, conversing in the living room, and time on my knees. But I took my pastoral
calling seriously and within a year all had come to Christ and lives had been
forever changed.
My word of encouragement to you today is that you do not
have to confine your gift and calling to an institutional setting. Yes, God works
through institutions but He has not confined Himself to institutions. Furthermore,
we cannot say that He prefers institutions. In fact, most historians of early
Christianity agree that there was a loss of Spiritual life and power when
Christianity moved from being a non-institutional movement of the Spirit to an institutionalized
religious system. True revival will break forth when women and men began to
obey the Lord and “function” in the gift and calling God has given them both
inside and outside the institution.
by Eddie L. Hyatt
www.eddiehyatt.com
Thanks for posting this! My husband and I have always belonged to an institution in one form or another with church and missions. We are for the first time stepping out as God leads us. It is sometimes a lonely path, but also an exciting one.
ReplyDeletePlease take a moment to read our blog Real Church Life where we also write about these issues at http://realchurchlife.wordpress.com
God bless!
Tina (wife, mother, author and blogger)