Ecclesias are for Growth

“And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ: till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ; that we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive; but speaking the truth in love may grow up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ: from whom the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love” (Eph. 4:11-16).

These verses are very impressive in underscoring the fact that ecelesial life is mandatory to growth. Even when the spirit gifts were given, nobody had all the abilities needed for the growth God wanted. Every believer, even those having the greatest of gifts, was only partially equipped. They all required what others had to offer and the community as a whole needed what they as an individual could provide. God deliberately arranged His gifts so that the necessity of ecclesial association would stand out for all to see.

The objective of growth through ecclesial association is made clear in the emphasized phrases in the above quotation.

v.12 “perfecting” — Greek is katartismos, “a restoring, restoration: a making perfect, educating” (Liddell-Scott Greek Lexicon). The basic idea is to improve the quality of something; here the word has particular reference to improving ecclesial understanding of the word of God.

vs.12, 16 “edifying” — Greek is oikodoniee, “the act of building: a building, edifice. 2. metaphorically edification, improvement, instruction” (L-S). As a building grows from the initial foundation to its full size, so the body of Christ is to grow in size and in quality.

v. 13 “unto a perfect man” — Greek for “perfect” is teleios, “complete, perfect, entire … of animals, full-grown; a full-grown man…” (L-S). The figure of a child growing into a man is prominent in vs. 14 and 15; we are “to be no more children” but are to “grow up” into mature disciples in Christ. Note how the figure of speech is based on the human growth process of many individual body parts maturing, sometimes at different rates, but eventually resulting in a single mature person.

Growth In knowledge

In these verses, one phrase after another underscores the need for growth in knowledge.

V. 13 “…the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God…”

v.14 “…carried about with every wind of doctrine…

v. 15 “speaking the truth…

Everybody was dependent upon others for growth in knowledge. Most needed to learn from those who were particularly blessed in this regard — those who were apostles, prophets, teachers. If those with such gifts absented themselves from the ecclesia, others would not be able to grow in knowledge as God intended. Even those who were prophets needed to learn from those who were teachers, and teachers from those who were prophets. God so designed the situation that ecclesial association was a requisite to growth for each believer.

Today we are blessed with the completed New Testament and we may feel the principles that were true for ecclesial life in the first century are not true today. But the sweeping language of Ephesians 4 surely persuades us God’s principles have not changed.

We may think we can not learn anything from somebody else or we may think we can learn everything necessary from one person. Such is not the case. The interchange of exposition and discussion of various points that is an integral part of ecclesial life contributes to the growth in knowledge of even those who know the most about scripture. The responses and questions of some babes in Christ often help clarify points for everybody.

We need to be wise in this regard. A hasty stifling of a question that may be new to us can shut off an area of consideration that would eventually add to the growth of our own knowledge and that of the ecclesia.

We may wish that all wisdom could be garnered from one teacher. We may find it disturbing to associate with those who approach things differently from ourselves. But one of the reasons for ecclesial life is growth in knowledge and this comes about by the various parts of the body contributing as they are able.

Growth In numbers

Part of the “work of the ministry” and the ‘Fulness of Christ” (vs. 12, 13) relates to the quantity of people who are converted to the Truth. While quality is more important than quantity, it remains true that “blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in” (Rom. 11:25).

Rarely has someone learned the Truth without several ecelesial members contributing to their instruction and conversion. Once baptized, the ecclesia supplies the new member (or should do) with continued instruction, family-type fellowship, social activities and sometimes financial assistance.

Without such support, many who turn to the Truth would not be able to hold fast to the end. We are social creatures and we need the fellowship of like-minded believers. In many cases, the Truth separates people from their natural families. The ecclesia must step in and fill this gap. The fact of an ecclesial community thus contributes to the growth in numbers of those who are in Christ.

Growth in character

We are to speak the truth in love; the body is to increase unto the edifying of itself in love.

There is to be more than growth in knowledge and in numbers within ecclesial life. Our characters must increase and develop and our personality traits often must be modified.

The ecclesia, with all its component parts, is supplied that we, individually and collectively, might come “unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ” (vs. 11- 13). Love and persistence, forgiveness, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, wisdom, judgment, holiness, justice, integrity are all to improve for we are to “grow up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ” (v. 15).

This is a vital area of growth, for the saints of all ages are to be joint rulers of the world with Christ.

Fundamental Points

The ecclesia Is God's idea

The ecclesial community is not man’s idea; it is not a Christadelphian idea; it is God’s idea.

Baptism is more than the individual being baptized into fellowship with the Father and the Son; it is inclusion into a community of believers established by God; we are all baptized into one body.

God's deliberate choice

God’s design is a deliberate choice on His part. There are many alternatives to the concept of one community of believers.

The individual believer could continue in his former associations.

He would not come to meeting but would spend his time with family, neighbors and the religious group to which he originally belonged. Even today, some think this would be a more effective way of spreading the Truth.

But this is not God’s design.

Believers could be divided into different groups following their favorite teachers.

The ecclesia in Corinth was in danger of being rent apart on just such a basis (1 Cor. 1: 12-13). The Jews were used to such a system in their loyalty to various rabbis.

Within Christadelphia, some would prefer to have ecclesias separated along lines of expositional emphasis: all favoring pioneer writings in one meeting, all leaning to a young earth view in another, etc.

But the followers of Christ are not to organize themselves in such a way.

Disciples of Christ could be divided into groups along ethnic, social and economic lines.

In New Testament times, this would have meant separate ecclesias for Jews, Gentiles, slaves and slave-owners. Such a structure would have made life much easier for most brethren and sisters. Jewish and Gentile believers frequently irritated one another because of their different dietary practices and attitudes to Jewish holidays. Left to themselves, they would, no doubt, have preferred to maintain one ecclesia for Jews and another for Gentiles, but this was not God’s design. Slaves and slave-owners moved in wholly different circles in daily life. Why put them together in ecclesias where all are equal? In our own day, it is inevitable that in the ecclesia we have to get along with some people we find difficult. We have no choice as to whom is baptized. If a person believes the Truth and commits himself to living it, we can not refuse him. He may come from a background or socio-economic level that is radically different from our own. We may find dealing with him uncomfortable and would prefer that ecclesias were divided along lines of people with similar heritage and occupation. But that is not God’s way.

We may find that some people have traits which irritate us.

We would, no doubt, prefer to organize an ecclesia where everybody in it had a personality we found agreeable to ourselves. Ecclesial life would be much easier if God’s design were different. But it is not.

Believers are to put aside worldly differences and are to be bound into one fellowship by their baptism into the one body. From a human point of view, this will cause problems. But it is God’s design.

One ecclesial body of all true believers

God set Christ “at his own right hand in the heavenly places, far above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion, and every name that is named … and gave him to be the head over all things to the church, which is his body, the fulness of him that filleth all in all … there is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling … we are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones” (Eph. 1:20-23; 4:4; 5:30).

All true believers of all ages are united in the one ecclesia in Christ. Only in the kingdom will the reality of this association be fully manifested. In any one generation, distance dampens the relationship between members of the body in different geographic areas. As much as possible, however, the Apostle sought to make the concept of the one body a reality by inter-ecclesial introductions, associations and welfare projects. The technological advances of our own day have many negative aspects but one great positive effect is to facilitate drawing the worldwide body of Christ closer together. Our opportunity to benefit from and to minister to other members of the body is thus enhanced.

Local ecclesias by geographic area

“And at that time there was a great persecution against the church which was at Jerusalem.” “They returned again to Lystra, and to Iconium, and Antioch … and when they had ordained them elders in every church…” “Greet Priscilla and Aquila my helpers in Christ Jesus … unto whom not only I give thanks, but also all the churches of the Gentiles. Likewise greet the church that is in their house” (Act. 8:1; 14:23; Rom. 16:3-5).

The word “church” (ecclesia) is clearly used in two ways: one referring to the total body of believers spanning all places and all generations, the other alluding to a specific group of believers who came together in one meeting place. The size of the local community was evidently determined by geographic distance and available facilities.

Many in One, One in Many – The Message of the Figures

While a variety of figures of speech are used for the ecclesia, a common message runs through them all — many individuals are to be joined into one unit.

The human body

In the body, there are many easily distinguishable parts having a variety of abilities and functions but they are united into one working whole.

“Just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, so in Christ we who are many form one body, and each member belongs to all the others” (Rom. 12:43 NIV). –

“For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body: so also is Christ” (I Cor. 12:12). The point is stressed that there are many unique parts but only one body.

“For the body is not one member, but many … But now are they many members, yet but one body” (I Cor. 12:14,20).

God’s design of the human body has been carefully conceived so that no members should be neglected and that each member should sympathize with and care for the other members.

“That there should be no schism in the body; but that the members should have the same care one for another. And whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; or one member be honored, all the members rejoice with it” (vs. 25-26).

There is no mistaking the intent of this analogy. We are to apply the points to ecclesial life. No matter what is our ethnic origin, cultural background or economic status, we are all united into one body.

“For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free … Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular” (I Cor. 12:13,27).

A temple made of stones

“And are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone; in whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord” (Eph. 2:20-21).

The parts are separately identifiable and have different functions — corner stone, foundation stones, etc. — but they form one unified structure. There are many parts but one whole. While this is clearly a characteristic of a temple made of stone, it is not true of all structures. A tent, for instance, would not suitably represent the ecclesia as the canvas appears as one piece rather than many separate, distinguishable pieces.

But what of the tabernacle, was not this a tent that represented the ecclesia?

Yes, it was. In order to do so, however, the tabernacle was constructed in a most unusual manner. . The sections of the covering curtains were not sewn together but were coupled with loops and taches (a device, like a buckle, for fastening two parts together). They thus retained their individual identity while combining to form one tabernacle.

“Couple the curtains together with the taches: and it shall be one tabernacle… and couple the tent together that it may be one” (Ex. 26:6,11).

In like manner, the structure itself was formed of many separate boards tied into one unit by the middle bar that reached from end to end (Ex. 26:18). Thus, rather than contravening the principle being considered, the peculiar construction of the tabernacle in the wilder-ness actually reinforces the importance of the ecclesia being a community of many parts united into one whole.

A family

We are so accustomed to calling one another brother and sister, we easily forget that this is really figurative language. The natural family is a figure for the association to which we have been called in Christ. And in this association, we, though many, are spoken of as all belonging to the same family. The Lord emphasizes the point that there are not several divine families, there is only one. Christ died that “he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad” (John 11:52). And, again, the apostle prays “unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named” (Eph. 3:14-15).

The Father, the Son, the angels and the saints are all spoken of as being included in the one family name. The point again is clear: many separate individuals united into one.

A flock of sheep

“I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep and am known of mine … and other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd” (John 10:14,16).

The believers are likened to a flock of sheep. Once again it is stressed that, while several flocks might be more convenient, there “must” be only one flock gathered under one shepherd.

The use of sheep to represent believers, rather than goats or cattle, is significant. Of all herding animals, sheep tend to pack together and move together in a tightly knit unit.

The Bread and the Wine

The memorial emblems speak of the unity shared among the various members of the ecclesia.

“The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? For we being many are one bread, and one body: for we are all partakers of that one bread” 1 Cor. 10:16-17).

Bread is made of many grains being eventually formed into one loaf. Wine comes from the juice of many grapes being crushed and distilled into its liquid form. In both cases, the end product is a result of many distinct parts being formed into one whole, like the ecclesia.

This similarity would not hold true if the memorial consisted, for example, of milk and a roast of meat. The roast would be from one animal and the milk could come from only one cow. With bread and wine, however, the perceptive believer is again reminded of the principle that many are to be united into one.

Five Practical Suggestions for solving Ecclesial Problems

1. Don't panic – Problems are inevitable

Problems are inevitable in ecclesial life due to factors beyond our control.

God has ordained that the ecclesia should be one body. Grecian Jews and Hebrew Jews may have lived more happily if they had separate, ecelesias for people of different cultural backgrounds. But doing so would have been in opposition to the concept of one body in Christ. Given the mix of backgrounds and personalities represented in any ecclesia, tensions and misunderstandings are likely to occur from this one factor alone.

The ecclesia is to be “in” the world as a living witness to the light of the gospel. Being thus in the world, the ecclesia is highly susceptible to the impact of the problems of contemporary society. The ethnic bias of Palestinian verses Grecian Jews was a problem amongst Jews throughout the world. In spite of the binding influence of fellowship in Christ, this social problem affected the ecclesia. Our situation is similar; we will be affected by the problems in the surrounding society. Lower morals, looser family structure, greater incidence of divorce, and increased tolerance for deviate relation hips will result in a greater incidence of such problems in our ecclesias. We may want to isolate ourselves by establishing remote agricultural commune. That is not an acceptable solution, however, for while we must not be lovers of the world, God has ordained that we must live in it.

Human nature, with its carnal impulses, is not changed by baptism. The neglect of Grecian widows was inconsiderate, unkind and petty but it was a manifestation of the flesh. Human nature was still a constant plague to the disciples in the first century and it is to us today. The ecclesia at Jerusalem had witnessed an earlier, dramatic incident proving the point. Ananias and Sapphira gave into the lust of the flesh and the pride of life in holding back part of the price of land they sold while pretending they had generously given the total amount to the ecclesial fund. Their sudden death was a pointed reminder to all that, until this corruptible is made incorruptible, ecclesial problems will occur because of our human nature.

Big problems even in first century

The magnitude of ecclesial problems will sometimes surprise and shock us but don’t panic, big problems occurred even with the apostles present.

Upon careful consideration, there was nothing small about the ecclesial problem in Acts 6. All involved had been baptized into Christ in whom all were to be distinguished by their love for one another even as the Lord loved them. Yet they were practicing worldly unkindness. All were Jews who had been raised on the Old Testament which stressed that widows are vulnerable and among the first to be hurt when the flesh rules (Ex. 22:22; Is. 1: 17). Yet widows were the ones being hurt. All involved had been adopted into the family of God in whom cultural differences are to become inconsequential. Yet it was their cultural background that was a major factor in the problem. They had all been called in hope of ruling the world in God’s name (1 Cor. 6:2). Yet they could not fairly administer the daily meal. A serious situation existed in the ecclesia at Jerusalem; a shocking one and the apostles were present.

If they had serious problems that close to the ascension of Christ and with all of the apostles in their ecclesia, how much more likely are we to have serious problems today? The frequency of wrong conduct will be much less in ecclesial life than in the world, but any of the works of the flesh can occur in the ecclesia. Don’t panic when they do.

Problems can help spiritual development

Don’t panic when ecclesial problems occur because problems can have a beneficial effect.

We may be deeply hurt when a loved one is falsely accused by another believer. That is bad, but it is good in that we have an opportunity to exercise forgiveness. We will never develop the attribute of forgiveness unless we have occasion to exercise it.

We may be annoyed by continual frustrations caused by a difficult personality in the meeting. But in learning to deal with different personalities, we are being prepared to shepherd the inhabitants of the kingdom who will be under our care.

Prolonged and in-depth Bible study may be required to counteract subtle error from within the body. But the result can be a useful sharpening of our own understanding of the

2. Follow Bible precedents

An answer in Deut. 1:9-15

The leaders of the Jerusalem ecclesia were overburdened because of ecclesial growth. What should they do? Continue trying to manage everything themselves fearing to share responsibility with others? Pray that the problems would go away? Hire outside experts to handle special areas of difficulty?

What they did was look to the scriptures. A similar situation had arisen with Moses and the good solution applied at that time was used as a guideline by the apostles. An overburdened ecclesial leader shared responsibilities with other people of God (Deut. 1:9-16)..

How were the, new serving brethren to be selected? Again the biblical precedent was followed: they were chosen by the congregation (Dt. 1: 13; Acts 6:3).

What method should the congregation use for the selection process? No method was specified. They could do as they chose in this regard (Dt. 1: 13; Acts 6:3).

Would the apostles have any final say in the acceptability of the brethren selected? Yes, they would follow Moses’ example and review those who had been chosen (Dt. 1: 15; Acts 6:3).

Other examples of following Bible precedents

The Jerusalem conference was settled by reference to Amos 9:11-12 (Acts. 15:15-19).

First century ecclesial welfare was patterned after the gathering of manna in the wilderness (2 Cor. 8:13-15 citing Ex. 16:18).

When Israel first entered the land, Achan and his family were dramatically killed for a sin of deception motivated by greed. At the beginning of the ecclesial era, similar dramatic action was taken by the apostles against Ananias and Sapphira who committed the same type of sin as Achan (Josh. 7:20-26; Acts 5: 1 -11).

Christadelphians already do this

We already do this in the major areas of ecclesial life. The Christadelphian structure is based on following the guidelines of scripture, not the wisdom of men. We stress anonymous donations because of Matt. 6:24. We have no ecclesiastical power structure because of Matt. 23:8-12. Ecclesias are organized as autonomous units linked to one another by our common belief in the gospel after the pattern of the ecclesias of New Testament times.

When specific problems arise, we should continue the pattern of following the precedents of scripture in working out a solution.

However, we can’t do this unless we know the Bible well. The guidelines and principles are all there but they are not presented in textbook fashion neatly indexed to the specific situations we face. We will only see the applicability of a given precedent if we are thoroughly familiar with the circumstances of various scriptural incidents and well acquainted with divine principles.

The purpose of scripture is to equip the person of God for right conduct (II Tim. 3:17). We don’t need the gifts of the Holy Spirit is this regard. In fact, even when the spirit gifts were extant, the available scriptures provided the guidelines for solving problems. In having the completed Bible, we actually have an advantage in this regard over ecclesias of the first century. However, we must use our advantage, and we can only use it if we know our Bibles.

3. Apply spiritual commonsense.

“Look ye out from among you” — If those administering the delicate welfare matter were chosen by the community as a whole, the ecclesia would more likely cooperate with the decisions of those selected. If the apostles, who were all Hebrew Jews, had appointed the committee, many of the brethren might have resented the situation. Remember, human nature does not disappear when we are baptized.

Seven Grecian Jews selected — Every one of those chosen by the ecclesial community has a Greek name indicating they were Grecian Jews. This is most remarkable and indicates that, given the opportunity, the brethren and sisters were sensitive to the problem and anxious to have it rectified in the spirit of Christ. No doubt, if the apostles had made such a selection themselves, many of the Hebrew brethren would have considered they were overreacting and would have complained the appointees would practice reverse discrimination. But given the opportunity to make the selection themselves, the nominees were accepted and the ecclesia prospered.

‘Whom they set before the apostles” — An ecclesia can sometimes act unwisely and it only makes common sense for the elders to review ecclesial selections.

The entire process showed wise judgment. The potential reaction of human nature was anticipated and a safeguard was provided against rash decisions.

Spiritual commonsense today

In our own situation, spiritual commonsense needs to be exercised in ecclesial matters.

Some examples:

To make someone recording brother who has recently moved to the ecclesia is not sound judgment; he does not know the strengths and weaknesses of members well enough to react properly for their eternal good. For strong brethren to divide over a weak brother’s odd ideas or sinful action does not make sense. Often in such cases the one causing the trouble drifts from the Truth leaving the others still divided where for years they had worked together in harmony. To make quick decisions on items newly introduced at a business meeting often results in bad decisions. Let matters be thought through so that their possible affects can be considered. Making rules to solve a passing problem is not sound judgment. Rely on biblical principles and precedents rather than on “quick-fixes” which are often neither scriptural nor appropriate.

Ask of God

Commonsense is a modem synonym for wisdom. If we lack wisdom, let us ask it of God “that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him” (Jam. 1:5).

4. Establish right ecclesial structure

“The number of the disciples multiplied” — Ecclesias do not stand still. The Jerusalem ecclesia had grown so large that the apostles could no longer cope with their responsibilities; help was needed.

With our own ecclesias, having no arranging board may work fine when there are only 11 brethren and sisters. However, if the ecclesia grows to 50, deciding every matter by impromptu business meetings becomes unwieldy and contributes to problems. Ecclesial structure needs to be adjusted as ecclesias grow.

Match jobs and people

It was not appropriate that the apostles should spend time on administrative matters. By virtue of their personal experiences with Christ, they were uniquely qualified for gospel proclamation and exposition of die word.

Every person is not equally suited to every ecclesial task. In fact, considerable trouble is sometimes caused when a brother or sister is given a responsibility for which they are unsuited.

A brother may be an excellent speaker but may be unsuited to handle the complaints frequently presented to a recording brother. A sister may be an excellent Sunday school teacher but unable to work well with others on a catering committee. A brother may work well with young people but be sufficiently disorganized so that he is unable to keep up ecclesial records as finance brother.

Some ecclesias are too small to allow much choice. But, where selection is possible, those who serve should do so in areas where they are best suited by virtue of ability, background and personality.

5. Keep spiritual priorities uppermost

“It is not reason…” — There was nothing wrong with serving -tables, but the most important aspect of ecclesial life is the eternal salvation of its members. The apostles were able to contribute in the area of preaching, exposition and spiritual counsel better than anyone else in the Jerusalem ecclesia. They felt obliged, therefore, to devote their efforts to those areas.

Sometimes we cannot do everything we are able and willing. to do in ecclesial life. A choice has to be made of which activities to pursue and which ones to drop. If that situation arises, let us keep spiritual priorities uppermost and concentrate on those areas where we best contribute to the eternal wellbeing of others.

“men full of the spirit and wisdom” — While the committee was to perform an administrative function, the most important consideration was that they do so in harmony with the will of God. The primary consideration in selecting brethren for the task was not to be their background in social work, or catering service or their organizational abilities. These factors may have been noted, but they were not to be the most important consideration.

Qualifications of elders

The same ranking of priorities is evident in the qualifications for ecclesial elders set forth in I Tim. 32-12. In that list, there is no mention of organizational ability, appearance, economic status, personal charisma or success in business. As noted earlier, considerations of secular background may sometimes be useful but they are always to be secondary to spiritual qualifications.

The objective of ecclesial life is not a smooth-running organization, but the long-term development of human beings suitable for receiving immortality.

Some examples:

A finance brother may be excellent with the books but wholly lacking in compassion for those who get in financial trouble through their own ineptitude. Compassion is more important than fiscal impeccability. A recording brother maybe early to meetings and efficient in notifying people of duties but be quickly provoked by brethren who are tardy because of family problems. Sympathy is more important than efficiency. A Sunday school teacher may provide excellent lessons with beautiful graphics but be intolerant of dull children who perform poorly on homework and tests. Patience is more important than performance.

Every Member Important

You are an important brother or sister! The other person is an important brother or sister! Each is vital to the maturation of the community to its intended potential.

“…even Christ from whom the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love” (Eph. 4:1516).

This is an essential principle of ecclesial life and is conveyed several times in different ways by scripture.

The broad distribution of spirit gifts

At Pentecost

The indications are that the Holy Spirit filled all 120 of the ecclesia.

“…the number of names together were about an hundred and twenty … And when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one accord in one place … And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit … this is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel; And it shall come to pass in the last days, saith God, I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh… ” (Acts 1:15; 2:1,3-4,16-17).

While Peter. and John were the chief spokesmen for the ecclesia, the broad distribution of spirit-gifts negated any idea of an elite hierarchy for: “your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams: and on my servants and * on my handmaidens 1 will pour out in those days of my Spirit…” (Acts 2:17-18).

To gentile converts

As the gospel spread to the Gentiles, apparently every ecclesial member was given some aspect of the Holy Spirit gifts.

“And you also were included in Christ when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, which is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance… ” (Eph. 1: 13-14 NIV). “But unto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ … [he] gave gifts unto men … and he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets … according to the effectual working in the measure of every part…” (Eph. 4:7-11,16).

The effect of such a policy would be threefold:

all members would feel included as important individuals within the ecclesia; every member would want all of the others to participate so benefit could be realized from the gifts possessed by others; the ecclesia would only function to its optimum potential when all members fully participated.

1 Cor. 12:6-11 confirms the spirit gifts were dispersed widely and a careful reading of the verses further indicates that, in the first ecclesias, every member was given some spirit gift.

… it is the same God which worketh all in all … But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal…dividing to every man severally as he will.”

The individual received a gift of the spirit to “profit withall’ (v.7). Each person would thus be under pressure to participate fully in the ecclesia that the whole group might be benefited thereby. If he did not, then the ecclesia would lose his input of teaching, administration, healing, tongues or whatever his gift might be.

In today’s ecclesia

The same is true today. While we do not have a gift of the Holy Spirit, we each have unique contributions we can make to ecclesial life. If we are not fully involved, we deprive the ecclesia of that benefit others can derive from us. What can we do for the ecclesia?

Attend meetings, listen attentively, participate with joy in singing, prepare carefully for any participation. Willingly take part in providing refreshments and in maintaining the meeting place. Thoughtfully communicate with others by conversation, phone and letter edifying others by our faith, joy and peace. Show hospitality, care for the sick, share our possessions, talents, homes and resources with those who are in need. Instruct our children and those of others. Spread the word of truth to friends and in ecclesial efforts. Use special abilities in writing, art or clear thinking for exposition and communication of the word of God. In a kindly manner, benefit others by our experience and wisdom.

The lesson of the human body, 1 Cor. 12:14-27

No matter how unique he may feel, every believer is part of a community of believers;

“For the body is not one, member, but many. If the foot shall say, Because I am not the hand, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body?…” (vs. 14- 16).

A variety of individual contributions are essential to the proper operation of the whole.

“If the whole body were an eye, where were the hearing?…” (vs. 17-20).

No person can say other believers are unnecessary to him; every member is important;

‘the eye cannot say unto the hand, I have no need of thee…” (vs. 21-23).

Every believer should have the same care for all members alike:

“but God hath tempered the body together, having given more abundant honor to that part which lacked: that there should be no schism in the body; but that the members should have the same care one for another” (vs. 24-25).

One believer’s problem should be a concern to the entire ecclesia;

“And whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it…” (v.26).

As the lessons apply to individuals within ecclesias, so they can apply to ecclesias within the brotherhood. For example, a small ecclesia that feels inconsequential compared to those which are large and well-known, can be a valuable training ground for young brethren. And they can be an example to others if they diligently send their young people to ecclesial functions in larger ecclesial centers.

The lesson of the stones, 1 Kgs. 5:17; 7:9-11

The great stones used to build Solomon’s temple and associated buildings represent believers in the ecclesia.

“And are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone; in whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord: in whom ye also are builded… ” (Eph. 2:20-22).

The ecclesia is likened to a temple in the process of being built. In the figure, the corner stone speaks of the Lord Jesus Christ, the foundation stones represent the apostles and prophets and the other stones the rest of us. That much is plain. What may not be so evident is the allusion to the stones in Solomon’s temple complex contained in the phrase “fitly framed together.”

Fitly framed together

The Greek word is sunarmologeo used only here and 4:16 (“fitly joined together”) and means, “to frame accurately together” (L-S). The word alludes to I Kings 6:7:

“And the house, when it was in building, was built of stone made ready before it was brought thither: so that there was neither hammer nor axe nor any tool of iron heard in the house, while it was in building. “

Some of the stones weighed thousands of pounds. God’s instructions forbade making any final adjustments to the stone once it was moved on to the temple site. Certainly, no one wanted to haul these stones into place and be forced to haul them out again because they did not fit properly. Great care would thus be taken with each stone so that it would fit perfectly when put into its final spot in the project.

God’s instructions applied whether the stone was a highly visible one or whether it was to be covered over with wood never to be seen again once it was in place (1 Kgs. 6:18). Great care would be expended to make every stone right, every stone was important to the master designer.

The message to us is clear — we are represented by those stones; great care is being taken with us to mold us that we might be fitly framed parts of the dwelling place of God. We may not be prominent, highly-visible stones, but we are important to the great builder.

Costly stones

The stones were fitly framed and they were described as being “costly.”

“And the king commanded, and they brought great stones, costly stones, and hewed stones, to lay the foundation of the house … All these were of costly stones, according to the measures of hewed stones, sawed with saws, within and without … and the foundation was of costly stones, even great stones, stones of ten cubits, and stones of eight cubits” (I Kgs. 5: 17; 7:9-10).

A person reading I Kgs. 5: 17 could think three different categories of stones were in mind — very large (“great”) stones, precious jewels (“costly stones”) and stones that required cutting (“hewed stones”). Upon reading IKgs. 7:9-10, however, we see that all three descriptions apply to the same stones. They were very large (up to 12′ by 15′), they were hewed with stone-cutting saws and were spoken of as costly.

“Costly” — Hebrew is yaqar, “precious, rare” (Young’s); describes God’s love for the upright in Psa. 45:9 — “Kings’ daughters were among thy honorable women,” and for the Messiah in Isa. 28:16 — “Behold, I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner stone… ” cf. I Pet. 2:6.

The contour of Jerusalem required that many of these “costly” stones be used to provide a level platform for the erection of Solomon’s complex of buildings (see illustration and note I Kgs. 7:8-9). Most of those stones may, seem unimportant to us but to God they were “costly, precious.” In like manner, we may feel we are an obscure member of the ecclesial building; we may think our work is unimportant but to God we are “costly precious.”

Note, too, the great effort in carefully preparing these costly stones for their appointed place. The sawing and shaping may have been a time-consuming, laborious and sometimes painful process (cf. Heb. 12: 11) but it was done with great care by the builders for each of the stones was precious to the great builder.

Lessons from the second temple, Haggal 1 and 2

Realistic encouragement, 2:34

The returned exiles had recommenced work on the temple when God’s word came through Haggai:

“Who is left among you that saw this house in her first glory? and how do ye see it now: is it not in your eyes in comparison of it as nothing?” (Hag. 2:3)

Was this a discouraging remark? Not if we know the divine perspective. Whether or not a project is glorious to man is wholly irrelevant to God. While this temple project was not magnificent, God accepted it. He realized their limitations; the message was, “Don’t be discouraged but “work.”

“Yet now be strong … saith the LORD, and work: for I am with you saith the LORD of hosts” (Hag. 2:4).

God realizes our limitations in talent and resources; He knows our physical difficulties and natural responsibilities. What He wants is for us to put our hearts into His service, to hands to the work and He will be pleased, in fact, He will be glorified bv such conduct.

The work that glorifies God

“Go up to the mountain, and bring wood, and build the house; and 1 will take pleasure in it, and I will be glorified, saith the LORD” (Hag. L8).

There was nothing glamorous about the task at hand: cut the wood, shape it, haul it and do it with your own hands. Here was not a call to prominence but to simple hard work. Yet look at what would be accomplished. The great God would take pleasure in their willing diligence and would be glorified by it. (The “it” in 1:8 was not the temple, which would be four years in building, but the labor of working thereon.)

We need to remember that the Lord Almighty is not glorified by the splendor of a great cathedral or the chords of a majestic organ; He is glorified by the humble work done in respect of His will. That would be hard to remember when struggling up the mountain under a load of wood, but here is conduct in which God delights.

All involved in the work, 1:12,14; 2:2,4

Of 38 verses in the entire prophecy of Haggai, 4 of them stress the same important point: Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel, governor of Judah, Joshua the son of Josedech, the high priest and all the remnant of the people obeyed the voice of the Lord and did work in the house of the LORD of hosts, their God. Not just the leaders were involved, not just the people did the laborious chores, but all gave themselves to the work. Through the prophet, God made it clear that His delight would come from everyone personally doing arduous routine labor on a project that was not magnificent.

Every member of that community was important. Every work done according to His will glorifies Him.

Today there are various humble tasks we do that give God pleasure:

The brother cleaning the hall may not have the talent for platform duties but can glorify God none the less in his ready labor.

The young couple prevented from doing mission work by family care and physical infirmity can give God pleasure by ministering in their local ecclesia.

God realizes the limitations of sickly members and takes pleasure in what they can do.

He sees the countless hours spent at preaching work which seem to yield no fruit and is glorified by the effort.

We may be limited by talent, resources and ability and our contribution may be small but God’s view is not man’s view. He is the one who put this treasure in earthen vessels. He is the one who has called not many mighty, not many noble, not many brilliant people. But every one He has called is ,important to Him and the work done according to His will gives Him pleasure.

Every member a joint ruler

Everyone found faithful will share in ruling the world with Christ.

The promise is not limited to apostles, prophets and elders.

It is not restricted to brethren or to sisters with many children.

Every believer who overcomes and keeps Christ’s works unto the end will share his throne. Therefore:

Every believer needs to develop divine attributes of character now. Every believer needs to be able to apply principles to specific situations. Every member is important!

Unity is Vital to God

The dire reaction to those who would disrupt the unify of the body indicates that something basic is at issue.

Unity Is basic to divine thinking, Eph. 4:4-6

God's name speaks of many united in one

“And God said unto Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and he said, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you. And God said moreover unto Moses, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, The LORD God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob hath sent me unto you: this is my name for ever, and this is my memorial unto all generations” (Ex. 3:14-15).

While Yahweh is the name of God, the full memorial title is “the LORD God of your fathers.” The significance of this title is seen from the following:

LORD — “I will be”, as the Hebrew is the first person, future form of the verb “to be.”

God — “mighty ones” from the Hebrew elohim which is a plural word.

Of your fathers — those who are spiritual sons and daughters of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

Herein is the purpose of God with mankind declared for He will take the spiritual seed of Abraham and, making them mighty spirit beings ‘ unite them into His name for ever. He will be mighty ones of Abraham. Many will be united in one and the one will be manifested in many.

This is His purpose and this is the basic method of divine operation. This very concept is employed now in the unity of the ecclesial body as many are united into one.

Immortal hosts working as one

Psa. 96:12-13 reads: “…then shall all the trees of the wood rejoice before the LORD: for he cometh, to judge the earth: he shall judge the world with righteousness, and the people with his truth.”

Who will judge the world with righteousness? God Himself, personally? The verse seems to say so clearly enough. But consider Acts 17:31:

“he hath appointed a day, in the which he will judge the world in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained…”

God will rule the world through the Lord Jesus Christ. Thus in Psalm 96, the name Yahweh includes the Lord Jesus as well as Deity himself.

Zech. 14:18 reads: “And if the family of Egypt go not up, and come not, that have no rain; there shall be the plague, wherewith the LORD will smite the heathen that come not up to keep the feast of tabernacles.”

Who will run the world during the kingdom age occasionally administering punishment upon various nations, God Himself personally? Consider Rev. 2:26-27: “And he that overcometh … to him will I give power over the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of iron … even as I received of my Father. ” Rulership of the world will co-shared by Christ with the immortalized saints who will share his throne of power. Thus in Zech. 14, the name Yahweh includes the host of the saints as well as Christ and die Deity.

There are not lords many and gods many, there is a host of holy ones included in the one Yahweh name and working as one in Him. This is the same principle as the unity of the body of believers today. Again, many in one is seen as basic to divine thinking.

When, therefore, we disrupt the unity of the body of Christ we are offending in a very sensitive area of God’s purpose. That is why those who cause division are spoken of in such harsh terms.

Dividing the Body is Sin

The sin of dichostasia

The Greek word dichostasia (“divisions, seditions”) is used only three times in the New Testament. A consideration of the passages where it occurs stresses the importance of conforming to God’s design of the unity of the body.

“Now I beseech you, brethren, mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and avoid them. For they that are such serve not our Lord Jesus Christ, but their own belly; and by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple” (Rom. 16:17-18).

Those who fragment the ecclesial community:

Disobey the teaching of the gospel. Are to be avoided. Do not serve Christ. Are mastered by the flesh (“their own belly”) not by the Lord.

“For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envying, and strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal and walk as men?” (I Cor. 3:3)

Note the repetition of the word “carnal” in vs. 1-4. Actions which cause divisions are not spiritual, they are carnal. True, the guilty parties may be actively involved in ecclesial affairs and may be enthusiastic about a given aspect of scripture. But if they are divisive in their effects, they are acting according to the flesh and not the spirit.

Note as well that those causing divisions are condemned for defacing the temple of God (vs. 9,17).

“Now the works of the flesh are …seditions … they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (Gal. 5:20).

Significantly, of the 17 works of the flesh listed in these verses, 8 of them relate to attitudes that prevail when ecclesial turmoil exits. They are: (definitions from Liddell-Scott Greek Lexicon)

Actions causing dichostasia

Teaching false doctrine. This must be opposed or eventually the body of believers will no longer exist for, by definition, they are only the ecclesia if they believe the truth. With some upholding wrong teaching and some opposing it, the unity of the body is shattered. Upholding wrong conduct as being right. This is done both through wrong teaching and through unrepentant indulgence in sin. Treating other members of the body as if they were not. Such behavior is diametrically opposed to the very concept of one body in Christ. Treating others as members of the body when they are not. The demarcation of the body of Christ is thereby blurred until it is no longer distinguishable. Seeking a personal following which is loyal to oneself rather than the community as a whole. This frequently entails demeaning others or promoting deviant teaching. Teaching in a confusing or misleading manner that arouses suspicions of false doctrine. Isolating oneself into family groups.

Solving an Ecclesial Problem – A Case Study from Acts 6:1-8

Acts 6:1 Trouble over ecclesial welfare

“the number of the disciples was multiplied” — Cf. 2:41, 3,000 added; 2:47, “the Lord added to the church daily; ” 4:4, “many … believed … the number of the men was about five thousand; ” 5:14, “And believers were the more added to the Lord, multitudes both of men and women.”

“the Grecians against the Hebrews” “Grecians” refers to “Grecian Jews” (NIV) who were born outside of Palestine and spoke Greek. The “Hebrews” were “Hebraic Jews” (NIV) who were born in Palestine and spoke Aramaic. While all were believers in Christ, differences would be apparent in many aspects of daily life such as customs in dress and choices of food.

Many Grecian Jews who believed would have resettled in Jerusalem to be with the ecclesia there.

“the daily ministration” — As part of the communal life of the Jerusalem ecclesia (2:44-45; 4:35), widows were evidently served daily in a group setting (cf. v.2).

Acts 6:2-4, A solution proposed

“The twelve called…” — The apostles and the believers had Holy Spirit gifts so why not solve the problem with a divinely inspired edict? As is evident throughout the New Testament, the gift of the Holy Spirit confirmed the word of the gospel as truth (Mk. 16:20; Hb. 2:4) but did not provide miraculous solutions to ecclesial or personal problems (Acts 15:6-7; 1Cor. 12:7-9; Gal. 2:11-14).

“the multitude of the disciples” — A business meeting was convened. All were believers and all were to have a part in solving the problem.

“It is not reason” — “It would not be right” (NIV). Christ had assigned the apostles the particular task of gospel extension throughout the world (Acts 1:8). They should concentrate on that assignment

“leave the word of God and serve tables” — “Leave the word” is meant in a relative sense for Stephen was active in many areas of the Truth including gospel proclamation (Acts 6:8-15). However, the apostles wanted to be free of administrative duties in order to be “continually” involved in prayer and biblical instruction (v.4).

The pastoral work of serving tables was not unimportant as is evident by the, quality of disciple needed for the task (v.3), but it was not the activity upon which the apostles should concentrate.

“Wherefore, brethren…” — The solution proposed follows the precedent of Deut. 1:9-14. Overburdened ecclesial leadership shared responsibility with godly men selected by the believers.

“look out from among you” — cf. Deut. 1.13. The apostles could have made the appointments themselves but they were more likely to secure the cooperation of the community if the believers chose their own committee.

Like Israel, the ecclesia was free to use the method of their choice in selecting the seven brethren. They could have done so by nomination and secret ballot, a show of hands, appointing a selection committee, etc. Ecclesias today have a similar flexibility in using whichever method they prefer in selecting their serving brethren.

“‘…men of honest report…” — Cf. Deut. 1: 13. Ideally every brother should meet the qualifications. Realistically, however, there is a wide range of spiritual development among ecclesial members and this must be wisely considered when ecclesial appointments are made (cf. I Tim. 3:2-12).

“the Holy Spirit” — “Holy” is omitted in the Greek and by versions such as the RV, RSV, NIV, etc. Its inclusion by the KJV is, no doubt, because of the phrasing of v. 5 and no significance should be attached to its omission in v.3

“whom we may appoint” — As the ecclesial elders, the apostles would review the ecclesial selections to ensure they were appropriate (cf. Deut. 1: 13).

Acts 6:5-6, The solution Implemented

Seven Grecian Jews — All seven brethren on the committee had Greek names indicating they were Grecian Jews. They would be more sensitive to the existing discrimination but their spiritual quality would be a safeguard against their implementing a policy of reverse discrimination. Their selection by the. body of believers indicates the community recognized the problem and was making every effort to correct it in love.

“the apostles … laid their hands on them” — thereby indicating they approved the choices made by the ecclesia.

Acts 6:7-8, The solution enhanced ecclesial growth

“the word of God increased” — This does not refer to additional divine revelations but to the increase in the influence of the Truth and the added numbers who adhered to it, cf. 12:24; 19:20.

“the number of the disciples multiplied” — appropriate solutions to ecclesial problems enhance the growth and vigor of the ecclesia.

Stephen — While handling additional administrative responsibilities, Stephen was still deeply involved in other areas of ecclesial life. He was not a one-dimensional disciple.

The Grounds Of Faith

“Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the certainty of realities we do not see” (Heb.11:1, R.S.V. and N.E.B.).

The realities we do not see but of which faith gives us an inner certainty are the existence of an almighty, entirely righteous and loving God by whose word the world was made, and the power of His Son to save us-and ultimately to save the world-from the domination of sin. And the things hoped for of which faith gives us assurance are the coming again of that same Son from heaven, the ensuing regeneration of the earth, the vindication of the righteousness and love of God in the hearts of all who have served Him and the perfecting of their fellowship with Him in the day when He is all in all. Other things are inextricably involved in these, but these and the implications they carry with them are the central features of belief and trust which distinguish the Christian view of life from all others. And wherever they are held in faith they are expressed through a way of life that is also distinctive.

Because this view of life presents a powerful challenge to the natural thinking of the human mind it has always been threatened by the inroads of the wisdom of this world; because this way of life imposes uncomfortable restrictions on the natural impulses of the human heart it has always been in danger of corruption from the self-interest and materialism of the world’s way. In other words, the Christian faith is perpetually under attack – open or insidious – from the influences of the alien world in which it has its being.

Present Dangers

I am not going to suggest that the forces of evil, the influences destructive of faith, are altogether more powerful today than they have ever been: in some respects I have no doubt they are; in others I am quite sure they are not (and one of the points I want to bring out later for our comfort is that the evil forces tending to undermine faith today are in essence no different from those that faced our brethren and sisters in the first century). But two things are reasonably certain: the first, that since the Christian religion became generally established in our western world (whether in its purity or not need not concern us for the moment) its hold on men’s minds has never been so weak as it is in this second half of the twentieth century; and the second, that since the establishment of the Christadelphian community as a distinctive, living witness to the Truth which is in Jesus that community has never been surrounded by such powerful influences conducive to its disintegration as it is now.

What I want to do in this booklet is to identify the more significant of these influences; to point out some of the dangerous effects they are already producing among us because of wrong responses to them; and finally to indicate what I feel to be the positive, constructive, and only saving way of meeting the challenges that face us.

There is no doubt in my mind that the threat to faith in our generation comes from two primary sources, and if I were asked to identify these sources each in a brief phrase I should call them scientic rationalism and affluent materialism. These two forces are by no means separate and independent of each other in their influence (as we shall see), and together they combine to produce a most powerful and insidious threat to our individual and communal faith. Let us look at them a little more closely, and first at what I have called scientific rationalism.

The Rationalistic Approach

The rationalistic approach to the interpretation of the universe is no new thing: theories and explanations of a world without God are ages old, and even in the nominally Christian society of our western world such interpretations have had prominent and eloquent exponents since at least the middle of the seventeenth century. Nor, of course, is scientific thinking and experimentation a modem thing in itself (though one recognizes readily enough some significant differences between “modern science” and the science of the ancient and mediaeval worlds). But what constitutes the particularly powerful threat to the Christian faith today is the tremendous impetus given to basically rationalistic and godless or agnostic views of life by modern scientific theory and discovery, especially in such spheres as geology and biology; and side by side with this the development of what purport to be scientific methods in the approach to the interpretation of the scriptures themselves. (The so called “higher criticism” of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was perhaps the least reputable of these approaches; but there are other and later ones, more genuinely scientific as far as they go, and more apparently convincing.)

In both of these spheres-in scientific investigation outside the Bible and in the scientific approach to the Bible itself-a tremendous mass of thinking, experiment and writing has been going on during the past hundred years or so. Much of it has been superficial, self-contradictory, unconvincing and of but fleeting significance; some of it has had a greater appearance of established truth; and some of it is true beyond any reasonable doubt. But the total pressure of all this can almost overwhelm the mind by its sheer mass; and since the direction of most of it is in effect, if not always by intention, anti-Christian, it is no wonder that faith is disturbed and not infrequently uprooted by its influence.

Much scientific theory (and the evidence that is adduced to support it) concerning the origins of life appears to render untenable the basic human situation that is presented to us in the Bible. The fact that science has been able to explain so many wonderful phenomena in man’s experience on a purely natural and rational basis and without reference to the supernatural has led to the calling in question of the divine origin of all things and to scepticism concerning the miraculous element in the scripture records themselves: stories like that of Jonah are widely ridiculed, and such fundamental miracles as the virgin birth and the resurrection of Jesus are discarded even among the ranks of professing Christians. The scientific approach to the examination and interpretation of the scriptures has had the effect of undermining faith in the authenticity of the documents, in the genuineness of authorship and dating, in the integrity of the writers-ultimately in the “inspiration” of the scriptures in any distinctive and meaningful sense. And in the wake of these processes has come, inevitably, the attenuating of the person of Jesus as Christ and Son of God (even in some cases to the point of his disappearance as a historical personage); and accompanying this the discrediting of Christian truth and of the Christian challenge in the moral sphere.

I do not say that all these things had to be so, that some of them are not due to misunderstanding, that science and the scientific approach have nothing to teach us. I am saying that this is what in fact has happened and that in all the circumstances it is very understandable that it should have happened.

Materialism

I come now to a consideration of the second major threat to faith that I have referred to-the threat of affluent materialism. Materialism, in the sense of an outlook on life and a manner of life basically self-centred and preoccupied with the satisfaction of selfish, personal and essentially tangible desires and pleasures, is, like rationalism, almost as old as our race. What has given it a special power in our modern world is the unprecedented extent to which it has been able to find its characteristic satisfactions over a wide area of society because of the affluence of our age; and the extent to which it is ministered to by the arts-notably literature, the stage and the visual arts generally (especially as these are conveyed to us through the medium of television). When those who profess the Christian faith find themselves sharing in the affluence of their times there is a grave danger that they may be more ready than they should to be to some extent absorbed by the society which provides them with such comforts; that they may begin to adjust themselves in all kinds of subtle ways to its standards, and that in this as in other respects they may come to lose their distinctive identity as a protesting community.

I have dealt with the influences of scientific nationalism and affluent materialism in separate categories. In practice

in the life of an individual or a community they interact in a very complex way. Where Christian truths are held less firmly in our minds because of the influence of this world’s wisdom it is easier to make compromises in daily living in a society which provides us with ease and comfort; where, on the other hand, ease and comfort have led us to make compromises in moral principle our minds are the readier to modify the Christian truths that lie behind the moral disciplines we have compromised-we are the readier to lean a little towards philosophies that make us feel less uncomfortable about the compromises we have made. Thus the combined influences of the two forces we have been examining work insidiously in the mind to the destruction of vital and robust and saving faith.

Now what in fact is happening in our own community in this second half of the twentieth century by way of response to these threats to faith from the world about us? What is happening to our thinking and to our way of life? Let us consider first the impact upon us of the affluence and materialism of our age.

Impact Upon Us

“Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing … I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire. that thou mayest be rich” (Rev. 3 : I 7-18). I suppose that of all the charges levelled against the churches of Asia Minor in the first century that of Laodicean affluence and materialism is among the last which our community would have felt relevant to its condition prior to the Second World War. We cannot deny its relevance today. We have certainly had our share in the affluence of the affluent society; and though we may not say, or even consciously think, “I am rich, and increased with goods”, the fact is that most of us are. And there is every reason for us to be greatly concerned at the extent to which many of us are engrossed in the affairs of this affluent world; at our waning consciousness of our position as strangers and pilgrims, with no continuing city in this order of things but rather with a primary obligation to bring home to its citizens their dire need of the salvation which is in Jesus; and at the degree to which, through preoccupation with the cares of this life and through compromise with its standards, our minds have become dulled to the spiritual issues that should he absorbing us, and our hands loath and slow to take up the tasks which life in a community demands of us.

I come now to our community’s response to the threat of scientific rationalism. Some among us, for whatever reasons (some good, I think, and others bad), seem to be virtually untouched by it; quite a substantial number seem able to sort out the wheat from the chaff, to hold on to what is worth while and helpful and to reject the pretentious and the false. I feel impelled, however, to comment in more detail upon two particular types of reaction which, though they emanate from minorities, have been and are remarkably vocal; both of them in their different ways, if undetected for what they are and allowed to develop their characteristic influences among us, would end by destroying us as a community making a true and distinctive witness for Christ in the earth.

Fear and Insecurity

“The Church is racked by fear, insecurity and anxiety, with a consequent intolerance and lack of love.” This is not a description of the Christadelphian community: it is one of the reasons given by Charles Davis for his departure from the Roman Catholic Church. It is not by any means a description of the Christadelphian community as a whole; but it comes very near to being an exact description of the way in which some members of the community have reacted to the impact upon them of the scientific influences we have been describing. The fears and anxieties we can well understand, and those of us who can should be doing our utmost to remove them; the narrow, unscriptural dogmatisms that often accompany the fears and anxieties are indefensible; so is the lack of love; so are the tensions and contentions that arise when love is absent.

These things are roundly condemned in the scriptures as being incompatible with the true profession of Christian discipleship. James, for example declares uncompromisingly:

“Who is a wise man and endued with knowledge among you? let him show by his good life his works in meekness of wisdom. But if ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts, glory not, and lie not against the truth. This wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish” (3 : 13-15).

And Jesus points firmly to the distinguishing quality without which no man can call him Lord:

“A new commandment I give unto you, that ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another” (John 13 : 34-35).

And in so far as the attitudes I am describing are supported by narrow dogmatists that have their origins in human tradition rather than in the clear teaching of scripture they must stand under the condemnation which was pronounced on the Pharisees:

“This people draweth nigh unto me with their mouth, and honoureth me with their lips; but their heart is far from me. But in vain do they worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men” (Matt. 15 : 8-9).

One thing that has been especially borne in upon my consciousness over recent years is the need for us all to have very great humility before the whole of God’s revelation lest we impose on any one part of it aims and meanings which it may not have had. And for the attitude I am now describing I would say that the zeal it displays for God is not according to knowledge, and that in its own way it constitutes as much of a threat to the faith of some who encounter it as does the enemy from without which it seeks destroy.

Dangers of Attenuation

There are, however, other elements in our community whose reaction to scientific and rationalist influences is such as would ultimately destroy faith by attenuating it and vapourizing away all its solid substance. There are those among us who appear to equate love with a degree of tolerance (sometimes of scientific theory, sometimes of doctrinal aberration, sometimes of the one arising out of the other) which would first of all blur and then break down the edges of demarcation between our own distinctive witness to the Truth of God on the one hand and on the other the thinking of the world and of the churches about us, which have already made significant compromises with the moral and intellectual fashions of the day. The lesson of what has happened to the churches is one that we should all take very much to heart. In his book ‘Religion in Secular Society’ Bryan Wilson demonstrates the recurring historical tendency for Christian denominations to come into existence with a view to making a new and independent witness to Christ, and then gradually to become absorbed in the larger society about them so that their originally distinctive witness is clouded and eventually lost:

“The denominations arising as protest movements in a particular period have gained strength for a time, and then gradually come to accept a place in the established order of society . . . They appear in large measure to have lost their raison d’etre.”

And the danger is that the same thing might happen to us.

This same tendency in the churches is commented upon in the leading article of the Easter, 1967, issue of the Times Educational Supplement:

“The Christian should try to preserve himself from the current obsession with this world and its possibilities. Even among the clergy there is a school which seems to proceed on the simple counsel ‘If you can’t beat them, join them’. This ends in a whole series of follies, from trying to square religion with science to jumping on every conceivable political and social bandwagon, with the delighted exclamation ‘You see., we Christians are in on this just like you’.”

The Lure of Social Welfare

We have not as a community gone that far yet, nor perhaps anything like that far, but that is the direction in which some of us are already quite plainly moving. And a word in passing about the “social bandwagon”. It is of course a natural and indeed inevitable outcome of true discipleship of Jesus that the Christian should do good to all men, and that where it lies within his power he should alleviate the world’s sicknesses and minister to its basic social needs. It is an entirely laudable thing that not a few of Christ’s disciples should find their daily work in the various branches of medicine and of social welfare. The danger arises when the Christian gradually, almost without being aware of it, begins to see in such activities (whether voluntary or professional) the essential satisfaction of his obligations in Christ, the essential justification of his existence as a committed Christian: and this happened all too often in the churches-almost always when their alertness to their specifically spiritual obligations to the world and within their own fellowship has become dulled. It is all too easy, moreover, once one has become involved in such activities to find oneself being influenced by the essentially non-Christian, humanistic philosophies and moralities from which as often as not they draw their inspiration. And all these dangers are the more subtle and insidious because they grow so imperceptibly out of motives and promptings which in their original form are entirely and blamelessly Christian. Let us beware of the wolf that may emerge from out of the sheep’s clothing.

The truth that is revealed with glaring clarity from all these considerations is that in one way or another, morally or intellectually or both, some of us are in danger of trying to have the best of both worlds, like Bunyan’s Mr. Facing-both-ways: and we might do well to remember that the name of the community to which Mr. Facing-both-ways belonged was Vanity Fair.

Meeting the Challenge

This brings me to the last phase of my subject-a consideration of the positive, constructive, and only saving way of meeting the challenges that face us-the true grounds of faith. And I would begin by making two preliminary points that seem to me to be of fundamental consequence in our thinking about all this.

The first point is that faith involves total commitment. I know that there are times in the experience of all of us, and of some more than others, when we stand in our need beside the father who cried to Jesus, “Lord, I believe: help thou mine unbelief!”. But basically a Christian is a committed person, committed through the waters of baptism to a morality that is not of this world, to a love that is not of self, to a wisdom that is from above. And our community is a committed community; and if our faith is what we profess it to be, and if we indeed belong where we profess to belong, then we are all of us committed people-and we ought to think and to behave as such: the scriptures make it trenchantly clear (and nowhere more clear than in John chapters I4-17 and in the Epistle of James) that fence-sitters and facers-both-ways have no part nor lot in the committed community of Christ.

My second fundamental point is that the grounds of our faith lie ultimately not in our ability to contend successfully with the forces which oppose our faith from without (a very necessary but nevertheless secondary and derivative feature of the spiritual life): our faith is grounded essentially in the positive truths about God and His Son and His kingdom that we outlined in our opening paragraph as the basic substance and content of our faith. And in the end both our positive, forward spiritual growth as a living and witnessing community, and our ability to contend with the destructive moral and intellectual influences about us will depend on the extent and depth to which the positive truths we distinctively stand for have taken possession of our minds and hearts. This above all is the desperate need of our community in these days, and in this lies the essential remedy for all our current ills-to recapture the vision and the vitality of our first faith and to deepen our awareness and understanding of the central truths that give it life and meaning.

Let us see how some of the New Testament writers sought to help their readers in this very thing.

Truths of the Faith

The second chapter of Peter’s Second Epistle describes the extremes of moral licence to which Christian churches can descend even in the course of their worship when they forget or become dulled to the truths on which their faith and their very existence are grounded. How does Peter deal with this situation? In his second chapter he condemns the immoral practices in some of the most witheringly eloquent language in all scripture; but then, in the third chapter, he justifies his condemnation by demonstrating the total incompatibility of his reader’s behaviour with the positive grounds, the fundamental truths, on which their professed faith is built-and in particular in this case with the truth that God is righteous and that a day is coming in the outworking of His purpose when that righteousness will be vindicated in all the earth and all unrighteousness destroyed from before His face:

“The heavens and the earth which are now reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men . . . But we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness.”

And it is these grounds of Christian faith that give sanction to the Christian morality:

“Seeing that all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy living and godliness … Seeing that ye look for such things, be diligent that ye may be found of him in peace, without spot, and blameless.”

So moral waywardness is rebuked and moral uprightness given renewed encouragement and vigour by firm reminders of the established truths of the faith once for all delivered to the saints of God. But Peter goes further than this. In his letter as a whole he is concerned not merely to reaffirm the grounds, the fundamentals, of his readers’ faith: he reaffirms also the grounds, the evidences (or at any rate what was for him one of the most convincing of the evidences), on the basis of which that faith is held with conviction:

“We have not followed cunningly devised fables when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eye-witnesses of his majesty. For he received from God the Father honour and glory, when there came such a voice to him from the excellent glory, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. And this voice which came from heaven we heard, when we were with him in the holy mount” (1:16-18).

It is clear both from the records of the synoptic gospels and from the writings of Peter and John that the transfiguration of Jesus made a tremendous and overpowering impression on those who witnessed it, and that in later years they cherished the unforgettable memory of it as one of the most manifest and convincing evidences underlying their faith in him. And through their witness it ought to loom large among our own grounds of faith.

The Power of the Resurrection

We turn for our second scriptural case to the opening verses of the sixth chapter of Paul’s Epistle to the Romans. Here the apostle is dealing not so much with moral licence in itself as with a subtle and soul-ensnaring philosophy which would seem to justify it and give it an appearance even of religious sanction: “What shall we say then.? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound?”.

Paul deals with this threat to the faith in essentially the same way as Peter with that which concerned him. He vigorously rejects the philosophy (“God forbid. How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?”), and then proceeds to show its incompatibility with the faith his readers profess. This involves him, like Peter, in a reaffirmation of certain of the grounds, the fundamentals of their faith, and in the drawing out of some of its further and deeper implications:

“Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.”

The philosophy that justifies moral licence is shown to stand condemned by reference to the rite of baptism (which is here confirmed as a central obligation of Christian faith and worship, and the significance of which for Christian living is drawn out in the rest of the chapter); baptism in turn is shown to derive its sanction and meaning from the cross itself-the very core of the Christian gospel and the ultimate ground on which rests the salvation which that gospel proclaims. But on what grounds does our faith rest that the cross is indeed the cross and has the saving significance which Jesus and his apostles ascribe to it? Like Peter, Paul goes beyond those grounds of faith which are its fundamental constituent elements and points to those further grounds which are the evidences on which that faith rests; he points in this case to that event which is not only a fundamental element in the Christian faith but which carries with it its own validation, its own manifest historical sanction; namely, the resurrection of Jesus from the dead:

“Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father.”

We see once again, then, as in the case of Peter, how a threat to Christian faith and living is met by a firm reiteration of fundamental truths and a drawing out of their deeper implications, and by a renewed and emphatic affirmation of the evidences on which faith in those truths is itself grounded.

The Ground of Assurance

There is something very impressive about the frequency and consistency with which in the Acts of the Apostles and in the New Testament Epistles the resurrection of Jesus is pointed to as the ultimate and incontrovertible ground of assurance in Christian faith and living. In our next scriptural passage, 1 Corinthians 15, it is referred to in refutation of doctrinal error. The error is defined in verse 12: “How say some among you that there is no resurrection of the dead?”. The apostle’s method is as before-to refute error by a strong reaffirmation of the basic elements of faith which it challenges, to draw out the implications of those elemental truths and show their relevance to the present crisis, and to justify faith in those truths by reference to the evidences on which they rest. In this case it is the resurrection of Jesus himself which is called in question by a denial of resurrection generally, and Paul points uncompromisingly to the implications for faith of such a denial; without the resurrection of Jesus the cross itself would have no meaning-it would not be the saving act it claimed to be:

“If there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen: and if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain . . . Ye are yet in your sins.”

That Christ is risen Paul demonstrates (verses 5-8) by reference to an impressive list of witnesses, including himself; and he concludes (verse 12) with a bold and challenging reaffirmation of this ultimate ground of Christian faith:

“But now is Christ risen from the dead, and (the consequent implication as far as the present heresy and personal faith are concerned) become the firstfruits of them that are asleep.”

According to the Scriptures

Yet even this is not all. The resurrection of Jesus as a historical event attested by many reliable witnesses is in itself a profoundly satisfying assurance that truth is in Jesus; but what makes assurance doubly sure and confirms faith to the uttermost is that the resurrection was not an isolated event in time but that it took place in a certain context that, like the cross itself, it was “according to the scriptures” (verses 3-4): it happened in accordance with and in confirmation of Old Testament prophecies which foretold in considerable detail the coming of Messiah, the Lord’s anointed one, and the circumstances in which his life on earth should be lived out. It has always seemed to me one of the most utterly convincing demonstrations of the truth of the Christian gospel that the powerful historical evidences of the resurrection of Jesus are combined with and arise out of a whole patterning of divine purpose foretold long ages beforehand by the Old Testament prophets, the cross itself being an integral and crucial part of the pattern. And I am at a loss to understand how professing Christians can ever have thought it possible to minirnize or spiritualize away this physical event in time and yet still regard themselves as Christians. That such things can come to pass (and they are to be seen on every hand today among the leaders of the churches about us) is perhaps the most devastating demonstration in human experience of the power and the subtlety of the wisdom of this world in first undermining and finally destroying the grounds of meaningful faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.

We come now, and finally, in our consideration of scriptural passages, to the First Epistle of John. The faith of John’s readers was being radically disturbed by a particularly subtle and insidious fusion of Greek philosophical speculation and superficially Christian theology. The result of the fusion was a plausible pseudo-Christianity the ultimate implications of which were, however, that Jesus of Nazareth was not the one, true and only-begotten Son of God; or put another way, that the Messiah, the anointed one of the Lord, had not made a real, physical appearance on earth as a true man in the person of Jesus of Nazareth.

Fundamental Truths

John’s method in dealing with this threat to his readers’ faith is in essence the same as Paul’s and Peter’s. He condemns the heresy as a lie and its promoters as antichrists:

“Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ? He is antichrist that denieth the Father and the Son (i.e. the true Father-Son relationship) . . . Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God: because many false prophets are gone out into the world . . . Every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is that spirit of antichrist, whereof ye have heard that it should come; and even now already is it in the world” (2 : 22, 4 :1,3).

The antidote to the heresy is, as in the other cases we have examined, a bold reaffirmation of the fundamental truths that were threatened by the new teaching.

“This is his commandment, That we should believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ, and love one another, as he gave us commandment” (3 : 23).

In these words we have a kind of compressed credal statement of the essential grounds of our faith; and the fundamental truths involved in this statement are reiterated again and again in John’s letter:

“Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God, God dwelleth in him, and he in God . . . Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God . . . This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith. Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God?” (4 : I.5; 5 4-5).

These assertions and reassertions rise to a tremendously powerful climax in the final affirmation of faith with which the letter closes:

“We know that whosoever is born of God sinneth not; but he that is begotten of God keepeth himself, and that wicked one toucheth him not. And we know that we are of God, and the whole world lieth in wickedness. And we know that the Son of God is come, and hath given us an understanding, that we know him that is true, and we are in him that is true, even in his Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God, and eternal life.”

This powerful affirmation reminds us of the triumphant climax of Paul’s argument concerning the resurrection of Jesus in 1 Corinthians I5: “Now is Christ risen from the dead.” And it is supported by the same kind of tangible evidence: once more the fundamental elements of faith are shown to be grounded in historical realities testified by eye-witnesses:

“That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life: that which we have seen and heard declare we unto you” (1 : 1, 3).

It is as though John cannot sufficiently emphasize the tangible reality of the evidences he and his fellow-apostles had received that Jesus of Nazareth was indeed from above and not from beneath, the true and only-begotten Son of God. He comes back to the same kind of testimony in chapter 4:

“We have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world” (verse I4).

And all this reminds us of the similar declaration at the beginning of the Gospel of John:

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God … And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father) full of grace and truth.”

Boldness of Conviction

These four scriptural passages we have now looked at are but a few of those we could turn to for the guidance and vision we need in facing the challenges of our time but here at any rate are some of the bedrock truths we profess to stand for, and here are some of the solid evidences that give them their validity. And the boldness of utterance and conviction that we have seen in Peter, in Paul and in John should be ours also: they are in fact the only justification for our existence as a separate witnessing Christian community. If we really hold these things in our hearts as assured and burning convictions of things unseen and hoped for, most of the contention and lovelessness that from time to time mars our worship, most of the moral compromise that dulls our spiritual sensibilities, most of the uncertainty and bewilderment that attends our contact with the wisdom of this world-most of all this would disappear at once from among us; and we might hope to develop such an intensity of inner certainty and loving kindness and joy in the gospel as would inevitably radiate outwards from ourselves and do something positive and elective towards transforming the outlook of the world we live in and preparing it for the consummation of God’s purpose in Christ Jesus.

When the World has Failed

I conclude with a further quotation from the Times leader already referred to:

“Above and beyond the stuff of this life the Christian is concerned with God and His Kingdom which is not of this world … When men turn to a Christian priest it is not to hear how Vietnam may be resolved, but to hear about God. And God is not lightly discovered. When men are more than ever taken up with the world in which they live, then it would seem right for the Christian churches to disassociate themselves from this absorption. ‘Here we have no abiding city.’ This is part of the Christian message. When men find that this world has failed them, it is to those who have not committed themselves to it that they will turn.”

And our prayer and our striving should be that whenever and wherever men turn in disillusionment from a world that has failed them to find rest for their souls, they may find in us a community that has not only not committed itself to the wisdom and the way of this world but one that is positively committed in full assurance of faith to the Truth which is in Jesus.

The Grounds Of Faith

“The Lord Jesus Christ” was the theme of a series of addresses at a week-end Gathering arranged by the Watford Christadelphian Ecclesia at Easter, 1967. Consideration of various aspects of the name and titles of our Lord led up to an address on “The Grounds of Faith” which by common consent was felt to be so apt for present needs in the Christadelphian Brotherhood – so relevant in its analysis of dangers and so powerful in its positive assurance-that there was a general desire that it should be made widely available.

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