Matthew
16:13-19 (KJV)
When Jesus
came into the coasts of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, saying, Whom
do men say that I the Son of man am?
And they
said, Some say that thou art John the Baptist: some, Elias; and others,
Jeremias, or one of the prophets.
He saith
unto them, But whom say ye that I am?
And Simon
Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.
And Jesus
answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and
blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven.
And I say
also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church;
and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
And I will
give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt
bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on
earth shall be loosed in heaven.
I
said last Sunday morning that I had a two week “break” in my preaching schedule
that I decided to use up with a couple of messages having to do with church
history and heritage.
I
began last week by giving you – really – four doctrines that are essential to
what are historically true churches.
It
doesn’t take much study to see that there are two very distinct kinds of
churches in history:
· Those that are related somehow to Catholicism/Protestantism
and
· Those that are not
When
the Catholic Church came into existence in the very early fourth century, there
were a substantial number of Christian churches already scattered around the
world that refused to join it. They were called by the Catholics Anabaptists.
Those
churches were very different.
Frankly,
most of us would not have been very comfortable in a lot of them.
They
did loosely hold to the basic doctrinal principles of churches like ours:
· Bible as the rule of faith
· Autonomy of the local church
· Priesthood of the believers
· Two offices: Pastor and deacons
· Individual soul liberty
· Saved baptized church membership
· Two ordinances: baptism and the Lord’s Supper
· Separation of Church and State
But
they were a diverse bunch and that diversity can take a person back a bit when
you first become aware of it.
Over
the course of thirty years of study and reflection on the heritage of Baptists,
I have come to believe that the four doctrines I presented last week are the
key ones for true churches:
· The preservation of the soul – saved by grace
through faith alone
· The preservation of the Scriptures – we have a Bible that
is perfect, infallible, and profitable and
· The preservation of the Sanctuary – the church that
Christ built hasn’t been prevailed upon by the gates of hell
Represented
those three doctrines as the legs of a three legged stool and the fourth as its
seat, the doctrine they hold up – that being, individual soul liberty, the
responsibility of every man to worship God according to the dictates of their
own conscience.
That’s
the doctrine that makes me comfortable with the Anabaptists.
They
all believed that every man, woman and child had both the right and the
responsibility to search out the truth of God and worship Him as they
understood pleased Him.
I
want to go back this morning to the third of those three legs – The Preservation of the Sanctuary – and
preach a bit more on the doctrine of the church.
I
have four questions I want to ask and try to answer today concerning the
doctrine of the church.
First,
I.
IS IT IMPORTANT TO GOD?
Baptists
like myself have very strong convictions about the church and especially about
a particular kind of church.
· It is always local and
· It is very Baptist
Modern
Christendom sees church life as a sort of buffet – there are all these
different sorts of churches and they are there for you to freely choose the one
that most suits you.
I
did not grow up going to church so I didn’t have any family connection to a
particular denomination.
I
got saved watching a TV program so I wasn’t hooked to any particular church.
What
I did know about church was from an outside observer.
Before
I ever attended a church as an adult, I already was certain that not
everything that claimed to be a church could possibly have been started by God.
Two
months after I got baptized I began trying to figure out which one of all of
these churches was the one God started.
At
that moment I was pretty much a blank slate.
I
would have become:
· a Jehovah’s Witness
· a Mormon, a Presbyterian,
· a Nazarene
· a Southern Baptist
or
any other denomination if I could have proven that God started it.
It
was three years later (and three different churches later) when I first began
to put the pieces together that led me to the convictions I have today
concerning the Baptist church.
During
those years I visited:
· A Nazarene Church
· A Presbyterian Church
· Several different Independent Baptist churches
· I had Bible studies in my home with Jehovah’s Witnesses
· I did some personal study of Native American Animism
· I had met several Southern Baptists and observed their faith
· I had met a Mormon who had given me a book of Mormon
I
had met some Pentecostals and
Anita
and I lived on the campus of a Christian group called “The Pillar of Fire.”
I
came to the convictions I now hold after many years of
· study,
· prayer
· reflection and
· conversations with people of a broad range of other
convictions.
It
isn’t just a little important to me.
I
frankly would never consider going to a different kind of church than a Baptist
church – and then I am very selective about them.
It
is important to me.
But is it important to God?
Ephesians
5:25 (KJV)
Husbands,
love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it;
Can
you agree with me that the thing for which you would die is important to you?
Christ
gave Himself for His church.
Question
two,
II.
IS IT SUPPORTED IN THE BIBLE?
I
take the position that God isn’t the author of all the confusion that is caused
by dozens and dozens of church denominations that exist today.
I
take the position that God has protected and preserved His work so that:
· What Jesus taught His apostles
· What the early Christians believed
· What God wanted churches to be
Still
exists today.
I
believe it exists only in the Baptist churches.[2]
Is the concept of the preservation of the
sanctuary – the church - supported in the Bible?
Matthew
16:13-19 (KJV)
When Jesus
came into the coasts of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, saying, Whom
do men say that I the Son of man am?
And they
said, Some say that thou art John the Baptist: some, Elias; and others,
Jeremias, or one of the prophets.
He saith
unto them, But whom say ye that I am?
And Simon
Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.
And Jesus
answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and
blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven.
And I say
also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church;
and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
And I will
give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt
bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on
earth shall be loosed in heaven.
Let
me begin by answering the question about the keys in verse 19.
It’s
not critical to the message I am preaching but I am afraid someone might get
stuck there and not hear me out if I don’t address it.
The
keys of the kingdom that Christ gave to Peter is the Gospel.
It’s
the plan of salvation.
We
have in the plan of salvation the means to unlock heaven for anyone who will
hear us.
· If they accept the Gospel and trust Christ as Saviour, their
home in heaven is assured.
· If they reject that Gospel, and refuse Jesus Christ, the
door to heaven is locked shut for them.
1
John 5:12 (KJV)
He that
hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life.
Jesus
said He would build His church and the gates of hell would not prevail against
it.
His
church would not be built upon Peter but upon a doctrinal truth that Peter had
just proclaimed, that Jesus is “the Christ, the Son of the Living God.”
The
promise of Jesus Christ is that the gates of hell would not prevail against His
church.
Did He keep the promise or not?
I
submit to you:
· That the first great challenge to that promise was when
Constantine forced everyone within his realm to profess themselves to be
Christians.
· That the resultant catholic church over which he was head
was the first time the gates of hell had prevailed against a church and
· That the churches that refused to unite with his catholic
church was the first proof that there was such a thing as a church the gates of
hell had not prevailed against.
Question
three,
III.
IS IT POSSIBLE GIVEN CHURCH HISTORY?
Here
is the academic question.
A
bright person will stop me here and challenge that there is no way to prove
that all of those churches that existed through the centuries outside of
Catholicism and later Protestantism, were solid, doctrinally sound churches.
My
answer is that I do not have to prove that every one of those churches were
sound churches.
All
I have to do is demonstrate that there have always been churches that have
existed outside of Catholicism and outside of Protestantism and that there
are churches still today that have existed outside of the same.
That’s
not difficult to do.
Nobody
denies it.
Most
Christians ignore the significance of them, but those who have studied history
know they have always existed.
· They have existed in every century
· They have existed all over the known world of the time
Mostly
we know about them because of the records the Catholics kept of trying to
exterminate them, but we know they existed.
At
one time in history, during the days of the Reformation, the King of the
Holland underwent some of the same questions I did.
The
Catholic Church was no longer going to be their official state church but he
didn’t want just any new church to be his country’s official church.
He
wanted to approve the church that Jesus started as his country’s official
church.
So
he hired the greatest historians of his day to search out the matter.
They
determined that the Baptists had the best claim to trace themselves back to
Jesus Christ.[3]
He
tried to make the Baptist church the state sponsored church of the Netherlands
but he ran into a conflict with one of the Baptist distinctives – separation of
church and state.
We
stand opposed to any government controlled church or church controlled
government.[4]
Yes,
it is very possible to demonstrate that the doctrinal treasures of the Baptists
have existed outside of Catholicism all the way back to Jesus Christ.
I
anticipate a final question might be,
IV.
IS IT RELEVANT TO MODERN CHRISTIANS?
I
can see someone asking the question, “What difference does it make whether a
person goes to a Baptist church or any one of the whole host of other churches
that are all around us, so long as they get saved and get their lives turned
around?”
Does
it matter whether these churches really traces themselves outside of
Protestantism and Catholicism all the way back to Christ?
Matthew
28:18-20 (KJV)
And Jesus
came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto me in heaven and in
earth.
Go ye
therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and
of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
Teaching
them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with
you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen.
Jesus
gave the church He said He would build a three-fold job:
· They were to evangelize
· They were to baptize
· They were to teach
A. They were to evangelize
– win people to Jesus
This
question assumes that only this part of the three-fold commission matters.
As
long as a person gets saved, the other two parts are just technicalities,
right?
The
argument of the bulk of Christianity today is that the only thing that matter
is that people get saved.
As
long as they go the heaven, Jesus can straighten out all or doctrinal
differences there.
But
what about the other two?
B. They were to baptize
those they won
There
is an interesting passage in,
Luke
7:29-30 (KJV)
And all
the people that heard him, and the publicans, justified God, being baptized
with the baptism of John.
But the
Pharisees and lawyers rejected the counsel of God against themselves, being not
baptized of him.
The
Bible says,
· They glorified God when they were baptized with the baptism
of John and
· They rejected the counsel of God when they refused His
baptism
Do
you know that nobody except Baptists – and only some of them - believe that
Christian baptism is the “baptism of John” today?
Is
all of this stuff about the church Jesus built relevant to modern Christians?
Only if
you want to glorify God.
If
you are fine rejecting the counsel of God, go ahead and ignore the messages
this week and last.
C. They were to teach all things whatsoever Jesus Commanded
Notice
the words, “all things whatsoever.”
The
church is supposed to teach and therefore Christians are supposed to learn to
observe “all things whatsoever” Jesus commanded.
That
means I had better find a church teaching all those things Jesus commanded.
Conclusion
Does
it matter?
Yes
– the doctrine of the preservation of the sanctuary matters because:
· It preserves the purity of the Gospel
· It is the only means to fulfilling the Great Commission
· It is the best hope of passing your faith to your children's
children
· It is the only way you will hear from Jesus, "Well done
thou good and faithful servant."
[2] And not all of them.
[3] “a committee appointed by the King of Holland to write a history of the Dutch Reformed
Church. In this history there is a chapter devoted to the Baptists.
This history was published at Breda, 1819, by Dr. Ypeig Professor of Theeology
at Gronigen, and Rev. I. J. Dermout, Chaplain to the King, learned
Pedobaptists. These men had access to all of the libraries and archives
of Germany and Holland. After a careful study of the Baptists they made
this statement: "We have now seen that the Baptists who were formerly
called Anabaptist, and, in latter times, Mennonites, were the original Waldenses;
and have long, in the history of the church receive the honor of that
origin. On this account Baptists may be considered the only Christian
community which has stood since the days of the Apostles, and as a Christian
society, which has preserved the pure doctrines of the gospel through all
ages."
They further
state that the Reformation was unnecessary, because the Baptists, then known as
Anabaptists, Waldenses and other names, were preaching the Gospel in its
simplicity, long before Luther; yea, even from the days of the Apostles.”
http://atcalvarybaptist.net/a_brief_history_of_the_baptists.htm,
accessed 11-12-16
[4] This is another area
where misunderstanding of the doctrine of the local church leads to
misunderstanding of other doctrines. Baptists do not oppose Christian
involvement and influence in government. Baptists oppose church involvement in
government. The Catholic church view, whether Roman Visible Catholic or
Protestant Invisible Universal church, equates Christianity with church.
Baptists see Christians and individual thinkers and churches as local
independent organizations. Christians, as individuals, should be involved and
influential in their governments. However governments should stay out of the
business of the churches and churches should remain un-entangled with
governments.
No comments:
Post a Comment