Saturday, February 7, 2026

Thanks for the Complement

Because I taught English composition for most of my teaching career, I am more sensitive than most to the little quirks in the language. If you share my sensitivity, you may have thought I misspelled the last word in my title. I didn’t. Complement and its homophone compliment come from the same Latin word, yet they have notably different meanings. Complement – with an “e” – shares meaning with its root word, complete. Compliment – with an “i” – means to offer praise. How they could descend from the same Latin word yet differ so widely in meaning – and narrowly in spelling – is one of the mysteries of the English language.

This little linguistic oddity came to my attention after writing “God’s Design,” in which I mentioned that the Apostle Paul said he rejoiced to “fill up in my flesh what is lacking of the afflictions of Christ.” The next day John MacArthur’s devotional I read, “The church is in fact “the fulness of Him who fills all in all.” The implication is that the incomprehensible, all-sufficient, all-powerful, and utterly supreme Christ is in a sense incomplete—not in His nature, but in the degree to which His glory is seen in the world.

“A synonym for ‘fulness’ is ‘complement.’ The church was designed to complement Christ. He is the One who ‘fills all in all’— the fullness of deity in bodily form…. (Col. 2:9) Yet He chooses to reveal His glory in and through the church. Therefore, until the church is fully glorified, Christ will not be fully complemented.” (John F. MacArthur Jr., Drawing Near—Daily Readings for a Deeper Faith, Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1993, p. 43.)

There’s a challenge. Paul said God’s completeness was displayed in Jesus. I like to say that everything we can know about God we can see in Jesus. That’s what Jesus told Philip. Our challenge is to complete Jesus’ revelation of God to the world – not just the physical creation, but to the heavenly realm as well, as Paul told the Ephesians. We are commanded and predestined to grow into the perfection of Christ. We often hear this preached as necessary for our personal benefit. That is true as far as it goes. Here we see that there is a much larger purpose: we are meant to complete Christ’s mission.

As I wrote in “God’s Design,” suffering may be a part of our mission to complete Jesus’ revelation. James described our complementary situation, although he used a different Greek word. “Consider it all joy, my brothers, whenever you encounter various trials, because you* know that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have its perfect effect, so that you may be mature and complete, lacking in nothing.” If we become “mature and complete,” as James says, we will fulfill the larger mission of our faith: reveal Christ to the world.

This is similar to what Paul told the Ephesians. The goal of church ministry is that “we all reach the unity of the faith and the knowledge of the Son of God, to a mature man, to a measure of the maturity of the fullness of Christ.” If you read the rest of chapter four, you find that the purpose for attaining “the [completeness] of Christ” is not just to perfect the Body of Christ but also to perfect our witness to the world. The same idea can be found in Paul’s discussion of spiritual gifts in 1 Corinthians 14. Although he does say that self-edification is possible, he stresses that edification of the Body is more important because the purpose of the gifts is for the witness to unbelievers – revealing Christ.

Carmen Joy Imes writes in her dissertation on the Ten Commandments that “God bestowed titles on his people like treasured possession, kingdom of priests, holy nation. As his treasured possession, Israel’s vocation—the thing they were born to do—is to represent their God to the rest of humanity.” (Carmen Joy Imes, Bearing God’s Name: Why Sinai Still Matters, Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic: An Imprint of InterVarsity Press, 2019, pg. 51) The church, the New Testament continuation of Israel, has the same task.

When Jesus’ disciples asked Him where He found something to eat at the well in Samaria, He said, “My food is that I do the will of the one who sent me, and to complete His work.” There is that idea again – complete God’s work. John uses a different word for complete, but the concept is the same. Jesus was representing God to people; we are to represent Jesus. A street preacher today might put it like this: “Represent, Bro!”

The church’s failure to do this properly is evident. There are many people in our society who have experienced “church” or “church people” but are turned away rather than drawn in. Many of them point out the hypocrisy of people who claim to be following Christ, but they live like the devil. There are no perfect churches nor any perfect Christians. But the sad truth is that few “followers” of Christ are representing Him in a way that might make someone who watches them want to follow Him too.

Every follower of Jesus should be living in such a way as to earn His compliment when our complementary work is done: “Well done, thou good and faithful servant.” Another way to put it is to imagine Jesus saying, “Thanks for the complement.”

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