Ephesians 4:14 – 16 has long
been embedded in my vision of the church. “…from whom [Christ] the whole body,
being fitted and held together by what every joint supplies, according to the
proper working of each individual part, causes the growth of the body for the
building up of itself in love” (4:16).
The image of the church in
this passage is one of growth into Christ and of mutual and reciprocal
edification in Christ, from Christ, and to Christ. This passage portrays a
dynamic church, a church growing into the image of Christ, of us collectively
becoming like Christ – and of us all participating in the process as we give
and receive from one another, as we are animated by the Holy Spirit.
The apostles, prophets,
evangelists, and pastors and teachers of verse 11 are called to equip the saints for the work of ministry; they
are not called to equip “sinners” nor are they called to monopolize the work of
ministry – they are called to equip others to function in ministry as the body
lives in Christ. The term “status quo” cannot describe this passage and yet in
practice we do not encourage the people of God to live as the priests of God,
as people who all have something to
give, something critically necessary for the building up of the Body of Christ.
In the natural when we see a
baby or a child not developing, not progressing along the path to mental,
emotional, and physical maturity, we become concerned, we think something is
wrong. Yet with the church we think nothing of it if we are frozen in time, if
the status quo prevails year after year, decade after decade, century after
century. We think little of it, if anything at all, if brother Joe who grew up
in the church and who is now 75 years old cannot share the Gospel with others,
cannot mentor younger men, cannot stand in the congregation and share a thought
from God’s Word, cannot contribute the Word of God in a small group. This is
simply wrong and is an indictment against both those who stand in front of
congregations and of those who sit in congregations. The church is
developmentally disabled and those who lead it do little to foster functional change and maturity.
It is ironic that we are
approaching the 500th anniversary of Luther’s nailing the 95 Theses
to the door of the Wittenberg church, an act many mark as the beginning of the
Reformation, and that instead of asking; “How far have we come since then? How
has the church grown into the image of Jesus Christ? How has the doctrine of
justification, and the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers, affected
the growth of the church into the image of Jesus Christ?” that we will tend to
think uncritically of ourselves and may even congratulate ourselves in
preserving the status quo of Reformation thinking and practice.
Reformation thinking and
practice (and let’s remember that it was diverse and not monolithic) was hardly
perfect any more than our thinking and practice is perfect – do we strive to be
frozen in imperfection – whether our own or others? Whether our generation’s or
a prior generation’s? And for those of us who are not Roman Catholic or Eastern
Orthodox, let’s not forget that there are rich treasures to be found in those
traditions as well as in our own.
To have not moved on from the
Reformation is akin to laying the foundation of a house and never building upon
it. Building on a foundation affirms the value of the foundation, it does not
repudiate it – the foundational teachings mentioned in Hebrews 6:1 – 2 are
teachings to be with us forever, but they are elementary, they are basic, they
are Christianity 101; and yet not only have we not moved on, not only have we
not built upon them – they are what we hear week after week, year after year –
no wonder our congregations have no muscle mass, they are fed baby food and not
allowed out of the playpen.
Cannot we see the tragic irony
in Luther risking his life to translate the Bible into German, of Tyndale being
burned alive for translating the Bible into English, when we, their heirs, take
the freedom of knowing Christ and the Bible away from the people of God through
our practices that relegate most Christians into second or third class status –
the unwashed masses incapable of reading, interpreting, and living out the Word
of God? The Latin Bibles may just as well have remained chained in the
churches, inaccessible to the people. How have we convinced otherwise
intelligent men and women that they need an “expert” to understand the Bible? Have
we committed insurrection against the Holy Spirit? Are we seeking to form the
church into our image as opposed to the image of Jesus Christ?
When people within
congregations commit ungodly actions perhaps it is because they have been
shielded from the Bible? Perhaps it is because their relationship with the Word
of God is secondhand, mediated through the experts – whether the experts are
scholastic and intellectual and practice subdued decorum, or whether they are
religious entertainers out to blatantly foster dependence on themselves. Dear
reader, when God’s people are unable to gather and open the Word of God and
interact with one another without a study guide or a video series or some other
“tool” (and don’t get me wrong, these all can have their place) something is
grossly wrong in the church.
The Church is the Bride of
Christ, it does not belong to man. Christ, the Bridegroom, left His Home, He
left His Father, and in and through the Incarnation He was joined to His Wife
(Ephesians 5:22 – 33).
We are not to take the place
of the Bridegroom. We are not to attempt to woo affection from Him to us. We
are not to be so presumptuous as to think that we know better than Christ. We
are to point the Bride to her Groom. We are to say over and over again, “Look
at Jesus. Go to Jesus. Behold Jesus. Allow Jesus to speak to you, to love you,
to draw you to Himself.”
I suppose we can do the best
we can wherever we are. If we must live in prison the least we can do is to
help the other inmates.
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