People
should be insulted by all the gimmicks that churches are offering to
draw and to keep them. Most of it is directed toward families, the
children in particular. I speak of all the secular, non-religious,
non-spiritual gimmicks -- the picnics, luncheons and suppers, the
parties, the sports teams, the fun and games, the square dances, the
clubs and socials, the diet and exercise classes, and the fund-raising
dinners and bazaars offered by churches. Classes and services that used
to be purely religious are given new appearances with gimmickry.
Don't
the people realize that the churches are saying, in effect, "We know
that purely spiritual or religious activities and services, involving
worshipping God, teaching and learning His word, edifying and being
edified spiritually, are not enough to draw and to keep you. So we are
featuring all these other secular activities in which you are probably
more interested and adding a little religion to them and calling them
'Christian fellowship.' We are willing to compromise to get our crowd."?
So
churches cease to be churches and become more like social, recreational,
athletic, health, craft clubs. The Church of Christ is still a church,
and we do not resort to gimmickry. We are trying to be like the churches
you read about in the New Testament, not the churches around us.
The
Work of the Church
Christians have God-given work to do, both individually and
collectively. While there is much overlap, passages such as 1 Timothy
5:16 clearly indicate a difference between the two. What does the Bible
teach about our collective work?
Spiritual
The
Bible teaches that God ordained specific tasks for churches to perform.
First-century congregations:
(1) Preached the
gospel at home and abroad
(1 Th. 1:8).
This was done through instruction given in worship assemblies
(1 Cor. 14:24-25),
by people talking to those with whom they had contact
(Acts 8:4),
and by sending men out to preach
(Phil 4:15 -16).
(2) Built up the
members of the congregation. Everything done in worship was to be
unto edification (1
Cor. 14:26). Elders, spiritual shepherds, were charged with
feeding the flock
(Acts 20:28). Even severing association was an act of seeking to
restore the erring
(1 Cor. 5).
(3) Provided for
needy brethren, either at home (Acts 2:44-45; 4:32-35) or abroad (1 Cor.
16:1-2; Rom. 15:26). This third area, unlike the others, was not
necessarily ongoing, but as needed. Since the church is a spiritual
relationship, it is no surprise that its work is in the spiritual realm.
So much of what modern churches do is conspicuously absent from the
pages of the New Testament. The Bible makes no reference to churches
operating schools or day care centers, providing recreational facilities
and opportunities, being in the health care business, being a source for
counseling and all sorts of social services, or even being a general
charity. The fact that something seems like a good thing to us is no
justification for altering God's plan. Neither do we have any right to
employ carnal means to attract more people. See John 6 for the result.
Equipped
The
Bible teaches that Christ equipped the church to accomplish everything
He wants it to do. "And He gave some as apostles, and some as prophets,
and some as evangelists, and some as pastors and teachers, for the
equipping of the saints for the work of service to the building up of
the body of Christ"
(Eph. 3:11-1 2).
God's
provisions are simple, yet sufficient. It is only when we try to involve
the church in an unauthorized activity that we find our resources or
organization inadequate. Make no mistake: any argument that says we must
go beyond the New Testament model for churches in order to be effective
is a denial of the sufficiency of God's design!
Independent
The
Bible teaches that each church governs itself, planning and executing
its own work in keeping with Christ's directions. Elders' oversight is
limited to the flock among them
(1 Pet. 5:2).
No New Testament church ever directed the work of another, wholly or in
part. None ever planned a work beyond its ability to carry out. Each did
what it could.
No New
Testament church ever paid a human institution to do its work for it.
There were no add-on organizations, no subsidiary "ministries," no
missionary boards or societies.
Let us
be busy doing God's work in God's way.
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