God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
So far from making evangelism pointless, the sovereignty of God in grace is the one thing that prevents evangelism from being pointless. For it creates the possibility – indeed, the certainty – that evangelism will be fruitful. Apart from it, there is not even a possibility of evangelism being fruitful. Were it not for the sovereign grace of God, evangelism would be the most futile and useless enterprise that the world has ever seen, and there would be no more complete waste of time under the sun than to preach the Christian gospel.
(Acts 1-7)
THE Jerusalem church is worthy of special mention
1 because it bears the distinction of having been the
first church of Christ. It was established and nurtured
under the direct supervision of the apostles, who were
guided into all truth by the Holy Spirit. Hence the
church at Jerusalem becomes the divine pattern for all
churches of Christ.
The word "church," as used in the New Testament,
has two distinct meanings. In its limited application,
it stands for a local assembly of obedient believers,
those who have been called out of the world by the
gospel of Christ, and worship the true God according
to the revelation of His will through Christ (Rom. 16:
16; 1 Cor. 1:2; Rev. 2:7). In other words, it stands
for a local congregation of obedient believers under the
supervision of elders and deacons, such as "the church
of Ephesus," "the church in Smyrna," "the church in
Thyatira," etc. (Rev. 2 and 3).
In its universal application, it stands for all the
elect of God, of all nations of the world, who consti-
tute the entire body of Christ, of which Christ is the
head (Eph. 1:22, 23; Col. 1:18). In this catholic
sense, it stands for the one fold of which Christ is the
one Shepherd (John 10: 16) ; for the one body of which
He is the Head (Eph. 4:4) ; for the consummation of
the eternal purpose of God (Eph. 1:9, 10; 3: 1-7; Col.
1: 18-20; Eph. 2: 11-22) ; for the kingdom of which He
has been crowned King, and of which those who are in
Christ are citizens (Matt. 13:38; 26:29; 28:18; Bom.
8:16, 17; Gal. 3:26-29; 1 Pet. 2:9). This church
universal must not be regarded as a visible organization
with ecclesiastical officers, because, in the Scriptural
sense of the term, it is a spiritual institution under the
absolute authority of Christ, whose w T ill is revealed in
the New Testament (John 18:36; Acts 2:47; Col. 1:
13; Heb. 12: 28; Rev. 20: 12). In this sense it is "the
general assembly and church of the firstborn, who are
written in heaven" (Heb. 12:23), as well as the bride
of the Redeemer (Rev. 21:2; 22:17). It includes all
who have "purified their souls in obeying the truth/'
thereby having been "born again," not of the cor-
ruptible, but of the "incorruptible seed, the word
of God, which liveth and abideth for ever" (John
3:3; 1 Pet. 1:22, 23), and having been translated
from the kingdom of this world into the kingdom
of Christ.
In this discourse we will study the term in its lim-
ited sense. We will study the church at Jerusalem, as
the model local congregation of the saints.
1. Membership. Of what did the church at Jerusa-
lem consist? It consisted of those who heard the gos-
pel as preached by Peter ; believed the gospel message,
and asked what to do to be saved ; repented, or turned
from the power of Satan unto God, and were baptized
in the name of Christ for the remission of sins (Acts
2:14-47). By complying with the law of restoration,
they received remission of sins, the indwelling of the
Holy Spirit, and the promise of eternal life (Acts 2:
38, 39). They did not "join church," but the Lord
"added" them to the church (Acts 2:47). Thus we
see that the first church of Christ consisted of baptized
penitent believers in Christ.
2. Worship. Having been added to the church by
the Lord, there were three distinct items constituting
their regular worship as Christians. "We read that they
continued stedfastly "in the apostles' doctrine and fel-
lowship, and in breaking of tread and in prayer"
(Acts 2:42). These three items are necessary to keep
kindled the fires of devotion. God kindles the light
when we obey the gospel of His dear Son, but we must
keep the light burning; and it is only by doing so that
we show forth the excellency of Him who called us out
of darkness into His marvelous light. Too frequently
baptism and the Lord's Supper have been made purely
mechanical.
We enter the church as "babes in Christ," and
must be nurtured by "the sincere milk of the word"
(1 Cor. 3:1; 1 Pet. 2:2). By a faithful study of the
Word, we can learn the will of God (Col. 3:16). We
can renew our spiritual strength from week to week by
the faithful observance of the Lord's Supper, which
turns our minds back to the vision of the cross, and
forward to the return of our Lord (1 Cor. 11:23-26).
By prayer we can draw closer and closer to the great
loving heart of the Father (Phil. 4:6; 1 Thess. 5: 17).
By means of these divine appointments, God's children
are "strengthened with might by His Spirit in the
inner man" (Eph. 3:16), and can attain unto the
stature of full-grown men and women in Jesus Christ
(Eph. 4:13).
3. Liberality. This was a feature of the Jerusalem
church that is worthy of special mention ; also a feature
that has been overlooked in the restoration of primitive
Christianity (Acts 2 : 44, 45 ; 4 : 32-35) . The Christians
at Jerusalem did not regard what they possessed as
their own, but they had all things in common. They
sold their possessions, and distribution was made accord-
ing to the needs of every man. This sale of property
was purely voluntary, the result of a spontaneous out-
burst of Christian love; and the money was left in the
hands of the apostles first, and afterwards the deacons,
to be distributed from time to time as every man had
need (Acts 4:35). The care of the poor and needy
was a part of the regular work of the seven deacons
(Acts 6:1-7). In such manner they began to fulfill
the law of Christ by bearing one another's burdens
(Rom. 15:1; Gal. 6:2; 1 Cor. 12:25, 26).
Very few congregations of to-day emulate the liber-
ality of the church at Jerusalem. "We have stressed
the restoration of the primitive plan of salvation, and
the primitive items of worship, but have neglected to
stress the restoration of primitive liberality, a liberality
flowing out of Christian love. We have seen many
congregations, representing thousands of dollars, eking
out a miserable existence, and doing nothing for Christ
or the extension of His kingdom. Such congregations
can not be termed "Christian" in any sense of the
term, and are not worthy of being called "churches of
Christ. 99 The man who is fundamentally selfish at
heart has not been "born again." The one who has
really surrendered to God counts nothing of a material
nature as his own, realizing that it all belongs to God,
and that he is God's steward for an appointed time
upon earth, and will be held responsible for his stew-
ardship. A congregation composed of men and women
who have surrendered absolutely to God would repro-
duce the liberality and charity of the church at Jeru-
salem. It is high time that ministers of the gospel
begin to stress this neglected item of Christian service !
4. Evangelistic zeal. The original membership of
the church at Jerusalem numbered some three thousand
or more (Acts 1:15; 2:41). The number of believers
was soon increased to five thousand (Acts 4:4). The
spread of the gospel brought the church into a conflict
with the Jewish Sanhedrin. But, in spite of opposition,
multitudes of souls were added to the Lord (Acts 5:
14). The apostles were thrown in prison, but delivered
by an angel (Acts 5 : 17-20). They defended the gospel
before the Jewish council, and were released at the
suggestion of Gamaliel. The word of God increased
and the number of disciples grew day by day. Even
a great company of the priests deserted Judaism for
the religion of Christ (Acts 6:7). This aroused the
bitter opposition of the Jewish authorities. They turned
into an infuriated mob, blinded by religious prejudice,
and stoned Stephen to death (Acts 7). A great perse-
cution arose against the chjirch. Saul made havoc of
it, going from house to house, seizing the followers of
Christ, and thrusting them into prison. But this per-
secution merely resulted in the spread of Christianity
over Judea and Samaria, as those that were scattered
abroad went everywhere preaching the Word (Acts 8:
1-4). Every disciple became an earnest exponent of
the gospel. Persecution merely stimulated their evan-
gelistic fervor. And thus it was that the scattering of
the church at Jerusalem merely resulted in the world-
wide evangelism that soon followed. Within the small
company of obedient believers at Jerusalem was con-
tained the power that was destined to overcome Jewish
ritualism, Greek philosophy, and even the paganism of
imperial Rome herself.
Those who hear, believe and obey the gospel to-day ;
who continue stedfastly, as individual Christians, in the
apostles' doctrine, in the breaking of bread, and in
prayer; who have all things in common, and minister
to each other's needs; and who withstand all opposition
to the pure gospel, and go about everywhere preaching
the Word — constitute a church of Christ in the fullest
sense of the term. Let us not neglect to stress any of
these items in the restoration of the primitive church.
What we need to-day is not a church for the twentieth
century, but a reproduction, in every particular, of the
church at Jerusalem. Such a reproduction would result
in another wonderful period of evangelism, both at
home and unto the uttermost parts of the earth.