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(Joe
Odle was editor of The Baptist Record, the Baptist paper of
Mississippi, for many years.)
THE
CHURCH
The Baptist belief and emphasis concerning the New Testament
church is one of the distinctives which differentiates them
from other denominations.
What
is a New Testament church?
A definition which probably is accepted by the majority of
Baptists was set forth in the Statement of Faith adopted by
the Southern Baptist Convention in 1963. That Statement says:
"A New Testament church of the Lord Jesus Christ is a
local body of baptized believers who are associated by covenant
in the faith and fellowship of the gospel, observing the two
ordinances of Christ, committed to his teaching, exercising
the gifts, rights, and privileges invested in them by his
word, and seeking to extend the gospel to the ends of the
earth. This church is an autonomous body, operating through
democratic processes under the lordship of Jesus Christ. In
such a congregation, members are equally responsible. Its
scriptural officers are pastors and deacons. The New Testament
speaks also of the church as the body of Christ which includes
all the redeemed of all ages."
1.
This statement places its emphasis upon the church as "a
local body of baptized believers,"but states that there
also is a secondary meaning. Let us consider the Baptist position
concerning the church as revealed in this statement.
1) Baptists emphasize the church as a local body of baptized
believers because this is the emphasis which is found in the
New Testament. The Greek word ekklesia, translated "church"
in the English Bible, is "used in the New Testament 114
times. Three times there clearly is no reference to the church.
Eighty-five times the local idea is positively certain."In
a number of
other cases the reference clearly is generic or general, referring
to the church as an institution. Three references appear to
be speaking of an ekklesia in heaven, when all of the saved
are together. There are references in ten verses in Ephesians
and Colossians, where the apostle seems to be thinking of
something other than the local church. It is largely from
these that the larger or "universal" (theological
term; not found in the Bible with reference to the church)
concept of the church as the body of Christ made up of all
the redeemed comes. However, many Baptist scholars interpret
these passages as having the generic or institution meaning.
Both Dr. B. H. Carroll and Dr. George W. McDaniel so classify
them. Whatever may be one's interpretation,
however, he must admit that in New Testament usage the primary
emphasis is upon the "local" church.
This
same emphasis is found in Jesus' use of the word. He spoke
of the church twenty-three times, three in Matthew and nineteen
in the book of Revelation. In every case except the first
one, Matthew 16:18, he clearly is speaking of a "local"
church. Matthew 16:18 is his declaration "Upon this rock
I will build my church." Since every other reference
is to the church as a local
body, it seems reasonable to assume that Jesus had the same
meaning here, except in an institutional sense. Nowhere did
Jesus say that he would establish two kinds of churches, a
local one and a universal one. It is because of the New Testament
usage that Baptists give emphasis to the church as a local
body.
2) This church is to be made up of baptized believers. First,
they must be "believers," by which Baptists mean
that they must have been saved or born again. Unsaved persons
may become members of Baptist churches, but they do so through
a false or mistaken profession of faith. Second, these believers
must be baptized, by which the Baptist mean immersed. A New
Testament church is, in Baptist thinking, a local, visible
body made up of baptized believers. This is what is sometimes
referred to as "a regenerate church membership."
This belief immediately eliminates both infant baptism and
any other type of church-related salvation.
3) In Baptist belief and practice these churches are made
up baptized believers "associated by covenant in the
faith and fellowship of the gospel, observing the ordinances,
committed to his teaching, exercising the gifts, rights and
privileges invested in them by his word...." Here is
a congregation of believers, worshiping together, working
together, and, together seeding to do the Lord's will in all
things.
4) Each church is an autonomous body, completely independent,
and in democratic manner, administering its affairs under
the headship of Jesus Christ. Baptists find in the New Testament
no evidence of hierarchical or other type of outside control
over the churches. New Testament churches elected deacons,
sent out missionaries, exercised discipline, and carried on
their work as a congregation. Baptist believe that they should
have the same autonomy today. Cooperation with larger bodies
such as associations or conventions, is entirely on a voluntary
basis, and every Baptist church always is independent.
5) In Baptist thinking, the church is the agency for carrying
out Christ's commission to make disciples, baptize them, and
teach them to observe all things which he had commanded. The
church may do this independently, or it may cooperate with
other churches of like faith and order in associations and
conventions, in an enlarged program of witness. Most Baptist
churches
choose to work I such denominational relationships, and the
vast mission, educational, and benevolent programs being carried
on by various Baptist groups today, are made possible through
this voluntary cooperation of independent churches.
Baptist
churches also usually cooperate with churches of other denominations
in kingdom affairs, so long as that cooperation does not call
for a sacrifice of doctrinal integrity or autonomy. In many
areas such as morals, community uplift, social action, and
others, Baptists always have worked with other groups. While
some Baptists participate in the modern "ecumenical
movements" feeling that there should be a Baptist voice
in them, most Baptist have maintained a position apart from
them, probably feeling with Dr. W. A. Criswell that "Ecumenicity
is another name for death for our Baptist faith." Baptists
so cherish their New Testament principles and their independence
that they never are willing to relinquish them for mere outward
unity. At the
same time they count every person who accepts Jesus Christ
as Lord and Savior as a brother, and always are ready to walk
with him in kingdom affairs and fellowship, when no compromise
is demanded or required.
Here
then, is the New Testament church, as Baptists see it, believe
concerning it, and emphasize it. It is a local body of baptized
believers, seeking to carry out Christ's will here on the
earth.
2. The Statement of Faith reveals that Baptists acknowledge
that "The New Testament speaks also of the church as
the body of Christ which includes all of the redeemed of all
ages." It is interesting to note the change in Baptist
emphasis in recent years, pointed up by the fact that this
statement was not in the Statement of Faith adopted by Southern
Baptists in 1925. There are two
points of view concerning the meaning of this statement.
1) To some Baptists it apparently means much the same that
is meant by other denominations when they speak of the "body"
of Christ, or of a "universal, invisible church."
They believe that there is in existence now a "body"
called the church, made up of all the saved on the earth,
and that it is entered by the new birth. Those holding this
position believe that "local" churches are simply
visible manifestations of the larger body.
2) There are other Baptists who deny that there is actually
a "universal, invisible church" in existence now,
although probably most of them would agree that when all of
the saved are together in heaven they will make one great
"church" or assembly. They contend that there is
nothing in the New Testament about people being "born
again" into the church, and that
proponents of this position are confusing it with the kingdom.
They call attention to the fact that the words "universal"
and "invisible" are never used concerning the church
in the New Testament, and that the New Testament church always
is an assembled or gathered group. A "universal"
church could be only an ideal, since its membership could
be known only to God, since it can have no meetings, no officers,
and no program, and since it can be an actuality only when
all of the redeemed are together in heaven. If someone argues
that this breaks fellowship with all Christians other than
Baptists, it is answered, "Not at all. They are in the
kingdom, can be in local churches, and will be part of the
true "universal" assembly gathered in glory. Here
on earth, however, the church is local and visible."
Thus
Baptists disagree concerning the meaning of church being something
larger than a local, visible body, but they are generally
agreed that the primary New Testament emphasis is on the local
church, and it is to that body which they give their major
attention.
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