THE
NEW CREATION
<PAGE 195>
STUDY
V
THE
ORGANIZATION OF THE NEW CREATION
The "Living Stones" for the Spiritual Temple--The
Nominal vs. the Real New Creation--The "Mystery of God"
and the "Mystery of Iniquity"-- Great Antichrist's
Organization--The Scriptures Trustworthy-- Freedom Permitted
to the World and to Churchianity-- Order out of Confusion--"In
Due Time"--"The Ends of the Ages"-- The Vine
of the Father's Planting--"The Twelve Apostles of the Lamb"--Paul
the Successor of Judas--Number of Apostles Limited to Twelve--The
Apostolic Commission--The Apostles' Strong Characters-- The
Apostle Paul "Not one Whit Behind" the other Apostles--
The Inspiration of the Twelve--Divine Supervision of the Apostles'
Writings--"Upon this Rock Will I Build My Church"--Harmony
of the Gospels--Keys of Authority--Apostolic Infallibility--Objections
Considered--"One is Your Master"--The True Church
is "The Flock of God"--Apostles, Prophets, Evangelists,
Teachers--The Lord's Organization of The New Creation Absolutely
Complete--He is Also Its Superintendent--Gifts of the Spirit
Ceased with Their Necessity--Unity of the "Faith Once Delivered
to the Saints"--Unity of Force, Antichristian --Bishops,
Elders, Deacons--True Significance of "Prophet"--Humility
Essential to Eldership--Other Necessary Qualifications --Deacons,
Ministers, Servants--Teachers in the Church-- Many Should Be
Able to Teach--"Be not Many of You Teachers, Brethren"--"Ye
Need not That Any Man Teach You"--"Him That Is Taught"
and "Him That Teacheth"--Woman's Province in the Church--Women
as Fellow-Workers--"Let Her be Covered."
AS
THE New Creation will not reach its perfection or completion until
the First Resurrection, so its organization will be completed
only then. The temple figure illustrates this: as living stones
we are now called, or invited to places in the glorious temple,
and, as the Apostle explains (`1 Pet. 2:5`),
we come to Jesus, who, as the Father's representative, shapes,
chisels, fits and polishes us for places in the glorious Temple
of the future--the meeting-place between God and the world. As
in the typical temple built by Solomon every
<PAGE 196> stone was thoroughly fitted in
the quarry for its place in the building, so with us--all the
fitting preparation is done in the present life. As in the type
every shaped stone went into its place without the sound of a
hammer, so in the antitype --the living stones, which now submit
joyfully to the Lord's preparation, will be completely organized
under himself as the capstone when united to him beyond the veil--without
confusion, without need of further arrangement or preparation.
However,
the Scriptures recognize a oneness or relationship of these living
stones during the period of their preparation. Indeed, they go
a step further, and recognize a temporary organization
which permits each member of the prospective Kingdom to be a sharer
with the great Teacher and Master Builder in the preparatory work
of "building up one another in the most holy faith"--assisting
one another in the shaping of characters in accord with the lines
of the pattern--our Lord Jesus. As we proceed to a minute examination
of the divine arrangements for the present time, it may surprise
many to discover how much liberty the Lord has left to each individual
member of the New Creation: but when we recognize the fact that
he is seeking willing worshipers, willing sacrificers, who are
prompted by love for the Lord and for the principles of righteousness
to lay down their lives for the brethren's sake, and for the sake
of being colaborers with him, then it is clear that the Lord's
plan of granting great liberty is the best plan--the one which
most surely tests the heart-loyalty, most fully develops character,
and proves the willingness of each to follow with the other the
Law of Love, doing to the other as he would the other should do
to him.
Such
a liberty, or, comparative freedom, is well adapted to the Lord's
object in the present time--namely, the selection of the little
flock and the perfecting of them in character and instructing
them for the Royal Priesthood of the future--but would be wholly
out of line with and insufficient for the work of converting the
world, which he is generally supposed to be doing. It is because
of this wrong
<PAGE 197> doctrine--this supposition that
God has commissioned the Church to conquer the world and to subdue
all things unto himself during the present age--that so many persons
of good judgment have marveled at the simplicity of the organization
of the Church by the Lord and the apostles. And seeing how inadequate
such an arrangement would be for the conversion of the world,
men have undertaken to elaborate the organization, as seen in
the various ecclesiastical institutions of Christendom. Of these
is the Papacy, one of the most subtle and powerful organizations
imaginable. The Methodist Episcopal system is also masterful,
but on a higher plane; it controls a different class. It is the
thorough organization of these two great systems that has given
them their success and their power in "the Christian world."
We shall see as we proceed that these and all human "churches"
are in their organization quite different from the Church which
the Lord instituted--that their ways are not his ways, even as
their plans are not his plans; for as the heavens are higher than
the earth, so are the Lord's ways and plans higher than those
of man. (`Isa. 55:8,9`) Ere long
the true-hearted will see that they greatly erred in leaving the
simplicity of Christ and attempting to be wiser than God in the
conduct of his work. Results will show his wisdom and man's folly.
The
Nominal vs. the Real New Creation
As
with the typical people all were Israelites in a nominal sense,
but comparatively few "Israelites indeed," so in the
antitype we are not to be surprised that we find a nominal Church,
as well as a real Church, a nominal New Creation as well as a
real New Creation. Ever since Christianity became to some extent
popular, "tares," "imitation wheat," have
infested the wheat-field, affecting to be genuine wheat. However
difficult it may be for man, who cannot read the heart, to determine
the true from the false, the wheat from the tares the Lord assures
us that he knoweth the heart, that--"The Lord knoweth them
that are his." He does indeed expect us to discriminate between
the true
<PAGE 198> sheep and wolves in sheep's clothing,
and between the true grapevine bearing the true fruits and the
thorns and thistles which might seek to pass themselves off for
members of the true Vine, and tells us so to do. But beyond this
general judgment--a liberal examination of the general outward
character, the Lord does not permit his people to go-- saying,
"Judge nothing before the time." Amongst those whom
you recognize as legitimate branches in the Vine, do not attempt
to decide how long a time should be granted them to bring forth
the ripe fruits. We must leave that to the Father, the Husbandman,
who prunes every branch, and who will ultimately take away every
branch or member that "beareth not fruit." We, therefore,
leave to the Husbandman the pruning of the "Vine"--the
correction of every truly consecrated member of the Church of
Christ-- letting him do the excommunicating, recognizing that
he did the planting and the watering also, and brought forward
the sprouting of every branch in the true Vine. The spirit of
the Vine is to be recognized to some extent in each branch or
member, and each is to be encouraged and assisted in its growth.
Love is to be the law amongst all these branches; and only as
the divine Word is heard--not a whit beyond its authorization--has
any branch the right to criticize, rebuke or otherwise prune,
or do aught against another branch. The spirit of love is, on
the contrary, to prompt to mercy, kindness, long-suffering and
patience up to the very limits allowed by the great Husbandman;
which, as we have already suggested, are broad and liberal and
designed to develop character in every branch.
All
this is different in human organizations in proportion as they
have ignored or abandoned the simplicity of the divine arrangement.
They have made arbitrary rules respecting who may be acknowledged
as members or branches of the Vine, and who may not be admitted
to the full fellowship; they have made financial exactions and
various rules and regulations which the Scriptures have not made,
and laid down numerous creeds and confessions which the Scriptures
have not laid down, and have prescribed penalties
<PAGE 199> for violations of these which the
Scriptures have not imposed, and have made regulations for disfellowshipping,
excommunicating, etc., contrary to any authorization given to
the True Church, the Body of Christ, the True Vine, the New Creation.
We
have already called attention to the fact that the Church of Christ
is called in the Scriptures the "Mystery of God,"26
because, contrary to expectation, the Church was to be the Messianic
Body which, under its Anointed Head, Jesus, shall rule
and bless the world. This mystery, or secret, now revealed to
the saints, was kept hidden from past ages and dispensations (`Eph.
3:3-6`), and is the mystery of God which shall be finished
now shortly, in the consummation of the New Creation, in the close
of this Gospel age. We have also drawn attention to the fact that
the Scriptures refer to Babylon as a counterfeit system (mother
and daughters --some more and some less corrupt, some better and
some poorer counterfeits), and there designated the "Mystery
of Iniquity." We are not to be understood as meaning that
the founders of these counterfeit systems purposely and intentionally
organized them for the purpose of misleading the people of God.
Rather we are to remember that it is Satan who in the Scriptures
is credited with having "deceived the whole world" on
this subject; putting evil for good and good for evil; light for
darkness and darkness for light. Satan "now worketh in the
children of disobedience" (`Isa.
5:20`; `Eph. 2:2`),
even as he proffered his cooperation to our Lord Jesus. He delights
to cooperate with all of Christ's followers whom he can seduce
from walking in the footsteps of the Master. As he tried to persuade
our Lord that there were better ways--ways that involved less
personal sacrifice and self-denial than the Father's ways--by
which he might bless all the families of the earth, so he, during
this Gospel age, has been intent upon persuading the Lord's truly
consecrated brethren to adopt his plans--not to give careful heed
to the Father's plans and rules. He would have them
<PAGE 200> overwise--to feel that they can
serve the Lord better by other methods than those the Scriptures
point out. He would puff them up with feelings of zeal for and
pride in their human systems, the work they are doing, and the
organizations which they have effected. With the Master the Adversary
had no success, his answer being invariably, "It is written."
But not so with his followers. Many, many neglect what is written;
neglect the Master's example and words; neglect the words and
example of the apostles, and are intent upon carrying out for
God a plan which they hope and believe he approves and which they
trust will redound to his praise.
How
wonderfully mistaken such will find themselves when, by and by,
they shall see the Kingdom as God originally planned it and has
since worked the matter out along his own lines! They will then
discover how much better it is to be careful to be taught of the
Lord, than to attempt to teach the Lord--to do his work in his
way, rather than work for him in a way which he will not acknowledge.
The success of these human plans--as in Papacy, Methodism, and,
proportionately, in other denominations--helps to make these systems
"strong delusions."
The
Lord has not interfered with, or hindered, the growth of the "tares"
in the wheat-field during this Gospel Age. On the contrary, he
instructed his people to expect that both would grow together
until the "harvest" time, when he himself would be present,
superintending the separation, gathering the wheat into his barn
(the glorified condition), and seeing to the bundling of the tares
for the great time of trouble with which the age shall end, and
which shall destroy them as "tares" or imitation
New Creatures without destroying them as human beings. Indeed,
many of the "tares" are respectable, moral, and, as
the world uses the term, "good people." So amongst all
the heathen religions there are elements of goodness, too, though
far less than amongst the "tares," who have been greatly
blessed and advantaged every way by reason of their close contact
with
<PAGE 201> the true "wheat," and
their partial discernment of the spirit of the Lord in the latter.
This
Mystery of Iniquity ("Babylon," Confusion, Christendom)
the Apostle Paul declares was already beginning to work amongst
the Lord's people in his day; but the working was evidently but
slight until after the death of Paul and the other apostles. While
the apostles remained with the Church they were able to point
out some of the false teachers through whom the Adversary was
seeking privily, privately, secretly, to bring in damnable heresies
to undermine the faith and to turn the faithful aside from the
hopes and promises and simplicities of the Gospel. (`2
Pet. 2:1`) The Apostle Paul speaks also of some of these
in general terms, as beginning the workings of iniquity; but he
names some of them personally, Hymenaeus and Philetus, et al.,
"who concerning the truth have erred," etc.--"overthrowing
the faith of some." (`2 Tim. 2:17`)
Respecting these false teachers and their errors, he again warned
the Church through the elders at Ephesus, especially pointing
out that these would flourish after his death--grievous wolves,
they would not spare the flock. (`Acts 20:29`)
This last is remarkably in accord with our Lord's prediction in
the parable. (`Matt. 13:25,39`) Our
Lord clearly shows that these false teachers and their false doctrines
were the agencies of the Adversary who sowed the tares amongst
the wheat that he and the apostles had planted. He says, "While
men [the special servants, the apostles] slept, an enemy
came and sowed tares."
It
was not long after the apostles fell asleep, we may be sure, until
the spirit of rivalry under the guidance of the Adversary led
step by step to the ultimate organization of the great Antichrist
system--Papacy. Its organization, as we have already seen,27
was not effected instantly, but gradually --beginning to assume
its power about the fourth century. The great Antichrist flourished
so successfully for a
<PAGE 202> time that all the histories written
from that period onward to the "Reformation" practically
ignored the right of every person and class to the name Christian
or to be considered orthodox and faithful who did not belong to
or in some manner support this Antichrist system. Others were
not permitted to exist except privately and under ban, and if
there were histories of them, apparently they were destroyed;
but, possibly, like those walking in the light of present truth
today, the faithful of that time were so insignificant in proportion
of numbers and influence that none would have thought them worthy
of mention in comparison with the great and successful system
which they essayed to oppose, and which so rapidly climbed to
the influential place of power in both temporal and spiritual
matters.
Since
the "Reformation" the Adversary has again showed his
cunning in organizing every new departure (every fresh effort
to reach the truth) into another Antichrist; so that today we
have not only the original "mother of harlots" but her
many "daughters."28
In view of these facts we will not seek for histories of the True
Church except such as we find in the New Testament, which evidently
have been preserved to us with great sacredness and purity, notwithstanding
an occasional interpolation, illustrated in
`John 21:25` and `1 John 5:7`.
We
will, however, briefly call attention to certain facts, which
not only prove to us that the Scriptures have been preserved in
comparative purity, but which attest also at the same time that
the many systems claiming to have been organized by the Lord and
the apostles are wholly different from the one which they did
organize, the account of which is given us in the New Testament.
(1)
If the primitive Church had been organized after the manner of
Papacy or other denominations of today, the records would have
been quite different from what they are. We would have had some
reference to our Lord's installation of the apostleship with great
ceremony, himself
<PAGE 203> sitting somewhere in state as a
Pope, receiving the apostles in scarlet robes as cardinals, etc.,
etc.; we would have had strict laws and regulations respecting
Friday, abstaining from meat, etc.--something respecting "holy
water" sprinkled upon the apostles or upon the multitude,
and something about making the sign of the cross. Mary, our Lord's
mother, would not have been forgotten. An account would have been
given of her claimed miraculous conception and she would have
been announced as "the mother of God," and Jesus himself
would have been represented as doing her some special homage,
and as instructing the apostles to approach him through her. Some
injunction would have been given respecting "holy candles,"
when and how and where they should be used; some instruction respecting
the invocation of saints; some instruction about the "mass,"
and how Peter, meeting with the other disciples, was recognized
as the Pope; how they prostrated themselves before him, and how
he performed mass for them all, declaring that he had power to
re-create Christ in the bread and to sacrifice him afresh for
personal transgressions. We would have some account of Stephen's
burial; how Peter or the others "consecrated" a grave
for him, so that he might lie in "consecrated ground,"
and that they put in his hand a "holy candle" while
they said certain prayers over him. We would have had rules and
regulations respecting various orders of clergy, and how the laity
are not at all "brethren" with them, but subservient
to them. We would in turn have orders amongst the clergy, higher
and lower, Reverend, Right Reverend, Most Reverend; Bishops, Archbishops,
Cardinals and Popes; and particular directions how each and all
were to attain their positions, seeking honor one from another,
and who should be greatest.
The
fact that these matters are in no sense of the word even hinted
at by the apostles is prima facie evidence that the systems
which claim either in whole or in part such divisions of the Church,
such authorities, such offices, etc., were not organized by the
apostles or under their guidance, nor
<PAGE 204> by the Lord who appointed them
and recognized their work. `John 15:16`;
`Acts 1:2`; `Rev. 21:14`
(2)
It proves, additionally, that the Bible was not concocted by these
wise organizers; for had they forged it we may be sure they would
have supplied it abundantly with references such as we have suggested.
(3)
Having this authority and evidence that the "mother"
and numerous "daughter" systems of the present day were
not instituted by the Lord and the apostles, but resulted from
corruptions of their simple teachings, and are, hence, mere human
institutions--attempts to be wiser than God in the doing of the
divine work--let us have the greater confidence in the Word of
God, and let us give the more earnest heed even to the smallest
particulars it sets before us, upon this and all subjects.
During
the six thousand years of the world's history up to the present
time, God has permitted mankind in general to do their best in
solving the problems of life. The natural man was created with
qualities of mind which inclined him to honor and worship his
Creator; and these qualities of mind have not been totally obliterated
by the fall--"total depravity" is certainly not true
of the race in general. As God has allowed men to exercise the
other qualities of their minds as they chose, so he has permitted
them to exercise their moral and religious traits according to
their inclinations. We may see that aside from natural Israel
and spiritual Israel, and the influences which have gone out from
these to the world, God has let the world alone--let it do the
best it could do in the way of self-development, etc. Man in his
ignorance and blindness has largely fallen a prey to the devices
of Satan and the fallen angels, who, through various forms of
superstition, false religions, magic, etc., have turned the masses
far from the truth. The Apostle explains the situation, saying
that this is so because when men knew God they glorified him not
as God, neither were thankful, but became vain in their imaginations,
and their foolish heart was darkened, and God gave them over--
allowed them to take the way they preferred, to learn certain
<PAGE 205> lessons in connection with their
own depravity, and to manifest by the degradation into which they
would fall the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and the unwisdom of
listening to any counsel except that of their Creator.
As
we have already seen, the Lord does not purpose to leave mankind
in this weak and fallen condition; but through the New Creation,
in his own due time, the knowledge of the Lord will reach every
member of the human family, with full opportunity to come to a
knowledge of the truth, and to all the blessings secured through
the redemption. But the point which we wish specially to enunciate
here is that, as God has thus left the heathen nations to themselves,
so also he is leaving so-called "Christendom" to itself.
He is permitting men who have received some of the light of divine
revelation to use it as they please--to try their hand at improvements
upon the divine plan, to organize human systems, etc. All this
does not mean that he has not the power to interfere, nor that
he approves of these various conflicting and, more or less, injurious
devices and institutions of humanity and Churchianity. These experiences
will constitute another lesson, which by and by will reprove many,
when they shall recognize the grand outcome of the divine plan
and see how God kept steadily on, working out the accomplishment
of his original purposes, practically ignoring the schemes and
devices of man, and accomplishing his results sometimes partly
through them and sometimes in absolute opposition to them. Just
so he did in the end of the Jewish age, when he permitted some
of that nation to accomplish his plan in persecuting and crucifying
the Lord and his apostles. And as some of them were "Israelites
indeed," afterward blessed and uplifted and made partakers
of the sufferings of Christ that by and by they might also be
partakers of his glories, so now there are probably spiritual
"Israelites indeed" who, Paul-like, will be recovered
from the snares of the Adversary.
Another
point is worthy of notice: the Lord has a special time for the
beginning of his Kingdom, a special time, therefore, in which
his elect New Creation shall be developed
<PAGE 206> and prepared for his service; and
apparently it was a part of his plan that special light should
shine upon the beginning and upon the close of this period. The
Apostle intimates this when he refers to us "upon whom the
ends of the ages have come." (`1 Cor.
10:11`) It was in the lapping of the Jewish and
Gospel ages that the Way, the Truth and the Life first were manifested;
"Dark Ages" intervened, and now in the lapping time
of the Gospel and Millennial ages the light shines as never before--on
"things new and old." While we are to suppose that those
in accord with the Lord in the beginning of the age were given
special light, and that such now, in the close of the age, will
be favored with the light of Present Truth that they may thereby
be sanctified, we are not to think that the same measure of light
was necessary to sanctification during centuries intervening,
some of which are known as the "Dark Ages." We are not
to suppose that the Lord ever left himself without witnesses,
however they may have been ignored on the pages of history; but
are to regard this ignoring as due to their comparative obscurity
and to their being out of touch and out of sympathy with the great
anti-Christian systems--even though some of them may have been
in those systems. So the Lord's call, applicable now, clearly
indicates that we should expect to find many of the Lord's people
in, and confused and bewildered by, sectarianism, in Babylon:
"Babylon the great is fallen." "Come out of
her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and
that ye receive not of her plagues."
`Rev. 18:2,4`
Having
thus taken a cursory view of the Church and her limited history,
let us come more particularly to an examination of the Church
as it was originally instituted by our Lord. As there is but one
Spirit of the Lord, which all who are his must possess,
so there is but one Head and center of the Church, our
Lord Jesus. We are to remember, however, that in all of his work
the Father was freely acknowledged, and that according to his
own account his work was done in the Father's name, by the Father's
authority--"Every plant which my Heavenly Father hath not
planted shall be
<PAGE 207> rooted up." (`Matt.
15:13`) The true Church, the New Creation, is of the Father's
planting. Our Lord says, I am the true Vine, ye are the branches
and my Father is the Husbandman. Later on he points out that there
is a "Vine of the Earth," a nominal church, a false
church, that was not of the Father's planting, and which shall
be rooted up. The fruitage of the True Vine is Love, and is precious
to the Father; but the fruitage of the Vine of the Earth is selfishness
in various forms, and will be ultimately gathered into the great
winepress of the wrath of God in the great time of trouble with
which this age will close. `John 15:1-6`;
`Rev. 14:19`
Every
Bible student has surely observed that our Lord and the apostles
recognized no division in the Church and ignored everything like
schism, both in fact and in name. With them the Church was one
and indivisible, like its one faith, one Lord and one baptism.
It was spoken of from this standpoint as the Church, the Church
of God, the Church of the Living God, the Church of Christ, the
Church of Firstborns; and the individuals of it were called "Brethren,"
"Disciples," "Christians." All these names
are used indiscriminately of the whole Church and of the smallest
gatherings--even the twos and threes--and of the individuals,
at Jerusalem or Antioch or elsewhere. The variety of these names
and their general use clearly implies that none of them were intended
to be proper names. All were merely illustrative of the great
fact which our Lord and his apostles continually set forth, viz.,
that the Church (Ecclesia, body, company) of the Lord's
followers are his "elect"--to share his cross and learn
needed lessons now, and by and by to be associated with him in
his glory.
This
custom should have continued, but was changed during the Dark
Ages. When error had developed, the sectarian spirit came with
it and peculiar designations followed --Church of Rome, Baptist
Church, Lutheran Church, Church of England, Holy Catholic Church,
Wesleyan Church, Christian Church, Presbyterian Church, etc. These
are marks of carnality, as the Apostle points out (`1
Cor. 3:3,4`);
<PAGE 208> and as the New Creation emerges
out of the gross darkness which has so long covered the world
it becomes enlightened upon this point also; and observing the
error and appearance of evil, not only comes out of sectarianism,
but refuses to be known by these unscriptural names--though willingly
answering to any or all that are Biblical.
Let
us now examine the foundations of the one Church which the Lord
established:
The
Twelve Apostles of the Lamb
The
Apostle declares that other foundation can no man lay than that
is laid--Jesus Christ. (`1 Cor. 3:11`)
Upon this foundation our Lord, as the Father's representative,
began to rear his Church, and in so doing he called twelve apostles--not
by accident, but by design, just as the twelve tribes of Israel
were not twelve by accident, but in conformity to the divine plan.
Not only did the Lord not choose more than those twelve apostles
for that position, but he has never given authority since for
any more--barring the fact that Judas, having proved himself unworthy
of a position amongst the twelve, fell from his place and was
succeeded by the Apostle Paul.
We
notice with what care the Lord watched over the apostles--his
carefulness for Peter, his praying for him in the hour of his
trial, and his special appeals to him afterward to feed his sheep
and his lambs. We note also his care for doubting Thomas and his
willingness to demonstrate to him thoroughly the fact of his resurrection.
Of the twelve, he lost none save the son of perdition--and his
deflection was already foreknown to the Lord and foretold in the
Scriptures. We cannot recognize the choice of Matthias recorded
in Acts as in any sense of the word the Lord's selection. He was,
doubtless, a good man, but was chosen by the eleven without authority.
They had been instructed to tarry at Jerusalem and wait for endowment
from on high by the holy Spirit at Pentecost, and it was during
this waiting period, and before they were endued with power, that
<PAGE 209> they mistakenly cast lots and chose
Matthias to take the place of Judas. The Lord did not reprove
them for this undesigned meddling with his arrangement, but simply
ignored their choice, and in his own time brought forward the
Apostle Paul, declaring, "He is a chosen vessel unto me";
and, again, we have the Apostle's statement that he was chosen
from his mother's womb to be a special servant; and, further,
that he was not a whit behind the chiefest of the apostles.
`Gal. 1:15`; `2 Cor. 11:5`
From
this it will be seen that we are entirely out of accord with the
views of Papacy and of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and of
the Catholic-Apostolic Church, and of the Mormons, all of whom
claim that the number of the apostles was not limited to twelve,
and that there have been successors since their day who spoke
and wrote with equal authority with the original twelve. We deny
this, and in evidence note how the Lord particularly chose those
twelve, calling to mind the prominence of the number twelve in
sacred things pertaining to this election; and we cap the climax
by pointing to the symbolical picture of the glorified Church
furnished in `Revelation 21`. There
the New Jerusalem --the symbol of the new Millennial government,
the Church, the Bride united to her Lord--is very clearly delineated;
and in the picture the statement is most distinctly made that
the twelve foundations of the City are precious, and that in the
twelve foundations were the names written of the "twelve
apostles of the Lamb"--no more, no less. What better proof
could we have that there were never more than twelve of these
apostles of the Lamb, and that any others were, as the Apostle
Paul suggests, "false apostles."
`2 Cor. 11:13`
Nor
can we imagine any need of more apostles; for we still have those
twelve with us--their testimony and the fruit of their labors--in
a much more convenient form than had those who were personally
with them during their ministry. The records of their ministries
are with us; their records of the Lord's words, miracles, etc.
Their discourses on the various topics of Christian doctrine in
their epistles are in our
<PAGE 210> hands today in a most satisfactory
manner. These things are "sufficient," as the
Apostle explains "that the man of God may be thoroughly furnished."
Explaining the matter further the Apostle declared, "I have
not shunned to declare the whole counsel of God." What more
is necessary? `2 Tim. 3:17`;
`Acts 20:27`
Immediately
succeeding his forty days of meditation and testing by the Adversary
in the wilderness, and having determined upon the proper course,
our Lord began to preach the Gospel of the coming Kingdom and
to invite followers, who were called disciples. It was from amongst
these disciples that he eventually chose the twelve. (`Luke
6:13-16`) They were all from what might be termed the humbler
walks of life, several of them fishermen, and of them it is declared
without disapproval that the rulers "perceived that they
were unlearned men." (`Acts 4:13`)
Apparently the twelve were called from amongst the "disciples"
or general followers who espoused the Lord's cause and confessed
him without leaving their daily avocations. The twelve were invited
to become associates in the ministry of the Gospel and the record
is that they forsook all to follow him. (`Matt.
4:17-22`; `Mark 1:16-20; 3:13-19`;
`Luke 5:9-11`) The "seventy"
commissioned later on never were recognized as apostles. Luke
gives us a particular account of the selection of the twelve,
informing us that just prior to this event our Lord withdrew to
a mountain for prayer--evidently to take counsel with the Father
in respect to his work and his colaborers in it. He continued
all night in prayer--and when it was day he called unto him his
disciples (Greek, mathetes-- learners or pupils); and of
them he chose twelve, whom he also named apostles (Greek,
apostolos--sent forth ones). Thus the twelve were marked
as separate and distinct amongst the disciples.
`Luke 6:12,13,17`
The
other disciples not thus chosen to apostleship were also beloved
of the Lord, and no doubt they were in full sympathy with his
appointment of the twelve, recognizing it as in the interest of
the work in general. Upon what bases
<PAGE 211> the Lord made his choice is not
stated; but we have the record of his own prayer to the effect
that, "Thine they were and thou gavest them me"; and
again, "Of those whom thou hast given me, I have lost none
save the son of perdition" --Judas. In what sense or to what
degree the Father made choice of the twelve matters nothing to
us. No doubt one qualification which they possessed was humility;
and, undoubtedly, their lowly vocations and previous experiences
in life had been such as tended to make them not only humble men,
but to lead additionally to strength of character, determination,
perseverance, etc., to a degree which other pursuits might not
have done to the same extent. We are informed that the selection
of the twelve at the time it took place, instead of waiting until
Pentecost (the date of the begetting of the Church), was, in large
measure, for the purpose of permitting these twelve to be specially
with the Lord, to behold his works, to hear his message, that
thus they might in due time be witnesses to declare to us and
to all of God's people at first hand the wonderful works of God,
and the wonderful words of life manifested through Jesus.
`Luke 24:44-48`; `Acts 10:39-42`
The
Apostolic Commission
There
is not the slightest suggestion anywhere, to the apostles or concerning
them, that they were to be lords over God's heritage; that they
were to consider themselves as different from other believers,
exempt from the operations of divine law, or specially favored
or secure as respects their everlasting inheritance. They were
continually to remember that "all ye are brethren,"
and that "one is your Master, even Christ." They were
always to remember that it was necessary for them to make their
calling and election sure; and that unless they obeyed
the Law of Love and were humble, as little children, they should
in no wise "enter into the Kingdom." They were given
no official titles nor any instruction respecting special garb
or peculiar demeanor, but merely that they should in all these
things be ensamples
<PAGE 212> to the flock; that others seeing
their good works should glorify the Father; that others walking
in their footsteps should thus be following in the footsteps of
the leader also, and ultimately attain to the same glory, honor,
immortality--partakers of the same divine nature, members of the
same New Creation.
Their
commission was one of service--they were to serve one another,
to serve the Lord and to lay down their lives for the brethren.
These services were to be rendered specially in connection with
the promulgation of the Gospel. They were partakers of the pre-anointing
that had already come upon their Master--the same anointing which
pertains to all of the New Creation, all of the Royal Priesthood,
and is described by the prophet, saying: "The Spirit of the
Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach good
tidings unto the meek,...to bind up the broken-hearted,"
etc. `Isa. 61:1,2`;
`Luke 4:17-21`; `Matt. 10:5-8`;
`Mark 3:14,15`; `Luke 10:1-17`
Although
this anointing did not come directly upon them until Pentecost,
they had previously had a foretaste of it in that the Lord conferred
upon them a share of his holy Spirit power, etc., when he sent
them out to preach. But even in this, special opportunity for
pride was taken away when later on our Lord sent seventy others
forth to do a similar work, and similarly empowered them to perform
miracles in his name. The real work of the apostles did not, therefore,
begin in the proper sense of the word until they had received
the holy Spirit at Pentecost. There, a special manifestation of
divine power was conferred upon them-- not only the holy Spirit
and gifts of the Spirit, but also, and specially, power to bestow
these gifts upon others. Thenceforth they were by this last-mentioned
power distinguished from all others of the Church. Other believers
were counted in as members of the anointed body of Christ, made
partakers of his Spirit and begotten of that Spirit to newness
of life, etc.; but none could have a gift, or special manifestation
except as conferred through these apostles. These gifts
<PAGE 213> of miracles, tongues, interpretations
of tongues, etc., we are, however, to bear in mind, in no sense
hindered or took the place of the fruits of the holy Spirit, which
were to be grown or developed by each of the faithful through
obedience to the divine instructions--as each grew in grace, knowledge
and love. The conferring of these gifts, which a man might receive
and yet be sounding brass, a tinkling cymbal, marked the apostles,
nevertheless, as the special servants or representatives of the
Lord in the work of founding the Church.
`1 Cor. 12:7-10; 13:1-3`
Our
Lord in selecting these apostles, and in instructing them, had
in view the blessing and instruction of all of his followers to
the end of the age. This is evident from his prayer at the close
of his ministry, in which, referring to the disciples, he said,
"I have manifested thy name unto the men [apostles] which
thou gavest me out of the world; thine they were and thou gavest
them me; and they have kept thy Word. Now they have known that
all things whatsoever thou hast given me are of thee. For I have
given unto them the words [doctrines] which thou gavest me and
they have received them,...I pray for them: I pray not for the
world, but for them which thou hast given me; for they are thine.
...Neither pray I for these [apostles] alone, but for them also
which shall believe on me through their word [the entire Gospel
Church]: that they all may be one [in purpose, in love], as thou,
Father, art in me and I in thee, that they also may be one in
us; [then showing the ultimate purpose of this election, both
of the apostles and of the entire New Creation, he added]--that
the world [loved of God while sinners and redeemed by the precious
blood] may believe that thou hast sent me"--to redeem and
restore them. `John 17:6-9,20,21`
The
apostles, although unlearned men, were evidently strong characters,
and under the Lord's teaching their lack of worldly wisdom and
education was more than compensated for in "the spirit of
a sound mind." It is not strange, therefore, that these men
were uniformly recognized
<PAGE 214> by the early Church as guides in
the way of the Lord--specially appointed instructors--"pillars
in the Church," next in authority to the Lord himself. In
various ways the Lord prepared them for this position:
They
were with him continually and could, therefore, be witnesses respecting
all the affairs of his ministry, his teachings, his miracles,
his prayers, his sympathy, his holiness, his self-sacrifice even
unto death, and, finally, witnesses of his resurrection. Not only
did the early Church need all these testimonies, but all who have
since been called of the Lord and have accepted his call to the
New Creation--all who have fled for refuge and are trusting in
the glorious hopes centered in his character, in his sacrificial
death, in his high exaltation and in the plan of God he is to
fulfil--needed just such personal testimony in respect to all
these matters, to the intent that they might have strong faith,
strong consolation.
Seventy
other disciples were sent forth later, by the Lord, to proclaim
his presence and the harvest of the Jewish age, but their work
was different in many respects from that of the twelve. Indeed
in every manner the Lord seemed so specially to set the apostles
apart, that we, with the entire Church, may have fullest confidence
in them. These alone were participants with him in the last Passover
and in the institution of the new memorial of his own death; these
alone were with him in Gethsemane; it was also to these that he
manifested himself specially after his resurrection; and it was
these only who were specially used as mouthpieces of the holy
Spirit on the Day of Pentecost. The eleven were "men of Galilee";
as some who heard them remarked, "Are not all these Galileans?"
`Acts 2:7`; `Luke 24:48-51`;
`Matt. 28:16-19`
Although--as
the record shows--our Lord revealed himself after his resurrection
to about five hundred brethren, nevertheless the apostles were
specially dealt with and were intended to be the specific "witnesses
of all things which he did both in the land of the Jews and in
Jerusalem; whom they slew and hanged on a tree: him God raised
up on the
<PAGE 215> third day...And he commanded
us to preach unto the people," etc.
`Acts 10:39-45; 13:31`; `1 Cor. 15:3-8`
The
Apostle Paul, although not directly a witness to the same extent
as the eleven, was, nevertheless, made a witness of our Lord's
resurrection in that he was given a subsequent glimpse of his
glorious presence, as he himself states the matter--"Last
of all he was seen of me also, as of one born out of due time
[before the time]." (`1 Cor. 15:8,9`)
The Apostle Paul was not really entitled to see the Lord in glory
before the remainder of the Church at his Second Advent, when
all of his faithful shall be changed and be made like him and
see him as is; but in order that the Apostle might be a witness
he was granted this glimpse and was additionally granted visions
and revelations more than they all. He was thus, perhaps, well
compensated for his previous lack of personal contact with the
Master. Nor were his special experiences merely for his own advantage;
but chiefly, we may presume, for the advantage of the entire Church.
Certain it is that the peculiar experiences, visions, revelations,
etc., granted to the Apostle who took the place of Judas, have
been more helpful than those of any other of the apostles.
His
experiences permitted him to know and appreciate not only "the
deep things of God"--even some things not lawful to be uttered
(`2 Cor. 12:4`), but the illumination
which they gave to the Apostle's mind has through his writings
been reflected upon the Church from his day to the present time.
It
was because the Apostle Paul had those visions and revelations
that he was enabled to grasp the situation and to appreciate the
new dispensation and recognize the lengths and breadths and heights
and depths of the divine character and plan so clearly, and it
was because he appreciated these things clearly himself that he
was qualified to state them in his teachings and epistles in such
a manner as to confer blessings upon the household of faith all
down throughout the age. Indeed, even today, the Church could
better afford to lose the testimonies of any or all of the other
<PAGE 216> apostles than to lose the testimony
of this one. Nevertheless, we are glad to have the full testimony--glad
to appreciate it all, as well as the noble characters of the entire
twelve. Mark the testimony which indicates his apostleship: first
of all, the Lord's words, "He is a chosen vessel unto me
to bear my name before the Gentiles and kings and the children
of Israel." (`Acts 9:15`) The
Apostle's own declaration is, "I certify you, brethren, that
the Gospel which was preached by me is not of man; for I neither
received it of man, neither was I taught it, but by the revelation
of Jesus Christ" (`Gal. 1:11,12`);
and again he declares, "He that wrought effectually in Peter
to the apostleship of the circumcision [the Jews], the same was
mighty in me toward the Gentiles." (`Gal.
2:8`) Not only did his zeal for the Lord and the brethren,
and his willingness in laying down his life for the brethren --in
spending time and energy for their blessing--testify to his worthiness
to rank as an equal of any apostle, but when his apostolic relationship
to the Church was called in question by some, he frankly pointed
to this, and to the Lord's blessing in connection with his revelations
and ministries, etc., as proving that he was "not a whit
behind" the others. `1 Cor. 9:1`;
`2 Cor. 11:5,23; 12:1-7,12`; `Gal.
2:8; 3:5`
It
was not the Lord's intention that the apostles should do a work
merely amongst the Jews--quite to the contrary is the record.
He instructed the eleven that his work and their message was for
all the people, ultimately; though they were to tarry at Jerusalem
until endued with power, and were there to begin their testimony.
Our Lord's words were, "Ye shall receive power after that
the holy Spirit is come upon you, and ye shall be witnesses unto
me both in Jerusalem and in Judea and in Samaria and unto the
uttermost part of the earth." (`Acts
1:8`) This witnessing continued not only during the lifetime
of the apostles, but still continues. They are still preaching
to us, still instructing the faithful, still encouraging, still
admonishing, still reproving. Their death did not stop their ministry.
They still speak, still witness, are still mouthpieces of the
Lord to his faithful.
<PAGE 217>
The
Inspiration of the Apostles
It
is well that we have confidence in the apostles as faithful witnesses,
or historians, and that we notice that their testimonies bear
the stamp of honesty, in that they sought not wealth nor glory
amongst men, but sacrificed all earthly interests in their zeal
for the risen and glorified Master. Their testimony would be invaluable
if it had no further weight than this; but we find the Scriptures
teaching that they were used of the Lord as his inspired agents,
and that they were specially guided of him in respect to the testimony,
doctrines, customs, etc., which they would establish in the Church.
They bore witness not only to the things they heard and saw, but,
additionally, to the instruction which they received through the
holy Spirit; thus they were faithful stewards. "Let a man
so account of us as...stewards of the mysteries of God,"
said Paul (`1 Cor. 4:1`). The same
thought was expressed by our Lord when he said respecting the
twelve, "I will make you fishers of men," and again,
"Feed my sheep," "Feed my lambs." The Apostle
also says--The mystery [the deep truths of the Gospel concerning
the high calling of the New Creation--the Christ] hidden in other
ages, is now revealed unto his holy apostles and prophets by the
Spirit. The object of this revelation is explained to be: "To
make all men see what is the fellowship of the mystery [upon what
terms participation in this New Creation may be obtained] which
from the beginning of the world has been hid in God." (`Eph.
3:3-11`) Again in describing how the Church is to be built
upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ
himself being the chief cornerstone, the Apostle declares "For
this cause [for the building up of the Church, the temple of God],
I, Paul [am] the prisoner of Jesus Christ for you Gentiles."
`Eph. 2:20,22; 3:1`
The
Comforter was promised to "teach you all things and bring
all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you";
"and he shall show you things to come." (`John
14:26; 16:13`) To a certain extent, undoubtedly, this is
applicable to the entire Church, but it was specially
<PAGE 218> applicable to the apostles; and,
indeed, it still operates toward the remainder of the Church through
the apostles--their words still being the channels through which
the holy Spirit teaches us things both new and old. In harmony
with this promise we may understand the apostolic inspiration
to have been of a threefold character. (1) Refreshment of memory
enabling them to recall and reproduce the Lord's personal teachings.
(2) Guidance into an appreciation of the truth pertaining to the
divine plan of the ages. (3) Special revelations of things to
come--the things of which our Lord declared, "I have yet
many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now."
`John 16:12`
We
are not to suppose that the refreshment of the memory of the apostles
implied a dictation of the exact phraseology or of the exact order
of our Lord's words. Nor do the apostolic writings give evidence
of such a dictation. The Lord's promise, however, is itself a
guarantee of the correctness of their statements. In each of the
four Gospels we have a history of the Lord's early life and ministry;
yet in each the individuality of the writer is manifested. Each
in his own style records those items which seem to him most important;
and under the Lord's supervision these various accounts furnish
altogether as complete a history as is necessary for the establishment
of the faith of the Church, of the identity of Jesus as the Messiah
of the prophets, of the fulfilment of the prophecies concerning
him, of the facts of his life and of his teachings. Had the inspiration
been verbal (a word-for-word dictation), it would not have been
necessary for several men to rephrase the narrative; but it is
noteworthy that while each writer exercised his individual freedom
of expression and made his own choice of the events most important
and worthy of record, the Lord by his holy Spirit so supervised
the matter that nothing of importance was omitted--all that is
needed is faithfully recorded--"that the man of God may be
perfect, thoroughly furnished." It is interesting to note
that the Apostle John's record supplements the other three--Matthew,
<PAGE 219> Mark and Luke--and that he chiefly
discourses of circumstances and incidents of importance omitted
by the others.
The
Lord's proposition that he would through the holy Spirit guide
the apostles, and through them the New Creation, "into all
truth," implies that the guidance would be a general one
rather than a personal and individual guidance into all truth--the
fulfilment after this manner is evidenced by the records. Although
the apostles, with the exception of Paul, were plain and unlearned
men, nevertheless their scriptural expositions are very remarkable.
They were able to "confound the wisdom of the wise"
theologists of their day--and ever since. However eloquent the
error, it cannot stand before the logic of their deductions from
the Law and the Prophets and the teachings of the Lord. The Jewish
Doctors of the Law remarked this, and, as we read, "took
knowledge of them that they had been with Jesus"--that they
had learned his doctrine and copied his spirit.
`Acts 4:5,6,13`
The
apostolic epistles consist of such logical arguments based upon
the inspired writings of the Old Testament and upon the words
of the Lord; and all who, throughout this Gospel age, have partaken
of the same spirit by following the lines of argument which the
Lord through his mouthpieces has set before us, are guided to
the same truthful conclusions; so that our faith does not stand
in the wisdom of men but in the power of God. (`1
Cor. 2:4,5`) Nevertheless, in these teachings, as well
as in their historical presentations, we have no evidence of a
word-for-word dictation-- no evidence that they were merely amanuenses
of the Lord, speaking and writing in a mechanical manner as did
the prophets of olden times. (`2 Pet. 1:21`)
Rather, the apostles' clear-sighted view was an illumination of
the mind which enabled them to see and appreciate the divine purposes
and thus to state them clearly; just as all of the Lord's people
since, following their leading, have been enabled to grow in grace
and in knowledge and in love, and so have been enabled to "comprehend
with all saints what is the breadth,
<PAGE 220> and length, and depth, and height;
and to know the love of Christ, which passeth [all human] knowledge."
`Eph 3:18,19`
Nevertheless,
we are fully justified in the belief that their other teachings,
as well as their historical accounts, were so supervised by the
Lord that improper words were avoided, and that the truth was
set forth in such a form as to constitute "meat in due season"
for the household of faith from their day to the present. This
divine supervision of the apostles was indicated in advance by
our Lord's words, "Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall
be bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall
be loosed in heaven." (`Matt. 18:18`)
We would understand this to signify, not that the Lord would yield
his prerogative and become obedient to the dictates of the apostles,
but that they should be so kept, so guided by the holy Spirit,
that their decisions in the Church, respecting what things should
be considered obligatory and what things should be considered
optional, would be proper decisions; and that the Church in general,
therefore, might know that the matters were fixed, settled--the
conclusions arrived at being the Lord's decision as well as that
of the apostles.
Upon
This Rock Will I Build My Church
It
was in full accord with this that, after the Apostle Peter had
borne witness that our Lord was the Messiah, "Jesus answered
and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh
and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which
is in heaven. And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter [petros--a
stone, a rock], and upon this rock [petra--a mass of rock--the
great fundamental rock of truth, which you have just expressed]
I will build my Church." The Lord himself is the builder,
as he himself also is declared to be the foundation, "Other
foundation can no man lay than that is laid--Jesus Christ."
(`1 Cor. 3:11`) He is the great Rock,
and Peter's confession of him as such was, therefore, a rock testimonial--a
declaration of the foundation principles underlying the divine
plan. The
<PAGE 221> Apostle Peter so understood this
matter and so expressed his understanding. (`1
Pet. 2:5,6`) He declared all truly consecrated believers
to be "living stones" who come to the great Rock
of the divine plan, Christ Jesus--to be built up as a holy temple
of God through union with him--the foundation. Peter, therefore,
disowned any pretension to being the foundation-stone himself
and properly classed himself in with all the other "living
stones" (Gr. lithos) of the Church-- though petros,
rock, signifies a larger stone than lithos, and all the
apostles as "foundation" stones would in the divine
plan and order have a larger importance than their brethren.
`Rev. 21:14`
Keys
of Authority
In
the same connection the Lord said to Peter, "I will give
unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou
shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven," etc. Thus
the same authority given to the apostles as a whole was specifically
expressed to Peter, with the additional privilege or honor of
the keys--the opening power or authority. We remember how the
Apostle Peter used the keys of the Kingdom and did the opening
work of the new dispensation, first, to the Jews at Pentecost,
and, later, to the Gentiles at the house of Cornelius. On the
Day of Pentecost, when the holy Spirit was poured out, we read
that "Peter stood up with the eleven"--he took the initiative;
he opened, the others followed, and the gospel invitation
was thus thrown open to the Jews. In the case of Cornelius the
Lord sent messengers to Peter, and specially directed him by a
vision to follow their invitation, and thus particularly used
him in opening the door of mercy, liberty and privilege to the
Gentiles--that they also might come into and share the privilege
of the high calling of the New Creation. These matters are in
full accord with what we have seen respecting the Lord's purposes
in connection with the choice of the twelve apostles. And the
more clearly the Lord's people discern the fact that these twelve
men were made the peculiar representatives of the new dispensation
and their
<PAGE 222> words the special channels of truth
in respect to the New Creation, the more thoroughly they will
be prepared to accept their words, and the more disinclined they
will be to indorse the teachings of others in conflict with their
testimony. "If they speak not according to this Word, it
is because there is no light in them."
`Isa. 8:20`
The
last proposition of our Lord's promise reads, "He [the Father's
holy Spirit] shall show you things to come." This implies
a special inspiration of the apostles, and indirectly it implies
the blessing and enlightenment of the Lord's people down to the
very close of this age, through their teachings. They were thus
not only to be holy apostles, but also prophets, or seers making
known future events to the Church. It is not necessary to suppose
that all of the apostles were used to the same extent in any or
all of these ways of service. The fact is that some were honored
more not only in privileges of service as apostles, but also more
in showing the things to come. The Apostle Paul points out various
things to come: the great falling away in the Church; the revealing
of the "Man of Sin"; the mystery respecting the second
coming of the Lord, and that we shall not all sleep, though we
must all be changed; the mystery, hidden from past ages and dispensations,
that the Church, including the Gentiles, should be fellow-heirs
of the promise made to Abraham--that his seed should bless all
the families of the earth, etc., etc. He points out, also, that
in the end of the age evil conditions will prevail in the Church;
that men will be lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God, having
the form of godliness but denying the power thereof; covenant
breakers, etc., and that "grievous wolves" (destructive
higher critics) would not spare the Lord's flock. Indeed, all
of the writings of the Apostle Paul are brilliantly illuminated
by the visions and revelations which he enjoyed as a seer of things
that in his day were still future and not proper to be fully explained,
but which now are manifest to the saints through the types and
prophecies of the Old Testament--understandable now in the light
of the
<PAGE 223> apostles' words because the "due
time" has come for them to be understood.
The
Apostle Peter, also, as a seer points out the coming of false
teachers into the Church who privily, secretively, will bring
in damnable heresies, even denying that the Lord bought them.
Looking down to our day he prophesies saying, "There shall
come in the last days scoffers... saying, Where is the promise
of his [Christ's] presence?" etc. He prophesied also
that "The day of the Lord shall so come as a thief in the
night," etc.
The
Apostle James likewise prophesies respecting the end of this age,
saying, "Go to now, ye rich men, weep and howl for the miseries
that shall come upon you...Ye have heaped treasure together for
the last days," etc.
The
Apostle John, however, was the most remarkable seer, or prophet
of all the apostles: his visions, constituting the Book of Revelation,
delineating in the most remarkable manner the things to come.
The
Apostolic Infallibility
From
the foregoing we are fully justified in believing that the apostles
were so guided by the Lord, through his holy Spirit, that all
of their public utterances were of divine inspiration for the
admonition of the Church, and no less infallible than the utterances
of the prophets of the preceding dispensation. But while feeling
thus assured in respect to the truthfulness of their testimony
and that all of their utterances to the Church have the divine
approval, it is well that we examine carefully five different
circumstances, mentioned in the New Testament, which are usually
considered as opposed to the thought that the apostles did not
err in their teachings. We will scrutinize these separately.
(1)
Peter's denial of our Lord just prior to his crucifixion. It cannot
be disputed that Peter here was overtaken in a serious wrong,
for which afterward he was sincerely penitent; but we should not
forget that this transgression though committed after his choice
as an apostle, was prior
<PAGE 224> to his being anointed by the holy
Spirit at Pentecost, and his divine endowment as an apostle in
the fullest sense. Furthermore, the infallibility we have claimed
for the apostles is that which applies to their public
teachings and writings, and not to all the incidents and minutiae
of their lives, which, unquestionably, were affected by the blemishes
of their earthen vessels, marred by the fall in which all of Adam's
children have suffered. The Apostle's words that "we have
this treasure in an earthen vessel," evidently applied to
himself and the other apostles, as well as to all of the Church--recipients
of the holy Spirit. Our share, as individuals, in the great atoning
work of our Master, covers these blemishes of the flesh which
are contrary to our desires as New Creatures.
The
apostolic office for the service of the Lord and the Church was
entirely apart from the mere weaknesses of the flesh, and was
conferred upon them not because of human perfection, but while
they were admittedly "men of like passions" with ourselves.
(`Acts 14:15`) The office did not
bring restitution--perfection to their mortal bodies--but merely
the new mind and the holy Spirit to guide these. It did not make
their thoughts and actions perfect, but merely overruled those
thoughts and actions so that the public teachings of the twelve
are infallible--the Word of the Lord. This is the kind of infallibility
claimed for the popes--that when the pope speaks ex cathedra,
or officially, he is overruled of God and not permitted to err.
This inerrancy of the popes is claimed for them on the basis that
they are also apostles--overlooking and ignoring the fact that
the Scriptures teach that there are but "twelve apostles
of the Lamb."
(2)
Peter on one occasion "dissembled"--was guilty of double-dealing.
(`Gal. 2:11-14`) This is pointed
to as a proof that the apostles were not infallible in conduct.
We concede this as we perceive the apostles also avowed it (`Acts
14:15`); but we repeat that these human weaknesses were
not permitted to mar their work or usefulness as apostles--who
"preached the gospel with the holy Spirit sent down from
heaven" (`1 Pet.
1:12`; `Gal. 1:11,12`)--not
with man's wisdom,
<PAGE 225> but with the wisdom from above.
(`1 Cor. 2:5-16`) This error on Peter's
part God promptly corrected through the Apostle Paul, who kindly,
but firmly, "withstood him to the face because he was to
be blamed"; and that it was properly received by the Apostle
Peter, and that he quite overcame this weakness in respect to
preference for the Jews, is abundantly witnessed by his two epistles,
in which no trace of wavering on the subject can be found, nor
any lack of faithfulness in acknowledgment to the Lord.
(3)
It is claimed that the apostles expected the Lord's second advent
to take place very quickly, possibly in their own lifetime, and
that in this they erred doctrinally and showed that their teachings
are untrustworthy. We answer that the Lord declared that he left
the apostles in uncertainty respecting the time of the second
coming and the establishment of the Kingdom--simply telling them
and all to watch, in order that when the event should be due they
might know and not be in darkness on the subject as the world
in general will be. Their inquiry about this matter after the
Lord's resurrection brought from him the answer, "It is not
for you to know the times and the seasons which the Father hath
put in his own power." Shall we then find fault with the
apostles for a matter which the Lord declared to be, for a time,
a divine secret? Surely not. We do find, however, that under the
guidance of the Spirit in respect to "things to come,"
the apostles were very guarded in their expressions in respect
to the time of the second advent; and so far from expecting the
matter in their own lifetime their words indicate the contrary.
For
instance, the Apostle Peter distinctly says that he wrote his
epistles to the intent that his testimony might be with the Church
after his decease--a clear evidence that he did not expect to
live until the establishment of the Kingdom. (`2
Pet. 1:15`) The Apostle Paul, while declaring that "the
time is short," did not pretend to say how short. Indeed,
viewed from the standpoint of a week of seven one-thousand-year
days--the seventh of which would bring the Kingdom--more than
four-sixths of the waiting time had
<PAGE 226> already passed, and the time was
far spent. In exactly the same way we speak of such matters now
respecting earthly affairs, when on Thursday we say that the week
will soon be gone. Paul also spoke of the time of his departure,
of his readiness to lay down his life, of his preference so to
do. He points out that the day of the Lord would so come as a
thief in the night. Some false impressions on the subject he corrected,
saying, "Be not soon shaken in mind nor yet be troubled:
neither by spirit nor by word nor by epistle as from us, as that
the day of Christ is now present. Let no man deceive you by any
means: for that day shall not come except there come a falling
away first and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition,"
etc...."Remember ye not that when I was with you I told you
these things? And now ye know what withholdeth, that he might
be revealed in his own season."
(4)
It is objected that Paul, who wrote, "I, Paul, say unto you,
that if ye be circumcised, Christ shall profit you nothing"
(`Gal. 5:2`), caused Timothy to be
circumcised. (`Acts 16:3`) And we
are asked, Did he not thereby teach falsely, and in contradiction
to his own testimony? We answer, No: Timothy was a Jew, because
his mother was a Jewess (`Acts 16:1`);
and circumcision was a national custom amongst the Jews, which
began before the Law of Moses and which was continued after
Christ had "made an end of the Law [Covenant], nailing it
to his cross." Circumcision was given to Abraham and his
seed four hundred and thirty years before the Law was given to
Israel as a nation at Mount Sinai. Peter was designated the Apostle
to the circumcision (i.e., to the Jews), and Paul, the Apostle
to the uncircumcision (i.e., to the Gentiles).
`Gal. 2:7,8`
His
argument of `Gal. 5:2` was not addressed
to Jews. He was addressing Gentiles, whose only reason for desiring
or even thinking about circumcision was that certain false teachers
were confusing them, by telling them that they must keep the Law
Covenant, as well as accept Christ, thus leading them to
ignore the Grace Covenant. The Apostle
<PAGE 227> here shows that for them to be
circumcised (for any such reason) would be a repudiation
of the Grace Covenant, and, hence, a repudiation of the entire
work of Christ. He found no objection to Jews continuing their
national custom of circumcision: this is evident from his words
in `1 Cor. 7:18,19`, as well as in
his course with Timothy. Not that it was necessary for
Timothy or any other Jew to be circumcised; but that it was not
improper; and that, as he would be going amongst Jews to a considerable
extent, it would be to his advantage--giving him the confidence
of the Jews. But we see Paul's steadfast resistance, on this subject,
when some who misconceived the matter sought to have Titus--a
full-blooded Greek--circumcised. `Gal. 2:3-5`
(5)
The account of Paul's course, recorded in
`Acts 21:20-26`, is reflected upon as being contrary to
his own teachings of the truth; and as indicating his errancy
as respects doctrines and practices. It is claimed that it was
because of wrongdoing in this instance that Paul was permitted
to suffer so much as a prisoner, and was finally sent to Rome.
But such a view is not borne out by Scripture-stated facts. The
record shows that throughout this entire experience Paul had the
sympathy and approval of all the other apostles, and, above all,
the Lord's continued favor. His course was at the instance of
the other apostles. It was testified to him by prophecy, before
he went to Jerusalem (`Acts 21:10-14`),
that bonds and imprisonment awaited him; and it was in obedience
to his convictions of duty that he braved all those predicted
adversities. And when in the very midst of his trouble, we read:
"The Lord stood by him and said, 'Be of good cheer, Paul:
for as thou hast testified of me in Jerusalem, so must
thou bear witness also at Rome.'" Later we find the Lord
again showing him favor, as we read: "There stood by me the
angel of God, whose I am, and whom I serve, saying, Fear not,
Paul; thou must be brought before Caesar: and lo, God hath given
thee all them that sail with thee."
`Acts 23:11; 27:23,24`
In view of these facts, we must seek an understanding
of
<PAGE 228> Paul's course in correspondence
with his uniformly bold and noble course--esteeming very highly
the work and testimony which God not only did not reprove, but
did approve. Coming then to the examination of
`Acts 21:21-27`, we notice (verse 21) that Paul had not
taught that Jewish converts should not circumcise their
children; nor did he repudiate the Mosaic law--rather, he honored
it, by pointing out the greater and grander realities which Moses'
law so forcibly typified. So far, therefore, from repudiating
Moses, he honored Moses and the Law, saying: "The Law is
just and holy and good," and pointed out that by it the knowledge
of the heinousness of sin had been increased; that the Law was
so grand that no imperfect man could obey it fully, and that Christ,
by keeping it, had won its rewards, and now under the Grace Covenant
was offering everlasting life and blessings as a gift to those
unable to keep the law, but by faith, accepted as the covering
of their imperfections his perfect obedience and sacrifice, and
who became his followers in the path of righteousness.
Certain
ceremonies of the Jewish dispensation--such as the fasts, the
celebration of new moons and Sabbath days and feasts--were typical
of spiritual truths belonging to the Gospel age. The Apostle clearly
shows that the Gospel of the Grace Covenant neither enjoins nor
forbids these (the Lord's Supper and Baptism being the only injunctions
of a symbolic character commanded us, and they new ones).
`Col. 2:16,17`; `Luke 22:19`;
`Matt. 28:19`
One
of these Jewish symbolic rites, termed "purifying,"
was that observed by Paul and the four Jews, in the case which
we are now examining. Being Jews, they had a right, if they chose,
not only to consecrate themselves to God, in Christ, but also
to perform the symbol of this purification. And this is
what they did--the men who were with Paul having made, additionally,
a vow to humiliate themselves, before the Lord and the people,
by having their heads shaven. These symbolic ceremonies cost something;
and the charges presumably made up the "offering"
of money-- so much for each, to defray the expenses of the Temple.
<PAGE 229>
The
Apostle Paul never taught the Jews that they were free
from the Law--but, on the contrary, that the Law had dominion
over each of them so long as he lived. He showed, however, that
if a Jew accepted Christ, and became "dead with him,"
it settled the claims of the Law Covenant upon such Jew, and made
him God's freeman in Christ. (`Rom.
7:1-4`) But he did teach the Gentile converts that they
had never been under the Jewish Law Covenant, and that for them
to attempt the practice of Jewish Law ceremonies and rites would
imply that they were trusting in those symbols for their salvation,
and not relying wholly upon the merit of Christ's sacrifice. And
to this all of the apostles assented. See
`Acts 21:25; 15:20,23-29`.
Our
conclusion is that God did most wonderfully use the twelve apostles,
making them very able ministers of his truth, and guiding them
supernaturally in the subjects upon which they wrote--so that
nothing profitable to the man of God has been omitted--and, in
the very words of their original writings, manifested a care and
wisdom beyond what even the apostles themselves comprehended.
Praise God for this sure foundation for our faith!
The
Apostles Not Lord Of God's Heritage
Are
the apostles to be regarded as in any sense lords in the
Church? or, in other words, When the Lord and Head of the Church
departed, did any of them take the place of the Head? or did they
together constitute a composite head, to take his place and assume
the reins of government? Or were they, or any of them, what the
popes of Rome claim to be, as their successors--the vicars or
substitutes of Christ to the Church, which is his body?
Against
such hypothesis we have the plain statement of Paul (`Eph.
4:4,5`) "There is one body" and "one
Lord"; and, therefore, among the various members of that
body, no matter what may be the relative importance of some, only
the one Lord and Head is to be recognized. This the Lord
also clearly taught when, addressing the multitudes and his disciples,
he said, "The Scribes and Pharisees...love...to
<PAGE 230> be called Rabbi; but be not ye
called Rabbi; for one is your Master, and all ye are brethren."
(`Matt. 23:1,2,6-8`) And again, addressing
the apostles, Jesus said, "Ye know that those presuming to
rule over the Gentiles exercise lordship over them; and their
great ones exercise authority over them, but it shall not be
so among you; but whosoever will be great among you shall
be your servant, and whosoever of you will be the chiefest shall
be servant of all; for even the Son of Man came not to be ministered
unto, but to minister [serve] and to give his life a ransom for
many." `Mark 10:42-45`
Nor
have we any evidence that the early Church ever regarded the apostles
as lords in the Church, or that the apostles ever assumed such
authority or dignity. Their course was very far indeed from the
papal idea of lordship, and from that of the prominent ministers
in all Christian sects. For instance, Peter never styled himself
"the prince of the apostles," as papists style him;
nor did he and the others ever title each other, or receive such
homage from the Church. They addressed or referred to one another
simply as Peter, John, Paul, etc., or else as Brother Peter, Brother
John, etc.; and all of the Church were similarly greeted--as brothers
and sisters in Christ. (See `Acts 9:17;
21:20`; `Rom. 16:23`;
`1 Cor. 7:15; 8:11`; `2 Cor. 8:18`;
`2 Thess. 3:6,15`; `Philemon 7,16`.)
And it is written that even the Lord himself was not ashamed to
call them all "brethren" (`Heb.
2:11`), so far is he from any domineering attitude in the
exercise of his true and acknowledged lordship or authority.
Nor
did any of these leading servants in the early Church go about
in priestly robes, or with cross and rosary, etc., courting the
reverence and homage of the people; for, as the Lord had taught
them, the chiefest among them were those who served most. Thus,
for instance, when persecution scattered the Church and drove
them out of Jerusalem, "the eleven" bravely stood their
ground, willing to do whatever might come; because in this trying
time the Church abroad would look to them at Jerusalem for encouragement
and
<PAGE 231> help. Had they fled, the whole
Church would have felt dismayed and panic-stricken. And we find
James perishing by the sword of Herod; Peter, with a similar fate
in view, thrust into prison and chained to two soldiers (`Acts
12:1-6`); and Paul and Silas in their ministry beaten with
many stripes, and then cast into prison and their feet made fast
in the stocks; and Paul enduring "a great fight of afflictions."
(`Acts 16:23,24`;
`2 Cor. 11:23-33`) Did they look like lords or act
like lords? Surely not.
Peter
was very explicit in this matter, when counseling the elders to
"feed the flock of God." He did not say your
flock, your people, your church, as many ministers
today speak, but the flock of God, not as lords
of the heritage, but being patterns to the flock--patterns of
humility, faithfulness, zeal and godliness. (`1
Pet. 5:1-3`) And Paul says, "I think that God hath
set forth us the apostles last, as it were appointed to death;
for we are made a spectacle unto the world, and to angels, and
to men. We are fools for Christ's sake,...we are despised;...we
both hunger and thirst, and are naked, and are buffeted, and have
no certain dwelling place, and labor working with our own hands.
Being reviled, we bless; being persecuted, we suffer it; being
defamed, we intreat; we are made as the filth of the world, and
the offscouring of all things." (`1
Cor. 4:9-13`) Not much like Lords in all this, were they?
And in opposing the idea of some of the brethren who seemed to
be aspiring to lordship over God's heritage, Paul ironically says,
"Now ye are full, now ye are rich, ye have reigned as kings
without us"; but further along he counsels the only
right way, which is that of humility, saying, "Be ye followers
of me" in this respect. And again, "Let a man so account
of us as of the ministers [servants] of Christ, and stewards
of the mysteries of God." `1 Cor. 4:8,16,1`
And,
again, the same Apostle adds: "As we were allowed of God
to be put in trust with the gospel, even so we speak; not as pleasing
men, but God, who trieth our hearts. For neither at any time used
we flattering words, as ye know, nor a cloak of covetousness:
God is witness. Nor of men
<PAGE 232> sought we glory--neither of you,
nor yet of others, when we might have been burdensome as the Apostles
of Christ. But we were gentle among you, even as a nurse [nourisher]
cherisheth her children." (`1 Thess.
2:4-7`) The apostles issued neither bulls nor anathemas,
but we do find among their loving entreaties such expressions
as these: "Being defamed, we entreat." "I
entreat thee also, true yokefellow." Rebuke not an elder,
but entreat him." `1 Cor. 4:13`;
`Phil. 4:3`; `1 Tim. 5:1`
The
early Church rightly reverenced the piety and the superior spiritual
knowledge and wisdom of the apostles, and, regarding them, as
they really were, as the Lord's specially chosen ambassadors to
them, they sat at their feet as learners; yet not with blank,
unquestioning minds, but with a disposition to try the spirits
and to prove the testimony. (`1
John 4:1`; `1 Thess. 5:21`;
`Isa. 8:20`) And the apostles, in teaching them,
enjoined this attitude of mind, which required a reason for their
hope, and encouraged it, and were prepared to meet it--not with
enticing words of man's wisdom (of human philosophy and theory),
but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power,
that the faith of the Church might not stand in the wisdom of
men, but in the power of God. (`1 Cor. 2:4,5`)
They did not cultivate a blind and superstitious reverence for
themselves.
We
read that the Bereans "were more noble than they of Thessalonica
in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and
searched the Scriptures daily [to see] whether those things were
so." And it was the constant effort of the apostles to show
that the gospel which they proclaimed was the very same gospel
darkly expressed by the ancient prophets, "unto whom it was
revealed, that not unto themselves, but unto us [the body
of Christ] they did minister the things now reported unto you
by them [the apostles] that have preached the Gospel unto you
with the holy Spirit sent down from heaven" (`1
Pet. 1:10-12`)--that it was the very same gospel of life
and immortality brought to light by the Lord himself--that its
greater amplification
<PAGE 233> and all the particular details
discovered to the Church by them, under the leading and direction
of the holy Spirit-- whether by special revelations or by other
and more natural means, both of which were used--were in fulfilment
of the Lord's promise to the apostles, and through them to the
whole Church--"I have yet many things to say unto
you, but ye cannot bear them now."
It
was right, therefore, for the Bereans to search the Scriptures
to see whether the testimony of the apostles agreed with that
of the Law and the prophets, and to compare them also with the
teachings of the Lord. Our Lord also invited a similar proving
of his testimony by the Law and the prophets, saying, "Search
the Scriptures,...for they are they that testify of me."
The whole divine testimony must be in harmony, whether it be communicated
by the Law, the prophets, the Lord or the apostles. Their entire
harmony is the proof of their divine inspiration. And, thank God!
we find that harmony existing, so that the Scriptures of the Old
and New Testaments constitute what the Lord himself designates
"the harp of God." (`Rev. 15:2`)
And the various testimonies of the Law and the prophets are the
several chords of that harp, which, when tuned by the holy Spirit
dwelling in our hearts, and swept by the fingers of the devoted
servants and searchers after divine truth, yields the most enchanting
strains that ever fell on mortal ears. Praise the Lord for the
exquisite melody of the blessed "song of Moses and the Lamb,"
which we learn through the testimony of his holy apostles and
prophets, of whom the Lord Jesus is chief!
But
although the testimony of the Lord and the apostles must harmonize
with that of the Law and the prophets, we should expect them to
testify of things new as well as old; for so the
prophets have led us to expect. (`Matt.
13:35`; `Psa. 78:2`;
`Deut. 18:15,18`; `Dan. 12:9`)
And so we find them not only expounding the hidden truths of ancient
prophecy but also disclosing new revelations of truth.
<PAGE 234>
Apostles,
Prophets, Evangelists, Teachers
According
to the general thought of Christendom, the Lord left the matter
of Church organization with provisions which were entirely inadequate
to the ends he designed, and has expected his people to use their
own wisdom in the matter of organization. Many men of many minds
have favored more or less strict organizations, and so we find
Christians throughout the world today organized on various lines
and with more or less rigidity, and each claiming advantages for
his particular denomination or system of government. This is wrong!
It is not reasonable to suppose that God, foreknowing this New
Creation before the foundation of the world, should be so negligent
of his own work as to leave his faithful people without a clear
understanding of his will and an adequate arrangement or organization
for their well-being. The tendency of the human mind is either
toward anarchy on the one hand, or toward tight organization and
bondage on the other. The divine arrangement, avoiding both of
these extremes, marks out for the New Creation an organization
simple in the extreme, and devoid of everything akin to bondage.
Indeed, the injunction of the Scriptures to each individual Christian
is, "Stand fast, therefore, in the liberty wherewith
Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the
yoke of bondage." `Gal. 5:1`
In
showing forth this divine arrangement we must confine ourselves
wholly to the divine records, and must entirely ignore ecclesiastical
history--remembering that the predicted "falling away"
had begun to work even in apostolic times; and that it proceeded
rapidly after the death of the apostles, culminating first in
the Papal system. In taking the Bible account we may include with
the New Testament records the typical arrangements under the Law,
but must continually remember that those types represented not
only affairs during this Gospel age, but typified also arrangements
for the coming Millennial age. For instance, the Day of Atonement
and its work represented, as we have
<PAGE 235> seen, this Gospel age. On that
day the High Priest wore not his glorious garments, but simply
the holy garments, or linen robes--illustrating the fact that
during this Gospel age neither the Lord nor the Church occupy
a place of distinction or glory in the sight of men--their whole
standing being represented simply as one of purity, righteousness--
typified by the linen robes which, in the case of the Church,
symbolize the righteousness of her Lord and Head. It was after
the Day of Atonement that the High Priest put on his glorious
robes, representing the glories, dignities, etc., of Christ's
authority and power during the Millennial age. And the Church
is represented with her Lord in the glories of that figure; because
as the head of the High Priest represented our Lord and Master,
so the body of the priest represented the Church; and the glorious
garments, therefore, represented the dignities and honors of the
entire Royal Priesthood when the time of exaltation shall have
come. The Papal hierarchy--claiming falsely that the reign
of Christ is being accomplished by proxy, that the popes are his
vicegerents, and the cardinals, archbishops and bishops represent
the Church in glory and power--attempt to exercise civil and religious
control over the world, and counterfeit the glories and dignities
of the elect New Creation in the gorgeous robes of office which
they wear. The true Royal Priesthood, however, still wear the
white robes of sacrifice and wait for the true Lord of the Church,
and for the true exaltation to "glory, honor and immortality,"
when the last member of the elect shall have finished his share
in the work of sacrifice.
It
is to the New Testament that we must look particularly for our
directions respecting the organization and rules of the Church
during the days of her humiliation and sacrificing. The fact that
these rules are not laid down in a compact form must not deter
us from expecting and finding that they are, nevertheless, a complete
system. We must fight against the natural expectations of our
perverted judgments in respect to laws, and must remember that
the
<PAGE 236> Church as sons of God are given
a "perfect law of liberty," because they are no longer
servants, but sons, and because the sons of God must learn to
use the liberty of sonship and thereby show the more particularly
their absolute obedience to the law and principles of love.
The
Apostle sets before our minds a picture of the New Creation which
illustrates the entire subject. It is a human figure, the head
representing the Lord, the various parts and members representing
the Church. In `1 Cor. 12` this subject
is grandly elaborated, and with great simplicity, the explanation
given being that, "As the body is one and hath many members,
and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body,
so also is Christ [one body or company composed of many members].
For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body [whether
Jews or Gentiles, whether bond or free]." The Apostle proceeds
to call attention to the fact that as the well-being of a human
body depends largely upon the unity and harmony and cooperation
of all its members, so also it is with the Church, the body of
Christ. If one member suffer either pain or degradation or disgrace,
all the members are affected, willingly or unwillingly, and if
one member is specially blessed or comforted or refreshed, proportionately
all others share the blessings. He points out (verse
23) that we seek to cover and hide the weaknesses, blemishes,
etc., of our natural bodies and seek to relieve and help them;
and that thus it should be with the Church, the body of Christ--the
most blemished members should have special care as well as the
covering of charity--love; "that there be no schism [division]
in the body, but that the members should have the same care one
for another," for the most humble as well as for the most
highly favored member--Verse 25.
According
to this the Lord's organization of the Church is a very complete
one indeed; but, as in nature, so in grace--where the organization
is complete there is the less necessity for splints and bandages.
A tree is thoroughly organized and unified from tips to roots,
yet the branches are not held on by patent fastenings or cords
or screws or
<PAGE 237> printed rules and laws; and so
with the body of Christ. If properly adjusted and harmonized and
united on the lines which the Lord has laid down, there will be
no necessity for cords, splints or screws to hold the various
members together --no need for laws and creeds and human spectacular
appliances to bring them together or hold them together. The one
Spirit is the bond of union, and as long as the spirit of life
remains, a unity, a oneness of the body must remain also, and
this will be a strong or a weak union, according as the Spirit
of the Lord abounds.
The
Apostle goes further, and points out that God is the superintendent
of the affairs of this organization, the New Creation, which he
himself devised and inaugurated. His words are, "Now ye are
the Body of Christ and members in particular. And God hath set
some in the Church [Ecclesia, body], first, apostles; secondly,
prophets; thirdly, teachers; after that miracles, then gifts of
healing, helps, governments, divers kinds of tongues." It
will be a new thought to many who are used to setting themselves
and setting each other in places of glory and honor and trust
and service in the Church, to realize that God has promised the
superintending of this matter amongst those who are looking to
him for guidance and are directed by his Word and Spirit.
If
this were recognized how few would dare to seek the chief seats
and to wire-pull after political fashion for honorable stations!
To realize the divine care over the true Church means first of
all to distinguish the true Church from the nominal systems; and
then to seek reverently and humbly to know the divine will in
respect to all of the true Church's arrangements, services and
servants.
The
Apostle inquires, "Are all apostles? are all prophets? are
all teachers?" implying that it will be generally conceded
that this is not the case; and that any recognized as filling
any of these stations should be able to produce some evidence
of his divine appointment, and should exercise his office, or
service, not as a man-pleaser, but as pleasing the great overseer
of the Church--its Head and Lord. The Apostle calls our attention
to the fact that these differences
<PAGE 238> in the Church correspond to the
differences amongst the members of the natural body, and that
each member is necessary and none to be despised. The eye may
not say to the foot, I have no need of you; nor to the ear, I
have no need of you; nor to the hand, I have no need of you; if
they were all one member where were the body? "for the body
is not one member but many." Verses
19,14
True,
there is not now this same variety of members in the Church; for,
as the Apostle pointed out, "Tongues were for a sign not
to them that believed, but to them that believed not," likewise
were the miracles. When the apostles, in whom resided the power
to confer these gifts of the Spirit, died, and when those
who had received these gifts from them died, these miracles--gifts--would,
as we have already seen, cease in the Church. But still there
would be in the Church a corresponding work for every man
and for every woman--an opportunity to serve the Lord, the Truth
and the fellow-members of the body of Christ, each according to
his natural abilities. As those miracles discontinued, education
in the Truth and in the knowledge of the Lord and in the graces
of the Spirit took their places. Even while these inferior gifts
of healing, tongues, interpretations, and miracles were in the
Church, the Apostle exhorted the brethren to "covet earnestly
the best gifts."
They
could not reasonably covet or expect an apostleship, since there
were only twelve; but they might covet or desire to be prophets
(expounders) or teachers. "And yet," adds the Apostle,
"a still more excellent way I show unto you." (vs.
31) He proceeds to show that far above any of these gifts
or services in the Church is the honor of possessing in large
measure the spirit of the Master--Love. He points out that the
humblest member in the Church who attains to perfect love, has
reached a position higher and nobler in the sight of the Lord
than that of any apostle or prophet or teacher who lacks the grace
of love. He declares that no matter what the gifts, if love be
lacking, the whole matter is empty and unsatisfactory in the sight
of the Lord.
<PAGE 239> Indeed, we may be sure that no
one could by the Lord's approval long hold the position of apostle
or prophet or teacher in the Church unless he attained a standing
of perfect love, or sought, at least, to attain to that standard.
Otherwise he assuredly would be permitted to drift into darkness,
and perhaps become a teacher of error instead of a teacher of
the Truth--a servant of Satan to sift the brethren.
In
his letter to the `Ephesians (4:1-16)` the
Apostle reiterates this lesson of the oneness of the Church as
one body of many members, under one Head, Christ Jesus, and united
by one spirit--the spirit of love. He exhorts all such members
to walk worthy of their calling in lowliness, meekness, long-suffering,
forbearing one another in love; endeavoring to keep the unity
of the Spirit in the bond of peace. In this chapter the Apostle
sets forth the various members of the body appointed to special
services in it, and tells us the object of the service;
saying: "he gave some [to be] apostles and some prophets
and some evangelists and some pastors and teachers; for the
perfecting of the saints for the work of the ministry [preparing
them for the glorious ministry or service of the Millennial Kingdom],
for the edifying [building up] of the body of Christ: till we
all attain unto the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of
the Son of God, unto a full-grown man, unto the measure of the
stature of the fulness of Christ: that we,...speaking the truth
in love, may grow up into him in all things, which is the Head,
even Christ: from whom the whole body fitly joined together and
compacted by that which every joint supplieth... maketh increase
of the body unto the edifying of itself in love."
`Eph. 4:11-16`
We
note the picture which the Apostle draws for us--that of a human
body, but small and undeveloped. He informs us that it is the
divine will that all of the various members should grow to full
development, full strength and power-- "the full stature
of manhood" is the picture which represents the Church in
its proper, complete condition. Carrying
<PAGE 240> the figure down through the age
to the present time, we see that member after member fell asleep
to await the grand organization of the Millennial morning in the
First Resurrection, and that the places of these were being continually
supplied, so that the Church was never without a full organization,
although at times there might be greater weaknesses in one member
and greater strength in another. However, the endeavor of each
member at all times must be to do everything in his power for
the upbuilding of the body, for the strengthening of the members
and for their perfection in the graces of the Spirit--"till
we all come to the unity of the faith."
Unity
of faith is desirable; it is to be striven for--yet not the kind
of unity that is generally aimed at. Unity is to be along the
lines of "the faith once delivered unto the saints"
in its purity and simplicity, and with full liberty to each member
to take different views of minor points, and with no instruction
whatever in respect to human speculations, theories, etc. The
Scriptural idea of unity is upon the foundation principles of
the Gospel. (1) Our redemption through the precious blood, and
our justification by demonstrated faith therein. (2) Our sanctification,
setting apart to the Lord, the Truth and their service--including
the service of the brethren. (3) Aside from these essentials,
upon which unity must be demanded, there can be no Scriptural
fellowship; upon every other point fullest liberty is to be accorded,
with, however, a desire to see, and to help others to see, the
divine plan in its every feature and detail. Thus each member
of the body of Christ, maintaining his own personal liberty, is
so thoroughly devoted to the Head and to all the members that
it will be his pleasure to lay down all, even life itself, on
their behalf.
We
have already considered the special work of the apostles, and
the fact that their number was limited, and that they are still
performing their service in the Church, speaking as the Lord's
mouthpieces to his people through his Word. Let us now examine
something respecting these
<PAGE 241> other services of the Church to
which the Apostle refers as the Lord's gifts to the general body,
or Ecclesia.
The
Lord provides the apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, teachers,
for the blessing of the general body, as respects both their present
and their everlasting welfare. It is for those who are earnestly
relying upon the Lord as the Head, the Instructor, the Guide of
the Church, his body, to expect, look for and notice his gifts
in all these particulars; and to accept and to use them--if they
would have the promised blessing. These gifts are not forced upon
the Church, and those who neglect them, when offered, experience
a corresponding loss. The Lord set these in the Church at the
beginning and thus gave us the ideal Church arrangement, leaving
it to his people to follow the pattern thus set them and to have
proportionate blessings; or to ignore the pattern and to have
corresponding difficulties and disappointments. Let us, as those
who desire to be led and taught of the Lord, seek to learn how
he set the various members originally, and what gifts of this
kind he has been bestowing upon his people since, that we may
thus appreciate whatever gifts of this character are at our disposal,
and may the more zealously avail ourselves of them for the future.
The
Apostle declares that it is the Lord's pleasure that there be
no schism in the body--no splits, no divisions. With human methods
divisions are unavoidable--except as in Papacy's period of triumph,
when the nominal system became powerful and used drastic methods
of persecution in dealing with all not fully in accord with itself.
That, however, was a unity of force, of compulsion--an
outward unity, and not a unity of the heart. Those whom the Son
makes free can never participate heartily in such unions, in which
personal liberty is utterly destroyed. The difficulty with the
Protestant denominations is not that they are too liberal and,
therefore, have separated into many fragments, but rather that
they still have much of the spirit of the mother institution,
without possessing the power which she at one
<PAGE 242> time exercised for quelling and
suppressing liberty of thought. We will, doubtless, surprise many
by saying, that instead of having too many divisions or splits
of the kind we now see on every hand, the real need of the Church
of Christ is still more liberty--until each individual
member shall stand free and independent of all human bonds, creeds,
confessions, etc. With each individual Christian standing fast
in the liberty wherewith he was made free by the Lord (`Gal.
5:1`; `John 8:32`),
and each individual Christian united in loyalty to the Lord and
to his Word, very quickly the original unity which the Scriptures
inculcated would be discerned and all true children of God, all
members of the New Creation, would find themselves drawn to each
other member similarly free, and bound each to the other by the
cords of love far more strongly than are men bound in earthly
systems and societies. "The love of Christ constraineth
us" [holds us together--Young's Concordance].
`2 Cor. 5:14`
All
the members of the Aaronic family were eligible to the services
of the priesthood; nevertheless, there were certain limitations,
barriers, and disqualifications for service in this connection.
And so it is amongst the antitypical "Royal Priesthood"--all
are priests, all are members of the anointed body, and the anointing
signifies to each a full authority to preach and to teach
the good tidings, as it is written: "The Spirit of the Lord
God is upon me, because he hath anointed me to preach the
good tidings to the meek, to bind up the brokenhearted,"
etc. While these words applied specially to the Head of the Christ,
the New Creation, the Royal Priesthood, they apply also to all
the members-- hence, in a general sense, every consecrated child
of God has in his anointing of the holy Spirit, a full authorization
or commission to preach the Word--"to show forth the praises
of him who has called us out of darkness into his marvelous light."
`1 Pet. 2:9`
But
as it was required of the typical priests that they should be
free from certain blemishes and should have attained a certain
age, so amongst members of the Royal
<PAGE 243> Priesthood there are some who lack
qualifications for public service which others possess. Each is
soberly (`Rom. 12:3,6`) to seek to
determine for himself the measure of God's gifts possessed and,
hence, the measure of his stewardship and responsibility. And
likewise all the members are to take cognizance of one another's
natural, as well as spiritual, qualifications and attainments,
and to judge of the divine will accordingly. In the type, age
was a factor; but this with the antitypical priests would signify
experience, character-development; the blemish of crossed eyes
in the type would signify in the antitypical priesthood a lack
of clearness of insight and clearness of vision respecting spiritual
things, which would properly be a hindrance to public service
in the Church. Likewise also all the various blemishes which hindered
the typical priesthood would represent various moral and physical
or intellectual disabilities amongst the antitypical Royal Priesthood.
Nevertheless,
as the deformed priests in the type exercised all the privileges
of the others in respect to their own sustenance, eating of the
shew-bread, sacrifices, etc., so with us in the antitype--those
deformities which might hinder a member of the body of Christ
from being a public servant of the Church and of the Truth need
not hinder his spiritual development and his recognition, as possessing
full rights with all the others at the spiritual table of the
Lord and at the throne of grace. As none could exercise the High
Priest's office except he were faultless physically and of full
age, so those who would serve as ministers of the Truth in "word
and doctrine" should not be novices, but members of the body,
whose ripeness in character and knowledge and fruits of the Spirit
would qualify them for such a service. Such were to be recognized
as elders--not necessarily elders in years of natural life, but
elders, or seniors, or ripe ones in respect to the Truth, and
fitness to counsel and admonish the brethren along the lines of
the Lord's Word.
With
this understanding of the meaning of the word elder, we recognize
the reasonableness of the Scriptures declaring that all who attend
to the spiritual ministries of the
<PAGE 244> Truth are properly described by
the term "Elder"; whether otherwise they are doing the
service of an apostle or prophet or evangelist or pastor or teacher.
To fill any of these positions of service properly one must be
recognized as an Elder in the Church. Thus the apostles declared
that they were elders (`1
Pet. 5:1`; `2 John 1`);
and when referring to the ministers (servants) of the Church and
their selection, they are mentioned in our common version of the
Bible under three names:
Bishops,
Elders, Pastors
These
three terms are, however, misleading in view of the misapplication
of them in churches of various denominations; hence, it is necessary
that we explain that the word bishop simply signifies overseer;
and that every appointed Elder was recognized as an overseer of
a work great or small. Thus, for instance, on one occasion the
Apostle was met by the elders of the Church at Ephesus, and in
giving them his parting admonition said: "Take heed to yourselves
and to the Church over which the holy Spirit hath made you overseers."
`Acts 20:28`
However,
under the Lord's providences some of these elders were granted
a wider scope of influence or oversight in the Church and might,
therefore, be properly termed general overseers. Such were
all the apostles--the Apostle Paul having a wider scope of oversight,
specially amongst the Churches established in Gentile lands--in
Asia Minor and in Southern Europe. But this position of general
overseer was not restricted to the apostles: the Lord in his providence
raised up others to serve the Church in this manner-- "not
for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind"--with a desire to
serve the Lord and the brethren. Primarily, Timothy engaged in
this service under the direction of the Apostle Paul and partially
as his representative, and was commended to various companies
or ecclesias of the Lord's people. The Lord was, and is
still, entirely competent to continue to send such overseers as
he chooses to advise and admonish his flock. And the Lord's people
should be thoroughly competent
<PAGE 245> to judge of the value of the advice
offered by such overseers. It should be attested by a godly life,
humble demeanor and spirit of self-sacrifice; by an absence of
all scheming for honor and filthy lucre, as well as by teaching
which would stand the scrutiny of thoughtful Bible study-- searching
the Scriptures daily to see whether or not their presentations
fully accord with both the letter and spirit of the Word. This,
as we have seen, was done with the teachings of the apostles--and
as they invited the brethren to do--commending those specially
who were thus cautious without being captious, hypercritical.
`Acts 17:11`
However,
so far as we may judge from Church history, the spirit of rivalry
and love of honor rapidly took the place of the spirit of humble
devotion and self-sacrifice, while credulity and flattery readily
superseded Scripture-searching; and as a result the overseers
gradually became dictatorial --gradually claimed equality with
the apostles, etc.-- until finally amongst them arose a rivalry,
and some of them became known and distinguished by the title of
chief or archbishops. In turn, a rivalry amongst these archbishops
led to the exaltation of one of their number to the position of
pope. And the same spirit has since obtained to a greater or less
degree, not only in Papacy, but also amongst those who have been
deceived and misled by her example far away from the simplicity
of the primitive arrangement. In consequence, we find today that
such an organization as obtained in the primitive Church--namely,
without a sectarian name and without glory, honor and authority
on the part of a few over the many, and without a division into
clergy and laity--is regarded as no organization at all.
We are happy, however, to take our position amongst these disesteemed
ones, to copy closely the example of the primitive Church and
to enjoy correspondingly similar liberties and blessings.
As
elders of the Church are all overseers, caretakers, watchers of
the interests of Zion, some locally and some in the broad and
general sense, so also each, according to his talent and ability,
might serve the flock, one as an evangelist,
<PAGE 246> whose qualifications fitted him
and whose conditions permitted him to go about preaching the truth
to beginners --finding those possessed of an ear to hear the good
tidings, etc.; another serving the flock as a pastor (shepherd),
because of special qualifications of a social kind, enabling him
to look after the interests of the Lord's people personally, individually--visiting
them at their homes, encouraging them, strengthening them, holding
together and defending them against the wolves in sheep's clothing
who would bite and devour them. "Prophets" also had
their special qualifications for service.
The
word "prophet" is not generally used today in the broad
sense in which it was used in olden times, but is rather understood
to signify a seer, or foreteller. The word prophet, however, strictly
signifies a public speaker--an orator. A seer of visions
or a recipient of revelations might also be a prophet, in the
sense of a declarer of the same; but the two thoughts are distinctly
separate. In the case of Moses and Aaron, Moses was the greater,
being the divine representative, and the Lord said to him--"See,
I have made thee a god (mighty one or superior) unto Pharaoh:
and Aaron thy brother shall be thy prophet"--spokesman, mouthpiece.
(`Exod. 7:1`) We have already seen
that several of the apostles were seers in the sense that they
were granted a knowledge of things to come; we now remark that
they were nearly all prophets too, that is public orators--especially
Peter and Paul. But there were many other public speakers, or
prophets. Barnabas, for instance, was one; and it is written "Judas
and Silas, being prophets [public speakers] also themselves, exhorted
the brethren with many words." `Acts
15:32`
There
is no suggestion in the Scriptures that any person disqualified
for the work to be done should be considered the Lord's appointee
to that position for which he lacks special adaptation; but rather
it is as a duty that in the body of Christ each member should
serve the others according to his talents--according to his abilities--and
that each should be modest enough, humble enough, "not to
think of himself
<PAGE 247> more highly than he ought to think,
but to think soberly," according to the actual value of the
talents the Lord has bestowed upon him. Neither should the Church
recognize those of their number desiring to be greatest on
that account. On the contrary, they should take cognizance
of humility as being one of the essential qualifications to eldership
or to service in any department. If, therefore, two brethren seem
to have equal talent, but one is ambitious and forward and the
other humble and backward, the Spirit of the Lord, which is the
spirit of wisdom and of a sound mind, would teach the Lord's people
to appreciate the humbler brother as the one whom the Lord would
specially favor and wish them to put into the more prominent place
in the service.
It
seems less remarkable that "goats" and goat-like sheep
in the Lord's flock should aspire to leadership, than that the
true sheep who recognize the Master's voice, who know his Spirit
and who are seeking to do his will, should with docility permit
such goats or goat-like sheep to take the leadership amongst them.
It is well that we follow peace with all men; but where we disregard
the Word and Spirit of the Lord for the sake of peace it will
be sure to result injuriously to a greater or less extent. It
is well that all should have the docile, sheep-like nature; but
it is necessary also that the sheep have character, else
they cannot be overcomers; and if they have character they should
remember the Chief Shepherd's words, "My sheep hear my voice
[obey it]...and they follow me," "a stranger
will they not follow...for they know not the voice of strangers."
(`John 10:5,27`) It is the duty,
therefore, of every sheep to take special notice of the message
and the manner of every brother before they aid in putting him
forward as an overseer, either local or general. They should first
be convinced that he has the real qualifications of an elder in
the Church--that he is sound on the basic doctrines of the Gospel--the
atonement, redemption through the precious blood of Christ, and
full consecration to him, his message, his brethren, his service.
They should have charity and sympathy for the weakest of the lambs
and for all the mentally and morally lame sheep; but they
<PAGE 248> would be doing violence to the
divine arrangement to choose such for their leaders or elders.
They should have no sympathy with goats, or with wolves in sheep's
clothing who strive for place and authority in the Church.
It
should be recognized that the Ecclesia is far better off
without any public servant than to have for a leader a golden-tongued
"goat," who would surely not "direct their hearts
into the love of God," but seductively into wrong channels.
Of such our Lord forewarned the Church; such the Apostle described,
saying, "Of yourselves shall men arise speaking perverse
things [wrong, misleading doctrines], to draw away disciples after
them [to artfully attract followers after themselves]." The
Apostle says that many shall follow their pernicious ways, by
reason of whom the Truth will be evil spoken of.
`Acts 20:30`; `2 Pet. 2:2`
So
we see it today. Many are preaching themselves rather than preaching
the Gospel, the good tidings of the Kingdom; they are attracting
disciples after themselves and their denominations, rather than
attracting them to and uniting them only with the Lord, as members
of his body. They are seeking to be the heads of churches, instead
of having all the members of the body look directly to the Lord
as the Head. From all such we should turn away--the true sheep
should give them no encouragement in their wrong course. The Apostle
Paul speaks of these as having a form of godliness but denying
its power. (`2 Tim. 3:5`) They are
great sticklers for days, forms, ceremonies, ecclesiastical authorities,
etc., and are highly esteemed amongst men, but an abomination
in the sight of the Lord, saith the Apostle. The true sheep must
not only be careful to recognize the voice of the true Shepherd
and to follow him, but they must remember also not to follow,
not to support, not to encourage those who are self-seeking. Every
one esteemed worthy of confidence in the Church as an Elder, should
be sufficiently well known in advance to justify such confidence;
hence, the Apostle says, "not a novice." A novice might
do the Church injury and might himself be injured also, by being
puffed up, and thus be led away from the Lord
<PAGE 249> and the proper spirit and the narrow
path toward the Kingdom.
The
Apostle Paul29
gives very explicit advice concerning who might properly be recognized
by the Church as elders --describing in detail what should be
their character, etc. In his letter to Timothy on this subject
(`1 Tim. 3:1-7`) he reiterates the
same in slightly different language. In addressing Titus, who
evidently was another general overseer (`Tit.
1:5-11`), he describes their duties toward the Church.
The Apostle Peter on the subject says, "The elders which
are among you I exhort, who am also an Elder,...Feed the flock
of God which is among you, taking the oversight thereof...not
for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind; neither as being lords
over God's heritage, but being ensamples to the flock."
`1 Pet. 5:1-3`
They
should be generous men, men of pure lives, having no more than
one wife; and if they have children it should be noticed to what
extent the parent has exercised a wholesome influence in his own
family--for it should reasonably be judged that if he has been
derelict in his duty toward his children, he probably would be
unwise or derelict in his counsels and his general ministries
amongst the Lord's children in the Ecclesia, the Church.
He is not to be double-tongued or deceptive, not to be a brawler
or a contentious person. He should be one of good reputation amongst
those outside the Church: not that the world will ever love or
rightly appreciate the saints, but that the world should, at least,
be unable to point to anything derogatory to their character as
respects honesty, uprightness, morality, truthfulness. There is
no limitation made respecting the number of elders in a Church
or Ecclesia.
In
addition to the foregoing limitations, it is required that an
Elder shall be "apt to teach"; that is to say, he must
have ability as a teacher, explainer, expounder of the divine
plan, and thus to be able to assist the Lord's flock in word and
in doctrine. It is not essential to eldership that the talent
<PAGE 250> or qualifications of a "prophet"
or public speaker be possessed; there may be found several in
the same Church possessing teaching abilities and pastoral and
other qualifications of an Elder, and yet possibly none possessing
the qualifications of a public speaker or declaimer of the divine
plan. The Lord should be trusted to raise up such servants as
are needful, and if none are supplied the need may be doubted.
We might here remark that some of the most prosperous Ecclesias,
gatherings or congregations are those in which there is no great
talent for public speaking, and in which, consequently, Bible
studies are the rule rather than the exception. The Scriptures
clearly show that this was a custom in the early Church, too;
and that when they came together an opportunity was offered for
the exercise of the various talents possessed by the various members
of the body--one to speak, others to pray, many, if not all, to
sing. Experience seems to show that those companies of the Lord's
people which follow this rule most closely, receive the largest
amount of blessing and develop the strongest characters. That
which is merely heard by the ear, however well-spoken and however
good, is not impressed upon the heart so thoroughly as though
the individual himself exercised his mind in connection with it,
as is sure to be the case in a properly conducted Bible study
in which all should have encouragement to take part.
Others
of the elders, perhaps not so apt to teach, may be just in their
element in prayer and testimony meetings, which should be a feature
amongst the various gatherings of the Lord's people. He who finds
himself possessed of a good talent of exhorting should exercise
that talent rather than let it lie dormant while endeavoring to
exercise a talent which he does not possess in any special degree.
The Apostle says, "he that exhorteth let him wait upon exhortation,"
let him give his ability and service in that direction: "him
that teacheth [who has a talent for exposition--for making the
Truth plain] let him give his attention to the teaching."
<PAGE 251>
As
the word bishop or overseer has a wide range of meaning, so also
has the word pastor. No one but an Elder is competent to be a
pastor, or overseer, or shepherd. A pastor, or shepherd in a flock,
is an overseer of the flock; the two words are practically synonymous.
The Lord Jehovah is our Pastor or Shepherd in the largest sense
of the word (`Psa. 23:1`), and his
Only Begotten Son, our Lord Jesus, is the great Shepherd and Bishop
(overseer) of our souls--to all the flock, everywhere. The general
overseers and "Pilgrims" are all shepherds or pastors--looking
out for the interest of the general flock; and every local Elder
is a pastor, shepherd, overseer in a local capacity. It will be
seen, then, that the elders in the Church should primarily possess
general qualifications fitting them for eldership, and secondarily
that their special natural qualifications should determine in
what part of the service they can best serve the Lord's cause--some
in connection with the evangelistic work and others in connection
with the pastoral work amongst the sheep already evangelized,
already consecrated, already in the fold; some locally and some
in a wider field.
We
read, "Let the elders that rule well be accounted worthy
of double honor, especially they who labor in word and doctrine."
(`1 Tim. 5:17,18`) On the strength
of these words the nominal church has built up a class of Ruling
Elders; and has claimed for all elders a ruling or authoritative,
if not a dictatorial, position amongst the brethren. Such a definition
of "ruling" is contrary to all the presentations of
the Scriptures on the subject. Timothy, occupying the position
of a general overseer, or Elder, was instructed by the Apostle,
saying, "Rebuke not an Elder, but exhort him as a brother,"
etc. "The servant of the Lord must not strive, but be gentle
toward all men." Nothing here, certainly, would sanction
an autocratic ruling, or dictatorial bearing--meekness, gentleness,
long-suffering, brotherly-kindness, love, must be prominent qualifications
of those recognized as elders. They must in every sense of the
word be ensamples to the flock. If, therefore, they should be
dictatorial, the example
<PAGE 252> to the flock would be that all
should be dictatorial; but if they should be meek, long-suffering,
patient, gentle and loving, then the illustration to all would
be in accordance therewith. A more literal rendering of the passage
under consideration shows it to mean that honor should be given
to the elders in proportion as they manifest faithfulness to the
responsibilities of the service they have accepted. We might,
therefore, render the passage thus: Let the prominent elders be
accounted worthy of double honor, especially those bending down
through hard work in preaching and teaching.
Deacons,
Ministers, Servants
As
the word bishop signifies overseer merely, and in no sense of
the word signifies a lord, or master, though it has gradually
come to be so misunderstood by the people, so also is it with
the word deacon, which literally signifies servant, or minister.
The Apostle refers to himself and to Timothy as "ministers
of God." (`2 Cor. 6:4`) The
word here rendered ministers is from the Greek diakonos,
which signifies servants. The Apostle again says, "Our sufficiency
is of God: who also hath made us able ministers of the New Testament."
(`2 Cor. 3:5,6`) Here also the Greek
word diakonos is rendered ministers and signifies servants.
In fact, the Apostle declares that himself and Timothy were deacons
(servants) of God and deacons (servants) of the New Testament--
the New Covenant. We may see then that all true elders in the
Church are thus deacons, or servants of God and of the Truth and
of the Church--otherwise they should not be recognized as elders
at all.
We
do not wish to give the idea that no distinction obtained in the
early Church as respects service. Quite the contrary. The point
we are making is that even the apostles and prophets who were
elders in the Church were all deacons, or servants, even as our
Lord declared: "He that is greatest among you shall be your
servant [diakonos]." (`Matt.
23:11`)
<PAGE 253> The character and faithfulness
of the servant should mark the degree of honor and esteem that
should be rendered to any in the ecclesias of the New Creation.
As there were servants in the Church not qualified by talents,
etc., for recognition as elders, because less apt to teach or
less experienced, so, aside from any appointments by the Church,
the apostles and prophets (teachers) on various occasions chose
certain ones for their servants, or assistants, or deacons; as,
for instance, when Paul and Barnabas were together they had John
Mark for a time as their servant, or helper. Again, when Paul
and Barnabas separated, Barnabas took John with him, while Paul
and Silas took Luke with them for a servant, or helper. These
helpers did not regard themselves as the equals of the apostles,
nor as the equals in service to others of greater talents and
experience than themselves; but rejoiced in the privilege of being
assistants and servants under the direction of those whom they
recognized as being qualified and accepted servants of God
and of the Truth. They needed not to be chosen by the Church for
such a service to the apostles; as the Church chose its servants
or deacons, so the apostles chose their own. Nor was it a matter
of constraint, but one of option. John and Luke, we may presume,
considered that they could better serve the Lord in this manner
than perhaps in any other way open to them, and hence it was of
their own free will and without the slightest restraint that they
accepted, as they might with equal propriety have refused the
service, if they believed that they could more faithfully use
their talents in some other manner.
Nevertheless,
this word deacon is applied in the New Testament to a class
of brethren useful as servants of the body of Christ and honored
accordingly, but not so well qualified as others for the position
of elders. Their choice at all, however, to a special service
in the Church implied good character, faithfulness to the Truth
and zeal for the service of the Lord and his flock. Thus in the
early Church, when
<PAGE 254> the distribution of food, etc.,
for the poor of the flock was arranged, the apostles first undertook
the matter themselves; but subsequently when the murmuring arose
and the claim was made that some were neglected, the apostles
turned the matter over to the believers, the Church, saying--Choose
out from amongst you suitable men for this service, and we will
give our time, knowledge and talents to the ministry of the Word.
`Acts 6:2-5`
It
will be remembered that seven servants, or deacons, were chosen,
and that amongst these seven was Stephen, who later on became
the first martyr--having the honor to be the first to walk in
the Master's footsteps even unto death. The fact that Stephen
was chosen by the Church to be a deacon in no sense of the word
hindered him from preaching the Word in any and every manner in
which he found an opportunity. Thus we see the perfect liberty
which prevailed in the primitive Church. The whole company, recognizing
the talents of any member of the body, might request him to render
it a service; but its request and his acceptance was in no sense
a bondage--in no sense hindered him from using his talents in
any other way he might find opportunity. Stephen, the deacon,
faithful in the serving of tables, transacting financial matters
for the company, etc., was blessed of the Lord and granted opportunities
for the exercise of his zeal and talents in a more public manner
in the preaching of the Gospel--his career demonstrating that
the Lord recognized him as an Elder in the Church before the brethren
discerned his ability. Doubtless had he lived longer the brethren
likewise would in time have discerned his qualifications as an
Elder and expounder of the Truth and would so have recognized
him.
However,
the point we wish to impress is the complete liberty of each individual
to use his talents as he may be able, as an evangelist,
whether by direct appointment of the Ecclesia of the New
Creation or not. (Stephen would not have been competent to teach
in the Church, however, unless
<PAGE 255> chosen by the Church to that service.)
This absolute liberty of the individual conscience and talents,
and the absence of any bondage or authority to restrict, is one
of the marked features of the early Church which we do well to
copy in spirit and in deed. As the Church has need of elders qualified
and competent to teach, and evangelists to preach, so it has need
of deacons to serve it in other capacities, as ushers, treasurers,
or what not. These are servants of God and of the Church, and
are honored correspondingly; the elders are servants, though their
service is recognized as being of a higher order--labor in word
and doctrine.
Teachers
in the Church
As
we have just seen, "aptness to teach" is a qualification
necessary for the position or service of elders in the Church.
We might multiply citations from the Scriptures to show that St.
Paul classed himself not only as an apostle and as an elder
or servant, but also as a teacher, "not in
words which man's wisdom teacheth, but as the holy Spirit teacheth."
(`1 Cor. 2:13`) He was not a teacher
of languages nor of mathematics nor of astronomy nor of any of
the sciences, except the one great science to which the Lord's
Gospel, or good tidings, refers. This is the signification of
the Apostle's words just quoted; and it is well that all of the
Lord's people should keep this strictly in mind. Not only those
who teach and preach, but those also who listen, are to see to
it that it is not man's wisdom that is proclaimed, but the divine
wisdom. Thus the Apostle exhorts Timothy, "Preach the Word."
(`2 Tim. 4:2`) "These things
command and teach." (`1 Tim. 4:11`)
"These things teach and exhort." (`1
Tim. 6:2`) Going still further the Apostle indicates that
all of the Church as well as the elders should see to it that
teachers of false doctrines, and teachers of philosophy and "science
falsely so-called," are not recognized as teachers of the
Church. The Apostle's recommendation is, "If any man teach
otherwise," etc., withdraw thyself--do not lend support
<PAGE 256> to that which is another Gospel
than the one ye have received, which was delivered unto you by
them that preached the Gospel unto you with the holy Spirit sent
down from heaven. `1 Tim. 6:3-5`;
`Gal. 1:8`
There
are some, however, who are competent to teach, capable of making
plain to others the divine plan in a private way, who have no
capacity for oratory, public speaking, "prophecy." Those
who can privately speak a word for the Lord and for his cause
are not to be discouraged; but, on the contrary, are to be encouraged
to use their every opportunity to serve those who have an ear
to hear, and to show forth the praises of our Lord and King. Then,
again, we are to distinguish as between "teaching and preaching."
(`Acts 15:35`) Preaching is discoursing
in public; teaching can generally better be accomplished in a
more private manner--in a Bible class or in private conversation--and
the ablest preachers, public speakers or "prophets"
have found occasionally that their public work prospers best when
it is ably supplemented by the less public discourses, by the
more private expounding of the deep things of God, to a smaller
company.
The
gift of the evangelist, the power to stir men's hearts and minds
to investigation of the Truth, is a special gift not possessed
by all today any more than in the early Church. Moreover, changed
conditions have more or less changed the character of this work,
so that today we find that in consequence of general education
amongst the people, the evangelistic work can largely be accomplished
through the printed page. Many are engaged in the present time
in this work--scattering tracts and colporteuring the SCRIPTURE
STUDIES series. The fact that these evangelists are working on
lines adapted to our day instead of upon the lines adapted to
the past, is no more an argument against this work than is the
fact that they travel by steam and electric power instead of on
foot or on camels. The evangelization is through the presentation
of the Truth--the divine plan of
<PAGE 257> the ages--the Word of God--the
"good tidings of great joy." According to our judgment,
there is no other evangelistic work today achieving so great results
as this. And there are many who have the talent, the qualifications,
for engaging in this service, who are not prepared to engage in
other departments of the work--many reapers who have not yet gone
forth into the vineyard, and on whose behalf we are continually
praying that the Lord of the harvest would send them forth--would
grant them to see their privileges and opportunities of engaging
in this evangelistic ministry.
When
Philip, the evangelist, had done what he could for the people
of Samaria, Peter and John were sent to them. (`Acts
8:14`) And so our colporteuring evangelists, after stirring
up the pure minds of their hearers, introduce to them the Studies
in the Scriptures as teachers from which they can further
learn respecting the way of the Lord. As Peter and Paul and James
and John, as the Lord's messengers and representatives, wrote
epistles to the household of faith, and thus shepherded and counseled
and encouraged his flock, so now truth literature visits the friends,
personally and collectively, regularly--seeking to confirm their
faith and to form and crystallize their characters along the lines
established by the Lord and his apostles.
Many
Should be Able to Teach
The Apostle wrote to some, "For the time
[ye have been in the Truth] ye ought to be teachers, but [in consequence
of a lack of zeal for the Lord and a spirit of worldliness] ye
have need that one teach you again which be the first principles
of the oracles of God." (`Heb. 5:12`)
This implies that in a general sense, at least, the entire Church,
the entire priesthood, the members of the New Creation, should
become skillful in their Father's Word to the extent that they
will be "ready always to give an answer to every man that
<PAGE 258> asketh a reason for the hope that
is in them, with meekness and reverence." (`1
Pet. 3:15`) Thus we see again that teaching, Scripturally
considered, is not limited to a clerical class; that every member
of the New Creation is a member of the Royal Priesthood "anointed
to preach," and thus fully authorized to declare the good
tidings to those who have ears to hear--each according to his
ability to present it faithfully and lucidly. But here comes in
a peculiar statement by another Apostle:
"Be Not Many of You Teachers, Brethren"
--`James 3:1`--
What
does this mean? The Apostle answers, saying: "Knowing that
ye shall receive severer sentence"--knowing that temptations
and responsibilities both increase with every advance step of
eminence in the body of Christ. The Apostle does not exhort that
none shall become teachers, but would have each one who believes
himself possessed of some talent for teaching remember that it
is a responsible thing to undertake to any extent to be the mouthpiece
of God--to make sure that not a word is uttered which would misrepresent
the divine character and plan, and thus dishonor God as well as
do injury to those who might hear.
Well
were it for the Church if all would recognize and obey this counsel,
this wisdom from above. There might be much less teaching done
than is now being done; but the effect both upon teachers and
learners would be not only a greater reverence for the Lord and
the Truth, his Word, but a greater freedom from confusing errors.
Along this line, our Master's words imply that some will have
a share in the Kingdom whose teachings have not been in the fullest
accord with the divine plan; but that the consequent result will
be a lower position in the Kingdom than if more earnest heed had
been given to have the teaching none other than the divine message.
His words are, "Whosoever, therefore, shall break one of
these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be
called the least in the Kingdom of Heaven."
`Matt. 5:19`
<PAGE 259>
"Ye
Need Not That Any Man Teach You"
"The
anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you, and ye
need not that any man teach you; but as the same anointing teacheth
you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie, and even as it
hath taught you ye shall abide in him."
"Ye
have an unction from the holy one and ye know all things."
`1 John 2:27,20`
In
view of the many scriptures which encourage the Church to learn,
to grow in grace and knowledge, to build one another up in the
most holy faith, and to expect that the Lord would raise up apostles,
prophets, evangelists, teachers, etc., this statement by the Apostle
James seems very peculiar until rightly understood. It has been
a stone of stumbling to quite a few, although we may be sure that
the Lord has not permitted any whose hearts were in a proper attitude
toward him to be injured by it. The prevalent tenor of the Scripture
to the contrary--line upon line and precept upon precept--no less
than the experiences of life, are quite sufficient to convince
every person of humble mind that there is something radically
wrong with the translation of this passage or with the ideas that
are generally drawn from it. Those who are injured are usually
very self-conscious people, whose self-conceit leads them to prefer
that the Lord should treat them separately and apart from all
the remainder of the New Creation. Such, however, is in absolute
contradiction to the general teaching of the Scriptures that the
body is one, and has many members united in the one; and that
the nutriment supplied is carried to each member of the body for
its nourishment and strengthening through or in conjunction with
the other members. Thus the Lord intended to make his people interdependent
upon each other, to the intent that there might be no schism in
the body; and it is to this end that he has exhorted us through
the Apostle not to neglect the assembling of ourselves together,
but to remember that he is specially pleased to meet with the
Ecclesia, the body, in every place, even if so small a number
as "two or three be gathered together" in his name.
Examining
the text we find that the Apostle is controverting
<PAGE 260> an error prevalent in his day--a
gross error which, in the name of the Truth, in the name of Christianity,
in the name of discipleship to the Lord, was virtually making
void the entire revelation. He declared this erroneous system
to be no part of the true Church or its doctrines, but, on the
contrary, antichrist, or opposed to Christ while claiming his
name; thus sailing under false colors. He says of these that "they
went out from us because they were not of us [either they never
were true Christians or they had ceased to be such]; for if they
had been of us they would have remained with us." He points
out their error; namely that the prophecies of a Messiah were
figurative, and never to be fulfilled through mankind, and declared
this a complete denial of the Gospel statement that the Son of
God became flesh, was anointed at his baptism by the holy Spirit
as the Messiah and that he redeemed us.
The
Apostle's thought is, that any who have become Christians at all,
any who have understood the divine plan to any extent, must first
have before them the fact that they and all were sinners and in
need of a Redeemer; and, secondly, the fact that Jesus, the Anointed
One, had redeemed them by the sacrifice of his own life. The Apostle
further declares that they have no need that any man teach
them this basic truth. They could not be Christians
at all and yet be in ignorance of this fundamental of the Christian
religion-- that Christ died for their sins according to
the Scriptures, and rose again for their justification--and that
our justification and consequent sanctification and hope of glory
are all dependent upon the fact and value of Christ's sacrifice
on their behalf. He points out that although it might have been
possible to trust in and believe on the Father without believing
on the Son before the Son was manifested, yet now, whosoever
denieth the Son of God denies thereby the Father; and no one can
confess the Son of God without confessing at the same time the
Father and the Father's plan, of which he is the center and executor.
So,
then, we today can see exactly what the Apostle meant; namely,
that whoever had been begotten of the
<PAGE 261> holy Spirit must first have been
a believer in the Lord Jesus; that he was the Only Begotten of
the Father; that he was manifested in the flesh; that he was holy,
harmless and separate from sinners; that he gave himself as our
ransom; and that the sacrifice was accepted of the Father and
witnessed by his resurrection to be the glorious King and Deliverer.
Without this faith no one could receive the holy Spirit, the anointing:
consequently, whoever has the anointing needs not that any man
shall waste time in discussing further the fundamental question
as to whether Jesus was or was not the Son of God; whether or
not he was the Redeemer; whether or not he was the anointed Messiah
who shall fulfil in God's due time the precious promises of the
Scriptures. The same anointing which we have received, if it abides
in us, will assure us of the truth of these things--"Even
as it hath taught you ye must abide in him." Whoever abides
not in him, in the Vine, is--like the branch cut off--sure to
wither; whoever abides in him is sure to abide in his Spirit also,
and cannot deny him.
"Ye
have an unction from the holy one and ye all know it." (Diaglott)
The holy Spirit was typified throughout the Jewish dispensation
by holy oil which, poured upon the head of the High Priest, ran
down over all the body; so whoever is of the body of Christ is
under the anointing, under the influence of the Spirit, and wherever
the Spirit of the Lord is, it is unctuous, smooth, lubricative.
Its tendency is to follow peace with all men, so far as is possible,
and so far as fidelity to righteousness will permit. It is opposed
to friction--to anger, malice, hatred, strife. Those under its
influence are glad to be taught of the Lord, and so far from quarreling
with his plan and revelation, they readily fall into full harmony
with them, and have correspondingly the lubrication promised--the
unction, the smoothness, the peace, the joy, the holiness of mind.
Those
who have received the Spirit of the Lord in this sense of the
word, bringing peace and joy and harmony into their hearts, knowing
that they have these as a result of the Lord's dealings with them,
and that they received these
<PAGE 262> since they believed on the Lord
Jesus and accepted him as the Anointed One. This unction, therefore,
is an evidence not only to themselves but, in a considerable measure,
an evidence to others that they are members of the body of Christ;
while those who lack this peace and joy, and whose hearts are
filled with malice and strife and hatred and bickerings and quarrelings
and disputes, certainly lack the evidence of the anointing, of
the lubrication, of the smoothness which accompanies the Spirit
of the Lord. True, we are not all alike, and the smoothness may
not in the outward affairs of life manifest itself so quickly
in some as in others; but very early in the Christian experience
this smoothness should be looked for in the heart, as an evidence
that we have been with Jesus and learned of him and received his
Spirit, and shortly after it should begin to be evident to others
in the daily life.
We
see, then, that nothing in the Scriptures opposes the general
tenor of the Lord's Word respecting the necessity of teachers
and of learning the mind of the Lord through them. Not that we
hold that God is dependent upon the teachers, and that he could
not instruct, edify, and build up the members of the New Creation
by some other means or agency; but because his Word declares that
this is his means and agency, his method for instructing
and upbuilding the Church, the body of Christ--that there may
be no schism in the body and that each member may learn to sympathize
with and cooperate with and assist every other member.
We
have already considered the fact that these teachers are not to
be regarded as infallible but that their words are to be weighed
and measured by the divine standards--the words of the Lord and
the apostles and the holy prophets of past dispensations, who
spoke and wrote as they were moved by the holy Spirit for our
admonition upon whom the ends of the age have come. We now call
attention to the Apostle's declaration, "Let him that is
taught in the Word communicate to him that teacheth in all good
things." `Gal. 6:6`
<PAGE 263>
"Him
that is Taught" and "Him that Teacheth"
This
scripture, in accord with all the others, shows us that God designed
to instruct his people by means of each other; and that even the
humblest of his flock shall think for himself and thus develop
an individual faith as well as an individual character. Alas,
that this important matter is so generally overlooked amongst
those who name the name of Christ! This scripture recognizes teacher
and pupils; but the pupils are to feel free to communicate, to
make known to the teachers any and every matter coming to their
notice and seeming to bear upon the subject discussed--not as
desiring to be teacher but as an intelligent student to an elder
brother student. They are not to be machines, nor to be afraid
to communicate; but by asking questions, calling attention to
what seems to them to be misapplications of Scripture or what
not, they are to do their part in keeping the body of Christ and
his teachings pure--they are thus to be critics; and instead of
being discouraged from doing this, and instead of being told that
they must not criticize the teacher or call in question his expositions,
they are, on the contrary, urged to communicate, to criticize.
We
must not, however, suppose that the Lord wished to encourage any
hypercritical spirit, or combative, fault-finding disposition.
Such a spirit is entirely contrary to the holy Spirit, and not
only so, but would be very dangerous; because whoever in a spirit
of debate sets forth a hypothetical, or supposititious case which
he does not believe to be the Truth, merely with a view to confusing
his opponent, having a "debate," etc., is sure to be
injured as well as tolerably sure to injure others by such a course.
Honesty to the Truth is a prime essential to progress in it: to
oppose what one believes to be the Truth, and to even temporarily
uphold what one believes to be an error, "for fun,"
or for any other reason, will surely be offensive to the Lord
and bring some just retribution. Alas, how many have undertaken
to "see just what could be said" against a position
which they believed to be the Truth, and have been entangled and
entirely
<PAGE 264> captivated and blinded while pursuing
this course! Next to the Lord, the Truth is the most precious
thing in all the world; it is not to be trifled with, not to be
played with; and whoever is negligent along this line will himself
sustain injury. See `2 Thess. 2:10,11`.
It
is proper to remark that the word "communicate"
is a broad one, and includes not only communication respecting
thoughts, sentiments, etc., but may be understood also to mean
that he who is taught and who receives spiritual benefits should
be glad to communicate in some manner to the support of those
who teach--giving to the Lord, the brethren, the Truth, of the
fruit of his labors and talents. And such is the very essence
of the holy disposition of the New Creation. Early in Christian
experience each learns the meaning of their Master's words, "It
is more blessed to give than to receive," and, hence, all
who have this spirit are glad indeed to give of earthly things
in the service of the Truth, and that in proportion as they receive
spiritual blessings into good and honest hearts. The question
of how to give, and of the wisdom to be exercised, will be considered
later on, under another head.
Woman's
Province in the Church
In
some respects this subject could be better considered after examining
the general relationship of man and woman in the divine order;
but in an important sense this is the appropriate place for its
presentation--the other concurrent views, set forth later on,
we believe will be found corroborative of what we now present.
Nothing
is clearer than that sex is ignored by the Lord in the selecting
of his Ecclesia of the New Creation. Both males and females
are baptized into membership in the "one body" of which
Jesus is the Head. Both are, therefore, alike eligible to a share
in the First Resurrection and its glory, honor and immortality,
on the general condition, "if we suffer with him we shall
also reign with him." Both have been honorably mentioned
by our Lord and the apostles in
<PAGE 265> warmest terms. Hence, any limitations
placed upon the female as to the character and extent of Gospel
service, must be understood to appertain merely to the present
time, while still in the flesh; and must be accounted for in some
other manner than by supposing a divine preference for males.
We shall endeavor to show that the discriminations between the
sexes are along symbolical and typical lines-- because the man
symbolizes Christ Jesus, the Head of the Church, while the woman
symbolizes the Church, the Bride, under the divinely appointed
Head.
Our
Lord's love for his mother, and for Martha and Mary and other
"honorable women who ministered unto him of their substance,"
is very evident from the record, even aside from the direct statement
that he "loved" them (`John 11:5`);
yet when choosing his twelve apostles, and later the "seventy,"
he included none of them. We cannot suppose this to have been
an oversight, either--even as it was not by oversight that the
female members of the tribe of Levi were, as respected the public
services, ignored for the more than sixteen centuries previous.
Nor can we explain the matter by supposing that the females of
our Lord's friends were not sufficiently educated to be used by
him; for of those chosen the record is that it was readily perceived
that "they were ignorant and unlearned men." We must,
therefore, conclude that it was of divine intention that from
amongst the "brethren," only the males were chosen to
be the special public servants and ambassadors of the Gospel.
And here, be it noted, that this divine arrangement is the reverse
of the method of the great Adversary who, although ready to use
either sex as his tools, has always found woman his most efficient
representative.
The
first woman was Satan's first ambassador--a successful one, too,
in misleading the first man and plunging the entire race into
sin and death. The witches of the past, and spirit mediums, "Christian
Scientists" of our times, are all evidences along this same
line--of Satan's propaganda through women nearly as marked as
the divine propaganda through men. Moreover, the divine program
runs
<PAGE 266> counter to the natural tendency
of all men to specially esteem women in religious matters--to
accredit to the sex a higher degree of purity, spirituality, fellowship
with God. This tendency is notable in the records of the past
as well as in the present, as evidenced by the Egyptian goddess
Isis, the Assyrian goddess Ashtaroth, the Greek goddess Diana,
and Juno and Venus and Bellona, and the Mariolatry which for centuries
and today dominates fully two-thirds of those claiming the name
of Christ--notwithstanding the most explicit appointment of man
as the mouthpiece and representative of the Lord in his Church.
Aside
from its symbolic meaning, the Lord's Word does not inform us
if there be other reasons for sex distinction, and our surmises
respecting the matter may or may not be correct: in our opinion,
however, some of the qualities of heart and mind which combine
in the noblest types of woman, render her unsuitable for public
religious services. For instance, by nature woman is, fortunately,
endowed with the desire to please and to win approval and
praise. This quality is an inestimable blessing in the home, leading
to the preparation of the numerous table delicacies and attractive
home adornments which differentiate a home from the apartments
of old maids or old bachelors. The true wife is happy when endeavoring
to make her family happy, and rejoices in their manifestations
of appreciation of her efforts --cookery, etc., and she should
never be denied the encomiums which surely are her due and which
her nature craves and which are absolutely essential to her health
and progress.
But,
if woman be lifted out of her sphere--so large and so important
that the poet has well said, "The hand that rocks the cradle
is the hand that rules the world"--if she gets before the
public as a lecturer or teacher or writer, she gets into a position
of great danger; because several of the peculiarities of her sex
(one of which we have mentioned) which go to make her a true woman
and attractive to true men will conspire under the unnatural
conditions to spoil her womanhood--to make her "mannish."
Nature has set the
<PAGE 267> metes and bounds of the sexes,
not only in physical contour and hair-suite but equally in qualities
of heart and head-- adapting each to the other so thoroughly that
any interference with, or disregard of, her laws is sure to work
injury in the end, however beneficial the changes may temporarily
appear to be.
The
quality of approbativeness which nature has so freely bestowed
upon and which rightly exercised is so helpful to her, to her
home and to her family, is almost certain to become a snare to
her if exercised toward the public--in seeking the approval of
the Church or the world. Ambition to shine--to appear wiser and
abler than others--is a danger which besets all before the public
eye, and, undoubtedly, has stumbled many men who have become puffed
up, and thus have fallen into a snare of the Adversary: but the
very womanliness of woman renders her peculiarly liable, not only
to herself stumble in her attempt to shine, but liable also to
stumble others; because such an one getting off the track would
be sure to be supplied by the Adversary with spurious oil--by
whose false light many might be led out of the way of the Lord.
Thus the Apostle's warning--"Be not many of you teachers,
brethren, knowing that a man [who is a teacher] shall receive
the severer testing" (`James 3:1`)--
would be still more forceful if applied to the sisters. Indeed,
the danger with them would be so great that none were appointed
to be teachers; and the Apostle writes--"I suffer not a woman
to teach, nor to usurp authority over a man, but to be in silence."
`1 Tim. 2:11,12`
This
emphatic and explicit statement cannot, however, be understood
to mean that the sisters of the New Creation may never impart
a blessing by telling the old, old story. The same Apostle refers
most respectfully to noble women of his day as helpers
in the ministry. For instance, he mentions Priscilla as well as
her husband as "helpers," or "fellow-workers."
(`Rom. 16:3`) This signifies more
than merely entertainers who had received the Apostle into their
home: it meant that they worked with him in his work--not merely
in tent-making, but specially in his chief work as a minister
<PAGE 268> of the Gospel. In a later verse
(`6`) he mentions Mary's services
differently, saying--"Mary bestowed much labor on us."
She evidently was not a fellow-worker. Her services rendered the
Apostle, and which he wished to acknowledge, were personal services--perhaps
washing or mending. Priscilla's service, on the contrary, is mentioned
in the same language as the services of Urbane (`vs.
9`). Indeed, since Acquila's name is mentioned after that
of his wife, the inference is reasonable that the wife was the
more efficient of the two as a "fellow-worker." Tryphena
and Tryphosa (`vs. 12`) are two other
sisters whose "labor in the Lord" is honorably
mentioned.
Any
interpretation of the Apostle's words which would ignore all opportunity
for the sisters to "labor in the Lord" would manifestly
be erroneous. It is in the gatherings of the Church (whether two
or three or more) for worship and praise and mutual edification
that the sisters are to take a subordinate place and not attempt
to be the leaders and teachers--thus to do would be usurping
authority over the man, upon whom, both by nature and by precept,
the Lord has placed the responsibility of the leading ministries
--undoubtedly for wise reasons, whether we could agree respecting
them or not.
The
Apostle's restrictions evidently related to meetings such as he
describes in `1 Corinthians 14`. These
meetings included the sisters, who certainly shared all of its
blessings-- joining in the songs and hymns and spiritual songs
and in the prayers, by whomsoever offered. The Apostle wished
to inculcate the necessity for order in the meetings, that they
all might be the more profited. He urges that not more than one
speaker orate or prophesy at a time, and that all others give
attention; and that not more than two or three orators or prophets
speak at one meeting, so as not to give too great diversity of
sentiment at one session. Likewise any speaking unknown tongues
were to keep silence unless some one present could interpret their
utterances.
Women
were not to speak at all in such meetings, although outside the
meetings or at home they might "ask
<PAGE 269> their own husbands," or, more
properly, their own men; they could suggest their views
or make queries through those brethren (men) with whom they were
most intimately acquainted --their husbands, if possible, or brethren
with whom they talked on their way homeward from meetings, etc.
The word home in this text has the significance of family
or acquaintanceship. The thought then is, Let them ask their questions
of or through the males of their acquaintance. The Apostle proceeds
to say, "It is not permitted unto them to speak; but they
are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the Law."
`1 Cor. 14:34-36`
Evidently
some in the Church at Corinth favored the "women's rights"
idea, claiming that in the Church the rights of the sexes were
indiscriminate. But the Apostle not only negatives this thought
but, additionally, reprimands their audacity in thinking to inaugurate
a procedure not recognized by others of the Lord's people. His
words are, "What, came the word [message] of God out from
you [originating with you]? or came it [from elsewhere] unto
you, only? If any man think himself a prophet, or spiritual,
let him acknowledge that the things that I write unto you are
the commandments of the Lord," and not merely my personal
opinions, or crotchets. We, then, no more than the Corinthians,
are to exercise our own preferences or judgments on this subject,
but are to bow to the Apostle's statements as the Lord's command.
And if any one disputes the Apostle's guidance on this subject,
let him be consistent and reject him as an apostle in toto.
It
is proper in this connection to call attention to the Apostle's
words when speaking of the gifts from our Lord to the Church--dating
from Pentecost. He says, "And he gave some to be apostles,
and some prophets, and some evangelists, and some pastors and
teachers; for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the
ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ. (`Eph.
4:11,12`) In the Greek the article indicates the
gender--masculine, feminine, or neuter. This text then is an excellent
one from which to decide how particularly the Lord through the
holy Spirit drew the line of
<PAGE 270> sex amongst the active servants
given to his Church. What are the facts as respects the above
text; which gender is indicated in the Greek? We reply that the
article tous (plural, Accus., masculine) occurs
before apostles, prophets, evangelists and pastors, and no article
at all before teachers, which apparently stands here either for
"helpers" (`1 Cor. 12:28`),
or else is a comprehensive term referring to the male apostles,
male orators, male evangelists and male persons as all
teachers.
Let
us here remark, however, that for a sister to call the attention
of the assembly to the words of the Lord or of the apostles on
any subject under discussion without giving her own views could
not be considered teaching, nor as in any sense usurping authority
over the man: she would, on the contrary, merely be calling up
the words of recognized and authorized teachers. Similarly for
a sister to refer to, or to read to others, this book or other
of our publications explanatory of the Scriptures would not be
teaching on her part, but by the author quoted. Thus we see that
the Lord's arrangements safeguard his flock and at the same time
make ample provision for their needs.
All
may obey the divine command, but, assuredly, none will comprehend
it except as he realizes that in Biblical usage a woman symbolizes
the Church, and a man symbolizes the Lord, the Head or Master
of the Church. (See
`Eph. 5:23`; `1 Cor. 11:3`)
As the Church is not to attempt to teach the Lord, so woman, who
symbolizes the Church, must not assume the role of teacher over
man, who symbolically represents the Lord. With this thought before
our minds no sister need feel slighted and no brother may feel
puffed up by this Scripture regulation; rather, all will have
in mind that the Lord is the only teacher and that the brethren
dare not utter wisdom of their own; but merely present to others
that which their Head sets forth as the Truth. Let us apply this
scripture (`1 Tim. 2:11,12`) to the
Lord and the Church, thus--Let a church learn in silence with
all subjection. I suffer not a church to teach, nor to usurp authority
over Christ but to be in silence."
<PAGE 271>
"Let
Her Be Covered"
We
have already pointed out30
that the High Priest who typified Christ, the High Priest of our
Profession, alone went with uncovered head when in priestly attire;
and that all of the under-priests, who typified the Church, "the
Royal Priesthood," wore head coverings called "bonnets."
The teaching of this type is in full accord with what we have
just seen, for in the gatherings of the Ecclesia of the
New Creation, the Lord, the antitypical High Priest, is represented
by the brethren, while the Church or Royal Priesthood is represented
by the sisters, who the Apostle declares should likewise wear
a head covering as indicating the same lesson--the subserviency
of the Church to the Lord. The Apostle details this in
`1 Cor. 11:3-7,10-15`.
Some
have inferred that as the Apostle mentions a woman's long hair
being given her by nature as a covering, that he meant nothing
more than this; but verse 6 clearly shows to the contrary--that
he meant that women should not only let their hair grow long as
nature provided for, but, additionally, should wear a covering,
which in verse 10 he declares is a sign, or symbolic recognition
of being subject to, or under the authority of man; symbolically
teaching that the entire Church is under law to Christ. The record
of verse 4 seems at first to be in conflict with the requirement
that women keep silence in the ecclesias. Our thought is
that while at the general Church service women are not to take
a public part, yet in social meetings for prayer and testimony,
and not for doctrinal teaching, there could be no objection to
the sisters participating with their heads covered.
Respecting
this matter of perpetuating the typical covering of their heads
by the sisters, the Apostle urges it, but he does not state it
to be a divine command. On the contrary, he adds, "If any
man seemeth to be contentious [on the subject] we have no such
custom [positive law in the Church]." It should not be considered
a vital subject; though all who are seeking to do the Lord's will
should be
<PAGE 272> particular in this as well as in
other regards from the time they discern its appropriateness as
a symbol. The words, "because of the angels," seem to
refer to the chosen elders of the Church, who specially
represent the Lord, the Head, in the ecclesias.
`Rev. 2:1`
* * *
Summarizing,
we suggest that the most liberal interpretation possible should
be given to the inspired Apostle's words respecting the scope
of the liberty of the sisters in the affairs of the Church. Our
judgment of this we set forth thus:
(1)
The sisters have the same liberty as the brethren in the matter
of the election of the Church's servants--the Elders and Deacons.
(2)
The sisters cannot serve as elders or teachers in the Church,
because, the Apostle says, "I suffer not a woman to teach."
(`1 Tim. 2:12`) This, however, need
not be understood to hinder the sisters from participating in
meetings not of the teaching or preaching kind; such as prayer
and testimony meetings, Berean studies, etc., because the Apostle
says that if she pray or prophesy (speak) it should be with her
head covered, representing her acknowledgment of the fact that
the Lord, the Great Teacher, is specially represented by the brethren.
(`1 Cor. 11:5,7,10`) Such participation
need not be considered teaching; because neither are the brethren
who participate teachers; as the Apostle says "Are all teachers?"
No, the teachers or Elders are specially chosen, though always
from among the males. `Eph. 4:11`;
`2 Tim. 2:24`; `1 Cor. 12:28,29`
THE
NEW CREATION
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