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Frustration
With Our Community
(Editorial - June 2004)
Looking around him,
David expressed his despair at what he saw: “Help LORD, for
the godly are no more; the faithful have vanished from among men. Everyone
lies to his neighbor; their flattering lips speak with deception”
(Psa. 12:1-2 NIV). David was not living among the Caananites or Amalekites,
he was living among God’s chosen people. What he saw is perhaps
what we feel at times as we evaluate our own experiences with the brethren
in Christ of this generation.
A
chronic problem
There is nothing new about the community of the chosen having serious
spiritual problems. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob’s families were at
times dysfunctional. Look at the hatred of Esau to Jacob, the fornication
of Dinah and the cruel revenge of Levi and Simeon. Joseph certainly was
not helped by his family; in fact he was hated, and yet he lived to save
them!
The time of
the Judges was a disaster: idolatry, confusion, disorganization, rape,
warfare, horrible decisions, internecine strife, etc. As history was unfolding,
the community looked poor to say the least. But Hannah and Elkanah went
to the temple each year, despite the sins of Eli’s sons. Though
it could be argued that the sanctuary had lost its godliness, they still
made the journey and Hannah shared her greatest desire with the Lord there.
We remember Eli assumed she must have been drunk, which tells us a little
about how most visitors to the temple must have behaved. Despite it all,
the believers were saved by faith.
Samuel, Kings
and Chronicles portray the people of God as sinful and idolatrous. There
were highlights and individuals of great faith, but after the time of
Solomon, there were only four good kings in Judah and none in the northern
kingdom of Israel. The nation comes through as stiffnecked and wicked,
albeit the Lord God sent his holy prophets to plead with them until there
was no remedy. Only a remnant did not bow the knee to Baal and they were
saved by faith. Again God’s select community revealed their intrinsically
sinful character.
Problems
in the twelve
Skipping to the New Testament, we see the same pattern in the congregation.
The disciples were wonderful men, otherwise the Lord would not have selected
them, but they refused to listen to the teaching of Jesus concerning his
death. They argued about who would sit on the right and left hand of Jesus
at the very time he was teaching about his impending death. They wanted
to call down fire upon the Samaritans, yet they were often dull of hearing
themselves. And then Peter, James and John couldn’t even stay awake
to help the Lord when he was going through his agony in the garden.
New
start, old problems
In the Acts, one of the first ecclesial events was the death of Ananias
and Sapphira, who were wrapped in their garments and carried off to be
buried. Not an auspicious beginning. Nonetheless Acts is full of great
stories depicting the spread of the gospel and the development of the
ecclesias in the Roman world. It was a time of happiness and joy for the
preachers, but a dark shadow, a portent of worse things to come, was the
vicious hatred of the Judaizers who pursued Paul and his coworkers with
deadly intent.
The epistles
reveal the development of these various ecclesias to us. Once again the
community shows up with all its mortal and fallible warts. Think of the
problems the believers faced in Corinth. There was incest in the ecclesia.
Many members were formerly temple prostitutes and idolaters. Some brethren
were turning the meal of fellowship, “the love feast,”
into a drunken orgy and lapping up the food with such gluttony that some
went home hungry. There were serious doubts as to the teaching regarding
the resurrection, and they had to be encouraged to set aside a little
for the poor in Jerusalem. They mishandled the spirit gifts until it became
a shouting match resembling a riot rather than a time of worship, but
Paul patiently exhorted them and sent visitors to assist in their out-of-control
deportment.
We can be assured
that anything Paul wrote to an ecclesia was directly related to either
a teaching error or bad behavior in that ecclesia. For example, in Galatians
he writes, “Now the works of the flesh are …these, fornication,
uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousies,
wraths, factions, divisions, heresies, envyings, drunkenness, revellings…of
the which I forewarn you, they which practice such things shall not inherit
the kingdom of God.” Not only that, in chapter 2, he had to
rebuke Peter in public because he stood condemned.
James reveals
that believers among the 12 tribes had dreadful problems. “Whence
come wars and fightings among you? …Ye lust, ye kill, and covet…ye
fight and war…Ye adulteresses, know ye not that the friendship of
the world is enmity with God?…Cleanse your hands, ye sinners; and
purify your hearts, ye doubleminded.” I don’t think this
was metaphorical “killing;” they were going for each
other’s throats, just as they did in the Old Testament.
We read the
assessment of the seven ecclesias in the Revelation. Not only were they
going astray doctrinally, immorality existed.
No
excuse for us
Past failures do not justify our present weakness and faults, but we need
to keep in perspective that it has never really been any different down
the long history of the congregation from the garden of Eden when Cain
killed Abel to the present day. There are bright spots, great victories
of faith, many men and women of faith, but the community in every age
has rarely reflected God’s goodness, and one big reason is that
we are mortal, sinful creatures, struggling to work out our salvation
while carrying the overwhelming burden of human nature. Apart from the
wondrous grace of God, we would have no opportunity for eternal life.
Why
stay?
We may ask ourselves, if the believers down through the ages were plagued
with such behavior, why belong to the community of God’s chosen
people? Why not go off on our own and work out our probation without belonging
to the community?
There is a compelling
and scriptural answer. It is the Lord’s design that we are part
of a community, the body of Christ, the congregation of God’s chosen
ones. Why did God choose this vehicle, this mechanism for us to work within?
Because it develops us and provides us with the training ground in which
to become rulers of the world to come. It is where we get the rough edges
rubbed off, where we bear long with spiritually and physically suffering
souls. It is where we have to face the consequences of our social or spiritual
conduct and attempt to “overcome” the forces of the
flesh within a diverse group of people.
The ecclesia
is a melting pot, at times a crucible, an extended family, at vital times
a safe harbor in the storm, the body of Christ, the divinely appointed
organization of which the Lord, in His wisdom, has designed that we should
be a part. It consists of Jew and Gentile, male and female, “master
and servant,” rich and poor, strong and weak, young and old,
experienced and novice, troublemaker and peacemaker and on it goes. It
is in this mix that the good Lord has designed that we train to become
rulers and ministers of the world to come.
And even the
Lord Jesus himself found his own small ecclesia to be a big help to him
in his trials. Despite all the problems they caused him, the eleven faithful
ones were a source of great strength to him so that he would say: “You
are those who have stood by me in my trials; and I confer on you, just
as my Father has conferred on me, a kingdom…” This was
a generously spirited comment as he certainly was looking on the bright
side of ecclesial life and not letting all the disappointments overwhelm
him.
Perhaps when
we despair and feel like leaving, we, too, should look on what our brothers
and sisters have done and are doing for us. Just maybe, if we think carefully
enough, we’ll realize the consummate wisdom of God in determining
that in the days of this mortal struggle, His people should live as a
community of called out ones.
Don
Styles
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