Volume 1, Number 1Behaving ourselves in the house of God: Timeless truths about the local assembly by Ian Rees, Bath, EnglandThe Church - its nature Having heard the gospel and taken the first two steps of obedience in
response to it, it is vital for each new believer to follow the example set
by the first Christians. The first step of obedience to the gospel is to
believe it and the second is to
be baptized. Those who ‘gladly
received [Peter’s] word were
baptized’ and were ‘added to
the church’ by the Lord Himself,
Acts 2. 47.
What is the ‘church?’ In its
everyday use, the word ‘church’
in English refers either to a
building - ‘Go down the hill and
turn left at the church’ – or to a
denomination – the Anglican Church, for instance. But is that the right
use of the word ‘church’? Christians should be more interested in how
God in the Bible sees and describes the ‘church’.
The Active Church
It is the Lord Jesus who first mentioned the word ‘church’ in the New
Testament when He said,‘I will build my church’,Matt.16.18.He is referring
here to the universal church. Two chapters later He again refers to the
church, this time local, when, speaking about Christians who have fallen
out with one another,He says,‘If he shall neglect to hear them, tell it to the
church; but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be to thee as an
heathen man’,Matt. 18. 17. Here the Lord clearly implies that the ‘church’
can hear (He says,‘tell it to the church’) and that it can speak (‘if he neglect
to hear the church’). The same thing is implied in Acts 11. 22 where we read, ‘Then tidings of these things came
unto the ears of the church which was in
Jerusalem’. In Acts 12. 5 the church
prayed, for ‘Peter therefore was kept in
prison: but prayer was made without
ceasing of the church unto God for him’.
The church can be hospitable (in Acts 15.
4 Paul and his delegation ‘were received
of the church’), and it can be greeted (in
Romans 16. 5 Paul instructed his readers
to ‘salute (greet) the church in Rome’, as
he had greeted the church in Jerusalem
in Acts 18. 22). It can be persecuted (Acts
8. 1, Gal. 1. 13), it can be instructed or
edified, (1 Cor. 14. 12) and it meets
together (1 Cor. 14. 23). Now none of
these things can be true of a building.No
building can hear,pray, receive others,be
greeted, edified, persecuted or meet
together. Evidently, therefore, the
‘church’, as far as the Bible is concerned, is
not a building but something else –
something alive, something capable of
doing things. This conclusion is
confirmed when we read of the church
in Antioch that they (the church) sent
forth Barnabas and Saul, Acts 13. 1-3.
We have arrived at this conclusion
merely by looking at our English
translation. Were we to look a little
deeper into the original Greek in which
the New Testament was first written,we
would find the use of the Greek word
for ‘church’ confirms this. Looking up
each of the references we have used
above in Strong’s Concordance,
following the numbers he gives, and
using a Greek Lexicon/Dictionary
coded to these numbers, we find that
the word translated ‘church’ in English is
the word ekklesia in Greek.
 The Assembled Church
There are many other places in the New
Testament where the Greek word
ekklesia is used. One that should draw
our attention at this stage in our study
is found in Acts chapter 19 and verses
29-41. A crowd of people in Ephesus
were angry at something the apostle
Paul was teaching. They arrested Paul
and his companions and rushed to a
public building, the theatre. This large
group of hostile people here is called an
ekklesia in Greek. The town-clerk
eventually intervened, attempting to
restore order and disperse the crowd.‘If
ye inquire anything concerning other
matters,’ he said,’ it shall be determined
in a lawful assembly (ekklesia). For we
are in danger to be called in question
for this day’s uproar . . .and when he had
thus spoken he dismissed the assembly
(ekklesia)’, Acts 19. 29-41.
It is clear from this passage that an
ekklesia is a group, a gathering, or an assembly of people. It need not be a
religious gathering, for this riot in
Ephesus was anything but. It is
disappointing that the translators of
our English Bibles were inconsistent in
their translation of this word, and
instead of translating ekklesia with the
word ‘assembly’ every time, as they did
in Acts 19, the same word ekklesia is
usually translated ‘church’. Geoffrey
Bromiley’s abridgement of Kittel’s
Theological Dictionary of the New
Testament tells us, ‘General dictionaries
define ekklesia as 1. ‘assembly’ and
2.‘church’. Since the [New Testament]
uses a single term, translators should
try to do so, but this raises the question
whether ‘church’ or ‘congregation’ is
always suitable . . . ‘assembly’ . . . is
perhaps the best single term‘. It is
important to remember this – the
‘church’, the ekklesia, is the assembly or
group of people who meet in God’s
name, not the building in which they
meet. In New Testament times, of
course, the ‘church’ did not have
dedicated buildings in which to meet,
as we do, but met in other peoples’
houses, Rom. 16. 5.
The Attracted Church
Looking up the word ekklesia in W. E.
Vine’s Expository Dictionary of New
Testament Words we discover it means ‘a
calling out of’. The ekklesia is an
assembly of people ‘called out of’
somewhere for a particular purpose.
When the word ekklesia is linked with
God, we understand the church is an
assembly of people called out by God.
Because God calls out local assemblies
of Christians, they are referred to as
belonging to Him. In Acts 20. 28, the
apostle Paul refers to ‘the assembly
(ekklesia/church) of God which he hath
purchased with his own blood’; so also
we read of ‘the ekklesia/assembly of
God which is at Corinth’, 1 Cor. 1. 2. The
assembly is also referred to as Christ’s
assembly, for He said, ‘I will build my
church’ (ekklesia) and in Romans 16. 16.
‘the assemblies of Christ salute you’.
The local assembly of Christians to
which you or I belong (some people use
the phrase ‘where we are in fellowship’)
is not our assembly. It is God’s assembly.
The people in that assembly have been
called out, or gathered by God and by
Christ to meet together in His name.
Though it may be the one in which we
are in fellowship, it does not belong to
us; instead we belong to it. It is God’s
assembly to do with as He sees fit, not
ours. God’s principles must govern it, as
must God’s purposes. If you are saved
and baptized, but not yet in
‘membership/ fellowship’ in a local
assembly of Christians you should be!
Search out your brothers and sisters in
the Lord and meet with them, and God
will bless you.Do you agree or disagree with this article do you have any questions? If so then please click here and fill out the comments form as we would love to hear from you. |