Zac Poonen: One Body In Christ

Copyright - Zac Poonen (1974)
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CONTENTS
* Prologue
1. One Body - the Basis of
Fellowship
2. Growing in love
3. Equal members
4. Helping one another
5. Submission and leadership
6. Power through unity
PROLOGUE
"Does my becoming a Christian", asked a new convert, "involve
joining the church near my house, where people are so frequently quarreling
with each other?"
What answer shall we give to such a query?
Called to manifest the beauty of Divine Love to the world, many churches are
instead hot-beds of internal politics and rivalry - caricatures of what Christ
intended them to be. (Included are many evangelical churches that have all
their doctrines right - except the doctrine of love!)
The clear witness of the Christian community is a fundamental necessity for
the effective propagation of the gospel. Evangelicals are in danger of putting
the cart before the horse, when evangelism is stressed and fellowship ignored.
An anemic church can never fulfill God's purposes.
Surely we need to set our own house in order first, before we can invite
others to join our fellowship.
What can we do to rectify the dismal state of interpersonal relationships in
the Christian community today?
The Word of God has an answer, if we care to
listen....
CHAPTER ONE
ONE BODY - THE BASIS OF FELLOWSHIP
Despite man's advancement in many areas, human relationships continue to
present problems all over the world. Business concerns and agencies spend huge
sums employing personnel to promote harmony among workers.
Well, one might think it is understandable that self-centred, unconverted
people find it difficult to get along with each other, but surely when people
are born-again and have become new creatures in Christ, such problems can never
arise. For, after all, when God is the center of one's life and service, what
possible room can there be for the petty problems that besiege others?
Yet, sadly, no proof is needed of the fact that Christians fight and quarrel
with each other, all over the world. Many are not even on speaking terms with
some of their fellow-Christians; some cannot even stand the sight of certain
other Christians. The Name of God continues to be disgraced in the world by the
behaviour of professing believers.
Jesus said that the world would identify His disciples by their intense love
for one another. This was - generally speaking - literally fulfilled in the
first two centuries of the Christian era. The world looked at the Christians
with amazement then, and exclaimed, "Behold how these Christians love one
another!" Today the story is different and the world often says,
"Behold how these Christians hate one another!"
Relationships are indeed most important. Gifts,
talents, methods, techniques, programmes and finances are all secondary to
people and to inter-personal relationships. The Church can fulfill her
God-ordained function as the light of the world only when there is true
Christian fellowship among her members. Likewise, an individual believer can
become a minister of life to others only when he himself has learned to live
according to the law of love with his fellow-Christians.
Two-dimensional fellowship
The Bible plainly and repeatedly teaches that no Christian can have
fellowship with God without fellowshipping with other believers. You cannot
walk with God if you do not walk in love with your fellow-believer.
The Cross on which Jesus died had two planks - a vertical one and a
horizontal one: Jesus came to bring peace not only between man and God (vertically)
but also between man and man (horizontally). The vertical and the horizontal
relationships go hand in hand. You cannot have the former if you ignore the
latter.
John, the Apostle of Love, has some very strong words to say on this matter.
One of the evidences, he says, of genuine conversion is that a man begins to
love his fellow-Christians. If a man does not have this love, it is a sure
indication that his conversion is spurious and that he is heading for eternal
death (1 John 3:14). Doctrinal correctness was not the only test that the
apostles applied to ascertain where a man stood in relation to God.
Later on in the same letter, John says that if a man claims that he loves
God while hating his brother, he is a liar. Mark that! The proper name for such
a man is not "believer", but rather, "liar"! And John's
logic is irresistible. He says a brother is visible whereas God is invisible.
If you cannot love the visible, it is impossible to love the invisible. (1 John
4:20).
Now compare this with the experience of most "believers." Love for
God is usually assessed in terms of busy activity in Christian work or in terms
of rapturous feelings of delight experienced in the presence of God. These can
be most deceptive. I have come across believers who are out of fellowship with
other Christians who testify nevertheless to "wonderful times of
prayer" and to "amazing results in service."
How could they possibly be walking with God
when they have not even made an effort to settle matters with other members of God's
family against whom they have a grudge? Surely Satan has blinded their minds to
the truth of Scripture!
The price of broken fellowship
Often we do not realise what we deprive ourselves of, when fellowship is
broken with other believers. The Bible tells us that we can discover the
breadth, length, depth and height of Christ's love and be filled with all the
fullness of God only along "with all the saints" (Eph. 3:17-19). It
is only as we know the reality of fellowship with the believers God places us
with, that we shall be able to enter into an experiential understanding of the
love of Christ and of the fullness of God.
The one who cuts himself off from any
fellow-Christian thereby deprives himself of the experience of Christ's love
and grace which could have been his through that person. When we fail to live
by the law of love, we rob ourselves of some of Christ's riches and some of
God's fullness.
The Body of Christ
Paul's letter to the Ephesian Christians is centred around the great truth
of believers being one Body in Christ. Christ is the Head of the Church, and
the Church is His Body (Eph. 1:22,23). Each believer is a member of this Body.
This is not merely a fact to be acknowledged intellectually but one that
should have many repercussions on our daily life on earth.
The first half of the letter to the Ephesians deals with the doctrine of the
Body of Christ. The second half of the letter deals with the practical
outworking of this truth. And this is how the second half begins:
Therefore..... walk in a manner worthy of the calling with which you have
been called, with all humility and gentleness, with patience, showing
forbearance to one another in love, being diligent to preserve the unity of the
Spirit in the bond of peace.....(for we are all parts of) one body" (Eph.
4:1-4).
In other words, once a person has understood and "seen" this truth
of the Church being the Body of Christ, he should long to walk in humility,
gentleness, patience, forbearance, love, unity and peace with his fellow-believers.
When a Christian does not walk like that, it indicates that he hasn't seen the
Body of Christ.
Such a person needs to go back to the first three chapters of Ephesians and
say, "Lord, I'm blind to something here. Please teach me. Please open my eyes."
For the truth of "the Body" is not one that we can grasp merely with
our intellects. As Paul says, the eyes of our heart need to be enlightened by
the Holy Spirit, if we are to know (Eph. 1:18,22,23).
To the church in Corinth, Paul wrote, "You are Christ's body, and
individually members of it " (1 Cor.12:27). True, the Christians in
Corinth in the first century were only a small part of the worldwide, past,
present and future group of believers that constitute the Body of Christ; but
they were nevertheless to be a local expression of that Body in Corinth. This
is the calling of every group of believers in every age and in every place. It
is God's intention that every Christian fellowship, whether it be a church,
organization or body of workers, be a visible expression to the world of the
Body of Christ.
When Jesus Christ came to earth, He came in an earthly body. God showed
Himself to man through that physical body of Christ. Without a physical body,
Christ could not have accomplished what He did, and the world would not have
known what God was like. A physical body was essential.
Now, consider what limitation there would have been in Christ's ministry on
earth, if His body had had paralyzed or uncoordinated limbs. If, for example,
His legs, arms or tongue had been paralyzed, He could not have walked to the
homes of sinners, put His arms around lepers or spoken the words of life. He
could do all these and more - only because He had a strong, healthy body.
When Christ ascended to Heaven, God gave Him another Body on earth to carry
on His work - a spiritual Body of believers redeemed by His blood out
of every nation and tribe and language. This Body of believers, indwelt by the
same Holy Spirit Who dwelt in Christ on earth, was to continue with the
ministry which Christ, using His physical body, had begun. This is the calling
of the Church.
Do you see why Christ is limited on earth now? His spiritual Body (the
Church) has limbs and organs that are either paralyzed through sin or
uncoordinated through disunity.
Satan cannot attack the physical body of Christ today, but he can and does
attack Christ's spiritual Body. Satan (unlike many believers) realizes that
Christ's work on earth can be limited by non-functioning or non-cooperating
members in the Church.
How desperately we need to pray for spiritual
vision concerning the Body of Christ. It is indeed one of the greatest needs of
the day. May God help us to see Christ as Head over His Body and each of us as
members in it. Such a vision alone can make the Church triumphant.
CHAPTER TWO
GROWING IN LOVE
The Body of Christ is built up and grows by the
exercise of spiritual gifts and by love (Eph. 4:11,12 and 16). Gifts and love are
both needed. Hence we find that wherever gifts are spoken of in the New
Testament, the exercise of love is also simultaneously stressed (1 Cor. 12 (on
gifts) and 13 (on love); Romans 12:4-8 (on gifts) and verses 9 and 10 (on
love); 1 Peter 4:10,11 (on gifts) and verse 8 (on love)).
Christ-like love
Jesus gave His disciples a new commandment just before He went to the Cross.
They were to love one another as He had loved them (John 13:34). It is that
last phrase which makes Jesus' command impossible to fulfill without God's
grace.
What is the distinctive feature of the love of Christ? Surely, it is the
Cross on which He died for us. So when He tells me to love my brother as He
loved me, it is a call to follow His example and to die to self in my relationship
with my brother. Self-denial is to characterize my relationship with other
members in Christ's Body. This and nothing less than this is true Christian
love. When we are told that "we ought to lay down our lives for the
brethren" (1 John 3:16), it is not a reference to physical death, but to
something far more difficult. It is easier to die once as a martyr than to lay
down our self-life a thousand times a day in our relationship with our
fellow-believers. But it is to the latter that Jesus calls us.
Such sacrificial, unselfish love is the fundamental law of the body of
Christ. One who does not carry the Cross and choose the way of self-denial
cannot fulfill his function in Christ's Body.
Why are we offended by and irritated with other Christians? Surely, because
Self is still on the throne of our lives. We consider ourselves so important,
that we feel we must be respected and consulted by others. We feel that others
must behave and order their affairs as we want them to. We expect others to be
kind and considerate to us, to `make much' of us and praise us. Such feelings
and expectations are clear evidence of the fact that we know nothing of the
Cross experientially. Our lives are still dominated by selfishness, revolving
exclusively around Self and its interests.
True Christian fellowship can never be experienced among believers, if the
love of the Cross is not made the fundamental rule in the conduct of their
relationships. Apart from such love, whatever goes by the name
"fellowship" will only be social friendship and not the true
communion of the Body of Christ. Such social friendship exists in worldly clubs
too. Sadly, many Christian churches and groups are no better than clubs!
The members of a Christian fellowship should be closely interlocked one with
the other. God has not called us to be an assortment of dismembered limbs
thrown together as in an anatomy laboratory, but to be united one with the
other as parts of a living organism like the human body. But there is a price
to be paid if this is to become a reality - the price of each member denying
himself for the sake of others. Blessed indeed is that Christian group where
all the members are willing to live by this rule.
What are some of the practical implications of
living by the law of love?
Forgiving love
Consider first, the area of mutual forgiveness. No one who denies himself
can ever harbour bitterness or a grudge against another or fail to forgive
another human being. Resentment exists only in hearts where Self is still on
the throne.
Jesus once told a parable of a servant who, though forgiven much by his
master, could not forgive his fellow-servant a paltry debt. His master, on
hearing this, handed over the unmerciful servant to the torturers to be
punished. "So", said Jesus, "shall My heavenly Father also do to
you, if each of you does not forgive his brother from your heart"
(Matt.18:35). However one interprets being handed over to the torturers for
punishment, that is exactly what Jesus said would happen to those who adopted an
unforgiving attitude or even harboured an unforgiving spirit against any of his
fellow-believers. Notice that Jesus emphasized that forgiveness must be from
the heart. In other words, it must be wholehearted and not an external ritual.
Telling someone that you forgive him is meaningless if there is still
bitterness in your heart.
When we violate God's law of love, we hinder the working of the Body of
Christ. But that is not all. We harm ourselves as well. Dr. S.I. McMillen, in
None of These Diseases, says, "The moment I start hating a man, I become
his slave. I cannot enjoy my work any more, because he even controls my
thoughts. My resentment produces too many stress hormones in my body and I
become fatigued after a few hours of work. The work I formerly enjoyed is now
drudgery. Even vacations cease to give me pleasure. The man I hate hounds me
wherever I go. I cannot escape his tyrannical grasp on my mind."
Hidden grudges and bitterness are ruining the effectiveness, and even the
physical health of many Christians and Christian workers throughout the world
today.
Jesus taught that we were to take the initiative in restoring fellowship,
even where a brother feels (rightly or wrongly) that we have hurt him. "If
you are standing....offering a sacrifice to God", said Jesus, "and
suddenly remember that a friend has something against you, leave your sacrifice
there beside the altar and go and apologize and be reconciled to him, and then
come and offer your sacrifice to God" (Matt. 5:23, 24-TLB).
Likewise He said, "When you are praying, first forgive anyone you are
holding a grudge against, so that your Father in Heaven will forgive your sins
too" (Mark 11:25-TLB).
Jesus calls us in all situations to deny ourselves, swallow our pride, and
"go the second mile" in seeking to restore fellowship wherever it has
been broken. At times, despite our best efforts at reconciliation, a brother
may adopt a hard, unforgiving attitude; but if we have made the effort we shall
have discharged our responsibility before God.
Jesus' words make it clear that God cannot accept our worship or our service
or anything else that we offer to Him, if matters are unsettled between us and
any other member of His body, and we have made no effort towards
reconciliation. I wonder at times, how many Christians take the words of Jesus
seriously. Many treat God's commands lightly and thereby bring spiritual death
into the Body of Christ.
"A further reason for forgiveness",
Paul tells us, "is to keep from being outsmarted by Satan" (2
Cor.2:11-TLB).
What does he mean?
If someone's conduct towards us is inspired by Satan, and we retaliate in
like manner, we are serving Satan too. How foolish we are, if we are stung into
serving Satan by someone else's bad conduct.
When people cursed and reviled Jesus on the Cross, they were serving Satan.
But Jesus served His Father and so could pray, "Father, forgive
them."
So the question is not one of whether we are right and our bitterness
justifiable, but rather this: Whom are we going to serve - Satan or God?
We are often most in danger when we know that we are right and the other
party is wrong. For it is in such situations that we can become self-righteous
Pharisees. We may be right concerning the issue, but wrong in our attitude -
Satanic rather than Christ-like, proud rather than humble.
God delights in being merciful and all His children should have this quality
in them. Hell is the only place in the universe where mercy is totally absent.
And therefore a merciless attitude and an unforgiving spirit would only
indicate that we have a little bit of Hell right down in our hearts.
Besides, we deprive ourselves of God's mercy when we fail to show mercy to
others in their failings. The Bible says, "There will be no mercy to those
who have shown no mercy" (Jas. 2:13). God treats us in the same way as we
treat others.
To one who joyfully accepts the Cross in his life, humbling himself and
forgiving others is an easy step. Only those who persist in keeping Self
enthroned find forgiveness difficult.
Showing mercy and forgiving others is only a first step. The Bible calls us
to go even further and to cover our brother's fault (1 Pet. 4:8) "Love
forgets mistakes" (Prov. 17:9-TLB), and so when we have forgiven a brother
from our hearts, we should bury the matter completely. We should not tell
others of his having failed and of our having forgiven him - for that would put
him in a bad light. Our endeavour should be to place our fellow-believers in
the best light possible.
Through such love the Body of Christ is built
up.
Loyal love
"If you love someone, you will be loyal to him no matter what the
cost" (1 Cor. 13:7-TLB).
Loyalty involves not saying anything behind a person's back which one is not
prepared to tell to his face. Backbiting is the pastime of cowards.
This does not of course mean that we are not to
give an adverse report about a fellow-believer when asked for our opinion by
someone like a prospective employer. In such a situation, we must remember that
our loyalty to God and to His work supersedes our loyalty to our
fellow-believers, and commits us to truthfulness. But where truth permits, we
should cover our brother's fault as much as possible.
Patient love
"Love is very patient. It is not irritable or touchy" (1 Cor.
13:4,5-TLB).
It is easy to bear with the faults of others and to be patient with them
when we are willing to deny ourselves. If we die to self, we cannot be
irritated or offended by the conduct of others. We shall be delivered too from
touchiness and impatience. A love that cannot bear patiently with the faults of
others is merely sentimental and human. The love of Christ is of an altogether
different quality.
The Bible commands us:
"BE PATIENT WITH EACH OTHER, MAKING ALLOWANCE FOR EACH OTHER'S FAULTS
BECAUSE OF YOUR LOVE" (Eph. 4:2-TLB).
Here is a verse that should be written in bold letters before every Church
and Christian fellowship. Patience is one of the clearest evidences of the love
of the Cross.
We are all fallen human beings. When we see our
own faults honestly, it is easier to be tolerant of the faults of others. Our
impatience and irritability are usually a measure of our self-righteousness.
Unprejudiced love
"If you love someone, you will.....always expect the best of him"
(1 Cor. 13:7-TLB).
Because of the self-centredness of our natures, our evaluation of others is
usually based on selective perception - that is, we see in others only what we
want to see. If we detest a person, we see only his weaknesses and believe
everything evil that we hear about him; and likewise, when we adore an
individual, we see only what is good in him and believe everything good that we
hear of him. We see people through "coloured glasses." Hence the
phrase, "Love is blind"!
To give but one illustration of selective perception: Many of us have
pre-conceived ideas about how people from certain communities and races behave.
And when we hear a rumour or a scandal about one of them (which may be totally
false), our prejudices are immediately reinforced, we believe the gossip without
question and fellowship is destroyed.
To avoid such pitfalls, we should seek to rid ourselves of all pre-judgments
(or prejudices) against communities or races or any other categories of people.
It is also a most helpful discipline to remember the good points of those whom
we do not naturally like and recognize the limitations of those whom we
idolize. We must judge those we dislike with mercy, and those we admire with
realism.
We should never judge others on the basis of hearsay, nor even jump to
conclusion on the basis of what we see. A person's behaviour may appear
`suspect'. But there may be a good explanation for it. We should seek to put
the best possible interpretation on the actions of others, at all times.
It was said of Jesus (in a prophetic reference in the book of Isaiah), that
He would not form a judgement by hearsay or even by appearance, but would seek
to arrive at a just assessment of people (Isa. 11:3,4).
So must it be in the Body of Christ.
Respectful love
Love places a high value on others.
When Self is on the throne of our lives, we tend to despise or ignore
others. But when we bear the Cross and die to self, we begin to respect, value
and even delight in our fellow-believers.
What is our attitude to believers who are socially, intellectually, or
spiritually inferior to us? Our answer will depend on whether we know the
reality of Calvary love in our lives. The love of God was seen in Christ when
He died to His position and to His superiority as God and came down and
identified completely with fallen man. His love was neither patronizing nor
condescending, neither should ours be.
But how often one member of the Body looks down on another because of
racial, social, cultural or other differences. Such "Christians"
(even if they are fundamentalists in doctrine) can never be instruments for
building up the Body of Christ, for they have not understood the first
principle of Christian service - the principle of `incarnation'. The Word
became flesh and dwelt among the people as one of them. As it was with the
Head, so must it be with the members of His Body, if they are to be effective
for God.
Do you value your fellow-believers? Do you
recognize your need of them and genuinely seek their fellowship? Or do you form
little cliques consisting of congenial people of the same race, community or
intellectual or social level, circulate exclusively within such cliques and
call that `fellowship'? If so, the great Deceiver of men has robbed you of
riches which might have been yours if you had humbly sought fellowship on an
equal basis, "with all the saints."
Courteous love
"Love is kind......never rude (1 Cor. 13:4,5-TLB).
"Kindness makes a man attractive", the Bible says (Prov. 19:22-TLB).
We are courteous towards strangers, but often rude towards those with whom we
`rub shoulders' daily. It does not cost us anything to be courteous and say a
few words of kindness and thus `spread a little honey' wherever we go, yet most
of us neglect to do this. Kind words and acts could have deepened many a
fellowship that remained on a shallow level. Like oil in machinery, courtesy
could have eliminated friction in many of our relationships.
But we are slow to learn.
Because we are basically self-centred, we have to discipline ourselves and
educate ourselves in the art of being kind. Fellowship does not develop
naturally. It has to be cultivated carefully like a garden.
How often, through careless utterances a believer wounds another. How many
Christians seek to earn a reputation for humour, by cracking jokes at the
expense of others. They may be less eager to tell a joke against themselves!
There is value in humour - certainly - but it
should not result in making others feel small or awkward. Remember, "It is
harder to win back friendship of an offended brother than to capture a
fortified city" (Prov. 18:19-TLB).
Caring love
Love is concerned about the needs of others.
The love of Christ, we have been seeing, is not self-centred. It is unselfish.
This applies in the area of our brother's need as well.
Consider the human body. When any part of the human body is injured causing
an infection, immediately large number of leucocytes (white blood cells) are
produced in the blood to combat the germs that have caused the infection. These
leucocytes rush to the injured area to battle with the bacteria causing the
problem and die in the process, forming what is known as `pus'. Millions of
white blood cells give up their life to bring health to the injured part.
What a lovely illustration of the way the Body of Christ should function!
The Bible says, "God has put the Body (of Christ) together in such a
way....that the parts have the same care for each other that they do for
themselves. If one part suffers, all parts suffer with it, and if one part is
honoured, all the parts are glad" (1 Cor. 12:24-26-TLB).
This last verse is not a command telling each `part' to suffer or be glad
when other `parts' suffer or are glad but rather a description of how one
`part' affects the others. In the same way, in the Body of Christ, each members
shares spontaneously in the suffering and joy of his or her fellow-members. If
such is not the case, faulty relationships are indicated.
If there is a living relationship between us
and the Lord and if our eyes have been opened by the Holy Spirit to see the
truth of the Body of Christ, then when another member suffers, we shall suffer
with him. His problem will cause us concern too.
Generous love
The Scripture says, "What's the use of saying that you have faith and
are Christians, if you aren't proving it by helping others? Will that kind of
faith save anyone? If you have a friend who is in need of food and clothing,
and you say to him, `Well, good-bye and God bless you; stay warm and eat
hearty', and then don't give him clothes or food, what good does that do"?
(Jas. 2:14-16-TLB).
Again it says, "If someone who is supposed to be a Christian has money
enough to live well, and sees a brother in need, and won't help him - how can
God's love be within him?.....Let us stop just saying we love people; let us
really love them, and show it by our actions" (1 John 3:17,18-TLB).
This does not mean that we should be distributing money indiscriminately to
all Christians who profess to be in need. No. Joshua and the leaders of Israel
once made a big mistake by showing compassion to the people of Gibeon, who
played a trick on them by pretending they were in great need (Joshua 9). Many
well-meaning and kindhearted Christians have been fooled likewise by
professional deceivers.
There is no virtue in being gullible.
But let us seek to be in touch with the Lord
and then we shall have wisdom for every situation. We are not to be governed
merely by human compassion. We should be in touch with the Head and governed by
Him.
Christ-directed love
In the human body, there is co-ordination among the various parts because
each part `obeys' or is controlled by the head (or brain). Likewise in the
Church, true fellowship can be a reality between the members only when Christ
(the Head) is in control of inter-personal relationships. It is dangerous for
two Christians to form a deep relationship without Christ being in between them
and being the central figure in their relationship.
I have seen instances where truth has been compromised by Christians for the
sake of friendship. God's work suffers in many places today, because human
loyalty takes precedence over loyalty to the truth of God. In all such cases,
it is obvious that the fellowship that exists between the parties concerned is
not through or in Christ but only on a human plane. This is often mistaken for
deep Christian fellowship, but is actually a counterfeit of the real thing.
If we live in close and deep communion with the
Head, obeying His laws, we shall naturally have the right attitude to other
members in the Body. Our fellowship one with another will then be deep and
genuine, not sentimental and frothy.
CHAPTER THREE
EQUAL MEMBERS
Scientists tell us that no two snowflakes anywhere in the world have the
same patterns. Likewise, no two human beings anywhere in the world are
completely alike.
God has created infinite variety in the universe. That is what makes
creation so wonderful and beautiful. How unimaginably boring it would have been
if there were no variety in the universe. Likewise, how uninteresting and
prosaic life would have been if all human beings were exactly alike in
temperament and personality.
There is variety in the Body of Christ just as there is in the human body.
At the same time, there is an organic unity among the various members. All the
members are equally important and necessary, though their functions in the Body
may be completely different. No one member is more important than another. No
one's ministry should exclude another's. When the body operates with each
member fulfilling his own special function, then alone will there be a powerful
corporate presentation of Christ to the world.
In Old Testament times, God often worked through individual prophets who
were His representatives and mouthpieces. But not so now. Today, God works
through the Body of Christ. God and Christ are to be represented to the world
through the corporate working together of believers harmoniously in one Body.
And for this purpose, no one believer is more important than another. Each
member's gifts are necessary for the upbuilding of the Body and for its
ministry to the world.
A failure to recognize this as God's way can
cause feelings of inferiority and superiority in the Church. Paul speaks of
these in 1 Corinthians 12.
Feeling inferior
Paul speaks first to those who, feeling inferior, assume that their gift is
not as necessary to the building up of the Body as is another's.
"If the foot says, `I am not a part of the body because I am not a
hand', that does not make it any less a part of the body. And what would you
think if you heard an ear say, `I am not part of the body because I am only an
ear, and not an eye'? Would that make it any less a part of the body? Suppose
the whole body were an eye - then how would you hear? Or if your whole body
were just one big ear, how could you smell anything? But that isn't the way God
has made us. He has made many parts for our bodies and has put each part just
where He wants it. What a strange thing a body would be if it had only one
part! So He has made many parts, but still there is only one body" (1 Cor.
12:15-20-TLB).
It is always harmful to compare ourselves with others in the Body of Christ
- either favourably or unfavourably. Such comparisons can lead to pride - or
discouragement and jealousy. When the foot begins to compare itself with the
hand, it may say, "Well, I don't have as prominent a part in the body as
the hand. I am usually covered over with socks and shoes, at the lowest end of
the body, and hardly anyone ever notices my existence. The hand, however, is
noticed by others every day. It is always busy doing something, whereas I am
inactive most of the time." Once having compared itself thus, it is but a
short step to discouragement and to the development of a spirit of complaining
against God for having made it a foot instead of a hand. Such a spirit leads
many a believer to bury his talent and do nothing what ever for the strengthening
and good of the Body of Christ. The Church of Jesus Christ suffers today
because of multitudes of believers who wish they had some spectacular gift; not
having such a gift, they decide to do nothing.
Having a grudge against God for not giving you the gift that you see someone
else has, is only a short step away from jealousy; and jealousy kills
fellowship. As the Bible says, "Wherever there is a jealousy or selfish
ambition, there will be disorder and every other kind of evil" (James. 3:16-TLB).
If only we could see the Body of Christ, there would be absolutely no room
for jealousy. In the human body, the foot has no problem about just being
itself. It never desires to be anything other than a foot and it never dreams
of becoming a hand. It is quite content to be a foot. It knows that God has
made no mistake in making it a foot. It rejoices in being a foot; it rejoices
equally in seeing what the hand can accomplish, even though it realizes that it
can never accomplish anything similar.
So will it be with all who have understood the meaning of the Body of
Christ. When you are envious of another, when you cannot rejoice wholeheartedly
at seeing another member being greatly used of God, it is obvious that you have
not understood this truth at all. Any member who lives in close communion with
the Head will rejoice and be glad when another member of the Body is honoured
(1 Cor. 12:26).
There is no room for competition either, between one member and another in
the Body of Christ. Co-operation, not competition, is the law of the Body.
When you see another fulfilling some ministry ably, and you plan to show
others that you can do just as good a job (if not better), then Self is
obviously still in the centre of your life. If you were living in submission to
the Head, you would never be competing with anyone in the Body. You would
instead concentrate on doing your specific job - and doing it well.
If we believe in the perfect wisdom of God, we shall recognize that God
knows best what gift to give each of us. There will then be no complaining, no
discouragement and no jealous longing after another's gift.
There is no need for anyone in the Body of Christ to feel inferior. All
members of the Body may not be equal in terms of ability or talent, but all are
equal in terms of usefulness in God's work in their own appointed place.
We are called to be ourselves - radiating God's
glory through the particular temperament, gift and talents that God has given
us. There is much limitation in the Church today, because believers do not
bring into it their own special contribution. Vainly trying to imitate somebody
else, they quench their own special gift, and as a result contribute nothing to
the ministry of the Body.
Feeling superior
To those who feel superior, Paul writes:
"The eye can never say to the hand, `I don't need you.' The head can't
say to the feet, `I don't need you.' And some of the parts that seem weakest
and least important are really the most necessary......So God has put the body
together in such a way that extra honour and care are given to those parts that
might otherwise seem less important.....Now here is what I am trying to say:
All of you together are the one body of Christ and each one of you is a
separate and necessary part of it (1 Cor. 12:21-27-TLB).
There are some conceited snobs in the Church who feel they are more
important than their fellow-believers. They consider their ministry to be more
necessary to the Body than that of others. Of course they never express their
feelings lest they be considered proud, but their actions and attitudes give
them away. Such spiritual pride not only ruins them spiritually, but also rings
the death-knell of true fellowship.
The eye is a very important part of the human body and has a significant
function to perform. But if (to continue the analogy) it despises the hand
saying, "I don't need you", then it has misunderstood its function in
the body altogether.
So with anyone who considers his ministry more important than another's. Our
hearts are so deceptive that we can easily fool ourselves into thinking that we
are called to be spiritual leaders and prophets among God's people. Those who
fall into this trap then covet to be elders in churches and leaders in
Christian organizations. They feel superior to others and are like a cancer in
the Body of Christ.
No one is indispensable in God's work. When Elijah complained to God that he
was the only one prophet standing true to God in the land of Israel, the Lord
told him to go and anoint Elisha to replace him as prophet (1 Kings 19:14-16).
Perhaps this was to teach Elijah that God would never be without men whom He
could use. Even the great Elijah was not irreplaceable.
No one is indispensable in Christ's Body.
On the other hand, no one is dispensable either. The Bible says that all the
members are necessary.
But we have first to recognize that we are dispensable, before we can become
truly indispensable. We are most needed in the Body of Christ when we have
realised our nothingness. Whenever someone feels that God's work in a certain
place will not carry on without him, the truth usually is that the work would
be far better off without him!
God's work is dependent on the corporate ministry of the Body of Christ -
not on any one individual. In fact, the individual who tries to do everything
himself is a positive hinderance to the work of God - for he leaves no room for
others to function.
The eye is an important organ, but if the whole body were just one big eye such
a body would be quite useless. Thus, when a church or Christian organization
centres around the ministry of one man (however gifted he may be), it ceases to
be an expression of the Body of Christ. Such a group actually becomes a
hindrance to the work of God. However impressive the statistics may be,
churches that centre around one gifted leader or pastor, do not fulfill their
God-ordained function. True Christian fellowship is impossible in such a
situation.
When one cell in the body grows into a size far beyond what God intended for
it, it can only do so by crushing the life out of other cells in the process.
This is cancer and, untreated it always kills the body.
This, alas, is the situation in many Christian organizations and churches.
The believers therein are not able to grow spiritually because of the
overpowering personality of one man in their midst. They are like small
mushrooms growing under the shade of a mighty oak tree, that seldom see the
sunlight themselves.
Let those who have an outstanding spiritual gift take note: You are more
likely to hinder the growth of other believers than those with mediocre gifts.
You are more likely to kill true fellowship than other less-talented brethren.
Besides, you are in danger of making members of Christ's Body more dependent on
yourself than on Christ the Head.
If we do not allow others to fulfill their ministry, we violate one of the
fundamental laws of the Body. The Bible exhorts us - everyone of us - to regard
others as more important than ourselves (Phil. 2:3). We may not be able, in all
honesty, to consider everyone as more spiritual than ourselves, and the Bible
does not urge false humility. What we are asked to do is to consider others as
more important. Surely we can all do this - if we see our place and the place
of others in the same body.
This does not mean that all the gifts of the
Spirit are of equal value to the upbuilding of the Body. The Bible itself tells
us that some gifts are of greater value than others (1 Cor. 14) and we are told
to "earnestly desire the greater gifts" (1 Cor. 12:31). All believers
have a definite contribution to make to the ministry of the Body, but those who
have been given a more useful gift by God (in His sovereignty) will naturally
be able to make a more significant contribution. The fact that some have a more
outstanding gift is not inconsistent with the fact of the equality of all
believers - for equality does not mean uniformity.
We need each other
One of the wonderful things about our Lord, when He walked on earth, was
that even though He was perfect and superior to everyone else, He moved among
men as their equal. This is how we are called to live too. Jesus lived as a man
needing the fellowship of other men. He turned to Peter, James and John in the
garden of Gethsemane and said, "My soul is deeply grieved, to the point of
death; remain here and keep watch with Me" (Matt. 26;38). He, the Son of
God, needed the prayer-fellowship of His imperfect disciples.
Yet how many of us are self-sufficient! We ignore weaker members of the Body
thinking that we do not need them. We only betray our spiritual poverty and
blindness by such an attitude. For remember, the Bible says, "Some of the
parts (of the body) that seem weakest and least important are really the most
necessary" (1 Cor. 12:22-TLB).
The internal organs of our physical body, like the heart and the liver, are
never seen by anyone; yet they have vital functions to perform. So too in the
Body of Christ. Some who do not have any public ministry, and who are unknown,
are really most necessary.
The Bible says that even the Head (Christ) does not say to the feet (the
least and lowest members in the body), "I don't need you" (1 Cor.
12:21). How much less can we do without even the weakest and least-gifted of
our fellow-believers. They have something to minister to us of Christ. So we
should listen to them. If we ignore or despise them, we shall in that measure,
deprive ourselves of the fullness of Christ.
Fellowship is always a two-way matter. There is giving and receiving. Those
of us who have ability in the ministry of the Word often feel that others
should always listen to us, because we feel we have something to give them.
Even in conversation, we tend to dominate the scene, so that our brother hardly
gets a chance to say a word. When he does have a chance to say something, we
impatiently wait for him to finish, so that we can start preaching to him
again. How self-important we are.
The Bible says, "Let everyone (preachers included) be quick to hear
(and) slow to speak" (James. 1:19). We need to educate ourselves in the
art of listening to others. After all, God has given us two ears and only one
mouth! And as someone has said, "God has given us ears that are always
open and a mouth that shuts"! So, our prayer should be:
"Lord, fill my mouth with
worthwhile stuff,
And nudge me when I've said enough."
We need to listen to one another. We need each
other's help. No member of the Body is self-sufficient.
No room for pride
When we see the Body of Christ, we cannot but recognize the equality of all
believers - irrespective of race, education, intelligence or social background.
All are equal and all are equally needed. None being more necessary than the
other, and all having something to contribute, no one need feel inferior, no
one can feel superior, and pride, comparison and jealousy are ruled out
altogether.
There will be no room even for that inverted form of pride (which assumes
the guise of humility) that some Christian workers have who glory in the fact
that despite their being so spiritual (?) and so qualified, they are yet
willing to work under less spiritual and less qualified brethren. How blind
such people are to the Body!
How many a problem is solved when we have a
spiritual revelation of the Body of Christ!
Unity in variety
There is a God-ordained variety in the Body of Christ.
God uses our different temperaments and gifts to present a balanced picture
of Christ to the world. By ourselves, each of us can at best present only a
distorted and unbalanced image of Christ. Any single person's ministry, by
itself, could produce unbalanced Christians. How thankful we have to be that
there are others in the Body with differing emphases and temperaments. For
example, if two brethren are ministering the Word to the same group of
believers, and one's emphasis is, "Don't be too sure that you are filled
with the Holy Spirit, for you may be deceiving yourself", and the other
brother's emphasis is, "Be sure you are filled with the Holy Spirit",
on the surface they may appear to be contradicting each other. But both
emphases are needed - so their ministries could be mutually complementary.
In the Body of Christ, we can have Calvinists and Armenians working
together, each bringing their distinctive emphases - for both viewpoints are in
the Bible. As Charles Simeon once said, "The truth is not in the middle,
and not in one extreme, but in both extremes." So, we need people
presenting both extremes.
Then again, there is room for `outgoing' personalities as well as for shyer
ones. Different temperaments can be mutually complementary. Some people may be
over-cautious; never taking a step forward without much deliberation, weighing
all the `pros and cons', and wondering for a long time whether to move or not.
Others are more carefree and tend to rush ahead enthusiastically, without
thinking deeply about the consequences. Because both these (and other) kinds of
personalities are found in the Body of Christ, there is a balance. If the Body
consisted only of hesitant, deep-thinking personalities, progress might be too
slow. Conversely, if the Body consisted only of impetuous enthusiasts, there
might be too many unfinished projects.
Each temperament has its strengths and weaknesses. A variety of people with
a variety of temperaments, working together as Christians, can present a more
complete and more accurate picture of Christ to the world. So we should not be
wasting our time trying to make everyone in the Body like ourselves. We should
allow each one to be himself. What we do need to concentrate on, is how our
strengths could support another's weaknesses. His strengths could in turn
support our weaknesses.
By working together, Peter and John (men of different temperaments) brought
more glory to God than they could ever have done independently. Paul and
Timothy - strikingly different in their temperamental make-up - could yet
labour together in the gospel and form a powerful team.
There are brilliant intellectuals as well as those with mediocre minds in the
Church. Naturally, their presentations of the truth of God will vary. But
neither category can despise or criticize the other, for both are equally
needed in the Body, to present the gospel to a world consisting of
intellectuals and non-intellectuals, philosophers and housewives, students and
farmers, etc., God needed a genius and a scholar like Paul for His work as well
as an unlearned fisherman like Peter. They had different styles of preaching
the same good news, but each had a distinctive part to play, and neither could
have done the work that God did through the other, just as ably.
Conversion does not alter a man's intellectual capacities. Neither does it
compel him to change his social status. The gospel does not eradicate the
heterogeneous nature of society here on this earth, although social
distinctions do become irrelevant in Christ. God had need for a wealthy man
like Philemon as well as for Onesimus who was a servant in Philemon's house.
Their social levels and standards of living remained unchanged, but they each
had a distinct contribution to make to the Body of Christ, that the other could
never make; and so they could labour together in the gospel.
God never intended the Body of Christ to be full of people who were exactly
alike in every way - like motor cars turned out of a factory. No. The very
ministry of the Body is dependent upon the variety of its members. There would
have been stagnation and spiritual death if all were alike.
Even our disagreements with one another can be used of God to deepen our
fellowship and lead us on to spiritual maturity. Proverbs 27:17 (TLB) says,
"A friendly discussion is as stimulating as the sparks that fly when iron
strikes iron, there are going to be sparks, but in this way both pieces of iron
are sharpened.
Sometimes God places two people with different temperaments together in His
work, and as they labour together, the sparks may fly between them, but this
may be God's way of "sharpening" them. If one person is like iron and
the other like clay, there will be no sparks and no sharpening either. Instead
there will be the imprint of the iron on the clay - one strong-willed person's
opinion forced on the weak-willed person. God's intention however is not that
one person should press his views on another, but rather that both should learn
from each other. We can disagree, but we can still be united, and still love
one another - nay, we can love one another more deeply now than before.
I believe God permits differences of opinion (on non-fundamental matters)
between different members of the Church so that there is greater opportunity
for the exercise of Christian love. Loving one another would have been an easy
matter if we all saw eye-to-eye on every matter. But when we disagree, our love
is tested. So we need to thank God for disagreements that do not divide or
disunite us.
A Christian fellowship that boasts no differences of opinion is `suspect'.
The members of such a fellowship are either failing to think for themselves or
being dominated by one strong-willed person.
True Christian fellowship is forged and
sharpened on the anvil of healthy, loving disagreements.
CHAPTER FOUR
HELPING ONE ANOTHER
"Speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in all aspects into Him,
Who is the Head, even Christ, from Whom the whole Body, being fitted and held
together by that which 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" (Eph. 4:15,16).
These and other verses in the New Testament make it plain that every
believer has a responsibility to minister life to the Body of Christ, in his
own way. This is not the exclusive privilege of preachers, but the duty of all
members of Christ's Body.
We have already seen the importance of bearing the Cross and of dying to
self. This is the basic law of interpersonal relationships in the Body of
Christ. This is also the primary means by which each member ministers life to
the Body. "Death works in us, but (as a result) life in you", wrote
Paul to the Christians at Corinth (2 Cor. 4:12). The more we bear the Cross in
our lives, the more we shall be ministers of life to the Body, even if we do
not have the gift of preaching.
Fellowship, as we have already seen, is a two-way matter. Giving and
receiving are involved. All of us need to give to others in the Body and all of
us need to receive from others. We saw in the last chapter, how some through
feelings of inferiority may hesitate to give, and how others, feeling superior
may feel that they have nothing to receive. When all members of the Body
function as they should, there will be a giving and receiving in love that will
lead to the building up of the Body.
The Bible tells us of a dual responsibility that each of us has in the areas
of giving and receiving. We are told to encourage and to correct one another.
Consider the following commands in the Bible:
"Warn (admonish, urge and encourage) one another every day.....that
none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin....
"Not forsaking or neglecting to assemble together (as believers) as is
the habit of some people, but admonishing - warning, urging and encouraging -
one another, and all the more faithfully as you see the day approaching"
(Heb. 3:13; 10:25 - Amplified Bible).
These commands are almost totally ignored by the vast majority of believers,
yet they highlight two of our chief responsibilities as members of Christ's
Body.
The word translated "admonish/encourage" in the above passages is
the Greek word parakaleo. The noun form of this verb is parakletos, which
translated as "Comforter", is the word Jesus used to refer to the
Holy Spirit in John chapters 14 to 16.
This would seem to indicate that encouragement and admonition are two of the
chief ministries of the Holy Spirit. And if the Holy Spirit of God dwells in us
as members of Christ's Body, He will seek to express Himself through us to one
another in a mutual ministry of encouragement and admonition. We shall
therefore be quenching the Spirit if we fail to engage in such a ministry.
Hence the Word of God exhorts us:
"We earnestly beseech you, brethren, admonish (warn and seriously
advise) those who are out of line.....encourage the timid and
fainthearted....Do not quench the Holy Spirit" (1 Thess. 5:14,19 -
Amplified Bible).
This does not mean that we shall be spending our time encouraging and
admonishing others all the time. No. There is a time and place for exercising
any ministry. We must, however, recognize our responsibility in these areas.
It probably was to this ministry that Jesus was referring when He told His
disciples at the last supper, "You also ought to wash one another's
feet" (John 13:14). Washing the feet would both refresh and cleanse them -
after they had tramped the dirty roads, wearing only sandals.
Likewise, encouragement can refresh a weak and
discouraged brother and correction can cleanse a straying brother. We must be
willing to wash others' feet and have our feet washed by them in return.
Encouraging others
Paul and Barnabas strengthened the souls of the disciples in the churches
they had established, by encouraging them, so the record reads (Acts 14:22).
We too can strengthen others through a ministry of encouragement - not only
through the preaching of the Word, but also by offering appreciation where it
is due.
Jesus was always quick to give a word of appreciation where due. He praised
a centurion for his faith (Matt. 8:10), a repentant woman for her love (Luke
7:47) and Mary of Bethany for her devotion (Luke 10:42; Mark 4:8,9).
To His failing disciples, He said, "You are those who have stood by Me
in My trials" (Luke 22:28).
Paul when writing to the churches - even to the most carnal ones - usually
found something to appreciate in them. To the Church in Corinth, riddled with
factions, disputed and immorality, Paul began is letter thus:
"I can never stop thanking God for all the wonderful gifts He has given
you, now that you are Christ's. He has enriched your whole life. He has helped
you speak out for Him and has given you a full understanding of the truth; what
I told you Christ could do for you has happened! Now you have every grace and
blessing; every spiritual gift and power for doing His will are yours during
this time of waiting for the return of our Lord Jesus Christ. And He guarantees
right up to the end that you will be counted free from all sin and guilt on
that day when He returns. God will surely do this for you, for He always does
just what He says, and He is the One Who invited you into this wonderful
friendship with His Son, even Christ our Lord" (1 Cor. 1:4-9-TLB).
Only then did he go on to say, "But, dear brothers, I beg you in the
Name of the Lord Jesus Christ to stop arguing among yourselves' (verse 10).
Paul tried to begin with something positive. So must we.
This does not come naturally to all of us. Most of us tend to see the
negative side of others first. But if we submit to the discipline of the Holy
Spirit, we shall find Him showing us something to appreciate in everyone.
A teacher once spread a large white sheet of paper with a small ink-spot in
one corner, in front of his class and asked the children to write down what
they saw. All of them described the small ink-spot rather than the large area
of unspoilt paper. So, in human relationships, we often tend to concentrate on
other people's minor defects.
Altering one's outlook requires determination
but it is worth the effort. Gradually the habit of noticing other people's good
qualities can be acquired. The next step is to tell them how much one
appreciates those good qualities.
Honesty
We can encourage our fellow-believers often by an honest admission to them
of our humanness and of our struggles.
We are called to be witnesses of Christ. But if in our testimony, we give
others a false impression of our lives, then we are actually false witnesses.
The vast majority of believers fall into this category. They give others a
glorious account of their triumphs but never say a word about their struggles
or their failures. They testify to many prayers God has answered, but mention
nothing about the prayers for which God's answer was No. They describe all
their mountain-top experiences in detail, but never so much as mention a word
concerning the many long valleys that lay between those mountain-tops. They are
false witnesses, for they give an unreal picture of the Christian life.
I remember, as a young Christian, struggling to live a life that was
pleasing to God, hearing many such testimonies from other Christians. Not one
of them told me, either from the pulpit or in personal conversation, that they
too had fears and unresolved problems and unanswered prayers, or that there
were things in the Bible that puzzled them too. I assumed therefore that such
problems and queries were peculiar to me. The result was that all their
testimonies only discouraged me; and discouragement in turn, led me further
away from the Lord.
Then I read in the Bible of how the great Apostle Paul was often perplexed,
how he despaired, how some of his prayers were not granted, how some of the
sick people he prayed for were not healed, and how he even had fears, and was
comforted in his depression by fellow-believers (2 Cor. 4:8; 1:8; 12:8,9; 2
Tim. 4:20; 2 Cor. 7:5,6). Paul's honesty lifted my spirit and I was encouraged
to press on.
Paul never wanted others to have a false impression of him (2 Cor. 12:6).
And so, he told them in plain words that he was a human being - not an angel.
He lived in victory over all known sin, but he was still a human being who
could make mistakes and in whom the flesh was still not eradicated. Paul's aim
was always to help others, not to impress them. Through his honesty about his
humanness, he became an instrument of encouragement to many.
It is the desire to impress others which makes many of us unwilling to be
honest with them about our struggles and our anxieties. This shows that we are
not really interested in helping them to a closer walk with God. We are not
concerned that they are discouraged by the unrealistic standards that we have
set before them. We seem to be quite content as long as we ourselves are held
in high esteem.
There is a price to be paid if we are to be channels through which the Holy
Spirit encourages others - the price of honesty.
True Christian fellowship must be based on light. We can walk in true and
deep fellowship with one another only if we are willing to walk in the light.
This involves a willingness to be ourselves with each other - avoiding all sham
and hypocrisy. This is how God intends Christians to walk with one another.
Remember, the first sin publicly judged by God in the early Church was
hypocrisy (see the story of Ananias and Sapphira recorded in Acts 5:1-14).
Sin has caused all of us to wear masks in our mutual relationships. We are
afraid and ashamed of being known as we actually are. We live in a world full
of people wearing masks; and when people get converted, they don't take off
their masks. They wear their masks and go to meetings and meet with other
people - and call that fellowship. But such fellowship is a farce. Yet the
Devil has got most Christians satisfied with just that.
It is true that it is impossible for any of us to remove our masks
completely. Living in a sinful world and fellowshipping in an imperfect church,
and bound by the flesh ourselves, it is neither possible nor desirable to be
completely honest with others. Total honesty is not feasible, because we can't
see ourselves fully. Neither is it advisable, because it may hinder others.
We certainly need wisdom in being honest. But we should never pretend to be
something that we are not. That is hypocrisy - and hypocrisy was condemned
outright by Jesus.
A self-righteous, Pharisaical attitude is what prevents many Christians from
being channels of help and encouragement to others. Our attitude must be such
that our fellow-believers and others will feel free to come to us and "let
their hair down" and unburden themselves, knowing that they will meet with
sympathy and understanding, and that they won't be despised for their ignorance
or for their failures.
The world is full of lonely, tense, fear-ridden and neurotic people. Christ
has the answer to their problems, but that answer should come to them through
His Body, the Church. But alas, most Christians are so self-righteous and
unreal that they drive away people in need.
Keith Miller says in The Taste of New Wine, "Our modern church is
filled with many people who look pure, sound pure, and are inwardly sick of
themselves, their weaknesses, their frustration and the lack of reality around
them in the church. Our non-Christian friends either feel, `That bunch of nice
untroubled people would never understand my problems'; or the more perceptive
pagans, who know us socially or professionally, feel that we Christians are
either grossly protected and ignorant about the human situation, or are
out-and-out hypocrites."
We need to learn what it is to have honest fellowship with others on a
personal level - and we can all begin with one person.
There are dangers in this realm of honest fellowship, however, that we
should be aware of, so that we can steer clear of them. Here are some
guidelines that may help:
First of all, such intimate fellowship must be restricted to individuals of the
same sex. We should not forget that we are still living in a fallen world and
that the flesh (and thereby the potential for sin) is yet within all of us. It
is therefore, most dangerous for anyone to try and develop an intimate
fellowship with someone of the opposite sex, outside the marriage relationship.
Those who have attempted to do so, have invariably fallen into one sin or
another.
Secondly, we must follow spiritual principles laid down in God's Word for
our fellowship - and refuse to be guided by psychiatric techniques. The Holy
Spirit should be in control of our fellowship, and we must allow Him to lead us
closer to one another spontaneously. We should never force anyone into an
artificial honesty.
Thirdly, remember that the aim of fellowship is not to confess our sins to
each other and to get a strange, un-scriptural consolation thereby. The Bible
nowhere encourages us to confess our sins to anyone or everyone. We are to
confess sin in the circle in which it was committed. If we have sinned against
God alone, we need to confess only to God. If our sin was also against some
other individual or group, then it must be confessed to them too. But we are not
to confess our sins to all our fellow-believers. Such confession of sin besides
being quite unnecessary, may actually be a hinderance to others - by polluting
their minds and perhaps encouraging them to sin similarly. We are to build up
the Body of Christ. Make sure you do not tear it down. Scripture exhorts us to
encourage and admonish one another, not to confess our sins to one another.
(The only reference in the New Testament to confessing our faults to one
another (James 5:16) is obviously, as the context indicates, in relation to
physical healing. Sickness is sometimes caused by unconfessed sin. And so James
urges a full confession of sin in the presence of the elders, so that healing
may not be delayed on that count. That command should never be taken out of its
context and given a wider application that it was never meant to have. Remember
that, `a text taken out of context is a pretext').
A foolish honesty can harm the testimony of Christ and also give occasion
for unnecessary gossip. I remember hearing a story of three deacons in a church
who decided to have honest fellowship with each other. One said that his
weakness was money and that he was stealing church funds. Another admitted that
his weakness was sex and that he was living in sin with a certain lady in the
church. The third said, "My weakness is gossiping; and I can hardly wait
to leave this meeting!"
The Bible says, "Don't tell your secrets to a gossip unless you want
them broadcast to the world" (Prov. 20:19-TLB). There are unscrupulous
people even in the church. Make sure you don't place either yourself or others
in embarrassing situations by an unwise "honesty". When in doubt, as
to how honest you should be with another in fellowship, it is better to err on
the side of saying less rather than more.
When we stick to the teaching of God's Word, we are safe.
Then fourthly, we should watch our motives. "Honesty" with others
that is really designed to enhance our reputation as humble saints is
abominable. I have heard believers publicly confess certain "respectable
sins" (such as "I am not praying enough", "I am not
witnessing as much as I should", "I need to be more
compassionate", ad nauseam) that left them looking more like saints than
sinners. Of course, that was their (conscious or unconscious) intention - to
obtain the approval of their fellow-believers for their "honesty."
Beware of such "humble pride!"
Fifthly, we should bear in mind that confidences shared with us by others
are a sacred trust, never to be betrayed. Such matters as people have told us
concerning themselves or concerning others must never be shared even as
"prayer requests." It is simply shocking to hear the amount of gossip
that is passed around under the pious umbrella of "I am sharing this only
for prayer."
Sixthly, we should avoid an unhealthy and carnal curiosity when someone
shares his heart with us. We are warned in God's Word not to be busybody in
other men's matters (1 Pet. 4:15). We are not to go prying into people's
affairs. Our aim in fellowship is to help another, not to discover all his
faults and sins.
Finally, let us ask God to be between us in all our sharing and fellowship.
His presence alone can shield us in our sharing. If Christ the Head is not in
between us, our fellowship can degenerate into a carnal exercise that falls
short of God's purpose.
True Christian fellowship involves each member
encouraging the other. Where this is practiced, the bonds of fellowship are
sweetened and strengthened.
Admonishing others
Faithfulness to our fellow-members in the Body demands that we admonish and
correct them in love when we see them going astray. True love could never sit
back in silent complacency, watching a brother about to go over a cliff.
The Bible says, "Don't hate your brother. Rebuke anyone who sins; don't
let him get away with it or you will be equally guilty" (Lev. 19:18-TLB).
The Bible does not ask us to go around pointing out everyone's faults to
them. We can only correct those with whom we have already established a bond of
fellowship; otherwise our reproof may be misunderstood and do more harm than
good.
We should certainly avoid correcting a person's faults, if we have never
praised him for his virtues. Expressed appreciation is the best background
against which to show a person his faults. We have already seen how Paul
followed this pattern when writing to the Christians at Corinth.
We should likewise refrain from offering correction to one who we know will
patently reject it. The Bible says, "If you rebuke a mocker, you will only
get a smart report; yes, he will snarl at you. So don't bother with him; he
will only hate you for trying to help him. But a wise man, when rebuked, will
love you all the more" (Prov. 9:7,8-TLB).
Needless to say, we should never offer correction to anyone if we ourselves
are unwilling to receive it from others.
Nevertheless, there are occasions when we are to correct our brethren. Jesus
said, "Rebuke your brother if he sins, and forgive him if he is
sorry" (Luke 17:3-TLB). Correcting our brother is as sacred a
responsibility as forgiving him. We are to neglect neither.
In Matthew 18:15-34, Jesus speaks at length on both these subjects -
correction and forgiveness. On correction, He says, "If a brother sins
against you, go to him privately and confront him with his fault. If he listens
and confesses it, you have won back a brother. But if not, then take one or two
others with you and go back to him again, proving everything you say by these
witnesses. If he still refuses to listen, then take your case to the church,
and if the church's verdict favours you, but he won't accept it, then the
church should excommunicate him" (Matt. 18:15-17-TLB).
"Open rebuke is better than hidden love." And you will find that
"in the end, people appreciate frankness more than flattery", for
"flattery is a form of hatred and wounds cruelly" (Prov. 27:5; 28:23;
26:28-TLB).
We need to be cautious however, about the spirit in which we offer
correction to our fellow-believers. We are not called to be
"self-constituted censors of others", lest we be judged by God with
greater severity (James. 3:1-Amplified). We are not here to tell other people
how they should be organising their homes, or what standard of living they
should maintain. Because of our carnal natures, many of us are "Nosy
Parkers." Some are turned away from the Lord because of self-appointed
"prophets" who think they are called to set others straight!
Our calling is to build up the Body of Christ. Any correction that we offer
anyone must be with this aim. If it is not, then we can do far more good by
remaining silent.
We must make sure that our facts are correct, giving others the benefit of
the doubt in every possible way. Having done that, we have the responsibility
to obey the exhortation which says, "If a Christian is overcome by some
sin, you who are godly should gently and humbly help him back on to the right
path, remembering that next time it might be one of you who is in the wrong.
Share each other's troubles and problems, and so obey our Lord's command. If
anyone thinks he is too great to stoop to this, he is fooling himself. He is
really a nobody" (Gal. 6:1-3;-TLB).
This command is directed not to all believers but to those who are
"godly" or "spiritual" (verse 1). The spiritual man is the
one who has first removed the logs from his own eyes, before he takes a step to
remove the speck he finds in his brother's eye (Matt. 7:1-5). The spiritual man
is also the one who is humble enough to recognise that he himself is capable of
falling into the same sin that his brother has fallen into (Gal. 6:1; 1 Cor.
10:12).
Further, a prospective "speck remover" must be gentle as well as
spiritual. For, after all, removing a speck from someone's eye is a delicate
business: harsh, rough treatment may drive the speck further into the eye and
thus do more harm than good.
The spiritual man is also one who will speak to another faithfully only
after prayer has given him the right attitude, so that he feels far more hurt
by his brother's fall than his brother will be hurt by his rebuke. This is what
it means "to share each other's problems" (Gal. 6:2).
The spiritual man is one controlled by the Holy Spirit - for that is the
meaning of the word "Spiritual." This implies that he offers
correction only when he receives the inner witness of the Spirit urging him to
do so. For, as the Bible says, "there is a right time for everything.....a
time to be quiet and a time to speak up" (Eccl. 3:1,7-TLB). We need to be
in close touch with the Head, if we are to know the best time to approach
another member of the Body with a word of correction. Only those who are in close
touch with the Head should undertake such a ministry.
Correction is a sacred responsibility that we
have to each other, as members of Christ's Body. Jesus said (in Matthew 7:5)
that after we remove the log from our eye, we have the responsibility to go to
our brother to remove the speck from his eye. We are not to sit back doing
nothing after cleaning up our own eye. Neither are we to go to our brother
merely to point out the speck in his eye. Our responsibility is to help him get
rid of it. This means that we are to stand alongside him and cooperate in the
removal of the speck.
Receiving encouragement
Fellowship, as we have repeatedly seen, is a two-way matter. Every part of
the human body needs to receive assistance from, as well as give assistance to,
the other parts of the body. So too in the Body of Christ.
We must be humble enough to acknowledge our need of encouragement from
others. It is a proud spirit that professes to be able to carry on without any
encouragement from anyone. If we are honest, we must acknowledge that we are
able to live and work much better when encouraged. Each of us needs
encouragement.
Consider the attitude of the Apostle Paul, when writing to the young
Christians at Rome: "I long to visit you", he says, "so that I
can impart to you the faith that will help your church grow strong in the Lord.
Then, too, I need your help, for I want not only to share my faith with you but
to be encouraged by yours: each of us will be a blessing to the other"
(Rom. 1:11,12-TLB).
There we have a clear example of how the members of the Body are to function
towards each other. Even the great Apostle, despite all his experience and his
maturity, recognised his need to receive help and encouragement from the young
Christians at Rome.
We too need one another's help and
encouragement.
Receiving admonition
We must also be humble enough to receive admonition from others. All of us
have faults. What is worse, all of us have `blind spots', so that we are not
able to see some of our faults as clearly as others can see them.
This is where other members of the Body can help us - if we are willing to
receive their help. If, however, they sense a proud, unteachable spirit in us,
they may never come and tell us what they see, and we alone shall be the
losers.
Paul was faithful enough to rebuke Peter, when he once saw the latter
compromising, and Peter, in turn, was humble enough to accept Paul's rebuke,
for he saw that Paul was right. The result was that others were blessed too and
the Body of Christ was built up (Gal.2:11-16). What loss might have been
incurred, if Paul had kept silent or if Peter had been too proud (as the senior
apostle) to receive the word of correction!
Are we accessible and open to those who may have a word of reproof for us? Or
do we indicate to others by our attitude that we do not want any criticism? If
other members of the Body find it difficult to approach us with advice, it is
more than likely that even Christ the Head may be finding it difficult to get
through to us.
One of the clearest tests of our spiritual condition is our attitude to
criticism.
Here is what the Bible says on this theme:
"It is better to be criticised by a wise man than to be praised by a
fool!....Anyone willing to be corrected is on the pathway to life....To learn,
you must want to be taught. To refuse reproof is stupid.....If you refuse
criticism you will end in poverty and disgrace; if you accept criticism you are
on the road to fame....If you profit from constructive criticism you will be
elected to the wise men's hall of fame. But to reject criticism is to harm
yourself and your own best interests...The wise man learns by listening .....
Don't refuse to accept criticism; get all the help you can...Wounds from a
friend are better than kisses from an enemy " (Eccl. 7:5; Prov. 10:17;
12:1; 13:18; 15:31,32; 21:11; 23:12; 25:12; 27:6-TLB)
The Body of Christ will be built up, as each
member fulfills his responsibility in giving and receiving.
CHAPTER FIVE
SUBMISSION AND LEADERSHIP
The laws of the Kingdom of God are quite opposite to the laws of earthly
kingdoms - as different as Heaven is from earth (Isa. 55:8,9).
On earth, leaders who exercise authority over others are considered to be
superior, and those who have to submit, inferior. But it is exactly the reverse
in the Body of Christ. The laws of the Body call us to:
"Honour Christ by submitting to each other" (Eph. 5:21-TLB);
"Serve each other with humble spirits" (1 Pet. 5:5-TLB);
and "through love, serve one another" (Gal. 5:6).
Every member is called to submit to and serve the other. "How is this
possible?", one may ask, "Are not the younger ones called to submit
to the elders?"
Such a question arises because submission is often misunderstood to mean
obedience alone. But we can submit to others by denying ourselves also. This is
how Jesus lived. He denied His rights constantly in His relationships with
others. This is the primary meaning of submission. And this is what each member
of the Body is called to do.
Jesus has shown us the glory of submission, and
so we should rejoice to walk this pathway all through our lives.
Submission to divinely-appointed authority
God is the ultimate authority in the universe. There is no doubt about that
whatsoever. But God also delegates authority. Government rulers, parents and
Church leaders have authority in society, homes and churches.
The Church is not, as some consider it, a democracy where everyone is
directly responsible to God alone. No. There are leaders appointed by the Lord
in the Body, whom we should submit to, and obey. This is the will of God and
clearly taught in Scripture.
Just as the Word of God commands people to submit to rulers, wives to
husbands, children to parents, and servants to masters, so also it commands
subjection in the Church.
For example the Bible teaches that man is God's delegated authority over
woman. Even though redeemed men and women are equally members of the Body of
Christ, yet God commands woman to be in subjection to man in the Church (1 Cor.
11:3; 14:33-35; 1 Tim. 2:11-13).
Similarly, God has placed elders to give leadership to local churches. Where
elders are truly placed of God in a church, they are the Lord's delegates and
wield something of His authority. The Lord told the disciples whom He sent out,
"The one who listens to you listens to Me, and the one who rejects you
rejects Me" (Luke 10:16).
The Word of God has commands such as:
"Obey your leaders, and submit to them; for they keep watch over your
souls, as those who will give an account. Let them do this with joy and not
with grief, for this would be unprofitable for you" (Heb. 13:17).
"We request of you, brethren, that you appreciate those who diligently
labour among you, and have charge over you in the Lord and give you instruction,
and that you esteem them very highly in love because of their work" (1
Thess. 5:12,13).
"Now I urge you brethren (you know the household of Stephanas, that
they were the firstfruits of Achaia, and that they have devoted themselves for
ministry to the saints) that you also be in subjection to such men and to
everyone who helps in the work and labours" (1 Cor. 16:15,16).
"Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double honour,
especially those who work hard at preaching and teaching" (1 Tim. 5:17).
"You younger men, likewise, be subject to your elders" (1 Pet.
5:5).
God places us as members of Christ's Body in fellowship-groups (churches or
teams of Christian workers). Therein, we are called to submit to the spiritual
leaders God appoints over us, and to move with them as a team. In individual
matters, it comes to us through our spiritual leaders.
In Acts 16:9,10, we read that Paul alone received guidance from God as to
where he and his team of workers were to proceed next. His team, comprising of
Silas, Timothy and Luke, followed him, fully believing that God was leading,
for they were working under Paul's leadership. It was not necessary for them to
obtain separate guidance from God for their move, for it was a team matter and
God had already spoken to their leader.
In the human body too, certain members are so placed that they have to move
when certain other members move. For example, the little finger on my right
hand is an independent member that can move by itself, in direct obedience to
signals from the head. At the same time, being a member of my right arm, it has
to move along with that arm when the arm moves. It cannot detach itself from my
arm at such times and refuse to move, for God has placed it as a part of the
`team' of members that constitute my right arm. It does not have to move when
my left arm moves, for it is not a member of that team, but it does have to
move with its own team.
If God has placed us in a church fellowship, or in a team of Christian
workers, we are obliged to submit to the leadership that God has placed over us
and to follow them in team matters. The only thing that we need to be sure of
is that God has placed us in that team. Once that matter is settled, there is
no question but that God expects us to submit to and obey our leaders. Many
problems in Christian work are solved, once this Scriptural principle is
understood.
Consider the example of the Son of God Himself. As a young lad, we read that
He lived in subjection to Joseph and Mary (Luke 2:51). Jesus was perfect.
Joseph and Mary were not. Yet the Perfect One lived for years in subjection to
imperfect human beings, because that was God's will for Him. The Father's will
settled all matters with finality for Jesus. If His Father wanted him to live
in subjection to Joseph and Mary, He would do just that - and that too, for as
long as His Father wanted Him to.
A time did come later on in Jesus' life, when (after His baptism) He
ceased to be subject to them - when His Father called Him to leave His home and
move out into His ministry as the Son of God. Thereafter, His answer to His
mother Mary was, "What do I have to do with you" (John 2:4). But as
long as His Father kept Him in subjection to Joseph and Mary, He joyfully
submitted.
So we see, from the example of the Perfect Son of God too, that the only
important question is, "Is it God's will that I should be in this
fellowship?". If the answer is `Yes', then it becomes our duty to submit
to God-appointed leadership.
Rebellion against authority was the first sin committed in the universe,
when Lucifer, the head of the angels, rebelled against God's authority over
him.
In the world today, there are two spirits operating - the Spirit of Christ
leading people to submit to divinely-constituted authority, and the spirit of
Satan leading people to rebel against such authority.
The spirit of rebellion is rife today in society, in the home and in the
Church too. This is a clear indication of the world rapidly drifting away from
God, and being increasingly controlled by Satan. We are called as members of
Christ's Body to stand against this satanic principle and to follow Christ's
example of submission.
We can never lose out by submission to God-appointed leadership. On the
other hand, we have a lot to lose by rebellion.
Submission to divinely-appointed leadership is God's method of leading us on
to spiritual maturity. We shall remain spiritually stunted if we do not submit
where God calls us to.
Many a believer has never learnt in experience, the reality of God's
sovereignty because he has never known what it is to be checked and thwarted in
his plans, as a result of a humble submission to his spiritual leaders. No one
can serve God effectively or be a spiritual leader himself who has never known
submission to others at any time in his life.
Submission is not something disgraceful and oppressive, as the Devil
whispers in our ears. On the contrary, it is the means by which God protects us
spiritually. In the early years of our Christian life, when we are still
ignorant of the ways of God, we can be saved from many a pitfall ourselves and
also be protected from leading others astray in our youthful zeal, if we submit
to our spiritual leaders. Those years spent in submission can also be the time
when God teaches us the laws of His Kingdom and thereby makes us spiritually
wealthy, so that we can have a ministry to others.
How much we lose when we evade the pathway of
submission!
Leadership
God Himself calls some members of the Body of Christ to exercise spiritual
leadership over others.
One of the first things that all such leaders must recognise is that Christ
is the only Head of the Body. Headship is never delegated by Christ to anyone.
Individual domination in a local church (or group of churches) or in a
fellowship of Christian workers, is therefore a positive violation of the
Sovereign Headship of Christ.
This is why the leadership prescribed for the New Testament Church is
through a body of elders (plural not singular). The elders together are to
exercise spiritual authority (See Acts 14:23; 20:17; 1 Tim. 5:17; Tit. 1:5;
James. 5:14; 1 Pet. 5:1).
In Matthew 18:18-20, Jesus said that where two or three gathered together in
His Name, He would be present in their midst giving them authority to bind and
to free. The immediate context of the passage (see v.17) seems to indicate that
Christ was referring primarily (though not exclusively) to the elders of the
Church (being at least two or three in number) exercising this authority. One
person by himself apparently could not exercise such authority. (Otherwise it
would have been meaningless for Christ to specify "two or three").
We are not living today under Old Testament conditions. In those days, God
often appointed one man to lead His people - e.g. Moses, Joshua, David, etc.,
Those leaders were all types of Christ. Now that Christ has come, He alone is
the Head of the people of God. And He works through corporate leadership in the
Body.
In the early days of the Christian era, the Lord did give a special
authority to the eleven apostles and to the Apostle Paul, over the churches,
but that was because the Apostles were the foundation stones of the Church
(Eph. 2:20; Rev. 21:14) and were the channels through which God gave His
written Word to the Church. Such a situation does not exist today, and so it
would not only be foolish but audacious for anyone to justify his authoritarian
actions by reference to Paul's action as an apostle. It is more likely that
such a person may be like Diotrephes rather than like Paul. (3 John 9).
Diotrephes was a self-appointed `apostle' who wanted to take the lead
single-handed in the Church. He is denounced in no uncertain terms by John.
Wherever a man today seeks to give single-handed leadership to God's people,
he stands in great danger of leading them back to Old Testament conditions
spiritually. This must be borne in mind especially by those with strong
leadership capabilities.
No doubt, God does even today, form teams of Christian workers, where a
Timothy and a Titus work under a Paul. But this should only be in the initial
stages of the formation of the team. As time went by, even Timothy and Titus
were considered by Paul as fellow-workers of equal standing and not as junior
helpers.
The divinely-ordained plan for leadership in the Body of Christ is through a
group of elders (whether for a church or for a team of workers). This is a
provision that God has made for the safety of the Church - to prevent any one
person's point of view becoming too dominant.
It is easy for those with great vision and ability to get impatient with the
slowness of others with whom they have to share leadership in Christian work.
They may then be tempted to assert themselves, and override others, claiming
that they are doing so for the ongoing of the work of God. But such a violation
of God's order will finally lead to the stunting of the growth of other members
of the Body of Christ.
Look around and see the condition of churches and
organisations where there is one strong authoritarian leader, and you will
invariably find that the Christians therein are spiritual dwarfs. Such one-man
leadership may appear to be dynamic with an abundance of programmes, but the
Christians who are led do not grow. This is not God's intention for Christ's
Body. He would rather have fewer programmes and projects, and more spiritual
growth among the members.
Qualifications for leaders
Only God can appoint a man to be a spiritual leader. If our appointment to
an office is merely by man, we can never exercise Christ's authority. Herein
lies the foolishness of those who seek to be voted into positions of Christian
leadership - and do not seek to be appointed by God.
A spiritual leader must lead his flock in the way of the Cross. This implies
that he must be one who is faithfully walking the way of self-denial himself.
Then again, no one can be a leader in the Body of Christ who does not long
to be a servant of others, as Christ Himself was. Jesus said, "The kings
and great men of the earth lord it over the people; but among you it is
different. Whoever wants to be great among you must be your servant. And
whoever wants to be greatest of all must be the slave of all. For even I, the
Messiah, am not here to be served, but to help others" (Mark
10:42-45-TLB). Paul, the great Apostle, who had an authority exceeding anyone
else's was a servant of others (2 Cor. 4:5; 1 Cor. 9:19). This is another of
the primary qualifications for spiritual leadership.
A spiritual leader is called to exercise authority over those whom God
places under him, and at the same time to be a brother to them and a
fellow-member in the same Body. It is this delicately-balanced relationship of
leader-brother that is often so difficult to maintain. We tend to be unbalanced
one way or the other. We shall need much grace from the Lord constantly, if we
are to maintain this balance. Hence the absolute necessity for the leader to
live close to God in a "face-to-face" relationship. This was the secret
of Moses' effective leadership of 3 million of God's people in the most adverse
of circumstances for 40 years (Deut. 34:10; Num. 12:8).
Spiritual authority, being God-given, is not something that we have to
assert over others or even force others to submit to. We should never compel
others to listen to us or to obey us. God Himself will deal with those who
resist His representatives. The servant of the Lord does not ever have to
strive with men (2 Tim. 2:24,25) - for if God is behind our authority, why
should we seek to defend our position. God will Himself defend us and establish
our authority. If we are seeking to assert our authority ourselves, it must be
because our authority is not God-given at all.
A spiritual leader should not defend himself or seek to justify and
vindicate himself, when attacked or slandered. The Bible says, "Christ is
your example. Follow in His steps.....He never answered back when insulted;
when He suffered He did not threaten to get even; He left His case in the hands
of God Who always judges fairly" (1 Pet. 2:21,23-TLB). The Son of God, the
greatest authority, refused to strive with men and to assert His rule over
them. He left it to God to defend Him and to vindicate Him. This is the path
that all under-shepherds in the Church must tread. As a spiritual leader, if
you live under God's authority yourself, you can safely leave everything in His
Hands. You can afford to ignore slander and criticism and backbiting against
you, for God's promise is that He Himself will defend His servants against such
attacks (Isa. 54:17). Oswald Chambers has said that when someone flings mud at
us, if we try to wipe it off, we will stain our clothes. But if we leave it
alone, it will dry up in due course and fall off by itself; and there will not
be any stain. This is the wisest way to deal with slander.
Watchman Nee, out of the many years of experience that God gave him in the
exercise of spiritual leadership in China, gives us some wise counsel in his
book, Spiritual authority. He says:
"It is not the violent or the strong but a man like Paul whose bodily
presence is weak and whose speech is of no account (2 Cor. 10:10) - whom God
will establish as an authority.....People usually assume such things as the
following to be the necessary requirements for an authority: splendour and
magnificence, strength of personality, bearing or appearance, and power. To be
an authority, they reason, one must possess a strong determination, clever
ideas, and eloquent lips. But it is not these that represent authority; instead
they stand for the flesh. No one in the Old Testament exceeded Moses as a
God-established authority, yet he was the meekest of all men. While he was in
Egypt he was quite fierce, both in killing the Egyptian and in reprimanding the
Hebrews. He dealt with people by his own fleshly hand. So at that time God did
not appoint him as an authority. It was only after he had become very meek -
more than all men on earth (Num. 12:3) - that God used him to be an authority.
The person least likely to be given authority is often the very one who
considers himself an authority. Likewise, the more authority a person thinks he
has, the less he actually does have....
"Authority is set up to execute God's order, not to uplift oneself. It
is to give God's children a sense of God, not to give a sense of oneself. The
important thing is to help people to be subject to God's authority.....To be a
delegated authority is not at all an easy thing, because it requires the
emptying of oneself.....
"Authority is not a matter of position. Where spiritual ministry is
lacking, there can be no positional authority. Whoever has spiritual service
before God has authority before men. Who, then, can fight for this authority,
for there is no way to strive for ministry? Just as ministry is distributed by
the Lord, so authority is also decided by Him.....We should not attempt to
outdo the authority of our ministry....Many brothers mistakenly imagine that
they can take up authority at random, not knowing that ......one's authority before
men is equal to one's ministry before God. If authority exceeds ministry, it
becomes positional, and is therefore no longer spiritual......
"Those who seek to exercise authority should not be given authority,
for God never gives authority to such persons. But strange to say, he who
senses his incompetency is the one to whom God gives authority..... A man needs
to fall before God before he can be used; whenever he lifts himself up he is
rejected by God.....
"How serious will be the judgement upon those who grab God's authority
with their carnal hands. May we fear authority as we fear the fire of Hell. To
represent God is not an easy thing; it is too great and too marvelous for us to
touch. We need to walk strictly in the way of obedience. The path for us is
obedience, not authority; it is to be servants, not to be heads; to be slaves,
not to be rulers. Both Moses and David were the greatest of authorities, yet
they were not people who tried to establish their own authority. Those today
who desire to be in authority ought to follow their footsteps. There should
always be fear and trembling in this matter of being an authority."
The Church today suffers because of a great dearth of spiritual leaders.
There are many who hold titles and exercise their authority officially. But
spiritual leadership is scarcely to be found. Jesus once looked out at the
crowds that came to him and felt great pity for them, "because their
problems were so great and they didn't know what to do or where to go for help.
They were like sheep without a shepherd" (Matt. 9:36-TLB). The situation
is just the same today.
We desperately need leaders in the Church, who
have the heart of a shepherd and the spirit of a servant, men who fear God and
tremble at His Word.
CHAPTER SIX
POWER THROUGH UNITY
"Two can accomplish more than twice as much as one, for the results can
be much better. If one falls, the other pulls him up; but if a man falls when
he is alone, he's in trouble.....And one standing alone can be attacked and
defeated, but two can stand back-to-back and conquer; three is even better, for
a triple-braided cord is not easily broken" (Eccl. 4:9-12-TLB).
You may remember the story from Aesop's fables, where an old farmer taught
an object lesson on unity to his three children, who were constantly quarreling
among themselves. Taking a number of weak sticks, he showed them how the sticks
could quite easily be broken individually, but when tied together in a bundle
were almost impossible to break.
Even the children of this world realise that there is strength in unity and
fellowship.
"The locusts", the Bible says, "though small are unusually
wise, for though they have no leader, they stay together in swarms (Prov.
30:27-TLB). Therein lies their safety and their power.
In the Church of Jesus Christ, we need to relearn this lesson.
Right at the outset, however, let me clarify that I am not referring to an
organisational unity of Christians or of churches, formed by man, at the cost
of compromise and of sacrifice of God's truth - such as in the modern day
ecumenical movement. That type of unity is a farce and a counterfeit of the
unity that Christ prayed for in His High-Priestly prayer (recorded in John 17).
The unity that the New Testament speaks of, is
the unity of the members of Christ's Body with one another, under the Headship
of Christ - an organic unity and not an organisational one. It excludes those
who are outside of the Body of Christ, even if they have the label `Christian'.
There can be no union between the living and the dead. Those made alive in
Christ through the new birth can find their spiritual unity only with others
who have been similarly regenerated by God. Christian unity is forged by the
Holy Spirit Who alone makes us members of Christ's Body. The Bible exhorts us
to "strive earnestly to guard the harmony and oneness produced by the
Spirit" (Eph. 4:3-Amplified). Any unity formed by man is worthless.
Satan's strategy
Satan is a cunning foe and he realises that he cannot overcome a united
Christian fellowship that lives under the authority of Christ and His Word. His
strategy for warfare, is therefore, to begin by sowing discord, suspicion and
misunderstanding among the members of a fellowship, so that he can paralyze
them individually.
In the Garden of Eden, Satan approached Eve when she was alone, possibly
because he knew that he had much less chance of success when Adam and Eve were
together.
Jesus said that the powers of Hell would not be able to overcome His Church.
(Matt. 16:18). It is the Church, the Body of Christ, that is promised victory
in the battle against Satan. A believer standing in isolation from other
believers may find himself defeated.
Satan attacked Christ constantly during Christ's life on earth, but was
unable to prevail. Finally at the Cross, Satan's authority and power were
overthrown by Christ (Heb. 2:14; Col. 2:15).
Today, Satan cannot attack the Risen Christ. His attacks are therefore
directed at Christ's spiritual Body, the Church. Victory over Satan is possible
only as we stand against him, as a Body under the Headship of our Lord.
In a fellowship of Christians, even if one member is not fulfilling his
function, the power of the Body is, to that extent, weakened. Satan knowing
this, seeks continually to isolate individual members of a group, or to divide
the group (or church) into cliques. Either way, he succeeds in his aim.
This is why we must constantly guard against
the subtle wiles of Satan, lest he weaken the links between us and any other
member of the Body of Christ.
The authority of the Body
The earlier chapters of Paul's letter to the Ephesian Christians, disclose
the `mystery' of the Body of Christ. Towards the end of the letter, there is a
description of the spiritual warfare that the Church is engaged in and of the
armour of God necessary to overcome in the battle.
Since the general theme of Ephesians is the Church as the Body of Christ, it
would seem to imply that the warfare described at the end of the letter is
something that the Body as a whole is engaged in - and not just the individual
members on their own. We need one another in this battle.
Earlier in the same letter, we are told that Christ has been exalted far
above all, as the Head of the Church (Eph. 1:20-23). It is one thing to know
that Christ has been exalted, and quite another to know that He has been thus
exalted as the Head of His Body the Church. Paul's prayer for the Ephesian
Christians was that they might have spiritual vision of this latter truth,
which has far-reaching implications for the Church here on earth.
For if Christ has been exalted far above all as the Head of the Church, it
implies that the Church has a share in the exercise of Christ's authority.
Consider an illustration from the human body. It would not be possible for my
head to sit on a throne without my body sitting on the same throne also. So too
with Christ and His Body.
The authority that Christ has is something that He desires to give to His
Church. Why is the Church then so powerless today? Surely it must be because it
hasn't recognised and taken its place as the Body under Christ's Headship.
Christ's authority is exercised through His Body, not just through isolated
individuals. The human body functions in obedience to the head, because it is
a co-ordinated organism and not merely a miscellaneous assortment of limbs and
organs. So too in the spiritual Body, where there is a coordinated Christian
team, there Christ's authority can be exercised.
Do you see now why Satan hates the truth of
"the Body" and why he will do everything in his power to keep us
blind to it? And if we do grasp the intellectual truth of the matter, Satan
will try to blind us to its practical application.
Symphony in the Body
Jesus made many promises in relation to individual believers praying to God.
But in Matthew 18:18,19, we have a promise made to a section of Christ's Body
praying in unison:
"Whatever you bind on earth", Jesus said, "is bound in
Heaven, and whatever you free on earth will be freed in Heaven. I also tell you
this - if two of you agree down here on earth concerning anything you ask for,
my Father in Heaven will do it for you" (TLB).
The word translated "agree" in verse 19, is the Greek word
sumphoneo, from which our English word "symphony" is derived. Jesus
was referring in these verses to a unity among even two of His children that
would be like a musical symphony. This implies more than just saying
"Amen" at the end of another's prayer. Symphony implies a deep
harmony of spirit between those who are praying together. When the fellowship
of even a small group of Christians is like the symphony produced by a
well-conducted orchestra, then (Jesus said) their prayers will have such
authority that anything they asked for would be granted. Such a group of
Christians would have authority to bind Satan's power and to liberate Satan's
captives.
The reason why such a fellowship could exercise such authority was explained
by Jesus: "For", He said, "wherever two or three are gathered
together into My Name, there I AM in the midst of them" (verse
20-Amplified). Christ the Head is present with all His authority in the midst
of such a fellowship, and therefore the powers of Hell can never stand against
it.
One reason why the Church described in The Acts of the Apostles knew the
reality of this authority was because they had this harmony in their
fellowship.
"All of these (the 11 apostles) with their minds in full agreement
devoted themselves steadfastly to prayer.....
"And all who believed were united and together.....and day after day
they regularly assembled in the temple with united purpose......
"And they (the apostles and other believers).....lifted their voices
together with one united mind to God......(Acts 1:14; 2:44,46; 4:24-Amplified).
Because they were integrated into one spiritual Body under the authority of
Christ, they could exercise the Lord's authority in prayer. They were not
highly educated, they had no social influence and no financial backing, yet
they turned the then-known world upside down for Christ.
When Peter was locked up in prison, all of Herod's forces could not stand
against the power of that early Church on its knees before God (Acts 12:5-11).
Satan's kingdom was shaken to its foundations by that Church as it went forth
as one Body, registering the victory and authority of Christ in human lives all
over the Roman Empire (See Acts 19:11-20 for one example of this).
Today Satan ridicules the efforts of a disunited Church trying to oust him
from his strongholds by gimmicks, gadgets, conferences, theological knowledge,
eloquence and trained choirs.
None of these are of any avail against Satan. The Church needs to know again
the reality of being one Body united under the Headship of Christ.
A fellowship of Christians properly related to each other, growing in love
for one another and living in obedience to Christ and His Word is the greatest
threat to the kingdom of the Devil on earth. Satan dreads nothing else as much
as that.
Let us make it our prayer that the Lord will
help us to live each day in the light of the glorious truth of the Body. As
more and more Christians throughout the world begin to understand and to live
by this truth, we shall assuredly see the Church, though small in number,
restored to her pristine glory, an instrument in God's Hands to rout the forces
of darkness and a channel of blessing to a needy world.
Copyright - Zac Poonen (1974)
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