The title of this piece is a question posed by our teacher,
Bill Johnson, at Kingdom Life in Muskegon last Sunday morning. Bill asked us to
say the first thing that came to mind when we heard the word “church.” There
being a number of mature believers in the room, things like “community,” and
“fellowship,” and “body” were shared. One person was honest enough to say that
the first thing he thought of was a little white building with a steeple.
Truth be told, most Christians share a similar image with
that man. Even though we know better, our language betrays us. If someone asks
where you go to church, the question itself implies a geographical answer, and
most will respond accordingly. Where is a certain meeting to be held? At
church, again, a physical location. Even when Christians say my church does
this, or my church has that, there is a sort of allusion back to a building in
the minds of most people. Be honest.
As one would expect, last Sunday Bill confirmed the idea
that the church is people, not places, but he went a step further in defining
the purpose of the people known as “the church.” The Greek word most often used in the New
Testament for church is ecclesia (εκκλησια). He pointed to the literal meaning,
“called out ones” which many of us already knew. Then he did something amazing
(I say with all humility for someone who has studied the Scripture as long as I
have): he told me something I didn’t already know.
In the Greek culture, for several centuries leading up to
the coming of Christ, ecclesia referred the council of men who participated in
the ruling government. This assembly made the rules that governed the actions
of the citizens. This idea would have been in the forefront of his audience’s
mind. So when Jesus told His disciples in Matthew 16:18 that the “Gates of
Hades” would not be able to withstand the pressure of the church, the ecclesia,
He was saying that the rules of order dictated by Him and established by His
people would overcome the forces of darkness and evil. Wow!
The second thing Bill shared which I had not seen before is
the use of another word which describes the church. Paul told the Philippian
church that their “citizenship” (πολιτευμα) was in heaven (3:20). According to
Thayer’s Greek lexicon, that word refers to “the administration of civil affairs…
[or] the constitution of a commonwealth.” Once again, the church is a governing
body. Bill also reminded us that Jesus most often identified His purpose as
bringing the Kingdom of God or Heaven to earth. Kingdom (βασιλεια in Greek) implies
rulership.
That all sounds great, but we know from other things Jesus
said and from the rest of the New Testament record that it would not be easy,
nor would the effort be unopposed. At one point, Jesus said that the Kingdom
would be taken
by force, and Paul regularly used words like “battle” and “fight” to
describe the Christian endeavor. The disciples who heard Jesus’ declaration in
Matthew 16:18 would have caught this more poignantly than most of us because
Jesus’ use of “Gates of Hades” had a particularly sinister meaning in the First
Century.
There may even have been a geographical/cosmic significance
to what Jesus proclaimed. The events of Matthew 16 took place in
Caesarea-Philippi, a region of the Trans-Jordan near Mount Hermon. This area
had been recognized for centuries by the people who lived there before and
during the Israelite occupation as the headquarters of their chief god, Baal.
Long before Jesus used “Gates of Hades,” people were using the phrase to refer
to the very spot on which He stood. It was considered the gate to the
underworld where their “gods” lived and ruled. Against this, Jesus said, the
church would prevail. Wow again!
There is one other thing I learned on Sunday: the Romans
adopted the idea of ecclesia (along with many other Greek traditions) and used
it to refer to the colonizers they sent to conquered territories. The purpose
of the Roman ecclesia was to spread Roman culture and thinking in the new
lands. This is a perfect description of the church Jesus foresaw when He gave
last instructions to His followers in Matthew 28:19-20: “As you go into the
world, make disciples of all nations, teaching them all I have commanded you,
baptizing them.” Making disciples as Jesus commanded is giving people a new
order of government to their lives; it changes their culture into one that
follows the teachings of the Master. Baptizing them identifies them with their
new Master in contrast to their old allegiances.
The true purpose of the church is imbedded in its very name:
spread the rule of God; advance the Kingdom of Heaven on earth. The denomination called "The Salvation Army" seems to get this. One of the
branches of the church I grew up in, the Church of Christ, frequently makes a
theologically significant statement in large letters on their buildings: “The
Church of Christ Meets Here.” We might gather in a building or a house or on a
street corner for some good purpose, but that is just a meeting. That is not “church.”
Doing “church” is hitting the streets, the workplaces, the homes of those under
the control of the enemy and introducing them to the One who is the Way, the
Truth, and the Life. True church activity translates people from the kingdom of
darkness into the Kingdom of Light. Church is a verb. Where do you go to
church?
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