Revelation 7:9-10 The Church Resplendant | WCF 25
HANDOUTS APPENDIX AT BOTTOM OF NOTES:
This morning is a 5th Sunday and according to our practice we will cover a chapter of the Westminster confession of faith, we usually preach passage-by-passage through books of the bible. This guards you from my hobby horses, this promotes the whole counsel of God, but it is good since the bible is so expansive to have occasional sermons that seek to go in depth on a single topic referencing many passages of scripture. So buckle up…
Read: Revelation 7:9–10 After this I looked, and behold, a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palm branches in their hands, and crying out with a loud voice, “Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!” (ESV)
Prayer of Illumination
What is the Church? Is it the building? Merely an institution? Is it just the people? Is it optional? Does it have authority? How does it have unity? Do we just make up what churches should do? Where can we know the word will be preached, we will find fellowship, and God will grow us closer to Jesus and his people. Where he will free us from some of the sorrows and dysfunctions of this fallen world.
Introduction: The Bible is the story of the wonderful works of God, it reveals God and his glory in his creation and providence, and it reveals mankind as we were meant to be in relationship and communion with him, even in that little church, Adam & Eve, the little gathering worshipping and communing with God.
The bible from Genesis to Revelation, shows the work of God to undo the separation that sin causes between God and man. And so the story of the bible is mainly about a redeemer, a savior, the grace of the Lord Jesus gathering a covenant people for himself, that is by the solemn promises God makes to us in the covenant of grace: that the Messiah the covenant Mediator would redeem by his sacrifice a people, who would once again HEAR the word of the LORD, be GATHERED by the word of the Lord and Rev. 22:19 share in the tree of life in the holy city, the garden to a city, gathered by the Savior the Lord of his people.
As a simple definition, Derek Thomas writes, “The church consists of those whom the Lord has called out of the world into union and fellowship with Christ and into communion with each other.”
I invite you to follow along in the WCF Chp 25 handout…And you can note that
Knowing what the Church IS was a pressing question in the 1500s & 1600s during the time of the Protestant Reformation, and so Church declarations of faith tended to teach on this topic extensively: the Belgic Confession, the Westminster Confession include sections like Chp 25, answering this great need. Arguing we love the church and are in continuity with the church down through the ages, even if it was sick and needed reform.
Today, the outline is simply walking through some of the Rev. 7 passage and then paragraph by paragraph through the confession. For an outline: What God Sees, What We See, The Good, the Bad, the Ugly.
The passage we read, Revelation 7, highlights several truths about the Church, from God’s ultimate perspective, which is what the first Paragraph of WCF 25 also highlights.
1. The catholic or universal church, which is invisible, consists of the whole number of the elect, that have been, are, or shall be gathered into one, under Christ the Head thereof; and is the spouse, the body, the fullness of him that filleth all in all.
1. Little c catholic simply means Universal: God’s people from all times and places, either looking forward to Christ in the OT or back at the work of Christ from the NT.
The gift of the Church is that all people can be gathered into the Christian Church, without partiality to language or ethnicity.
By “invisible” the confession simply means that we cannot see the hearts of man, we cannot number who were the elect, within the visible and external church that we see.
One church from different perspectives. Which holding both these perspectives will give you divine Hope: we know that Christ is gathering his people through the church which (humbly, and with patience) we know is a mixed body of true believers, and of sometimes false professions, or sometimes just Christians who are still struggling with sin in a way that has ended up hurting us.
But though we cannot see it Jesus will gather his sheep, he will use the visible church, and the number unknown through the centuries will be gathered and not one sheep will be lost, and it will be a glorious body of people from the whole world and all centuries from Adam and Eve all the way to the mysterious future day when Christ returns.
Until then, the promise is that Christ himself will do this as a husband who loves his church. Turn to Ephesians 5, we’ll drop into other chapters in Ephesians soon.
Ephesians 5:25 Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, so that he might present the church to himself in splendor, without spot or wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without blemish.
This is how Jesus views the church universal, what he is shaping his people into, what we will fully and finally be in the new heavens and new earth. We will be resplendent, pure, and entirely holy, glorified both as individuals and as the Church,
3. Our Passage in Revelation 7:9 says it is The Lamb, Jesus, He is the one who gathers. Him as the Lamb reminds us the cost to gather the church, his work on the Cross removes the sin that separates us from communion with God, he makes us a holy people, forgiven, and we are clothed in his righteous robes, we are filled by the Holy Spirit and gathered under the Kingship of Christ
He is the head we are the body Colossians 2:19 [https://www.esv.org/Colossians+2:19/] - and not holding fast to the Head, from whom the whole body, nourished and knit together through its joints and ligaments, grows with a growth that is from God.
He is the King, we are his Kingdom, He is the head and Our life is in Christ. We are nourished by his Word and Spirit,
“While we cannot yet see this full assembly, the invisible church takes visible shape every Lord’s Day.”
Look in the WCF paragraph 2. The visible church, which is also catholic or universal under the gospel (not confined to one nation, as before under the law), consists of all those throughout the world that profess the true religion; and of their children: and is the kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ, the house and family of God, out of which there is no ordinary possibility of salvation.
Jesus, the lamb of God, Jesus is the head of this Church, he is the Husband of the Church. The Church, as a gathered people, is the Bride of Christ. He wins, loves, and defends his bride. And it takes a visible form, it is an institution, a body politic (in the best sense of the word)
Paragraph 2, switches from this universal, all times, all ages invisible perspective to the perspective of the visible church, so the visible gathering of people in a time and a place, all “those who profess the true religion; and of their children.”
· A credible profession of faith is referring to, professing with my mouth that I am a sinner and Christ is my only savior, and that I join myself to this church, and promise to study its purity and peace, to worship with these families and with these officers, pastor, elders, and deacons, and that we are a covenant family together with our children
o 1 Corinthians 1:2–3 Says, To the church of God that is in Corinth, to those sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints together with all those who in every place call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, both their Lord and ours: Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. (ESV)
o What makes the Church in Corinth a church? The are made holy in Christ, as those who “call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, both their Lord and ours.
o Paul says “to the church of God that IS IN CORINTH. Simultaneously we believer their is one church universal, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, and we speak of local congregations…hey you Corinth, you are a particular local church you worship, you call upon the name of Jesus in worship together as a single covenant family.
o Churches are individual yet, connectional. What Joins us is the Word, Worship, and Work of our location to make disciples HERE.
§ And he is writing the Corinthians remember. A True church, far, far from perfect. They are a perfect mess.
· The confession says the membership of the church is parents together with our children, this is a precious biblical truth, remember God says, I will be a God to you and to your children after you, God declares our covenant children, holy, clean, and members of the Church by right of the covenant of grace and our children for whom we pray will grow into maturity and make a profession of faith, and in maturity join us at the Lord’s table.[1]
Let’s focus on a few more images here in paragraph 2: The Church is the kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ, the house and family of God
Psalm 2:7–8 I will tell of the decree: The LORD said to me, “You are my Son; today I have begotten you. Ask of me, and I will make the nations your heritage, and the ends of the earth your possession.
Christ is king, and he gathers us from the nations and makes us one new house, a new family, not bound necessarily by blood, but yes that is often true, but by being sons and daughters of God.
Actually turn here and see In Ephesians 2:13-22
Ephesians 2:13–22 [13] But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility by abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby killing the hostility. And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near For through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father. [19] So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God,
It’s a new family gathered by Jesus. Families need a rallying anchor, a head: Ephesians Ephesians 3:14–19 shows that the rallying cry of the church family is LOVE. Love for the gathered body of Christ. And love flowing from Jesus into and between every individual: … [17] so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith—that you, being rooted and grounded in love, [18] may have strength to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, [19] and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, that you may be filled with all the fullness of God. (ESV)
There is no concept for a believer in the whole of the bible that is not united to the people of God. TO love Jesus is to love the people of Jesus. Every word of the above passage is PLURAL. The Letter of Ephesians is nonsensical if you think you are going to be a lone wolf Christian. The lone Christian is like the coal that fell out of the fire, it may look bright and hot initially but it will fade and grow cold, lose its love of jesus and love for the bride, the family, the house of Jesus rapidly as it grows cold and alone.
“Loving Jesus always means loving His people—there is no lone-ranger Christianity in Scripture.”
This is the intention of the final phrase: “Out of which is no ordinary possibility of Salvation.”[2]
Once again that word ORDINARY. Ordinarily, none will find their salvation by walking their path outside of the church. It is an aberration, and it is lonely. I beg of you, find your life always joined to the church. ….This is not referring to Christians in Muslim countries, or isolated areas who have few fellow believers if any. These believers are saddened by the isolation it is involuntary.
Therefore, Make decisions of your Job, where you will love, whom you will marry, based on being joined to a church that loves Jesus, and imperfectly oh so imperfectly loves each other as brothers and sisters in Christ.
Look in Paragraph 3, The Church family has a head Jesus and he gives us a defined structure. 1 Timothy 3 explains about the qualifications for Elders and Deacons. We already saw this hinted at in Ephesians 2:20 that there is a foundation of apostles and prophets and Christ, but what is built on this a home that has officers.
Paragraph 3. Unto this catholic visible church Christ hath given the ministry, oracles [for oracles think the whole bible written and then preached], and ordinances of God [ordinances being immediately: baptism and the Lord’s supper but also the ordered worship of God, the Lord’s day, fellowship, communion],
[These ordinary means of grace the officers and ordinances, the worship are for]: the gathering and perfecting of the saints, in this life, to the end of the world: and doth, by his own presence and Spirit, according to his promise, make them effectual thereunto.
When Jesus ascended into heaven he poured out his Spirit. In the foundational era as the new testament canon was being formed he gave the apostles and prophets. For perpetual ministry, he gave various gifts to his people: gifts of love, mercy, administration, teaching, and so forth…With this he gives his ordinary officers of Elders & Deacons, you can see this in 1 & 2 Timothy especially 1 Tim. 3 and Acts 6, 15, and 20, in 1 Peter.
This section both reminds us that Pastors are simply Teaching Elders, we are not priests like in Roman Catholicism. These are simply men gifted and put forward and called by the people. The New Testament has no knowledge of Bishops and Arch Bishops and Popes placed over whole regions of the Church. It speaks of gathered counsels, of regional deliberative bodies of men gathered; it is a representative government, more similar to a constitutional republic than to pure democracy or merely human Monarchy.
Christ is the Only King and Head of the Church, and his officers are representative governing under the constitution of the Word of God. And these officers will teach, baptize, administer the supper, encourage mercy and generosity, and care for the family of God.
Look in Paragraphs 4
4. This catholic church hath been sometimes more, sometimes less visible. And particular churches, which are members thereof, are more or less pure, according as the doctrine of the gospel is taught and embraced, ordinances administered, and public worship performed more or less purely in them.
Paragraph 4 helps us in two ways. It reminds us to be patient with the imperfections of the church. It warns us against a narrow sectarian spirit. We do not profess to be the one true church. We warmly cooperate with brothers and sisters from different denominations, we are united together by one Lord, one Faith, and one baptism.
Jesus in fact tells people in his parables to be patient about this fact. He speaks of the wheat and the tares and the gardner is warned don’t accidently RIP UP the wheat the good crop by over aggressively weeding. Live it to the LORD to discern the weeds, simply till the field, care for the crop work on being a more healthy church that remains a hospital for sinners and will not be perfect until the end of the age.
The strength and health of the church ebbs and flows, doctrine waxes and wanes in health.
This is true of the church as a whole and every individual church. We can always ask, “so where are we healthy?”, “what are we doing well? What did we use to do well but no longer do, where would God revitalize and lead us as we are reformed according to the word and receive wisdom from the church down through the Ages.
The 7 letters of Jesus to the Churches in Revelation are a commending, challenging, and calling for the reform of the health of these churches in this way.
You’ll notice the confession highlights 2 Marks for us to consider.
The Word & The Sacraments. (Church Discipline is implied because we are admitted to the Lord’s supper by being in good standing with the body of the church.).
1. First the Word: the Gospel taught, the word preached, the word embraced…Not perfectly but truly central. Not rejected. Protestants traditionally have a central pulpit. We encourage open bibles. The Service is the word, read, preached, prayed, and sung, and the gospel is the center. The gospel is defended and not denied.
a. We must beware when the word is shunted to a smaller place, the sermon shrinks, the content more secular, psychological, and about anything but the word.
b. And worship is replaced with Priests, and temple on the one hand, or entertainment and the show on the other hand.
2. Second, Ordinances administered: Baptism, the Lord’s Supper,
a. The salvation army is not a church because they do not baptize or administer the Lord’s supper. They are a kindly Christian charity, and parachurch ministry, not to be confused with the church.
3. God repeatedly in his word calls for Worship to be performed according to the Word of God “we do in worship only what God commands as elements. And then we have freedom to search the scriptures guidance on the forms, and some things we consider circumstances, simply wisdom, what time, when to sit and stand, how many songs to sing? But all done in reverence, joy, and going to the word…And
what the confession recognizes is that through the centuries the church has often been pulled to the ceremonial replication of priests and temples away from the simplicity of the New Testament with Pastors instead of Priests…with images and idols, the calendar filled with feasts and prayers to the saints. These are grace matters
a. Rev. 21:22 And I saw no temple in the city, for its temple is the Lord God the Almighty and the Lamb.
b. Let us worship in spirit and in truth not in types and shadows of the old covenant ceremonial law.
4. This brings us to third implied by the scripture citations given in this section, church discipline: Simply note those little scripture texts 1 Corinthians 5:6, 7, Revelation 2-3, show how important holiness and being willing to address sin is to the churches worship. What good is a sermon series through 1 Corinthians or Ephesians if we allowed everything Paul addresses as grieving to God to go on un addressed.
5. Matthew 18 guides church discipline, it ought to be done in love, in a. Spirit of Gentleness according to Paul in other places, it is in matthew 18 for the reclaiming of lost sheep, and for the protection of the purity and peace of the Church in Paul’s teaching in 1 Corinthians. And in the letters to the Church in revelation it is for the honor of Christ who is present with his churches and essential to their perseverance under worldy persecution.
Paragraph 5 gives this sober warning. And you most remember the context of a time with the sword of the Roman Catholic Church was still strong, the nations would use force. But we still must be spiritually aware even if the physical fear has diminished through the centuries
6. Some errors in worship we might consider an error but not fatal, the confession recognizes no church or worship service is perfect this side of heaven. But that sometimes the error becomes so grave that it becomes contrary to the gospel, against the word, harmful worship. And this was the state of the Church under Roman Catholicism, or some of the radical anabaptist sects (not to be confused with our English Baptist brothers).
The reformation never desired to be schismatic. It always wanted to place itself squarely in the stream of history in continuity with all that was good and biblical.
You’ll find they always want to say we are in continuity with the great heritage of the faith from Genesis, to the Apostles, to the Young Church in the early centuries and we are grieved NOT because the true church has been lost for a thousand years or such a thought like the Reformation and Protestants were the first believers since the year 350 A.D. But that over time many problems and sicknesses in church doctrine, worship, and structures had festered to the point that the Roman Catholic Church had looked at the gospel and said if anyone believe in the doctrines of grace justification by faith alone, grace alone, found in christ alone, believed according to scripture alone, and all for the glory of God alone then let him be anathema, accursed.
So with great sadness the institutional Roman Catholic Church cursed the gospel, the authority of the bible over tradition, and refused to let go of idolatrous worship.
Paragraph 5: some churches have so degenerated as to become no Churches of Christ, but synagogues of Satan. Nevertheless, there shall be always a Church on earth to worship God according to His will.
This does not mean we have no hope for friends or individuals within the catholic church for their salvation. There has been progress in bible reading and in parts of the world I would say individuals who are believers yet the institution is still a false Church, and in time it is healthy and good for them to leave a false church, and join a healthy true church.
There are many healthy denominations of which we recognize many brothers and sisters of various names: Evangelical, Confessionally Protestant, and not sectarian about.
But we ought to have a person from a cult or a false church first make a profession of faith and join a true church before we would marry such a person.
Look in Paragraph 6, I won’t spend a bunch of time here but This denies that the Pope or any other man is the head of the Church, or can speak singularly for the Church. This is a central protest of Protestantism is against the papacy.
We are people of the Book! Creeds and Confessions are summaries of what the gathered church, the elders of the church, believe is a faithful explanation of what King Jesus has declared to his church to believe, to live, and to proclaim.
And Jesus has gathered his church through the centuries, he supports, he defends, he feeds us. Though imperfect now, a hospital for sinners, in the New Heavens and new earth He clothes us in splendor.
Read: “Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!” (ESV)
Prayer
Benediction
[1] “The reason for the inclusion of children in the church finds its roots in the Old Testament, and it is a truth which God himself expressed passionately in the face of denial: children of professing Christians are God’s before they are ours. In a dark chapter of Israel’s history people took their sons and daughters and offered them as burned offerings to pagan gods. This was an outrage by any account, but the Lord describes it as an intense personal offence: the children which they considered theirs were “born for me’; they were ‘my children’ (Ezek. 16:20, 21).
God takes ownership of covenant children. At the beginning of biblical revelation God promised to direct the future of Adam and Eve’s ‘seed’ or descendants (Gen. 3:15). It is for that reason that he placed his cov-enantal ownership sign on all those who were under the instruction and authority of godly householders, especially their children (Gen. 17:7). It is for that reason, as the church was initiated into a new age at Pentecost, that Peter not only stressed that the promise of the gospel was for all those who are far off (meaning, the Gentiles), but also for your chil-dren’ (meaning, our children!, Acts 2:39).” – Chad Van Dixhoorn, 340.
[2] People who claim to be believers and refuse to join the church in the face of clear biblical instruction and providential opportunity to do so, should deeply worry us. They are like people who say they are in love but refuse to get married. Usually they want the privileges of the relationship without the accompanying responsibilities. Their refusal to publicly commit to Christ’s church casts doubt on the genuineness of their devotion to him, as does a refusal to publicly commit to marriage. The pattern of the New Testament is clear: when people were joined to Christ they were joined to his church. People devoted themselves to the best teaching, to fellowship, breaking bread, prayer, helping those in need, and praising God (Acts 2:42-47). And this was not done in the context of random or disassociated groups of believers. Luke tells us that the Lord added to the church those who were being saved’ (Acts 2:47). May he continue to do so today. – Chad Van Dixhoorn, 341
WCF Chapter 25 Of the Church
1. The catholic or universal Church, which is invisible, consists of the whole number of the elect, that have been, are, or shall be gathered into one, under Christ the Head thereof; and is the spouse, the body, the fullness of Him that fills all in all. (Eph. 1:10 [https://ref.ly/Eph.%201.10;esv?t=biblia], 22–23 [https://ref.ly/Eph%201.22%E2%80%9323;esv?t=biblia], Eph. 5:23 [https://ref.ly/Eph.%205.23;esv?t=biblia],27 [https://ref.ly/Eph%205.27;esv?t=biblia],32 [https://ref.ly/Eph%205.32;esv?t=biblia], Col. 1:18 [https://ref.ly/Col.%201.18;esv?t=biblia])
2. The visible Church, which is also catholic or universal under the Gospel (not confined to one nation, as before under the law), consists of all those throughout the world that profess the true religion; (1 Cor. 1:2 [https://ref.ly/1%20Cor.%201.2;esv?t=biblia], 1 Cor. 12:12–13 [https://ref.ly/1%20Cor.%2012.12%E2%80%9313;esv?t=biblia], Ps. 2:8 [https://ref.ly/Ps.%202.8;esv?t=biblia], Rev. 7:9 [https://ref.ly/Rev.%207.9;esv?t=biblia], Rom. 15:9–12 [https://ref.ly/Rom.%2015.9%E2%80%9312;esv?t=biblia]) and of their children: (1 Cor. 7:14 [https://ref.ly/1%20Cor.%207.14;esv?t=biblia], Acts 2:39 [https://ref.ly/Acts%202.39;esv?t=biblia], Ezek. 16:20–21 [https://ref.ly/Ezek.%2016.20%E2%80%9321;esv?t=biblia], Rom. 11:16 [https://ref.ly/Rom.%2011.16;esv?t=biblia], Gen. 3:15 [https://ref.ly/Gen.%203.15;esv?t=biblia], Gen. 17:7 [https://ref.ly/Gen.%2017.7;esv?t=biblia]) and is the kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ, (Matt. 13:47 [https://ref.ly/Matt.%2013.47;esv?t=biblia], Isa. 9:7 [https://ref.ly/Isa.%209.7;esv?t=biblia]) the house and family of God, (Eph. 2:19 [https://ref.ly/Eph.%202.19;esv?t=biblia], Eph. 3:15 [https://ref.ly/Eph.%203.15;esv?t=biblia]) out of which there is no ordinary possibility of salvation. (Acts 2:47 [https://ref.ly/Acts%202.47;esv?t=biblia])
3. Unto this catholic visible Church Christ hath given the ministry, oracles, and ordinances of God, for the gathering and perfecting of the saints, in this life, to the end of the world: and doth, by His own presence and Spirit, according to His promise, make them effectual thereunto. (1 Cor. 12:28 [https://ref.ly/1%20Cor.%2012.28;esv?t=biblia], Eph. 4:11–13 [https://ref.ly/Eph.%204.11%E2%80%9313;esv?t=biblia], Matt. 28:19–20 [https://ref.ly/Matt.%2028.19%E2%80%9320;esv?t=biblia], Isa. 59:21 [https://ref.ly/Isa.%2059.21;esv?t=biblia])
4. This catholic Church hath been sometimes more, sometimes less visible. (Rom. 11:3–4 [https://ref.ly/Rom.%2011.3%E2%80%934;esv?t=biblia], Rev. 12:6 [https://ref.ly/Rev.%2012.6;esv?t=biblia], 14 [https://ref.ly/Rev%2012.14;esv?t=biblia]) And particular Churches, which are members thereof, are more or less pure, according as the doctrine of the Gospel is taught and embraced, ordinances administered, and public worship performed more or less purely in them. (Rev. 2–3 [https://ref.ly/Rev.%202%E2%80%933;esv?t=biblia], 1 Cor. 5:6–7 [https://ref.ly/1%20Cor.%205.6%E2%80%937;esv?t=biblia])
5. The purest Churches under heaven are subject both to mixture and error; (1 Cor. 13:12 [https://ref.ly/1%20Cor.%2013.12;esv?t=biblia], Rev. 2–3 [https://ref.ly/Rev.%202%E2%80%933;esv?t=biblia], Matt. 13:24–30 [https://ref.ly/Matt.%2013.24%E2%80%9330;esv?t=biblia], 47 [https://ref.ly/Matt%2013.47;esv?t=biblia]) and some have so degenerated as to become no Churches of Christ, but synagogues of Satan. (Rev. 18:2 [https://ref.ly/Rev.%2018.2;esv?t=biblia], Rom. 11:18–22 [https://ref.ly/Rom.%2011.18%E2%80%9322;esv?t=biblia]). Nevertheless, there shall be always a Church on earth to worship God according to His will. (Matt. 16:18 [https://ref.ly/Matt.%2016.18;esv?t=biblia], Ps. 72:17 [https://ref.ly/Ps.%2072.17;esv?t=biblia], Ps. 102:28 [https://ref.ly/Ps.%20102.28;esv?t=biblia], Matt. 28:19–20 [https://ref.ly/Matt.%2028.19%E2%80%9320;esv?t=biblia])
6. There is no other head of the Church but the Lord Jesus Christ. (Col. 1:18 [https://ref.ly/Col.%201.18;esv?t=biblia], Eph. 1:22 [https://ref.ly/Eph.%201.22;esv?t=biblia]) Nor can the Pope of Rome, in any sense, be head thereof. (Matt. 23:8–10 [https://ref.ly/Matt.%2023.8%E2%80%9310;esv?t=biblia], 2 Thess. 2:3–4 [https://ref.ly/2%20Thess.%202.3%E2%80%934;esv?t=biblia], 8–9 [https://ref.ly/2%20Thess%202.8%E2%80%939;esv?t=biblia], Rev. 13:6 [https://ref.ly/Rev.%2013.6;esv?t=biblia])
Long Quotes
Ephesians has rich Ecclesiology (teaching about the church), especially Ephesians 4:4–16 There is one body and one Spirit—just as you were called to the one hope that belongs to your call—[5] one Lord, one faith, one baptism, [6] one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all. [7] But grace was given to each one of us according to the measure of Christ’s gift….
“The reason for the inclusion of children in the church finds its roots in the Old Testament, and it is a truth which God himself expressed passionately in the face of denial: children of professing Christians are God’s before they are ours. In a dark chapter of Israel’s history people took their sons and daughters and offered them as burned offerings to pagan gods. This was an outrage by any account, but the Lord describes it as an intense personal offence: the children which they considered theirs were “born for me’; they were ‘my children’ (Ezek. 16:20, 21). God takes ownership of covenant children. At the beginning of biblical revelation God promised to direct the future of Adam and Eve’s ‘seed’ or descendants (Gen. 3:15). It is for that reason that he placed his cov-enantal ownership sign on all those who were under the instruction and authority of godly householders, especially their children (Gen. 17:7). It is for that reason, as the church was initiated into a new age at Pentecost, that Peter not only stressed that the promise of the gospel was for all those who are far off (meaning, the Gentiles), but also for your children’ (meaning, our children!, Acts 2:39).” – Chad Van Dixhoorn, 340.
A repentant thief on a cross, a Muslim convert to Christianity who has not yet discovered other believers, or a man stranded on the desert island with only a Bible, each has plausible reasons for not being a part of the church. But people who claim to be believers and refuse to join the church in the face of clear biblical instruction and providential opportunity to do so, should deeply worry us. They are like people who say they are in love but refuse to get married. Usually they want the privileges of the relationship without the accompanying responsibilities. Their refusal to publicly commit to Christ’s church casts doubt on the genuineness of their devotion to him, as does a refusal to publicly commit to marriage. The pattern of the New Testament is clear: when people were joined to Christ they were joined to his church. People devoted themselves to the best teaching, to fellowship, breaking bread, prayer, helping those in need, and praising God (Acts 2:42-47). And this was not done in the context of random or disassociated groups of believers. Luke tells us that the Lord added to the church those who were being saved’ (Acts 2:47). May he continue to do so today.” – Chad Van Dixhoorn, 341
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