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Thursday, April 7, 2011

Confession To North Korea - We Left Our Bibles At Home

As I was reading the words to an old well-known hymn in church this morning-from the overhead - I began mental about what we will tell the North Koreans when they ask us why we don't use songbooks any longer. The Koreans as a rule use many of the original songs of the church, a great deal of which have been around since the Reformation. The songbook to a Korean is a high-priced thing.I dream that songbooks as well as Bibles have been smuggled in to the North Korean churches by now. But overhead projectors may have not. Here, also giving up the article of those old hymns on which we were raised, we've stopped bothering with the containers, the books, too. So what should we tell them?

And Bibles, that will be an even greater challenge of explanation. In America not as many population carry their Bibles to church these days. Many pastors have given up trying to get their population to buy one accepted version, like the new King James or some such solid translation. So they put Scriptures on the same overheads as the songs. population can leave their Bibles at home, so they do. How do we tell North Koreans they won't need to bring these high-priced Books into the House of God any longer when "freedom" comes? How will we break it to them that those who risked their lives to get them the Bible did it only for their home reading, that the church is taking another step away from its rich tradition? What will we tell them?

News North Korea

I know. The first Christians had neither Bible nor songbook. But between their age and ours has come the Roman usurpation of the Church and the Word. The Reformers tried to restore the Message to all the people. They wrote it, translated it, published it, distributed it. Because of that heritage, from a child, most of us have learned to cherish it, knowing it was given to us at the price of much blood.

But the times they are changin'.

Britain and America led the way for the longest time in getting the Word to the world. But Britain's affect waned long ago. America now follows, and seems to be important the fee into apostasy, spreading its doctrines and strange ways into the universal church.

One thing American workers in Korea, whether they be of the South Korean variety or the accepted European stock, need to remember if they are to be sufficient servants to the emerging (and it will emerge!) North Korean population: we do not sell the new Americanism to the Korean church. We don't go to Westernize but to Christianize. Freedom has its limits and the North Koreans must be considered taught what those limits are. It is easy to dream a starving population eating all things in sight once they're free, of bodily food as well as all the other thingsthat can be ingested in a man's mind and soul.

Oh for the gift of discernment for North Koreans! Oh that Americans had it too. Who will stand up and ask for the hymnals and Bibles to be restored to the American church? Not for show, but for use. To get population turning pages and finding chapters and listening and reading as the preacher preaches, and growing thereby. To reverse the trend of the electronic age lest we all get swept away into something we will regret as much as did true believers in the Medieval church: the loss of God's Word.

It is coming, you know. One big happy religion with no Bibles, no songbooks, no preached Word, no real praise. No strong message. One huge political power that will speak for moral correctness but will not know what sin is about. 'Cause they left their Bible at home.

Confession To North Korea - We Left Our Bibles At Home

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