Article description: Is it possible to rediscover the church of the New
Testament in today's world Many sincere
people have never considered this possibility. It is a thrilling
thought. In a recent address, Wayne Jackson spoke of
this matter.
The following material is the transcription of a lecture presented to a
group of interested Bible students a few
months back. The style is, therefore, more spoken than written. It is
not burdened with technical argument or
documentation.
Several months ago, the nations news programs were dominated by the
story concerning the young woman from
California who worked as a congressional aide, and who mysteriously
disappeared. Over and over again, her
physical description was published height, hair color, eye color, and
distinguishing characteristics. By virtue of
that detailed description, there was hope that if someone should see
her, she could be identified and brought home
to her worried family.
Every day in our lives we encounter occasions in which we have to
identify certain objects. If we go to the
supermarket to shop, and we return to the parking lot, we have to
identify the particular vehicle that belongs to us. If a mothers child becomes separated from her in a large crowd, she can
provide an identifying description to those
who may be able to locate that child.
Perhaps the most important application of that principle is this: Is it
essential that we be able to identify the church
of the New Testament the one that God planned, and the one that Jesus
purchased by the shedding of his blood Is
it important that one be able to identify that spiritual body Can it be
found in today's world
Tragically, many sincere religious people operate on the premise that it
really doesn't make any difference what
church one belongs to, so long as it is under the general umbrella of
Christendom. But is that a valid premise
upon which to operate
If the church is something important in the mind of God and it is, the
Bible indicates it was a part of the divine
plan from eternity (Eph. 3:10-11), and because Christ shed his blood to
buy it (Acts 20:28)then surely it is
important enough to need appropriate identification. One doesn't just
flip through the yellow pages of the telephone
book, or he doesn't just drive up and down the shady lanes of our
communities, looking for a commodious church. Rather, the conscientious person wants to know, intellectually and
biblically: What is the church of the Bible
Where is it Am I a member of it, or am I not
Let me give you another illustration, which I think will help put this
matter into focus. Suppose one is asked to
identify a mammal. What is a mammal Well, you might consult several
dictionaries. You might look at a more
general dictionary, or you might want to reference a science dictionary.
The definitions will be the same generally,
with perhaps with a greater degree of detail in the scientific work.
Here is an abbreviated definition of a mammal. A mammal is a creature
characterized by certain traits. It has hair. It
is warm-blooded. And mammals nurse their young. The English word mammal
derives from a Latin word,
mamma, which is the term for breast, having to do with the suckling of
the offspring.
A dog is a mammal. A dog has hair, is warm-blooded, and suckles its
young. A cat is a mammal. Human beings are
mammals according to this definition. A whale is a mammal, having all
three of these characteristics. But a bird is
not a mammal. Though a bird is warm-blooded, it does not have hair, and
it does not nurse its young. A caterpillar
is not a mammal. A caterpillar has hair, but does not nurse its young. A
mammal has all the previously mentioned
traits.
Here is the point of the analogy. There are many churches in our
community which have some of the traits of the
New Testament church. But just as a mammal is not a mammal unless it has
all of the qualities that are mammalian,
just so, a church is not the church of the Bible unless it consists of
folks who have done precisely what God requires
in becoming a Christian.
Moreover, to have Heavens sustained approval, a group of Christians must
attempt to conform to those particular
qualities that characterized the church as it functioned under the
guiding hand of the inspired leaders of the first
century.
Obviously, we don't have the time to develop this theme at great length
in this limited presentation, but let us at
least survey the matter briefly. I want you to think very seriously; I
want you to look into your heart, look into your
life, look into your personal history, your experiences and answer this
question: Am I a member of Christ's
church Or am I simply a member of a church
When Was the Church Established
First of all, I would raise this issue. When was the church of Christ
established It was established 50 days after the
death of Jesus. The record of this is found in the second chapter of the
book of Acts. The time is specifically
identified as the day of Pentecost. The power of the Holy Spirit was
poured out supernaturally upon the apostles,
and for the very first time in all of history, they began to proclaim
the basic facts of the gospel message, namely
that:
- Jesus had been crucified for the sins of humanity,
- He had been buried in a tomb.
- But on the third day, he arose from that tomb, and then, forty days
later, ascended back into heaven to be at
the right hand of God.
Peter, the leading spokesman on that occasion, suggested that those who
were assembled in the city, the Jews, were
responsible for having put Christ to death and, therefore, they were
guilty of sin. He said to them:
"Repent and be baptized, every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ,
for the forgiveness of your sins, and you
shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38)."
Luke, the writer who recorded the events, said they who gladly received
Peters words were baptized, and there
were added together, that day, about 3,000 people.
From that time on, in the book of Acts, we read that the church is in
existence. Prior to that time, all references to
the church are in the future tense. Jesus, for example, had said in
Matthew 16:18, I will build my church. That
was about six months before he died. But from Acts 2 onward, the church
is in existence.
And so, we conclude that the church was established at that time. The
year is approximately A.D. 30. The day was
Sunday. The method by which they constituted the church was submission
to the gospel message. Those who
attempt to become Christians in any other fashion are not members of
Christs spiritual body.
Now, what about the church of which you are a member Was your church
established in the city of Rome, several
centuries after the New Testament was completed Was your church set up
in London, in the 1600s or 1700s If
so, it is not the church of the New Testament. The church of Jesus
Christ traces its origin to the events recorded in
Acts 2twenty centuries ago.
What About Organization
Let me ask you this. What was the pattern of church organization, as we
read of such in the New Testament Well,
the issue is rather simple.
First, Christ is the head of the church. He is the head of the body, the
church (Col 1:18). The church of the New
Testament had no earthly head some person allegedly governing by the
authority of Christ. Rather, Jesus is the
only head of the church (Eph. 1:22-23).
Second, in New Testament times, within local congregations, there were
men known as elders. They were also
called shepherds, pastors, or bishops (Acts 20:17,28; 1 Tim. 3:1ff; Tit.
1:5ff). They supervised the expediency
elements of the local congregation.
There was no such thing, in the first century, as a bishop who presided
over a number of churches. There was no
such officer, in the first century, as a cardinal over churches of the
various nations. There was no such creature, in
Bible times, as the Papa, the Pope, of all churches. Rather,
congregations were organized on a local level, with a
plurality of men (the elders), who guided them in matters of human
judgment (Heb. 13:17).
Does your church have a single pastor with a board of deacons that
governs the local congregation If so, you are in
a church that is not organized after the Bible pattern. Is your church
subject to a bishop who exercises authority
over a conglomerate of congregations There is a fundamental flaw in
that system.
What About Worship
Then there is the matter of worship. What is the worship procedure in
the church of which you are a member A
survey of the New Testament record reveals that several different acts
were engaged in whenever the church met on
the Lords day to worship God.
The Lords Supper
We are told, for example, that the early Christians assembled themselves
together on the first day of the week and
every Lords day (see1 Cor. 16:2NASB)for the purpose of partaking of the
communion Supper. This involved
eating the bread and drinking the fruit of the vine (Mt. 26:26ff; Acts
20:7).
This is what Jesus himself had commissioned on that evening when he
celebrated the Passover and then, subsequent
to that feast, instituted the Lords Supper. He took bread, broke it, and
said, eat this in memory of my body. He
gave them a cup of the fruit of the vine, and said, divide this among
yourselves and drink it, this is [i.e., represents]
my blood.
Is that what your church family does Does it meet each Lords day for
the purpose of observing the communion
Or are you identified with a group that observes the Lords Supper
quarterly, or semi-annually, or even only yearly
Or perhaps at some other random time If so, I must tell you with
compassion and kindness, that such does not
conform to the biblical pattern relative to the observance of the
communion.
Prayer
The Lord taught his disciples to pray to God (cf. Matt. 6:5ff). After
his ascension, they continued in this practice of
speaking to God (Acts 2:42).
Does your church offer prayers to those other than God If so, those
prayers are ineffective. Christ's church prays
as he instructed.
Preaching the Word
On the Lords Day, there was also the practice of preaching the word of
God. In Acts 20:7ff, when the disciples
came together on the first day of the week, Paul also taught the
brethren, and continued his communication for a
considerable time (cf. Acts 2:42).
Singing
In addition to the teaching program, the early church engaged in singing
as a form of worship. Ephesians 5:19
underscores the corporate nature of the musical portion of church
worship (cf. Col. 3:16). The inspired apostle
wrote these words: Speaking one to another in psalms, hymns and
spiritual songs, singing and making melody in
your hearts unto the Lord. Singing is an expression of praise in which
every Christian within the congregation
should engage.
Does the church with which you are identified come together, and, in
addition to singing, have musical
accompaniment with humanly manufactured instruments Such a practice is
unknown to the New Testament
record.
Oh, but someone objects, musical instruments are mentioned in the Old
Testament! Yes, they are, but the Old
Testament reflected a very elementary scheme of things, a carnal system
(see Heb. 9:10). The Old Testament
contained the offerings of bloody sacrifices. The Old Testament had the
burning of incense. The Old Testament had
a physical, tribal priesthood through whom the rank and file of the
people approached God. But that carnal system
was laid aside, as the writer of Hebrews argues, in chapter nine of that
document. The Old Testament regime was superseded by a spiritual system.
Here is a point that is without controversy, historically speaking.
Churches identified with Christianity never used
instruments of music in their worship for at least six hundred years
after the establishment of the church.
Instruments were introduced only when certain sects were significantly
down the road of apostasy, digressing from
the pristine New Testament plan.
Giving
The early church, on the first day of every week, contributed into the
common congregational treasury, that the
Lords work might be expediently financed (1 Cor. 16:1-2). The modern
practice of engaging in business
enterprises to underwrite the work of the church was not a part of the
original pattern of church economics.
So it was, then, that the primitive church observed the Lords Supper,
prayer, singing, teaching, and the weekly
contribution.
Does the church of which you are a member practice these items as per the
New Testament pattern If not, then it
does not conform to the New Testament mold; it does not fit the ideal of
the early church, as such existed under the
supervision of the apostles of Christ.
Don't you want to be affiliated with the church of the Bible Is it not
possible today to be a part of the original
church without any affiliation with a church organism that has adopted
merely some of the elements of
Christianity
Does a Name Matter
What was the first century church called How were the early disciples
designated
There were several appellations employed to describe the first-century
believers, e.g., disciples, saints, brethren, etc.
But beginning in Acts 11, the early disciples were formally called
Christians first at Antioch of Syria (Acts 11:26;
cf. 26:28; 1 Pet. 4:16).
And interestingly enough, the word called in Acts 11:26 is a very
special word that has to do only with a divine
sort of calling. It is a calling that issues from God as its source.
They were divinely called Christians.
Why would men set aside that name, and designate themselves by human
heroes (e.g., Lutheran) Or name
themselves after some form of organization, (e.g., Presbyterian) Or
adopt titles according to some individual point
of doctrine they espouse, (e.g., Baptist) There is no scriptural basis
for this common practice.
Tell me please, why are those who profess allegiance to Jesus Christ
dissatisfied with simply wearing the name
Christian Why are they not known as just churches of Christ (Rom.
16:16) or churches of God (1 Cor.
1:2) either appellation being entirely scriptural. There is no solitary,
exclusive name for the church. But whatever
you call it, you need to call it what it is, and not what it is not.
The church is not a Pentecostal church just because it was established
on the day of Pentecost. The church is not a
Baptist church just because it advocates baptism. The church is not a
Congregational church just because it is
organized congregationally. The church is the church of God (1 Cor.
1:2), because God planned it.
Congregations are the churches of Christ (Rom. 16:16), because Christ
gave his life in order to bring them into
existence. The New Testament indicates that we ought to speak as the
oracles of God (1 Pet. 4:11), which means we
ought to express biblical concepts with biblical terms whenever
possible.
What about the Plan of Salvation
Finally, I would ask you this question: What does your church teach in
terms of how to become a Christian I can
tell you this, if it does not teach exactly what the Bible teaches,
there is no way it can be identified as a church of
the New Testament.
The apostles and other inspired teachers of the first century, as they
went forth proclaiming the basic facts of the
gospel, first of all instilled within people the need to believe basic
facts concerning Jesus Christ. Jesus himself said
in John 8:24, Unless you believe that I am he, you will die in your
sins, and he also affirmed that if one dies in
sin, he cannot join the Lord ultimately (Jn. 8:21). That is plain
enough.
There is a church called the Universalist Unitarian Church. It claims to
be a Christian church, but I must tell you
this. You do not have to believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God to
be a member of it. You do not have to believe
that Jesus was born of the virgin Mary. You don't have to believe that he
performed the miracles attributed to him
in the New Testament record. You do not have to believe that he was
raised from the dead.
How in the world could that be a New Testament church It could not be.
In the first century, believers, who had arrived at that state of
spiritual and intellectual development, were required
to turn away from their sins in repentance.
On Pentecost, those who believed the gospel message, cried out to Peter
and the apostles, Brethren, what shall we
do
Peter responded, first of all, that they needed to repent. Repentance is
a change of your mind, a change of your
attitude, which subsequently results in a change of your conduct (2 Cor.
7:10). It demands that whatever you are
doing that is sinful, you must try to stop that, turn around, and reform
your life.
Any church that teaches that your personal life need not be altered, so
long as you go through a ritual to obtain
absolution, thus suggesting that you may continue to pursue your sinful
lifestyle, cannot be the church of the New
Testament. The church of the Bible demands reformation, a change of ones
life.
In the first century, those who were candidates for becoming Christians
had to acknowledge their faith before their
peers. They confessed that they believed that Jesus Christ is the Son of
God, or they indicated their faith in some
fashion (Rom. 10:9-10; 1 Tim. 6:13). When one entertains a fatally
flawed faith, he cannot be acknowledged as a
Christian.
Moreover, in the first century, those who had been instructed in the
faith were to consummate the previous steps of
obedience by being buried in water, formally called baptism, for the
forgiveness of their sins (Acts 2:38; 22:16).
Some people think that it is not very important to understand the
purpose of baptism. As long as you understand
that it involves going under the water, that would be sufficient. Many
churches don't even believe that. Tragically,
many of our religious neighbors, whom we admire for so many noble
traits, practice the sprinkling of water upon
babies. There are two mistakes in that procedure.
First, baptism means immersion (Rom. 6:3-4; Col. 2:12), it is not
sprinkling.
Second, babies do not need baptism for forgiveness of sins, because they
are pure, not having reached a level of
personal accountability (Gen. 8:21; Mt. 18:1ff).
Do you belong to a church that baptizes infants Then you are not a part
of the New Testament church. Do you
belong to a body of people that sprinkles water when a candidate
requests baptism That's not the Bible church. Do
you belong to an organism that teaches that you are saved at the point
of faith and therefore, you need only be
baptized to show that you are already a child of God My ancestors
believed and taught those ideas. But they were
wrong about such matters.
The Bible teaches that one is to be immersed for the forgiveness of
sins. If one does not need to understand the
purpose of the ordinance, why is it stated in the passage The apostle
could simply have said, repent ye and be
baptized. That would have settled that issue. The purpose then would be
irrelevant. But no, the apostle
admonished: Repent and be baptized for the forgiveness of your sins
(Acts 2:38). As Ananias told Saul of Tarsus,
in Acts 22:16, Arise, and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling
on the Lords name.
A Concluding Appeal
Is the religious organization of which you are a member deficient in the
elements we have just surveyed If it is,
you ought to leave it, and find the group that replicates the Bible
pattern. There always will be weaknesses in the
human elements of the church; but there is a divine ideal, and towards
that one must strive.
Would you think about this very seriously And if you have not obeyed
the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth, do so with all dispatch As soon as you've reached a firm
conviction about your spiritual state, and have
an understanding about what the Scriptures teach, do not hesitate to obey
the truth.
You can then know, with confidence, that you are a genuine Christian.
You will be a member of the church that is
found in the New Testament one that cannot be wrong, because it has the
divinely-prescribed identifying traits.
© 2002 by Christian Courier Publications. All rights reserved.
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