For
years a basic difference between the preaching of the gospel
preachers and denominational preachers has been our plea for a
restoration of the church of the New Testament while they have
taught that every man has the right to the church of his choice.
We have insisted that by speaking where the Bible speaks and
remaining silent where it is silent and by contending that
scriptural authority is necessary for all that is taught and
practiced in religion, we can restore the church of the New
Testament.
Now
a group of brethren are telling us that we have gone about our
preaching in a wrong way and have antagonized and alienated our
religious neighbors by this approach to the Scriptures. They
tell us that we need a new set of rules or hermeneutics for
applying and interpreting the Scriptures. ACU Press has released
a book, The Cruciform Church, written by C. Leonard Allen, in
which the restoration plea is ridiculed as one of the conceits
of our time and we are told that we cannot return to the
beginning and start all over again (Introduction, p. x).
Advocates of the new hermeneutics ridicule the plea for
restoration by asking which church of the first century we want
to restore, Laodecia with its indifference, or Corinth with its
immorality, etc. Their conclusion seems to be that since these
failed to be ideal that there is no pattern worthy of
restoration. I agree that these churches were lacking in some
things but suppose they heed the instructions given for
correcting these faults, will they then become examples worthy
of our emulation? Besides, there are some who received no
censure. How about choosing the church at Smyrna or Philadelphia
(Rev. 2-3)
or
the church at Philippi?
The
assumption that corruption in a church in the first century
eliminates an ideal for restoration is ridiculous. Shall we also
assume that since false gospels were taught in the fast century
by Judaizers and Gnostics (Gal.
1:6-8)
that we cannot sweep away the past and restore the true gospel
of the first century? Is this another of the great conceits of
our time to suppose that we can do this?
Is
our plea for a restoration of the church of the first century a
valid plea? I affirm that it is and do so for the following
reasons.
First, the word of God is the seed of the kingdom. Matthew
called it "the word of the kingdom"
(Matt. 13:19)
while Luke identifies it as "the seed"
(Lk. 8:11).
An irrevocable law of God says that a seed produces after its
kind
(Gen. 1:11).
As long as a seed has life, it will produce the same kind of
plant as that from which it came. And, if all of these plants
are lost, the possibility of their being restored remains as
long as their seed exists. Exactly the same is true regarding
the kingdom or church of our Lord. Preaching the word produced
the Lord's church during the first century and as long as we
have the word (seed), we have the potential for the restoration
of the church. If not, why not? Why will it not make the same
thing of those who believe and obey it today as it did 1990 or
more years ago?
Second, the New Testament is a "form" of doctrine or of sound
words
(Rom. 6:17; 2 Tim. 1:13).
The word hupotuposis, used in
2 Timothy 1:13
also occurs in
I Timothy 1:16
and is there translated "pattern." The New Testament is a form,
a pattern or blueprint of what God wants his people individually
and collectively to be. As Moses was forbidden to alter the
pattern of the tabernacle
(Heb. 8:5),
we are forbidden to make changes in the teaching of Christ
(I Pet. 4:11; 2 Jn. 9; 1 Cor. 4:6).
Inasmuch as the New Testament is a pattern showing how to start
a local church, what its organizational structure is, its
mission and its worship, it follows that as long as we have a
New Testament, we have the blueprint for restoring the church of
the first century.
I
do not know what kind of dress Martha Washington wore when her
husband became the first president of our country. But I know
that, if a seamstress has the material and pattern from which it
was made, she can today make one exactly like it. As long as
these exist, the dress can be restored. Equally as well, using
the same material and following the same pattern today will
restore the church of the first century.
Other Articles by Lowell Blasingame
Growing Up
Baptism
Isn't For!
Cross-Centered Preaching
"By What
Authority"
Rejecting
the Reins
Are All Churches of Christ Alike?