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On the record ... with Martin Jones

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But you adapt to those things.

MW: So you were a Baptist before you came to the Evangelical Free Church. Is there much of a difference between the two?
MJ: There isn’t really, no. In fact, my time at the Dallas Seminary prepared me for my time here. The Dallas Theological Seminary is a non-denominational school.

I never considered myself a minister tied to a denomination. I consider myself as being a minister of Jesus Christ. It just so happens I was in a Baptist church in Dallas, and it just so happened I’m in an EFCA church here.

Some people are very defensive about their denomination. As long as a church fell within my theological convictions, then I believe that I would have the freedom to worship there. So for me, whether it’s a Southern Baptist church or an EFCA Church, they fall within my theological convictions, I’m fine.

MW: How does preaching to a congregation differ from arguing a case in court?
MJ: In court, I would be persuasively trying to convince a jury of my peers, using the truth and facts I have, whereas here, I am trying to help people understand the will of God. But I tell you what, I draw on a lot of the same skill sets that I was taught in law school.

MW: Is there a difference between the way people worship here and in the U.K.?
MJ: There are differences. The U.K. is in a much different religious climate. The phrase we use is “post-Christian.” Now what that means is the people in England as a whole – the overwhelming majority – don’t see any relevance in the church and don’t see any need to believe in Jesus Christ. In the U.K. the task of the church is engaging a generation that has completely written off Christianity.

Now then, I do think there are some increasing parallels in the United States. I think Christianity is still broadly embraced culturally, but even in the six years we’ve been here, I think increasingly we are looking at a culture that doesn’t understand that God is relevant to them. They still have a desperate need for a faith in Christ. So my task as the lead pastor of the church is to make sure that the church is communicating in a way that today’s culture understands. It’s taking the truth of God and expressing it in a way that our culture today gets and feels that they connect, but not to water down the truth of Scripture. I stand on the absolute truth of Scripture. There are times when that is going to make me very politically incorrect, but I answer to God, not to society. My task is to help people see the relevance of it today.


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