The
church Christ built is worthless to man if it is impossible to find
it, if it only existed in ancient history, and cannot be known today.
Fortunately, like all things that exist, there are marks of
identification that allow us to know his church from those made by
man. What are the marks of identification of the Lord’s church
versus man-made churches?
(1)
The time of its founding. The Lord’s church began in the first
century on the Day of Pentecost in Acts 2. Any church that was built
or came into existence later cannot be the church Jesus built. Many
of today’s churches were founded during the years of the Reformation and in the years since then, thus eliminating them from
consideration as being the church Jesus built.
(2)
The builder--Christ himself built his church. If a church can trace
its beginnings back to a particular man or movement that can be named
for its founding, it is clearly not the church Christ built.
(3)
Its name. If a church is the church Jesus built, then one would
expect it would not have a name given by men attached to it. Actually, no formal name was ever given to the church Jesus built.
It was often referred to by appellations such as: the body of Christ
(Eph. 1:22-23, 4:12), the Lamb’s bride (Rev. 21:9-10, Rom. 7:4),
the church of God (Acts 20:28), the church of Christ (Rom. 16:16),
the church of the living God (1 Tim. 3:15), the church of the
firstborn (Heb. 12:23), the household of God (Eph. 2:19), the flock
of God (1 Peter 5:2), God’s field (1 Cor. 2:9), God’s building (1
Cor. 2:9), the house of God (1 Tim. 3:15), the temple of God (1 Cor.
3:16-17), and, of course, the most common designation for the church
in the Bible is the singular term,
“the church.”
When
a church has a name or designation not found in the Bible, that ought
to immediately raise a red flag. That alone tells you it differs
from what you find in scripture and makes it suspect. If a church is
named after a man, a method of governance,
or a peculiar doctrinal stance, it detracts from God’s honor and
glory. God is to be given glory in the church (Eph. 3:20-21)—not a
man or a movement.
(4)
Its members--their names. In the church built by Jesus no member was
called anything other than a disciple, a brother or a sister as the
case might be, or just brethren when taken collectively, a child of
God, a saint, or just by the name Christian (Acts 11:26). This
listing is not necessarily exhaustive but is sufficient to make a
needed point. In the New Testament church there were no such beings
as Christians who also had an additional appellation or name to
distinguish them from others. This was the very thing Paul condemned
in 1 Cor. 2:4 when he said, “For when one says, ‘I am of Paul,’
and another, ‘I am of Apollos,’ are you not carnal?” (NKJV)
No
church whose members are called by a denominational name in addition
to the name Christian is the church Jesus built. Not only is it
carnal, as Paul said, but it is also dishonoring to God, as if it is not
good enough to just be called a Christian or child of God. The name
“Christian” is a Christ-honoring name. Denominational names
dishonor Christ as his name is replaced with that which the Bible
knows nothing about.
(5)
Membership--how do people become members of Christ’s church? This
is an easily answered question. The church was established on the
Day of Pentecost in Acts 2. When Peter confessed Jesus as the
Christ, the Son of God, in Matt. 16:16, Jesus’ responded by saying,
“on this rock I will build my church” (Matt. 16:18 NKJV) but then
in the very next verse he tells Peter, “I will give you the keys of
the kingdom of heaven.” (Matt. 16:19 NKJV) Jesus thus uses the
terms the church and the kingdom interchangeably making them one and
the same.
The
kingdom of God is not something that in our own time is down the road
in the future. Jesus said to those with whom he was speaking, in
Mark 9:1, “Assuredly, I say to you that there are some standing
here who will not taste death till they see the kingdom of God
present with power.” (NKJV) Paul says some years later in Col.
1:13, “He has delivered us from the power of darkness and
translated us into the kingdom of the Son of his love.” (NKJV)
Peter
used the keys of the kingdom (the keys being the gospel message with
its requirements) on the day of Pentecost. When the 3,000 that day
heard the message, believed it, repented of their sins (as instructed
to do--Acts 2:38), and were baptized for the forgiveness of sins (as
instructed to do--Acts 2:38), they were then translated into the
kingdom of God by God himself. It is in that kingdom, not out of it,
where salvation is found. If saved that day, no one doubts that they
were, they were at that very time translated into the “kingdom of
the Son of his love.” (Col. 1:13 NKJV)
Men
do not join the church (the kingdom of God), but rather God adds them
upon conditions. “The Lord added to the church daily those who
were being saved.” (Acts 2:47 NKJV) The conditions are those set
forth by Peter on the day of Pentecost. Jesus said, “Unless one
is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.”
(John 3:5 NKJV) There are only two kingdoms, the kingdom of God and
the kingdom of Satan. One must be in the kingdom of God for
salvation, but Jesus is the Savior of the body (Eph. 5:23) which is
the church (Col. 1:24). The kingdom and the body, the church, are
one and the same, the difference being only in the way it is being
portrayed. The kingdom has a king, the body has a head, but the same
one who is king is also the head--the head of the body and of the
church, which are one and the same (Col. 1:24).
Membership
in this body, this church of Christ, this church Jesus built, is
granted only on the basis of the new birth (John 3:5). It begins
with the Spirit in that through the Spirit’s word, the gospel
message, man is led to faith and repentance and a willingness and
desire to confess Christ for who he is--the Son of God--and it
culminates in baptism for the forgiveness of sins (Acts 2:38, 22:16)
but more succinctly to put to death the old man of sin and to arise a
new spiritual creation (Rom. 6:4-6). The old man dies in baptism
(Rom. 6:4), “we were buried with him through baptism into death.”
(NKJV) We come up from the water clothed with Christ (Gal. 3:27
NAS). Paul is thus able to say, “For by one Spirit we were all
baptized into one body…and have all been made to drink into one
Spirit.” (1 Cor. 12:13 NKJV)
These
then are the terms of membership if one desires to be in the church
Jesus built. One can get into churches built by men on other terms,
into man-made churches, but there is only one way into the Lord’s
church. We must go back to the New Testament and enter the Lord’s
church on the same terms of membership that they did back then. The
same process that makes one a Christian also makes him a member of
the church Jesus built, also adds him to the church, the Lord doing
the adding when the requirements are met.
(6)
Another mark of the Lord’s church is its organization. Each
congregation was on its own, running its own affairs, with no
guidance from any kind of national church organization. Each
congregation was to have elders appointed who met certain
requirements as set out in 1 Tim. 3:1-7 and Titus 1:5-9. This group
of men was sometimes referred to under various terms in the same way
Christians were as discussed earlier. The terms used were elders,
overseers, shepherds, bishops, pastors, and rulers.
One
of the requirements for a bishop or elder was that he be “the
husband of one wife” (1 Tim. 3:2, Titus 1:6), and thus the church
Jesus built was led by men. There were no women in leadership
positions in the church. Perhaps the reason is given by Paul in 1
Tim. 2 when he says, “I do not permit a woman to teach or to have
authority over a man…for Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam
was not deceived, but the woman being deceived, fell into
transgression.” (1 Tim. 2:12-14 NKJV) This is a historical reason
that time will never be able to erase and thus it was not a matter of
culture as some teach today.
If
you find a congregation that is in violation of God’s plan for
church leadership, you can be certain that it is not the church Jesus
built or it has apostasized,
one or the other. The eldership was always made up of a number of
men and not just a single individual (Titus 1:5, Heb. 13:17). Thus, in the church Christ built, there were no women in leadership
positions or teaching over men (preachers), nor was there any such
thing as the modern pastor system. Those things are from men, not
God.
There
was also a group of men known as deacons who worked or served in
the church under the direction of the eldership. Qualifications for
these men are found in 1 Tim. 3:8-13. Some feel the 7 men chosen to
supervise the daily distribution in the church at Jerusalem, as found
in Acts 6:1-6, were the first deacons. They certainly filled the role
deacons might well fill.
(7)
Worship of the church. What are the acts of worship as found in the
New Testament that, when done in the right manner, please God?
Partaking of the Lord’s Supper on the first day of the week is one
(Acts 20:7), prayer is another, singing psalms and hymns and
spiritual songs (Eph. 5:19-20, Col. 3:16) is included, teaching of
God’s word in which exhortation would be a part, and giving. Very
few, if any, would object to any of these things for all are pretty
much in agreement that these things can be found on the pages of the
New Testament as things authorized in worship. We can do all of
these things in the name of the Lord Jesus. “Whatever you do in
word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to
God the Father through him.” (Col. 3:17 NKJV)
But
when we talk about the worship of the church, there is more to it than
just the correct object of worship--God in heaven. Jesus said we
must worship God in spirit and truth (John 4:24). He then says in
reference to God that, “Your word is truth.” (John 17:17 NKJV)
This means, obviously, that man is not free to worship God just any way he chooses and call it worship, worship
that is
pleasing to God. God gets to decide what pleases, not man. If you
recall, the church at Corinth in 1 Cor. 11 had a worship problem as
it pertained to the Lord’s Supper. We
are not free, in the Lord’s church, to do things our way.
The
problem today, when one is searching for the church built by Christ
as far as it pertains to the worship, is finding a church that has
not added to the worship. All kinds of entertainment have been made a
part of the worship--plays, instrumental
music, musical
entertainment (generally called in my part of the country “special
music”), special events, and around election time even political
rallies passed off as worship service. No, if we want the church the
saints had in the first century, the one that belonged to Christ, we
will have to content ourselves with doing what they did under divine
approval and say that is good enough for it is good indeed as it came
to us from “the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation
or shadow of turning.” (James 1:17 NKJV)
(8)
The works of the church. The church Jesus built taught the gospel,
they attempted to build each other up in the faith, and lend a hand to
one another as needed; they were encouraged in every good work, and
helped the poor and needy. The mission of the church was spiritual, but that did not mean it was divorced from the cares of this world
completely. “Whoever has this world’s goods, and sees his
brother in need, and shuts up his heart from him, how does the love
of God abide in him?” (1 John 3:17 NKJV)
Much of what you see being done in churches today was never a part of the New
Testament church. There were no ball teams, no seminars on how to do
your taxes or lose weight, no business enterprises to raise money
versus giving it out of your own pocket, and the list could go on and
on. We need to learn what work the New Testament churches were
involved in and get back to it, and forget about everything else.
In
this article, I have tried to set forth the marks of identification
for the church Christ built. That is the church we need to be in and
get back to. If we did all denominations would cease to exist. Men
will fight that tooth and nail for it is one thing to say we want
Christ’s church and it is another thing to want it enough to give
up “our church,” our denomination. In other words, the old
saying “talk is cheap” is more than just a saying. A lot of
things will have to be given up to get back to Jesus’ church, but it
can be done once the will to do it is found.
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