Back to Basics: the Church

22 And he has put all things under his feet and has made him the head over all things for the church, 23 which is his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all. ( Ephesians 1:22-23 NRSV).
The vision of the church must
always be heavenward. Thus its worship must be Christ-exalting rather than
creature-centered. To allow anyone other
than Jesus or anything other than the gospel to become the focus of a church’s
life is to elevate that person or issue to greater prominence than Christ
himself and to veer off into idolatry.
Go back and reread the sermons in Acts. You will be impressed anew with the
Christocentric theme of each one. Depending on whether the audience was Jewish
or Gentiles, the evangelist might choose to quote Scripture or a Greek poet.
While adapting the method of presentation to the hearers, the message remained
the same. " God has made this Jesus . . . both Lord and Christ
"
(2:36). " They never stopped teaching and proclaiming the good news that Jesus is
the Christ
" (5:42). " Philip began with that very passage of
Scripture and told him the good news about Jesus
" (8:35). " Paul
was preaching the good news about Jesus and the resurrection
"
(17:18).
The essence of the kingdom of God is righteousness,
peace
, and joy
in the Holy Spirit
(Rom. 14:17-18). And these blessings come as gifts from Christ rather than as
fruits of our own spiritual achievements. The central issue of the Christian
faith is still Jesus question: " Who do you say I am?"
(Matt.
16:15). Unless everything focuses on and finds its meaning in the person and
work of Jesus Christ, a church dooms itself to ineffectual striving after the
wind.
Second only to an affirmation
of faith in and allegiance to Jesus Christ, a faithful and fruitful church
declares its confidence in the Bible as the authoritative Word of God. All we
would dare affirm about Jesus is what we can ground in Holy Scripture. It is
our definitive source of information about him and the normative guide for
understanding his function as head of the church.
The Christian faith rests upon the data found in the Bible, for " faith
comes from hearing the message, and the message is heard through the word of
Christ
" ( Rom. 10:17
).
This "word of Christ" has been recorded permanently for all people in
the sixty-six books of canonical Scripture. The thirty-nine books of the Old
Testament point forward to Christ
through prediction, type, and shadow; the twenty-seven books of the New
Testament provide the fulfillment
,
anti-type, and substance. Because we look to Jesus as the one having all
authority in spiritual matters, we listen to his words from the New Testament.
The things he has spoken himself and through his appointed apostles constitute
the authoritative body of doctrine that must guide the life of the faith
community called the church.
The world around us is waiting for churches to embrace, affirm, and live
Scripture that they cannot but see Jesus in them. They want churches both to
teach and to model the life of Christ. Those churches will draw men to God.
They will be highly effective. They will lead men and women to salvation in
Christ.
A faithful church is so focused on Jesus that its own experience of the Word of
God reveals him to everyone who sees it.
The Bible is God’s revelation of himself in the person and work of
Christ.
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