I said this a few posts back:
A church must meet or gather. Right now our church is not gathering, but there is the assumption that it will, just like there is the assumption that it will when it's not meeting on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Even when it isn't meeting, the church, however, is still the church. The church is the church when sermons are livestreamed on youtube. That's still our Assembly out there, the Congregacion of Tyndale's New Testament. Some might ask, is this church? Yes, it is church, because it is still church even when it isn't meeting. This assumes still that the church will meet, and our church will meet.Perhaps my former seminary professor, Thomas Strouse, directed the following to me in his newsletter, dated April 30:
Saucy states, “Ekklesia also designates the universal church. In this usage the concept of a physical assembly gives way to the spiritual unity of all believers in Christ. Ekklesia in this sense is not the assembly itself but rather those constituting it; they are the church whether actually assembled or not. This is clearly evident in the early persecution of the church at Jerusalem. Even when believers are scattered abroad and in their homes, they are ‘the church’ (Acts 8:1-3).” Robert L. Saucy, The Church in God’s Program (Chicago: Moody Press, 1972), pp. 16-17. He failed to recognize that they were baptized church members and became the assembly only when they assembled. In this verse, the term “church” is the figure of speech (“synecdoche”) wherein the whole represents the part (“church” = church member). . . . Shades of Ignatius!Alright, so was I right in the post a week or so ago about that being the church out there listening in a livestream, even though they aren't visibly assembled? Does this justify universal church teaching? Strouse is writing that it does. Am I even saying anything different than Strouse himself is arguing against Saucy in that paragraph? Maybe Strouse could use a better argument against Saucy's point.
I don't really want a conflict with Strouse. I love Dr. Strouse. We're both local only in our ecclesiology. We don't see eye to eye in every aspect of it, but we both believe that the church is local only. No one would think I'm less Baptist than he is, probably more than he. Strouse writes: "they were baptized church members and became the assembly only when they assembled." This is a case of reading something into the text. There isn't a single verse that says that the assembly is only the assembly when it is assembled. I'd like to start with the passage to which he refers, starting in Acts 8:1. It doesn't help his point.
And Saul was consenting unto his death. And at that time there was a great persecution against the church which was at Jerusalem; and they were all scattered abroad throughout the regions of Judaea and Samaria, except the apostles.The church, all of its members except for the apostles, were scattered throughout Judea and Samaria. A church member was still the church, even when he was scattered. He wasn't invisible. He was in Judea and in Samaria. He wasn't assembled in Jerusalem. According to scripture, the church scattered is still the church. Acts 8:3 then reads:
As for Saul, he made havock of the church, entering into every house, and haling men and women committed them to prison.
Was Saul making havock only of assembled members? Remember, Strouse says it isn't the church unless it is assembled. Paul went into every house to hale men and women, not the assembly of men and women. The havock on the church occurred when the members were in their own homes. This doesn't make room for a universal church. They were still from the assembly in Jerusalem, so the Jerusalem church was the one upon which Saul was making havock.
An example of a "synecdoche" is "Cleveland won by six runs," and "Cleveland" means "Cleveland's baseball team." Strouse is saying that this is a similar figure, "the church" means "individual church members." "Synecdoche" is a fancy sounding figure of speech, so technical that it sounds like someone might be on to something. For the sake of how he is arguing, Strouse must have "the church" not be those individual members that Paul is dragging out of their homes, so he calls "the church" a figure of speech. It would be very helpful if Strouse could point to other usages like that in the New Testament. His problem, I believe, is that he wouldn't find any others comparable to the one he says is synecdoche.
"The church" isn't a "synecdoche" in Acts 8:3. "The church which was at Jerusalem" is "the church which was at Jerusalem." It doesn't become a figure of speech suddenly in verse 3. Strouse doesn't need to do this to dispose of Saucy and his attempt to read in a universal church. Actually, both Saucy and Strouse are stretching.
The problems aren't going to stop with the point of view that "the church isn't the church except when it assembles." I agree that a church must assemble. It's not an assembly if it doesn't assemble. However, scripture doesn't indicate that it is only the church only when it assembles.
In Acts 9:31, when the churches were "were walking in the fear of the Lord," that didn't mean that they were walking in the fear of the Lord only during the very moments they were assembling. Neither were "the churches" all synecdoches, figures of speech.
Acts 14:27 reads: "And when they were come, and had gathered the church together." If the church wasn't the church unless it was gathered, this verse would be redundant. The church was gathered together there because it was the church when it wasn't gathered together. The overseeing of "the flock" in Acts 20:28 occurred not only when the flock was assembled. Offense was not to be given to the church, whether assembled or not (cf. 1 Cor 10:32). It's unassembled members were still the church. Paul says he "persecuted the church of God" (1 Corinthians 15:9), and he wasn't doing that mainly when the assembly was assembled. In Ephesians 1:22, Christ is the head of the assembly in Ephesus even when it isn't assembled. The church is subject to Christ always (Eph 5:24), not just when it is meeting. The ruling of the church of God is compared to the ruling of a man's own house, which is not just when it's members are assembling (1 Tim 3:5, 15). Does the church only relieve widows when it assembles? (1 Timothy 5:16).
The essence of a church is that it assembles. It isn't an assembly without assembling. When great fear falls upon the church, that doesn't mean that it only falls during an assembling. The members of the church are still the church, even when the church isn't assembling. Jesus special presence, yes, is promised when the church gathers, but Jesus also said to the church in Matthew 28:20, "I am with you alway," you plural.
Strouse writes: "Many Baptist pastors seem to have forgotten their calling from the Lord Jesus Christ to be the bishop (overseer) of their respective assembled assembly." To Strouse, isn't saying "assembled assembly" sort of like saying "pizza pie"? "Pizza" is the Italian word for "pie," so that someone is saying, "pie pie." Why would someone say "assembled assembly" if he didn't think that the assembly wasn't overseen even when it wasn't assembled? Strouse seems to believe in his heart what I'm arguing. The assembly still has to assemble, the assembling of ourselves together (Heb 10:24-25), which means sometimes it doesn't.
Diverting momentarily from the point of this piece, I add a quotation of Jonathan Mayhew, whom Strouse quotes in his article in support of his view of government:
Here the apostle argues more explicitly than he had before done, for revering, and submitting to, magistracy, from this consideration, that such as really performed the duty of magistrates, would be enemies only to the vile actions of men, and would befriend and encourage the good; and so be a common blessing to society.
Some churches are not meeting (some assemblies are not assembling), because they see the "shelter-in-place" as befriending and encouraging the good and a common blessing to society. My elderly parents live with me and I think our compliance has helped them and others like them to live. This isn't the time for our church to help kill more people and further burden the hospitals. I can respect some of those churches that take some different tact. I think we'll know the time for our assembly to assemble again.
10 comments:
"This isn't the time for our church to help kill more people and further burden the hospitals."
That statement tells it all! How do you answer such ignorance? A pastor?
No, just a man that FEARS and "hath torments" when when the churches desire is to meet TOGETHER to worship, preach and fellowship with Gods people rather than "Help KILL people"!
Just too funny if it was not serious.
"My elderly parents live with me and I think our compliance has helped them and others like them to live."
So, you love your parents more than you love God! So, you will let a HOAX (the virus is real, but what is told about is NOT TRUE, but rather FEAR MONGERING) run the life of the church? You believe, that if you serve God by assembling, and your parents died and ALL of the congregation, you would then be WRONG in assembling? What if you assembled and no one died?
And you think you will stand up for the Lord God when REAL AFFLICTIONS, BONDAGE, IMPRISONMENTS, including DEATH for the "faith once delivered to the saints" come??
Yea right. You will instead run to Romans 13 and 1 Peter 2 to justify the EVIL instead of rebuke and stand against it.
The Preacher
Everyone,
I printed a George comment. Just the one. I picked it random, so you would know what I hear. I"ll leave it to you to judge. I got this comment in the midst of my writing the last one, and usually I don't publish, but this time I did.
I thought, "assembled assembly" was a peculiar term, too. Like "local church" as if there was something else other than an actual local church. Pie pie is a good analogy. I love Dr. Strouse, also. I look forward to continuing my studies under him in June (Lord willing, in the Philippines). Things are not looking good here with a strong recommendations from the mayors of Manila to extend the "Enhanced Community Quarantine" (ECQ) till the end of May (their decision if forth-coming, and from the reports in the news, it sure doesn't look good - however, my prayer is for a "relaxation" of the ECQ. We continue to live stream our "services" (we connect with our church folks and non-church folks individually via short personal visits, textings, social media). I don't feel that I am "missing church" because I do have the church in my house (my wife and I are both sent out by our sending church) and my two boys are actually saved, and baptized, and members of our church fellowship in Tuktukan. The Lord said, where two or three are gathered together in His name, that His special presence is there in our midst. We rejoice in that truth. I am sure that is the life-verse of every church planter (at the outset of their ministry). I think the world of that precious promise. We grieve that we cannot "function" like normal, but we are not discouraged. We are hopeful to be able to assemble again, and we are doing what we know we are supposed to be doing to honor the Lord. Dr. Strouse and you and a few others are on my "go to" list for Biblical insights. Moments like these, I think is like iron sharpening iron. I take no offence or damage to nothing you or he is articulating. I am trusting that the Lord will make a way for us to once again function like normal but with added spiritual growth and appreciation for "the good old days." Be well, Pastor B. and thank you for your posts.
Thanks Bill.
The one thing, really, that I was writing about was whether people were still the church when not assembled. I don't like being called a coward, but if I am one, then it would be good to hear it, and if I am not, then it doesn't matter either, because I'm not.
Kent,
I sincerely appreciate your wisdom brother Brandenburg and I definitely don’t see you as a coward. Far from it. If it appears like I insinuated that, I wholeheartedly apologize, as I truly did not intend that. I have actually appreciated your position on this matter, and argument for it, but have leaned more towards the position of Dr. Strouse, which I believe is the more Biblical position, although an argument can certainly be made for your position.
The term “assembled assembly" is indeed a bit peculiar; I appreciated your rebuttal of it. I would undeniably agree with you that people are still the church when not assembled.
God bless you brother and the flock you shepherd,
Reuben
I'm in agreement with the policy of not letting George Calvas's comments be posted. I'm sorry you have to sort through them. They usually add nothing of value to the discussion.
E. T. Chapman
I'm surprised anyone would think that a church ceases to exist after its members leave after a time of serving the Lord corporately. It sure looked to me as if you (Bro. Brandenburg) proved the point very well from Scripture that the Lord uses the word "ekklesia" to describe the church even when it is not assembled, thus it exists when not assembled. It doesn't seem even possible to me that that not be the case based on how "ekklesia" is used in the Bible.
E. T. Chapman
Dear Kent, Thank you for your clear thinking and writing on this matter. I am helped and encouraged when people can express with words what is on my heart and in my head. Bill H. above in his post voices the thoughts of many missionaries who are a "part" of their home sending church even if they are "apart" from it. I do not think that Paul ceased to be a member of his sending church at Antioch even though he was unable to "assemble" with it for some years. The same is true of Bro Bill H. in the Philippines or us here in Australia. God bless!
Thanks Jerry. That's one evidence, Paul was still in the church at Antioch when he was in Lystra or wherever else.
It would seem like Strouse's position means that the church ceases to exist six days a week, or five days when there is a mid-week prayer meeting. How does that fit with Matthew 16:18 and Ephesians 3:21?
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