Church: Difference between revisions
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<big><big>Many | <big><big><big><big>Many different opinions | ||
as to the definition of a church. | as to the definition of a church. | ||
[[file:C06237.jpg|C06237.jpg|250px|left|link=https://joebatchelor.com/index.php/Bible]] | [[file:C06237.jpg|C06237.jpg|250px|left|link=https://joebatchelor.com/index.php/Bible]] | ||
The [[church]] will be the [[Bride of Christ]] | |||
The [[church]] will be the '''[[Bride of Christ]]''' | |||
and the saved ones not baptized by a scriptural church | and the saved ones not baptized by a scriptural church | ||
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and the Old Testament saints | and the Old Testament saints | ||
will be guests at the [[Marriage Supper of the Lamb]]. | will be guests at the '''[[Marriage Supper of the Lamb]]'''. | ||
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by the baptism with the Holy Spirit." | by the baptism with the Holy Spirit." | ||
This is the popular view | This is the popular view | ||
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to fulfill the great commission. | to fulfill the great commission. | ||
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Try the two definitions with the following verse. | Try the two definitions with the following verse. | ||
Acts 8 | [[Acts 8]] | ||
And Saul was consenting unto his death. | :1 And Saul was consenting unto his death. | ||
And at that time there was a great persecution | :And at that time there was a great persecution | ||
against the church which was at Jerusalem; | :against the church which was at Jerusalem; | ||
and they were all scattered abroad | :and they were all scattered abroad | ||
throughout the regions of Judaea and Samaria, | :throughout the regions of Judaea and Samaria, except the apostles. | ||
Is it local or universal and invisible? | |||
[[Galatians 1]] | |||
:2 And all the brethren which are with me, | |||
:unto the churches of Galatia: | |||
First note Paul uses the word church in it’s plural form, | First note Paul uses the word church in it’s plural form, | ||
Line 207: | Line 199: | ||
in an institutional sense | in an institutional sense | ||
such as in Ephesians 1 | such as in [[Ephesians 1.22]]-23 and [[Ephesians 5.23]]-27 | ||
Latest revision as of 19:49, 2 July 2024
Many different opinions
as to the definition of a church.
The church will be the Bride of Christ
and the saved ones not baptized by a scriptural church
and the Old Testament saints
will be guests at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb.
It is a local visible body of baptized believers
who have covenanted together
to fulfill the great commission.
One view was promoted to popularity by C I Scofield
in his Scofield reference Bible.
This view states that "The Spirit forms the church
by baptizing all believers into the body of Christ."
He further states the church
to be "composed of the whole number
of regenerate persons
from Pentecost to the first resurrection,
united together and to Christ
by the baptism with the Holy Spirit."
This is the popular view
held by most Protestant churches.
Another view, not as widely held,
is that of the "church consisting
of all the redeemed in all ages."
From these two views we understand the church
to be universal and invisible.
Baptists, in opposition,
hold the church to be both local and visible.
These two prior views
fail to take into consideration
the difference God makes
between the family of God,
the kingdom of God,
and the church of God.
The family of God
is made up of all born again believers
from Adam until this present time.
The family of God includes all the saved
in heaven and on Earth.
The kingdom of God is made up of all believers
on the earth at any given time.
The churches of God are made up of saved people
who have been scripturally baptized
by a proper administrator
and joined to a local, visible body.
Baptist have long held
to a common definition of the church.
It is a local visible body of baptized believers
who have covenanted together
to fulfill the great commission.
The universal invisible church theory
excludes baptism as necessary for church membership.
It also perverts the meaning
of the Greek word "ecclesia"
which is translated "church" in our English Bible.
The fact that the word "church"
exists in our English version of the Bible
is due to King James of England.
He literally made a rule for the translators
to follow that the word "congregation"
which had been commonly used,
was not to be used,
but in it’s place
they should use the word "church."
The word "ecclesia," "called out,"
means an assembly of people gathered together.
Once this definition is understood and used
the Scriptures using it make perfect since.
Try the two definitions with the following verse.
- 1 And Saul was consenting unto his death.
- And at that time there was a great persecution
- against the church which was at Jerusalem;
- and they were all scattered abroad
- throughout the regions of Judaea and Samaria, except the apostles.
Is it local or universal and invisible?
- 2 And all the brethren which are with me,
- unto the churches of Galatia:
First note Paul uses the word church in it’s plural form,
not universal invisible church of Galatia,
but local visible churches of Galatia.
There are few instances
where the word church has reference to a universal body of believers.
When it does it is referring to a future assembly
that will then be both local and visible.
There are scriptures where the use of the word is used
in an institutional sense
such as in Ephesians 1.22-23 and Ephesians 5.23-27
This usage does not make the church universal and invisible
any more than it makes all husbands and wives universal.
When Did It All Start?
The Church was started
when Jesus was baptized
He was the first member and head of His Church.
The first use of the word "church"
in the New Testament
is found in Matthew 16:18,
which states:
- "And I say also unto thee,
- That thou art Peter, and upon this rock
- I will build my church;
- and the gates of hell
- shall not prevail against it."
Christ calls it His church.
He is distinguishing it from any other.
It originated with Him,
He organized it, and He is building it.
Mr. Scofield and the Protestants
would have us to believe
the church started on the day of Pentecost.
It is this very fact that gives rise
to the teaching of the universal invisible church theory.
Baptists teach from the Scriptures
that the church began
during the personal ministry of Jesus Christ.
This verse in Matthew
does not teach Peter
was the foundation of the church
as the Roman Catholics would have us to believe.
Instead, it teaches that Peter (little pebble)
should understand that the rock (huge strata)
upon which Christ’s church would be built
was Jesus Christ and none other.
Lets get an additional definition
of what is a Scriptural church.
A New Testament Church
is an assembly of baptized believers called out from the world
by the preaching of the gospel,
accompanied by the regenerating work of the holy Spirit.
Each of the twelve Apostles
and the early disciples
were scripturally baptized by John the Baptist,
as was Jesus.
John was "to make ready a people prepared for the Lord."
These men were born again and baptized.
When Christ came to this Earth they were called out,
assembled together, ordained, and sent forth at His command.
This fills the definition
of what we know to be a true New Testament Church.
They sang, preached, collected offerings,
had a Pastor (Jesus Christ), baptized,
observed the Lord's Supper,
they had rules and order, conducted business,
and they were given authority
to carry out Christ’s commands.
All of this happened before the day of Pentecost.
Before the day of Pentecost
Jesus was physically the single head of one church.
After the day of Pentecost,
through the ministry of the Holy Spirit,
Jesus Christ was Spiritually the single head
of many churches.
These two views make an extreme difference
in how a church carries out its business,
how it accepts members,
how it observes the rules of the New Testament,
and how it carries out the great commission.
It affects the teachings concerning the Lord's Supper
Baptism, Church authority,
church membership, church associations,
and the perseverance of the autonomy of the local church.
The Pattern Of A New Testament Church
The pattern of a New Testament Church
is to be found in the Bible.
The Bible is our final rule of faith and practice.
It is within the Bible
we will discover the church’s government, purpose, plan,
and directives.
Tradition and history must always be balanced
with the Word of God not vice versus.
The Bible teaches that each church is to be autonomous,
independent, and indigenous.
That means the church is to be self-governing,
separate from all other bodies and organizations,
and local.
The government of a Baptist church
is to be democratic under the direction of its only head,
Jesus Christ.
The local church is to determine its own course of action
apart from any outside interference of other churches,
associations, councils, fellowships, presbyteries,
preachers, or civil authorities.
The Lord’s Churches recognize no higher authority
than their Head, Jesus Christ.
This frees the Church to follow the Lord’s direction
in selecting their own officers,
exercising their own discipline,
and adopting their own courses of action.
This also allows for co-operation
with other true New Testament churches
in carrying out the demands of the gospel,
without relinquishing their independence.
The early church met on the first day of the week.
This is not a Christian Sabbath as some might say.
It is the celebration
of the rising of our Lord from grave
and securing our salvation.
Sunday is the day set aside for the work of the ministry
not the work in the yard.
Sunday is the day set aside for the honor,
worship, and praise of God.
It is on the first day of the week
that we are to bring our offerings unto the Lord.
We are to come and worship God in Spirit and in truth
not in ritual and formalism.
God’s plan for financing the ministry of the church
is through the giving of offerings.
Giving is as much a part of our worship as is singing,
preaching, or praising the Lord.
The Officers Of The Church
There are only two offices in the church
that are recognized within the New Testament,
pastors and deacons.
The pastor may be called a bishop, an elder, an overseer,
or shepherd of the flock.
This office is designated as the overseer of the church of God.
He is the one, which has the responsibility
to teach and preach the word of God
and to equip the saints of God
to do the work of the ministry.
The pastor and deacon, or deacons, are to be chosen, or appointed,
by the church in a democratic method
and may be removed from that office in the same manner
by a majority vote of the church.
The pastor is charged with the spiritual oversight of the church
while the deacons are charged with the physical oversight
that would restrict the pastor or elders
from prayer and ministry of the word.
Not all preachers are destined to be pastors
any more than all servants of God
are destined to become deacons.
The desire to fill the office of pastor
comes from the leading and calling of the Lord
and is confirmed by a call from a local church to that position.
The qualifications of a pastor or elder
are scattered throughout the New Testament.
There are two major portions of Scripture
which deal with specific qualifications;
1 Timothy 3:1-7; and Titus 1:6-9.
The office of deacon seems to have risen
over a dispute concerning the distribution
of material resources as seen in Acts 6.
Rather than requiring the Apostles
to remove themselves from prayer and ministry of the word
they asked the church
to seek out men among themselves to fill these rolls.
It was the church who decided
who should be appointed to these positions
based upon spiritual and scriptural qualifications.
We find these qualifications listed in 1 Timothy 3:8-13.
The Purpose Of A New Testament Church
The Lord began and built His church
because He had a purpose in mind.
There is a design and direction for the church.
He has entrusted the church with the responsibility
of preaching the gospel to a lost and dying world.
He has called upon us to teach and to baptize
those who believe and repent.
This gives us our primary goal
as a New Testament Baptist church.
Matthew 28:18-20 gives us our commission.
"And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying,
All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth.
Go ye therefore, and teach all nations,
baptizing them
in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
Teaching them to observe all things
whatsoever I have commanded you:
and, lo, I am with you alway,
even unto the end of the world. Amen."
The goal of every church
is not to entertain or to provide a social place to gather.
It is to instruct in and with the Word of God
by the power of the Holy Spirit.
This involves caring for and feeding the flock of God.
It involves teaching the whole counsel of God
not just bits and pieces
or those that seem to best suit our purposes
or attract the greatest amount of interests.
While the oversight of such a great task
is given to the pastor
it is not his to do alone.
He is to equip the saints to do the work of the ministry.
An important fact to remember is
that we are talking about the purpose
or mission of the church.
Who is the church?
If you are saved, baptized, and have been added to this,
or any, Baptist church,
the responsibility is yours.
Your mission is obedience to the commands of God
and those commands are to go preaching, baptizing,
and then to teach the all things.
What About It’s Membership?
The first and foremost qualification for membership
in one of the Lord’s churches is to be born again.
Only those who are baptized can be church members
and only those who give proof
of regeneration and conversion
are qualified candidates for baptism.
That gives us both the first and second qualifications
for church membership.
Each member has the privilege and responsibility
to vote in matters of business.
If their vote happens to be in the minority
there is the need to submit to the decision of the majority.
There is no right to stir dissension
or be contentious when there is no violation of the Word of God.
Every member of the Lord’s churches must be aware
they are accountable to the Lord and His church
in matters of doctrine,
practice and the covenant into which they enter.
The Ordinances of The Church
The ordinances recognized by true New Testament Baptists
are baptism and the [[Lord's Supper].
While we hold each as important in their doctrine and practice
we believe neither has any saving merit attached to them.
It is our responsibility to "contend for the faith
once delivered unto the saints" Jude.
We are to maintain the truth and application of both.
We believe both are symbols of spiritual truths.
The Lord’s supper was instituted by the Lord
and is to be observed until He returns to this Earth.
The Lord’s Supper is a commemoration
of the shedding of His blood and His death as our substitute.
This is strictly a church ordinance
to be observed by the members of a local church.
This is a restricted communion,
only to those who are members of a local body.
The elements of the Lord’s supper
are unleavened bread and wine.
We are instructed what to do and how to do it,
but we are given liberty as to the timing.
The Lord said "as oft" as you do it,
do it in remembrance of me.
Some churches may observe the Lord’s Supper weekly,
some monthly, some quarterly, some yearly,
and others at their discretion.