Michael Clary Profile picture
Dec 15, 2022 16 tweets 3 min read Read on X
There once was a certain kind of evangelical Christian I felt free to make fun of. I was pastoring a fast growing church in an urban environment, and a spirit of elitism had infected us. No one would correct me on it because they made fun of them too.
The people we felt free to mock were conservative, uneducated, backwoods fundies who still read the KJV. They lacked the theological sophistication and cultural insight I had acquired while doing campus ministry and studying at seminary.
I came from the hills of WV. Appalachian, born and bred. I knew these people well because I grew up around them. But I had moved on. I was better than them. I was more learned and cultured. I had "seen the world" and they hadn't.
I was a successful church planter in an urban cultural context in Cincinnati. My sending organization flew me around the country to share my success stories and train younger planters in the "way it's done."
I would not have admitted this at the time, but deep down, I felt superior to my hometown people and their country religion. My ministry "success" was at least partly driven by a desire to separate myself from them and prove that "I'm not one of those fundie Christians."
But then it began to dawn on me: I was standing on the shoulders of giants. My grandfather was one of those country preachers. His provided for his family by working a physically demanding job in a steel mill his whole life. His family was poor, but he did what needed to be done.
He had only received a 6th grade education. He didn't know how to read very well. He listened to the KJV bible on audio cassette on his 45 minute commutes to work. Up and back, every day, listening to the Bible. King James! Scripture got under his skin.
My mom told me a story once. When he was filling out paperwork or writing something and didn't know how to spell a word, he would remember where that word was in his KJV bible, then look it up to see how it was spelled.
My great-grandfather was the same way. He only received a 3rd grade education. He planted a church deep in the hills of WV and built a church building for it on his property. He ministered there for many years, preaching from his KJV Bible.
He lived to be 102 years old and was healthy and energetic up to the very end. In his 90s, he would take fruit baskets to the "shut ins" of his church who were much younger than him. He married his wife she was 14. He remained faithful to her and they enjoyed 74 years together.
In my office, I have this poem framed that my great-grandfather ("Popo Galley") wrote on Sept. 1st, 1928, about his call to ministry. He didn't really retire, he just slowed down. He remained faithful to that calling for the rest of his life. He died on July 1st, 2011. Image
He stayed true to the Lord and to his calling for 80 years. EIGHTY YEARS!

And here I was, three or four years into my new church plant, attracting a few hundred people, feeling like I'd accomplished something. Feeling superior to men like my grandfather and great grandfather.
So I repented. I repented of my arrogance. I repented of my self-righteous attitude towards "that old time religion" that sustained my grandparents who had so much less than me. I repented of looking down on faithful, older Christians who had passed on a legacy to me.
I share all these things because my arrogance was cultivated in an evangelical subculture that produces a spirit of elitism. And I wanted to ascend the ladder and reach achieve notoriety within that subculture. What I have learned is that subculture is actually sub-Christian.
Elitist Christianity cannot survive the rigors of hard discipleship. But my grandparents did. And they handed me a legacy to follow. There are many points of doctrinal disagreement that I would have with my grandfathers. But these were men who suffered & knew how to suffer well.
These are the sorts of men that deserve our respect and admiration. Men who finished well and stayed true. Men of whom the world is not worthy. By God's grace, I want to follow in their footsteps and be like them. SDG

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More from @dmichaelclary

May 6
Many Christians argue we shouldn't be involved in politics because we're called to be "exiles" on earth.

This produces a "loser" attitude of passivity & retreat from the public square. They say, "our citizenship is in heaven," so we should bow out of politics.

Not so fast. 1/8
2/ The OT concept of "exile" doesn't directly apply to the New Covenant era without careful theological reflection.

In the OT, exile meant divine judgment for breaking covenant and dispersion from the homeland. God's people broke covenant, and God punished them with exile.
3/ Christ's death and resurrection ended the exile of God's people by ushering in a New Covenant. In Christ, we are not under judgment. He suffered it for us (Rom 3:25, 5:8), giving us the right to become God's children (John 1:12).
Read 9 tweets
Apr 18
Where did Jesus' spirit go after he died on the cross?

He told the thief on the cross "today you will be with me in paradise" (Lk 23:43).

The Apostles' Creed says, "he descended into hell."

So which is it? 👇
To answer this question, we need to address the OT’s concept of the afterlife.

One of the best things I’ve read on this subject is Samuel Renihan’s book, “Crux, Mors, Inferi: A Primer on the Descent of Christ.”

Sounds intimidating, but it's not. Highly recommend. Image
The entire cosmos is divided into three realms:

(1) Heaven
(2) Earth
(3) Sheol (the “underworld”)

These three realms represent not only physical but spiritual dimensions of existence, each imbued with profound theological significance, particularly the “descent” of Christ.
Read 15 tweets
Nov 25, 2024
How can you tell if a church is playing word games to obscure their unbiblical stance on sexuality?

Let me show you. Here's one example of a FB message where the church answers a question about their view of sexuality.

It's a mess.

Let's pick it apart, shall we? Image
The first sentence says, "Our church holds to the historic position of sexuality - one man, one woman, in marriage, for life.”

Seems solid, right? Well, it isn't.

It's bait.

The bait sentence is meant to build trust and reassure bible believing Christians they're legit.
They claim to uphold the "historic position on sexuality."

The rest of the message lets you know they do the opposite in practice.

How can we know that?

Look at the next sentence. It begins with a massive "however." The "however" is a pivot to an unbiblical practice.
Read 14 tweets
Oct 21, 2024
America's memory verse is Matthew 7:1, which says, "Judge not, that ye be not judged."

Contrary to what most people think, the Bible does not prohibit all judging, but wrong judging.

There are at least five ways to judge wrongly. 🧵
1. Judging by the wrong standard.

Col 2:16 says, "Therefore let no one pass judgment on you in questions of food and drink..." The text goes on to describe such judgements as "human precepts and teachings" (v22).

Christians must always judge by the standard of God's word.
2. Judging with insufficient information (AKA "prejudging").

Prov 18:17 says, "The one who states his case first seems right, until the other comes and examines him."

1 TIm 5:17 says, "In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus and of the elect angels I charge you to keep these rules without prejudging, doing nothing from partiality."

Christians must not make a judgment until they have the necessary facts to draw the right conclusion.
Read 7 tweets
Sep 28, 2024
Men are lonelier than ever. This fact has been shown in many surveys.

For Christian men, fellowship with like-minded brothers is an absolute necessity.

Faith grows in community. Faith withers in isolation.

So here's five things Christian men can do to make better friends.
1. Focus on building a community, not a network.

John Taylor Gatto has written about the difference between communities and networks.

Communities relate to people across a broad spectrum of life experiences. Networks relate to people across a narrow band of life experience.
I once did marriage counseling with a couple who were also paying for multiple other counselors.

He had his counselor. She had her counselor. They had a separate couple's counselor. And they had me as their pastor.

That's how networks operate. No one knew them holistically.
Read 13 tweets
Sep 11, 2024
Here are 12 simple and biblical principles of sexuality that Christians need to faithfully honor God.

These are compiled from my study of sexuality and from many years of pastoral experience.
1. Move with the grain of God's design for sexuality.

God made us male & female from the beginning. The world is more functional & beautiful when men act in masculine ways and women act in feminine ways.

Don't reject it. Don't deny it. Embrace it. Be glad for how God made you.
2. Orient your top life priorities towards establishing and building up a household.

Every Christian should reasonably expect to get married and have children. There may be legitimate exceptions, but you're probably not one of them. Don't define the norm by the exceptions.
Read 14 tweets

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