Christ is Building His Church


BIBLICAL APPEARANCE OF CHRIST’S CHURCH
OR
CHURCH IS IN THE PROCESS OF DEVELOPMENT

Mat 16:15 He said to them, "But who do you say that I am?" 16 Simon Peter replied, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." 17 And Jesus answered him, "Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven. 18 And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. 19 I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven."


     II.       How should we go about studying the development of church  in particular? (In seeking to answer this question, I will propose and seek to explain two basic principles.  If we would properly study church:

          A.      We must keep before us the biblical appearance of church.  And:
          B.       We must keep before us the biblical categories of church.

Let us at this point consider the first basic principle for the proper study of church history, which again is:

          A.      We must keep before us the biblical appearance of church’s development.  I.e., we should understand and remember what the development of church looks like according to the Word of God.  In order to begin painting the biblical picture of church’s growth, consider once again the key text we considered earlier - Mt 16:15-19 - where we find Christ's first recorded explicit (clear/plain) mention of the church.  Notice first of all from this text:

                   1.       The key element of the biblical picture of development of church.  The key phrase of this passage for our purposes is found in vs. 18 where our Lord declares, ". . . I will build my church . . .".  If we learn anything from this passage, we learn that church will appear as a process of development.  Here is the key element of what church’s development looks like.  It is not a still photo or snapshot.  It is a like a moving picture - a video - full of continuous movement and change and development.

Building upon this foundational view of the development of church, let us begin to consider some:

                   2.       Further descriptions of this key element of the picture.  There are at least nine further descriptions of this process of development which may be gleaned (collected slowly and patiently or perhaps indirectly) from our standard, the Scriptures - descriptions which will help us to accurately portray (represent/describe/revel/expose) church history.  The first four grow out of the key text we have already begun to study:

                             a.       First, this development is a predicted development.  Consider with me three things about this fact.  First of all, notice:

                                      (1)      The two indications that this is predicted development:

                                                (a)      At the time Christ spoke, the church did not yet exist in fully-recognizable form.  It was in its earliest formative (shaping) stages.  Christ had not yet instituted the Lord's Table.  He had not yet initiated the New Covenant by His death and resurrection.  He had not yet poured out His Holy Spirit upon His church at Pentecost and begun gathering sizeable (large/ample/significant) numbers into it.  And he had not yet openly begun to include the Gentiles.  So when Christ spoke of His church, those who listened probably wondered what it was to which He was referring.  For it had still to become a reality in the future.

                                                (b)      But also, the development of the church was clearly a predicted development because Christ here spoke in the future tense.  He was saying, "I will build my church", building upon the foundation rock which in the context here is either the Christ confessed by Peter, or the Peter who was confessing Christ.  Jesus spoke of events which at that time were only in their initial stages, just as the laying of a foundation is but the earliest part of the process of building a building.

So Christ's words were a prediction of future development.  But how certain was this prediction?  This brings us to:

                                      (2)      The well-founded certainty of this predicted development.  Here was no blind prediction by a mere limited man.  Christ's words were not like something I heard regarding an earthquake which occurred in California in 1989.  At the time of the quake, a news commentator said that a study conducted before the earthquake occurred had concluded that there was a 50% probability of an earthquake of a magnitude of 7.0 or greater on the Richter scale sometime during the next 30 years.  After giving these details of the prediction, the commentator concluded that the crystal ball[1] of the scientists was working well because of what had happened.  The problem was that this earthquake was slightly less that 7.0 on the Richter scale, only a 50% chance was given in the first place, and it could have happened anytime over a period of 30 years.  What a great prediction!

But such was not the case with the prediction of Christ.  Here were not the words of a mere man.  The One who here spoke was none other than Immanuel - God with us.  It was God incarnate who predicted.  Here was no uncertainty.  Here was only definiteness.  And this well-founded certainty regarding Christ's prediction was borne out by:

                                      (3)      The early fulfillment of this predicted development.  It should not surprise us that the earliest history of the church found in the pages of the infallible Scriptures records the beginning of the accurate fulfillment of Christ's Words, so that we read:

                                                (a)      ". . . there were added that day about three thousand souls." (Acts 2:41b)

                                                (b)      "And the Lord was adding to their number day by day those who were being saved." (Acts 2:47b)

                                                (c)      ". . . the number of the men came to be about five thousand." (Acts 4:4b)

                                                (d)      "And all the more believers in the Lord, multitudes of men and women, were constantly added to their number. . ." (Acts 5:14b)

                                                (e)      "And the word of God kept on spreading; and the number of the disciples continued to increase greatly in Jerusalem, and a great many of the priests were becoming obedient to the faith." (Acts 6:7)

                                                (f)       ". . . the church throughout all Judea and Galilee and Samaria . . . being built up; and, going on in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the Holy Spirit, it continued to increase."(Acts 9:31)

We could multiply the examples, but there was indeed a solid basis for Paul's later words to the Ephesian believers found in Eph. 2:19-22.  Please read that passage, and also Peter's words to the Hebrew believers in 1 Pet. 2:4-5a.  Even during the days of the Apostles, the building process had begun and was continuing to take place.

So this development is predicted development.  But in the second place, it is:

                             b.       Personally purposeful development.  Christ's prediction in Mt. 16:18 was certainly not made only because He as God could perfectly see what would happen in the future.  It was even more certain because the resurrected Christ, who declared "All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth" before He returned to heaven, is the One who has personally purposed to build His church and is fully qualified to sovereignly do what He's purposed and promised to do.  In the 1st person singular He declared, "I will build My church."

Christ spoke as Sovereign Lord and Head of the church when He made His declaration that He would build His church.  And He is accomplishing His purpose through the power of His Holy Spirit, the third Person of the Trinity, who was poured out upon the church at Pentecost, was active in the Early Church as recorded in the book of Acts and elsewhere in the New Testament, and has continued to be active in building the church since.

Therefore, we should hold as a basic assumption that when we study church history, we are witnessing the personally purposeful, sovereign building activity of none other than Jesus Christ through His Spirit.  This was the historian Luke's assumption when he wrote in Acts 1:1-2, "The first account I composed, Theophilus, about all that Jesus began to do and teach, until the day when He was taken up. . ."  Luke here clearly implied that in the book of Acts he was now going to describe what Christ had continued to do in building His church since He returned to heaven.

Church history is indeed personally purposeful development.  However, the building of the church by Christ, as predicted in Mt. 16:18, is not only certain because Christ knew ahead of time what would happen, and because He was personally determined to act to make it happen.  It was also certain because this development is:

                             c.       Priority development.  Christ's church building activity was of the greatest personal interest for Him.  He declared, "I will build my church".  The church He would build is the church which He had loved from all eternity, and for whom He became a man and came to earth.  She is the church which He purchased by His own precious life blood, which He is presently preparing and purifying, and for which He is praying.  She is that church which is His body and is described as being His fullness.  He declares that He will build it, and we therefore, may rest assured that when we study church history, we are witnessing Christ's sovereign building activity being carried on with His deepest personal interest in what He is doing.  The church's development is priority development with Christ.

How then should we apply the predicted and personally purposeful and priority development of the church as we approach our study of church history?  (Here I have been helped by a former teacher.)

                             1.       When we come to study the history of the church, we should do so with full confidence and expectation of finding precisely what Christ predicted would happen, and what actually began to happen in the earliest days of the church.  The intellectually-proud skeptic might say, "What?  You expect me to conclude what I will find in church history before I even begin to study it?  That's not objective scientific study!"  However, we must respond, "Yes it is objective scientific study because the God of science has told us what church history will look like in advance.  Therefore, any other conclusion is in error and foolish and the mark of a heart in rebellion against that God."  (We might add, that we not only may look to the past with certainty that Christ has already built His church; but also, that we may look to the future with the greatest certainty that Christ will continue to build His church, because He has not yet finished the job (or He would be here already!).)

But there is a second application which also flows from what we have already seen.

                             2.       There is no room for neutral objectivity in the study of church history.  There is no room for the attitude of cool indifference assumed by so many supposed church historians who try to appear scholarly by being so neutral that it appears that they could care less whether the church was built, or whether it was blown to tiny pieces by a hydrogen bomb.  You see, you cannot be neutral in the study of church history because you cannot be neutral toward the One who is active in church history.  You have to choose which side you are on, and a failure to choose to be for Christ and His church is a choice to be in opposition to them.  This reality does not allow us to be dishonest in our studies.  But it does demand that we be biased in our studies (which everyone ultimately is).  An approach of supposed neutral objectivity usually reflects a heart unwilling to be openly supportive of, and identified with, the Christ who is building His church.

Furthermore, you dare not and ought not to be coolly (calmly) indifferent to church history because the King of Kings who is building His church is intensely interested in what He is doing.  We should reflect His attitude as His image-bearers if we would be pleasing to Him.

So there is no room for neutral objectivity or cool indifference in the study of church history.  But a third application remains:

                             3.       We are called to godly wonder and awe, and the greatest of care in our study of church history.  When we come to the study of church history, we come to a Holy of Holies of scholarly study.  We come to that handiwork of Jesus Christ which is His most prized work and possession of all - the outworking of His costly redemption and the extension of His glorious kingdom through a developing church.  Such realities call us to approach our study with wonder and awe, and to use great care in order to properly see and apply the handiwork of our Lord.

Now we turn to another description of the development of the church.  It is:

                             d.       Positive development.  Although this fact is implied to some extent in the word "development" itself, I believe that this fact needs to be underscored.

What is the imagery of Mt. 16:18 (and of Eph. 2:19-22 and I Pet. 2:4-5a)?   As we have noted, it is that of building a building.  Christ speaks of using either Himself as testified by Peter, or the Peter who testified of Him (take your pick) as the foundation rock for erecting a building which is the church.  Even as the erection of a building is a positive process leading up to a worthwhile, useful end-product, so Christ's building of His church is a positive process with advance and increase and improvement until ultimate arrival at the desired, useful, end-product of a completed and purified and glorified church.  How then do we apply this positive development of the church?

When we study church history, we should approach it expecting to find, and looking for such positive progress and development.  We should view it as the continued raising up of a building.  Therefore, at the beginning, we should look for foundation building, then the erecting of superstructure and finishing work.  Granted, there will be periods such as the Middle Ages when progress was very slow, and when there seemed to be more decline than advance.  (We will consider this reality further below.)  But over longer periods of church history we should expect to find, and therefore should look for, the overall positive fruit of Christ's construction work.  The line of development will keep moving in an overall upward direction.

If we respond in this way, two sinful attitudes toward church history will be excluded:

                                      (1)      Excluded will be a cynical (pessimistic/mocking/sarcastic) spirit which is regularly, sneeringly (scornfully) questioning the goodness of Christ's church and the sincerity (honesty/genuineness) of men - especially the sincerity of men in their religious beliefs and convictions.  There will not be room for a spirit of constantly looking for and focusing upon and magnifying the sins and blemishes of the leaders and members of Christ's church as an excuse for remaining in rebellion against God the Father and His exalted Son.  Such a cynical spirit will be excluded because the emphasis of Scripture is upon improvement and growth and development in the church.  God's Word emphasizes the progressive washing away of more and more of the church's spots and blemishes.

However, you may not fit the role of a cynic.  There may be another more appropriate application for you:

                                      (2)      A proper response to the positive development of the church will also exclude a pessimistic spirit which too much focuses upon the all too real and common problems in the church - upon the sins and divisions and battles and false teachings within the church - and therefore becomes discouraged.  We should be optimistic, not pessimistic, as we look at church history.  We should give first priority to looking for the evidences that the church has been advancing and improving throughout her history.  We should do so because ultimately Christ has been building His church - not sinful men.

Thus far, we have seen that the development of the church is predicted, personally-purposeful, a priority and positive.  Closely-related to the idea of positive development is the additional one of:

                             e.       Organic development.  Here we will notice two key texts and then will seek to draw conclusions:

                                      (1)      First of all observe the first key text - Mk. 4:26-29.  This parable tells what the kingdom of God is like.  Remember, it is the church which is presently the chief visible expression of God's kingdom on earth, and which is His primary instrument in extending His kingdom.  (Mt. 16:18-19, which we noted earlier, ties church and kingdom closely together.)  So this parable regarding the kingdom of God provides us with helpful instruction regarding church history.  Let's answer several questions drawing from it:

                                                (a)      What is the imagery here?  Growing grain plants.

                                                (b)      What is the point being made?  The organic development and growth and maturity of the kingdom of God even as plants grow and mature.

                                                (c)      When does the process end?  On harvest day which is the final return of Christ and the day of judgement.

But notice also:

                                      (2)      A second key text - Eph. 4:11-16.  (Observe that the context of these verses in the book of Ephesians is primarily the universal church, not just the local church).  Let's again answer several questions flowing from this passage:

                                                (a)      What is the imagery here?  A human body.

                                                (b)      What is the point being made?  That the body of Christ - i.e., the church - should grow up and mature.

Having considered two key texts, what should be our:

                                      (3)      Conclusions?

                                                (a)      When a wheat (or rice) plant has emerged from the ground only within the last week, would you expect it to have a fully-developed head of grain on it already?  Of course not.  The potential (possible/impending) is present to produce such a seed head, and all the parts are present in embryo (Kernel/origin/seed) form, but the plant is still a young seedling (sprout/sapling).

                                                (b)      When a baby is three months old, do you expect her to be already carrying on an adult conversation (even though she may think she is!)?  Of course not.  In God's ordained process of development, babies must learn first things first, and go through a long process of development before they are adults.

What is true for the wheat plant, and for the human baby, is also true for the church of Jesus Christ.  (Here we come to a very important truth regarding the study of church history.)

After the foundation of the church had been laid during the period of the living Apostles, what do we find in the generations which immediately followed the Apostles?  We find spiritual "baby talk" when we read the earliest writings.  Great immaturity of understanding of the truths of God's Word is apparent (plain/clear).  All that Christ intended the church to be was present in embryo form.  But she was far from the mature plant.

This reality of the organic development of the church affects greatly how we should view earlier periods of church history as compared with later periods.  We should not expect the same precision of understanding of doctrine and even of practice which we find later and which the church now possess.  At times it will be true that what an earlier church father said in 200 A.D. would have been heretical if stated either in 400 A.D. or today.  However, this early church father's comments were not necessarily heretical at the time at which he spoke due to the church's fuzzy (unclear), indistinct (blurry/dim) grasp of the relevant truths at that time.  Often this fuzziness (ambiguity) of understanding was due to the fact that a heresy or doctrinal controversy had not yet arisen to bring the church to clearer views of the specific issue.  And such relevant controversies had not yet arisen because the church was still wrestling with more basic issues.  She had to learn to speak baby talk before she could speak fluently.  She had to learn to crawl before she could walk, and to walk before she could run.

Therefore, when we study church history, it is crucial that we determine and understand the historical contexts of the individuals whom we are studying.  We must be very careful to always view these individuals in their historical settings, instead of unfairly transplanting them into our present day situation which reflects more maturity and growth in the church than had taken place in their day.  (Modern, Christian historical novels or movies can frequently err at this point.)  Here is a temptation which we must constantly resist (oppose).  And here is a principle we will have to continually apply as we study the history of the church. 

I might add that this principle is one which also should be applied in our dealings with others who may not have had the benefits of the biblical instruction and of the Spirit's illumination which we have had.  We need to patiently deal with such people by beginning our dealings with them at the point where they are in their spiritual understanding and not getting frustrated when they do not see right away truths which are (now) clear to us.  And we should remember that many of us were ignorant of some of those very same basic truths for many years before the Lord opened our eyes.

By way of summary of our present area of study thus far, we have been seeking to paint the biblical picture of what church history looks like.  Thus far we have seen that church history is a process of development; and that this development of the church is predicted, personally-purposeful, a priority, positive, and organic.  Until now, the development of the church in church history has been pictured only in a positive way.  But there are other biblical realities regarding the appearance of church history as well.  Therefore, we also need to observe that this development is:

                             f.       An opposed development.  Notice again the words of our key text - Mt. 16:17-18.  This text tells us that there are forces hostile to Christ and His church, and that therefore, there will be warfare during the history of the church. 

The hostile forces here are described as the gates of Hades or hell.  The word translated "Hades" in the New American Standard Bible may mean simply the "grave", but also may refer to the dwelling place of the ungodly after death.  In our text this term is apparently used more broadly as a picture for the kingdom of darkness which stands in violent opposition to the kingdom of God and His church during this age.

But notice further that this opponent is described as the gates of Hades or hell.  Here is the imagery of an ancient walled city where the gates were the strategic part of its defenses and the place through which its attacking armies poured out on the offensive.  Because the gates were such an important place, the one who controlled them was viewed as the one presently having control over the city.  Therefore, in the Old Testament we often find the elders of the city or the king sitting in the gate as he exercised his authority and power.  In the case of our text, the imagery of the gates of hell probably points to Satan's power or authority as head of the kingdom of darkness - an authority which is exercised in opposition to the church in an attempt to weaken her and ultimately overthrow and destroy her.

This active opposition against the church is also predicted in the Parable of the Tares.  Please notice the details of this parable recorded in Mt. 13:24-30; 37-43.  Here is the picture of a growing field of grain which is the world.  The Devil sows his sons among the sons of the kingdom like weeds sown in wheat.  As weeds hinder and harm the growing crop, so wicked men alongside the righteous hinder them as they labor as part of God's church.  And this opposition continues until the harvest day at the final judgment.

The reality of this spiritual opposition to Christ's building activity is repeatedly brought out in the biblical records of the apostolic church.

What do we learn from this opposition?:

1.       We had better expect to find conflict and opposition and spiritual warfare when we study the history of the church, (and also when we live and work together as members of Christ's church).  There always has been, and will continue to be, such warfare until Christ returns.  This is what church history looks like.

2.       We should still be optimistic as we study the conflict-ridden history of the church (and as we battle in our present spiritual warfare), for the gates of hell will not prevail against Christ's church, and the judgment day is coming when Satan's wicked plotting and ability to assault God's kingdom will be totally overthrown.  We should be looking for Christ at work in building His church even in the seemingly darkest hours of her history.

As a result of this opposed development, we find that church history is therefore also:

                             g.       A mixed (or variable) development. 

                                      (1)      Because of the real spiritual opposition against Christ's church, we first of all find an outwardly mixed pattern of development between different periods of church history.  Even as during an extended (total/wholesale/complete) war, the fortunes of the two opponents may seem to switch back and forth, and ebb (tide) and flow for each, so during church history there are periods when the church appeared to be mightily developing and advancing, and other times when she appeared to be in full retreat.

This is what happened in the book of Acts.  The first local church at Jerusalem was prospering mightily.  Then persecution broke out and that church was scattered to the four winds and it appeared that Satan was triumphing.  But then it became apparent that this dark hour was but a sowing of the seeds of greater triumphs for our Lord.  The Gospel was spread as Christians were scattered, Satan's most fervent human instrument - Saul of Tarsus - was converted and became a mighty herald (messenger) of the Gospel, and the church in Antioch was planted from which missionary labors to the Gentiles were launched.

This is what has since happened in church history as well.  The church prospered, Roman persecutions broke out, the Roman emperor professed Christ and the persecutions greatly eased, the barbarians sacked Rome, the barbarians were converted, Moslems swept in, they were thrown back and the Gospel made an end-run around their region to the nations beyond, the church declined during the Middle Ages, the Reformation and revival occurred, the Protestant churches declined, the Great Awakening and related revivals took place, major missionary ventures were launched, then liberalism and neo-orthodoxy swept in, but in our day conservative, evangelical churches to a large extent have far outstripped (outshine/surpass) the dead apostate churches.  And throughout it all, Christ has been, and still is, building His church.  But outwardly, the fortunes of the church from one period to the next have been mixed or variable, with ebb and flow.

Unfortunately, this is not the only way in which this spiritual opposition has led to a mixed result in church history.

                                      (2)      There is also a mixture of good and evil to be found at any specific point in church history in the individuals, churches, and broader groups involved in that historySatan and his hosts not only make frontal assaults from the outside.  They also seek to subtly attack from within as well.  When they do so they use at least 2 powerful allies (associates):

                                                (a)      There is the remaining corruption within the hearts of true believers who make up Christ's church (Rom. 7:14-25; 1 Jn. 1:8-10).  Therefore when we study the lives of the godliest saints, and when we study the churches made up of the most mature Christians, we still find a mixture of good and evil.  Good increasingly is triumphing over evil if true believers are involved, but the sad mixture yet remains nonetheless.  There are still spots and blemishes which Christ is purifying from His church (Eph. 5:27).

Thus in the early church you have a young man falling asleep while no less than the Apostle Paul preached, an Apostle Peter compromising the Gospel by refusing to associate with Gentiles, a Timothy apparently tending to be too timid in carrying out his duties, a Barnabas and a Paul disagreeing over John Mark and parting company, and a Corinthian church with all its problems.

But Satan also has a second ally on the inside of Christ's church:

                                                (b)      There are false professors, apostates and false teachers who manage to become a part of the church - at least for awhile.  Thus in the parable of the Sower in Matthew chapter 13, some initially receive the Word gladly and profess Christ, but later fall away due to trials and persecutions, or the cares of this life, or the deceitfulness of riches.  Christ and Paul must repeatedly warn regarding false teachers and divisive men.  In the Apostolic church, Ananias and Saphira are struck dead for their lie to the Holy Spirit; Simon the Sorcerer tries to buy the gift of the Holy Spirit, Demas forsakes Paul having loved this present world, and whole churches in Revelation chapter 2 & 3 are on the verge of becoming apostate and synagogues of Satan.

What do we then learn from the church's mixed development?

1.       We must be biblically realistic in our approach to church history or we may become disillusioned.  There are real periods of serious outward setback in Christ's church.  There are real areas of weakness and sin in the lives of the godliest of saints and in the best churches and groups of churches throughout the church's history until the return of Christ.

2.       We must also be biblically realistic in our approach to church history or we may over-simplify and become seriously inaccurate in our assessments.  There is a tendency for many to want to tag (mark/label) every individual or church or larger group in church history as being either very, very good, or very, very bad.  Biographies of great saints often fail to adequately note their failings, weaknesses and sins; and paint an untrue picture of such "holy" people.

However, in general, such totally black and white conclusions are simply not possible nor truthful.  They especially are difficult to make during the early church period following the time of the Apostles because doctrinal and practical distinctions were much less clear at that time than they were later.  There is a real sense in which distinctions between truth and error, evil and good, have been increasingly crystallized as church history has progressed and the church has matured, even as individuals tend to become fixed more and more in a path of righteousness or of wickedness as they get older.

As a result of the mixture of good and evil, we must avoid "idealizing any stream of church history which practically assumes that error is not mixed with it".[2]  This is what some Baptists have done in supposedly tracing "the pure baptistic church" all the way back to John the Baptist.  We must avoid the "trail of blood" mentality which assumes that anyone who was persecuted was the good guy, and the persecutor was the bad guy.  This leads to the fact that we also must beware of "vilifying (or condemning) of any stream of Church History which denies the good mixed with it".[3]  Especially in the Early Church, truth often was shared almost equally by opposing sides, and to reject one side would be to lose part of the truth.  We should ask regarding every individual and movement, "Where were they right? And Where were they wrong?" (and might I add, such biblical realism should cause us to maintain a humble perspective upon ourselves, our own local church and our particular group of sister churches as well.)

                             h. It is a principled development. We have seen that the development of the church is opposed, and therefore mixed.  But we also need to observe that it is a principled development.  Even unconverted historians find that history not only in some ways makes overall advancement, but also seems to move in cycles of advance and decline.  When we come to the Bible, we learn the major reason for these cycles in history in general, and in church history in particular.  It is the moral principle that ultimately ". . . those who honor Me (God) I will honor, and those who despise Me will be lightly esteemed" (I Sam. 2:30c). 

Thus we find churches and groups of churches which prosper as they seek to follow Christ faithfully with the light they have during their period in history.  And we find decline and decay and ultimate rejection by Christ of churches and groups of churches as they move away from their Head and His will for His church.

This is much of the focus of Revelation chapters two and three where most of the seven local churches addressed there are warned because of serious decline and defects in them.  Serious threats of having their lamp-stand removed and of being spit out of Christ's mouth are issued to two churches (Ephesus and Laodicea).  And evidently these churches eventually failed to heed Christ's warning, because they have since ceased to exist, in accordance with Christ's threats.

What does this tell us about our study of church history?  That as we study, we should expect to find evidences of God's blessing where He was honored, and of God's chastening and judgment where He was despised, even though these results are delayed.  And when we see such a pattern in history, we should recognize and evaluate it as such:

                                      (1)      When we see Athanasius ultimately vindicated after repeated exiles, we should recognize God's hand of blessing upon his faithfulness.

                                      (2)      When we see Martin Luther used by God to shake Europe with Reformation and revival, we should see God honoring the man who honored Him and His Word and Gospel.

                                      (3)      When we see largely liberal and neo-orthodox denominations dying a slow death, we should see the judging hand of God for their apostasy.

You see, as one writer has said, "the way a man interprets providence proves his real theology".[4]  Everyone starts with presuppositions when he comes to study history.  For ourselves, we need to make certain that our presuppositions agree with the revelation of God.  For the biblical, moral principle enables us to interpret history accurately when we interpret in light if it.  Furthermore, since the biblical, moral principle is the Word of God, it rightly demands that we interpret history in light of it.

However, there is at least one final element of the appearance of church history which we must not ignore and which balances what we have just seen:

                             i.        Church history is puzzling development.  Some secular historians look at history in general and conclude that there is no identifiable pattern to be found.  They conclude that history therefore is the product of chaos - that there is ultimately no meaning and purpose to be found in it.  We at times might be tempted to conclude the same thing.  Why is God's blessing sometimes seemingly so long delayed when there is faithfulness?  And why is God's judgment seemingly often so long delayed where there is unfaithfulness?  Why did Christ allow the early Apostolic Church to decline if He's building His church?  And why did the revivals of the 1730's and 1740's in Britain break out when there was such spiritual darkness just before?  Why does an apostate Roman Catholic Church seem to continue to prosper and grow in at least some ways?

Two passages of Scripture answer these questions at least in part:
                            
In Isa.55:8-9 we read, "`For My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways,' declares the Lord.  `For as the heavens are higher than the earth, So are My ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts.  . . . '

And in Rom.11:33-34 we read, "Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!  How unsearchable are His judgments and unfathomable His ways!  FOR WHO HAS KNOWN THE MIND OF THE LORD, OR WHO BECAME HIS COUNSELOR?"

What then should we learn from this puzzling development found so often in church history?

1.       We should humbly acknowledge and submit to God's wise ways before those aspects of church history which we are unable to understand and evaluate.

2.       We should patiently wait until God makes His purposes known more fully - either before, or at, the return of Christ.  The often puzzling nature of church history is why, generally, time must pass before we can begin to more fully understand what Christ has been doing in building His church.  Only then can we start to sort out seemingly meaningless pieces of God's providence and begin to see the outline of what He was doing.  I.e., only after some time has passed can we get far enough away from the individual trees to be able to see the whole forest.

Conclusion
a.            This development is a Predicted development.
b.            Personally purposeful development.
c.            Priority development.
d.            Positive development.
e.            Organic development.
f.             An Opposed development.
g.            A Mixed (or variable) development. 
h.            It is a Principled development.
i.             Church history is Puzzling development.

This then has been the first specific principle for the study of church history.  We must keep before us the biblical appearance of church history.  But briefly, a second principle is that:

          B.       We must keep before us the biblical categories of church history.  Here I want to briefly give a biblical rationale for the approach adopted for our study of the different periods of church history.  Consider once again the words of Mt.16:17-19.

                   1.       In the person of Peter, our Lord tells us in this passage that He will use human instruments in building His church.  The inspired records of the apostolic church portray for us how Christ began to work this out.  The book of Acts is filled with the role of human instruments in building Christ's church.  However, the inspired historical record of Acts does not deal with each human instrument equally.  It instead focuses primarily upon the labors of two key individuals in the history of the church - Peter and Paul.  Based upon this inspired approach to church history, we will seek to especially focus on the primary human instruments whom Christ has used in building His church during other periods of church history as well.  Where we are able, we will study key biographical sketches of the most prominent servants of Christ, as you can see in the course syllabus.

                   2.       Our Lord also in Mt. 16:18 tells us that Christ will build His church.  This construction work began in the apostolic church and continues to this day.  Therefore we will seek to review the growth and building of the church during the periods of her history which we study.  We will look at her:

                             a.       Quantitative growth.  In our studies, we will seek to survey the quantitative increase of the church in numbers and geographic area during her history.  In a real sense, the entire book of Acts is a record of this quantitative growth during the apostolic church period, and provides us with a pattern for our study of the rest of church history.

We will also consider the church's:

                             b.       Qualitative growth.  Eph. 4:11-16 tells us that internal growth in the quality or health or maturity of the church will take place in at least two areas:

                                      (1)      There will be increasing maturity in the knowledge of the truth, and:

                                      (2)      There will be increasing development in the practice of the truth.

Once again, we find descriptions of this qualitative growth in the apostolic church in the book of Acts and elsewhere in the New Testament which provide a pattern for our church history studies.

                   3.       Finally, Mt. 16:18 tells us that the church will be faced with stiff opposition.  The book of Acts and the New Testament books which follow are filled with records of such spiritual warfare.  Therefore, as we pursue our study of church history, we will review the persecutions and warfare of the church during her history.

These then are the biblical categories which we will follow in the studies which follow.  Please consider the Church History Study Outline (1C) which has been provided with these notes and observe how these categories are reflected in the path laid out there.


In concluding this last part of our overall introduction to church history, we once again need to do two things when we begin to study the history of the church:

1.       We must ever keep before us the biblical appearance of church history.  We must not forget that church history is development which has been predicted; which is purposeful; which is a priority with the Master Builder; which is positive; which is organic; which is opposed; and which is mixed, principled and puzzling.  Only as we approach the history of the church with a biblical and therefore accurate concept of what we will find there will we be able to properly study the mighty redemptive works of Jesus Christ on earth since He returned to heaven.

2.       But also, we must keep before us the biblical categories of church history.  We need to remember what the Bible emphasizes as being of major importance in the history of the church, and be sure that we focus upon those same priority categories in our own studies.  Otherwise we will be in danger of drifting aimlessly into unprofitable diversions and side trails, and we may lose sight of the elements of Christ's works which He intended for us to see and from which He desires that we profit.

By Rameshwar Yadav





     [1]  An instrument used by fortune-tellers to supposedly predict the future using devilish arts.
     [2]  Waldron, p.10.
     [3]  Waldron, p. 10.
     [4]  Roberts, p. 50.

Comments

  1. Christ is building His Church. So None can stop it because He has been building His church for 2000 years. Many rose against the Christ's church but passed away. Still He is working as His Father is at work.

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