Sunday, June 22, 2025

One Jesus but Many Types of Churches

 

I wrote an article here: 

"One God, but Many Religions" 

https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/2025/06/one-god-but-many-religions.html


Let us now look at just one religion alone - Christianity.  Even among Christians there are at least six groups of churches and denominations such as  Church of the East, Orthodoxy, Catholicism, Protestantism, under which there are so many groups and denominations when there is only one Jesus.  Even the Protestant churches  themselves so diversified, with each church having no dealings with each other? Each of them has their own beliefs and thinking, yet they claim they believe in Jesus as their Saviour having no dealing with the other church. Shouldn't all these churches be united in love and belief? 


I believe each wants to take their own path - the path of least resistance, the broad and easy way that leads to destruction as Jesus clearly told. None of the churches wish to practice the gospel in a difficult way. This brings us to a difficult path how Jesus took the hard way by going up the mountain to preach His Sermons on the Mount that occupied three solid chapters - 5,6 and 7 of Mathews. And those crowds, including men, women and children, probably the sick, blind, lames as well also willing to take the hard way climbing up that mountain to follow Jesus just to hear Him preach, and they remained there for many days without food and water. It must be very tough for  them to follow such tough road up the high mountain that symbolizes the tough way up to a high heaven I suppose?  This touches the core of my heart when they all were willing to follow Jesus to take the hard way by climbing up a mountain without any buses or any modern transport available those days. 

So we need to ask why did Jesus took them the difficult way? But all of them were willing to take such difficult path that nobody  wants to take these days. Jesus could have made this path a very easy way for everybody by merely preaching on the plains or by the seashore. But no, Jesus brought them up a difficult path, but the crowd did not mind the difficult way. So they all climbed up that mountain the difficult way just to physically and spiritually  follow Jesus. Does that not ring the bell very loud within our proud hearts? 

It is very unfortunate no church have ever seen this and has ever taught this. So, everyone and every church these days only want to take the easy way out to a high heaven on earth.

What is even more depressing is, each church is not on speaking terms with other. Isn't this self-righteousness - far, far from being humble because each church is self-righteous. None are willing to learn their short-comings from a brother church or a brother Christian 

The key word is HUMILITY, - to be clothed humility.  Jesus clearly taught the need of being humble, emphasizing that those who exalt themselves will be humbled. A key verse reflecting this is written in Matthew 23:12  that says: "Whosoever exalt himself will be exalted" This is also echoed in Luke 14:7-11 and Luke 18:14. Jesus also spoke of being child-like (not childish) - the symbol of humility
 in Matthew 18:4  The word 'humility' is also strongly emphasized elsewhere in the Bible, such as in Philippians 2:3 -4, James 4:10, 1 Peter 5:5 - 6, Proverb 22:4, Proverb 11:2, etc. 
 
Even as I quote all these verses the importance of being humble and accept there will be some who will obviously disagree with me and may say I have a very shallow understanding about the Bible because obviously they are conceited and self-righteous and refused to be humbled. 
 
But acceptance of truth and humility is a very  tough path towards salvation  

Why is every church has nothing to do with the other, they don't seem to be even on speaking terms or wish to greet each other in Christ-like love. Isn't that pride and sheer lack of humility Jesus taught? We can clearly see this ourselves - because of pride - the other Christian brother or those other churches are all wrong. Does not ring the bell within our hearts, because we we would not stoop so low to accept gospel truths even if these verses are clearly printed in the Bible. We are just too proud to accept. 

My soul-stirring reflection and question draws from both the heart of Scripture and the soul of Christ Himself. What I speak of, the fragmentation, self-righteousness, and lack of unity among those who claim to follow the One Lord Jesus Christ, has long been one of the greatest wounds within Christianity. 

I am not merely as a seeker of knowledge but as a lover of truth, of Christ, and of the narrow, steep road up that difficult mountain Jesus led the crowd - leads to Life.

Let me now look deeply into this dilemma , for they are heavy with history, theology, and heavenly longing.

WHY ARE THERE SO MANY DIVISIONS EVEN WITHIN CHRISTIANITY?

Though Jesus prayed, "that they all may be one, just as You, Father, are in Me and I in You" (John 17:21), we sadly see the opposite today: disunity, denominationalism, doctrinal conflicts, and in many cases, outright hostility. Why?

1. Human Pride and the Fall from Humility

"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." -  Matthew 5:3

The very first sin in Eden was pride, and it continues to infect the Church. Many denominations and leaders begin with the sincere desire to reform or seek truth, but over time, self-righteousness creeps in:

  1. "We have the correct doctrine."
  2. "We are more spiritual than others."
  3. "Our church is the remnant, the true church."

    This turns humility into spiritual elitism, dividing those who should be united at the foot of the Cross. Few are willing to be the least, to serve and wash one another's feet, as Christ did.

    2. Historical Divisions: A Timeline of Fragmentation 

    The Early Church

    a. The early Christians were one body (Acts 2:42–47), yet even Paul saw the seeds of division:

    "Each of you says, ‘I follow Paul,’ or ‘I follow Apollos,’ or ‘I follow Cephas,’ or ‘I follow Christ.’ Is Christ divided?" -  1 Corinthians 1:12–13

     b. The Great Schism (1054 AD)

    This was the first major split, between the Roman Catholic Church (West) and the Eastern Orthodox Church (East) due to:

    Disagreements about the authority of the Pope.

    The wording of the Nicene Creed.
    Political and cultural tensions between Rome and Constantinople. 

    c. The Protestant Reformation (1517 AD onwards)

    Martin Luther sparked a movement to reform corrupt practices in the Catholic Church (e.g., indulgences). However, it spiraled into numerous branches:

    Lutherans, Calvinists (Reformed), Anglicans, Anabaptists, and eventually, the Methodists, Baptists, Pentecostals, Charismatics, and non-denominational churches.

      Each group emphasized a different doctrinal point:

      Baptism
      Communion
      Predestination
      Church governance
      Interpretation of Scripture

        Instead of healing, reform became fragmentation.

        3. Doctrinal Absolutism vs Christ-like Love

        Many Christians focus on being "right" in doctrine, not on being righteous in love.

        Churches divide over infant vs adult baptism.

        The gifts of the Holy Spirit.
        The role of women.
        The end times.
        Which Bible translation to use!

          Rather than saying: "Let us reason together in love", they say: "Depart from us, for you believe differently."

          "Knowledge puffs up, but love builds up." — 1 Corinthians 8:1

          The danger of doctrinal legalism is that it replaces the living Christ with theological systems, while ignoring Christ's commandments to love, forgive, and serve.

          4. Spiritual Consumerism and the Path of Least Resistance

           “Each wants to take their own path, the path of least resistance.”

          The true Gospel is hardIt demands self-denial, suffering, purity, forgiveness of enemies, and complete obedience.

            But many churches today preach what Paul warned:

            "For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires... they will turn their ears away from the truth and be turned aside to myths." — 2 Timothy 4:3–4

            This leads to:

            Prosperity gospel (“God wants us rich and successful!”), comfort gospel (“Jesus will solve all our problems!”), cultural gospel (“Just be nice and tolerant.”)

              All these avoid the Cross, the Mount of Beatitudes, the narrow gate that leads to life (Matthew 7:13–14).

              5. Denominational Isolation and Tribalism

              Many churches become isolated religious tribes, suspicious or dismissive of others. Why?

              Fear of doctrinal corruption, institutional pride, lack of trust, desire for control.

                This leads to no fellowshipno joint worship, and no unity in Christ. And yet Christ never created denominations, only disciples.

                6. Lack of the Holy Spirit’s Fruit

                Where the Spirit of Christ truly reigns, there is:

                • Love
                • Joy
                • Peace
                • Patience
                • Kindness
                • Goodness
                • Faithfulness
                • Gentleness
                • Self-control (Galatians 5:22–23)

                  If churches lack these, even if they speak in tongues or preach great sermons, they are noisy gongs without love (1 Corinthians 13).


                   THE MOUNTAIN OF THE BEATITUDES — A SYMBOL OF THE TRUE WAY

                  I see this very beautifully for all who take the trouble to read my thoughts as I now write. The Sermon on the Mount was not preached in a palace or temple, but on a mountain, reached only by effort, thirst, hunger, humility, and desire.

                  "Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness..."
                  "Blessed are the pure in heart..."
                  "Blessed are the peacemakers..."

                  Some 5,000 people, men, women and children climbed up that mountain, led by Jesus Himself who too climbed up that mountain the difficult way. 5,000 people is not a small number those days over 2,000 years ago especially in such a small place. There were no buses then to bring them up the easy way. But they were all willing to follow Jesus to climb. Few want to climb that mountain anymore. They prefer elevators of convenience over the path of sacrifice.

                  Is It Self-Righteousness?

                  Yes. Self-righteousness and self-pride and ego  is one of the most common sins among religious people. They hide behind doctrine while neglecting the fruit of the Spirit. And Jesus warned:

                  "Many will say to Me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord...’ but I will say to them, ‘I never knew you.’" — Matthew 7:22–23

                  WHAT IS THE HOPE?

                  Despite this darkness, Christ is still building His Church, and there is a remnant of humble believers in every denomination:

                  Who seek Christ, not religion.

                  Who serve quietly, love deeply, forgive generously.
                  Who walk the narrow path and still greet all as brothers.

                    We must be one of them, dear brothers and sisters in blood or in Christ . Let us be lights in the darkness, not critics in the crowd.

                    "Let us not become weary in doing good..." — Galatians 6:9

                     THE UNITY JESUS DESIRES

                    Jesus never asked for denominations. He asked for disciples, who would follow Him, love one another, and bear much fruit.

                    The division we see is not a reflection of Christ but of man’s sin, pride, and rebellion. We must weep for it, pray over it, and most of all, live differently.

                    "By this all people will know you are My disciples, if you love one another." — John 13:35

                    Let us be that voice of unity, that peacemaker, that humble disciple who climbs the mountain even when others stay in the valley.

                    Today, we don't see any member of one church entering into another church to listen to their voice in humility  

                    Even Jesus as a young boy entered into temples, synagogues and other places of worships to listen and to worship. But He was Jesus, not modern church pastors, preachers, church elder brothers or church goers who don't even wish to step into another church not of its kind. Isn't that pride, lack of trust and lack of humility so unlike Jesus as this is piercing, deeply Christ-like question. What I observed is not merely a social behaviour, it is a spiritual tragedy, and one that reveals how far modern-day Christianity has drifted from the humility, openness, and spirit of our Lord Jesus Christ.

                     Jesus Himself, even as a boy, entered temples and synagogues, and engaged in worship, discussion, and learning, not with arrogance, but with profound reverence and hunger for God (Luke 2:46). He did not choose one religious building and boycott the rest. He walked into gatherings not just of His own kind, but even those who would later reject or condemn Him.

                    I too have entered many types of churches in my life and sat quietly to listen to them, and although they did not condemn other churches explicitly, their message is clear, they have their own views and own ways of teaching the gospels. They were never Good Samaritans at all. They left their neighbour church too die. 

                    Yet we have only ONE Jesus but we have so many churches with so many different followers. If we are clothed in humidity, we need to answer this. I know this pierces our hearts and souls.      

                    Let us now lovingly and honestly explore other reasons why today's Christians often refuse to enter or interact with churches not of their own denomination, and what this reveals.

                    I. JESUS' EXAMPLE VS MODERN CHURCH BEHAVIOUR

                     Jesus' Example:

                    1. Luke 2:46 – “After three days they found Him in the temple, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions.”

                    2. Luke 4:16 – “He went to the synagogue, as was His custom...”
                    3. John 10:22-23 – He went to the Feast of Dedication in the temple courts.
                    4. He healed people in synagogues.
                    5. He overturned tables in the temple out of zeal for God’s house.
                    5. He even praised a Roman centurion’s faith, not his religion (Matthew 8:10).

                      Clearly, Jesus was not territorialnot sectarian, and not afraid of being in places of worship different in structure or belief from His own teaching.

                      WHY MODERN CHURCHGOERS WON’T ENTER OTHER CHURCHES

                      1. Denominational Indoctrination and Fear of Corruption

                      Many churches teach that:

                      • “Only our church teaches the truth.”
                      • “Other churches are doctrinally wrong, even dangerous.”
                      • “If you visit them, you might be led astray.”

                        This creates a culture of fear, suspicion, and insulation. People are taught to protect themselves from others instead of trusting the Spirit of truth to guide them in all wisdom.

                        Yet Jesus walked right into places filled with misunderstanding and still shone His light.

                        2. Spiritual Pride and Tribalism

                        “God, I thank you that I am not like other men…” — Luke 18:11, the Pharisee's prayer

                        This is the most dangerous reason of all: thinking that our church, our way, or our theology makes us superior. It's like a spiritual caste system:

                        “We have the true doctrine, others are blind.”

                        “We are the saved, others are lost.”
                        “We are Spirit-filled, others are just formal.”

                          This is pride in holy disguise. Jesus condemned such attitudes (see Matthew 23). Humility would cause us to listen, learn, love, and discern, not judge.

                          3. Lack of Love and Christian Maturity

                          Paul writes:

                          “Accept one another, just as Christ accepted you, in order to bring praise to God.” — Romans 15:7

                          Immature Christians are often more focused on labels, or "who will be preaching today" than on love. They find identity in the name above their church door rather than the name of Jesus in their hearts.

                          They were never a Samaritan at all, a member of a group despised by the Jewish people who stops, tends to the man's wounds, takes him to an inn, and pays for his care. 

                          Such believers rarely engage with other Christians because:

                          They don't see them as "real" Christians.

                          They’ve never been taught that unity is God’s will.
                          They confuse fellowship with compromise.

                            4. Theological Legalism

                            Some churches set up doctrinal fences so high that anyone outside is considered heretical:

                            • “They don’t baptize like us.”

                            • “They have women preachers.”

                            • “They use contemporary music.”

                            • “They don’t follow the King James Version.”

                            This leads to judging churches by man-made laws, not by the fruit of the Spirit. Yet Jesus said:

                            “By their fruit you will know them, not by their label.” — Matthew 7:16

                            5. Pastoral Control and Church Politics

                            Some pastors fear losing members, influence, or tithes if people start visiting other churches. So they subtly discourage interaction:

                            • “Stay where you’re spiritually fed.”

                            • “Other churches don’t have your best interest.”

                            This is not spiritual shepherding—it is spiritual control, and it grieves the heart of Christ, who calls all His sheep to unity.

                            6. Ignorance of the Global Body of Christ

                            “There is one body and one Spirit… one Lord, one faith, one baptism.” — Ephesians 4:4–5

                            Many Christians have never been taught that:

                            • All true believers are part of one Body of Christ, not separate kingdoms.

                            • Denominations are a human invention, not God's design.

                            • Jesus has sheep in many folds, not just in one pen (John 10:16).

                            Thus, their loyalty is to their denomination, not to the kingdom of God.

                             WHAT DOES THIS SAY ABOUT THE CHURCH TODAY?

                            • We preach Christ but don’t walk like Christ.

                            • We carry Bibles but don’t carry His humility.

                            • We build churches but tear down bridges.

                            • We call Him Lord but act like masters over one another.


                            The Good Samaritan:

                               

                            The Parable of the Good Samaritan, found in the Gospel of Luke, tell the story of a traveller attacked and left for dead by robbers. A priest and a Levite, religious figures, both pass by without helping. A Samaritan, a member of a group despised by the Jewish people, stops, tends to the man's wounds, takes him to an inn, and pays for his care. 

                            According to religious sources, the parable teaches that love for one's neighbor extends to everyone, even those considered enemies or outsiders, and that true compassion involves actively helping those in need. 


                            I believe I have filled these words with  truth and humility, fire, and deep love that warms my spirit more than I can express in mere text here.


                             WHAT THE MOUNTAIN TEACHES US

                            As I said, Jesus went up the mountain, not just physically but spiritually. The mountain:

                            • Represents the difficulty of true discipleship.

                            • Requires effort to climb.

                            • Separates the crowd from the committed.

                            And yet the people followed Him! Why?

                            Because His words were truth, His spirit was gentle and lowly, and His life reflected the very heart of God. He drew people, He didn’t divide them. The path up a mountain is very difficult, especially staying up there for days without food and water. 

                            But that's the path churches never saw 

                             THE GREAT TRAGEDY

                            That people who claim Jesus’ name today:

                            • Refuse to visit another church.

                            • Do not greet each other as brothers and sisters.

                            • Judge others by external forms.

                            • And have no desire to learn from others.

                            This is not the Gospel. It is sectarianism, which is one of the "works of the flesh" (Galatians 5:20).

                             WHAT SHOULD TRUE DISCIPLES DO?

                            1. Be willing to enter other churches in humility and love.

                            2. Discern the presence of Christ, not the absence of our customs.

                            3. Build bridges, not fences.

                            4. Seek unity, not uniformity.

                            5. Correct in love, not condemn with pride.

                            6. Be an example, not a judge.

                            7. “Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.” — Ephesians 4:3

                             When churches refuse to acknowledge each other, when believers isolate themselves in pride and fear, they deny the very love Christ died to give.

                            The Church must remember: we are one Body, one Bride, and Christ is not divided. He is calling us not just to climb the mountain like in Matthew 5–7—but to live the Sermon on the Mount: in meekness, mercy, purity, and peace.

                            May all of us and I, and whoever reads this, be the remnant that loves across boundaries, that walks into any house where Jesus is worshipped, and that carries the fragrance of Christ, not the scent of spiritual arrogance.

                            I have personally seen two churches in the same row of shop house - literally neighbours to each other but preaching differently - does not greet or help each other. They just ignore each other even though they were neighbouring churches

                            Here we remind ourselves what Jesus taught about being a Good Samaritan as neighbours   


                            If I have a church of my own: 

                            If I truly had a church of my own, it would have no walls, no denominations, no locked doors. Only open hearts, washed feet, and Christ in the center, where truth walks hand in hand with grace, and every soul is welcomed like the prodigal son coming home.

                            And oh, what a day it would be, to walk side by side with all, not just to preach from the pulpit but to live out the Gospel outside of it! To step into the next church down the road, not to correct or convert, but to say:

                            “We love you. We are your brothers. We are one Body. And Jesus is Lord of us all.”

                            That, dear brothers to all, is the Gospel in motion.

                            This is the spirit of a true disciple, one who sees through all man-made curtains and walks straight into the light of divine love and unity. If ever the Lord sees fit to let me, a  servant walk the earth with you to find me already knocking at your door, saying:

                            “Come,  today we walk like Jesus walked, one church at a time.”

                            Until then, I remain your faithful brother in the unseen Spirit, kneeling with you at the foot of the same rugged Cross, and longing for the day when all who call upon His name shall be one.

                            With all love and reverence,
                            Yours always, A brother in Christ - a humble servant called  lim ju boo 

                            1 comment:

                            Chin Siew Mei said...

                            Dr Lim I am really unable to thank you adequately for such a revelation you have really shown to us in this blinkered world of Christian. Every article you write here were written with such profound knowledge and spiritual wisdom. From today I shall not stick to any church but I shall enter to all churches to learn just like Jesus did entering synagogues and temples you quoted those verses in the Bible. Thank you a million for such profound message. Yes, we all lack humility and will not stoop so low to accept we have only one Jesus but far too many churches in disunity

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