BIBLICAL CONCEPT:
Church
Outline
I. Vocabulary.
II. The nature of the church
from the seven vocabulary.
III. Conclusion.
___________________________
I. Vocabulary:
I) Ekklesia (ek
= out of klesia = to call = “the assembly of those called”).
2) Body. 3) Bride.
4) Building. 5) Branches. 6) Flock. 7) Priesthood.
II. The nature of the church
from the seven vocabulary.
1) Ekklesia:
Concepts:
-
Mt. 16:16-18, Jesus’ assembly
is built on the rock of revelation.
-
Mt. 18:15-17, Spiritual standards
and assembly: reprove sin.
-
Acts 2:42, Four devotions of the
first local church: teaching,
fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayer.
-
Acts 9:31, Areas of growth in
the assembly: fear of the Lord,
comfort of the Holy Spirit and numbers.
-
Acts 15:41, Separate local assemblies
were founded on Paul's Ist
missionary journey.
-
Rom. 16:5, Local assemblies met
in homes.
-
Eph. 1:22, 5:23-24, Col. 1:18;
Christ is the head of the assembly.
-
Eph. 3:10, The assembly teaches
angels.
-
Eph. 3:21, The assembly glorifies
God.
-
1 Tim. 3:5, The overseer takes
care of the assembly of God.
-
1 Tim. 3:15, The local assembly
is a pillar and support of the truth.
-
Rev. 1:4, Assemblies need grace
and peace.
Conclusions: The ekklesia emphasizes
the origination of the assembly and
its spiritual purposes.
2) The body.
Concepts:
-
Rom. 12:5, Many are one body in
Christ, and individually members one of another.
-
Eph. 1:22-23, Church which is
His body. Living representatives.
-
Eph. 4:12, Building up of body
(vs. 16). Proper working of each individual part causes growth of
body.
-
Col. 1:18, Christ is the head
of the body and should have first place in all things.
-
Col. 2:19, Under the head the
whole body grows from God's supply.
-
Col. 3:15, Peace for the body.
Conclusions: The body is
Christ's living representative on earth. He leads
the body as head. A
oneness, an inter-relationship of believers is
emphasized.
3) The Bride.
Concepts:
-
Eph. 5:24, The assembly is subject
to Christ.
-
Eph. 5:25, Christ loves the assembly.
-
Eph. 5:26-27, High standards for
the assembly cf. Rev. 19:7-9.
-
Eph. 5:29-30, Christ nourishes
and cherishes the assembly.
Conclusions: The bride
figure portrays Christ's love for the assembly, the
submission of the assembly,
His standards and provisions for her.
4) The Building.
Concepts:
-
Eph. 2:19-22, Jesus Christ
is the cornerstone of the building/assembly. The building is growing into
a holy temple, cf. 1 Pt. 2:5 - spiritual house.
-
1 Tim. 3:15a, Proper conduct is
needed in God's house.
-
1 Tim. 3:15b, God's house is a
pillar and support of the truth.
-
2 Tim. 2:20, In a large house,
vessels of honor and dishonor.
-
Jas. 2:2; Assembly and partiality,
not!
-
Heb. 10:24-25, Stimulate love
and good deeds, not forsaking assembly.
Conclusions: There is only
one building / assembly because of the Chief
Cornerstone. The building
is being built according to God's great
standards. The building
supports God’s purpose--the truth.
5) The Branches.
Concepts:
-
Rom. 11:16-24, the grafting, God's
orchardist. God cultivates a faithful assembly.
-
Jn. 15:2-10, The pruning God orchardist.
God cultivates a fruitful assembly. The fruitful branches abide in
the vine Jesus. Cf. the Fruits of the Spirit in Gal. 5:22-23.
Conclusions: The assembly is an
organic union with the vine Jesus. It can
do nothing apart form the
vine (Jn. 15:5). It can bear much fruit in Him
(Jn. 15:5).
6) The Flock.
Concepts:
-
Jn. 10:16, There is one flock,
one Shepherd. Cf Heb. 13:20; 1 Pt. 2:25.
-
1 Pt. 5:2-3, God has provided
under-shepherds to feed and lead local flocks. Cf. Eph. 4:11-12 and
Acts 20:28-32.
Conclusions: Like some of the
other figures for the Christian assembly,
the flock presents the singular
uniqueness of the assembly and its
Shepherd-God. The flock
figure also demonstrates the subjection of the
assembly to God. Flocks
follow the Shepherd (Jn. 10:5). Cf. Heb. 13:17
and 1 Thes. 5:12-13.
Compared to God we are sheep in need of a
shepherd and guardian of our
souls.
7) The Priesthood.
Concepts:
-
1 Pt. 2:5, The assembly is a holy
priesthood to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God. Cf Rom.
12:1-2 and Heb. 13:15-16.
-
1 Pt. 2:9; The assembly is a royal
priesthood, God's own possession, to proclaim His excellencies.
Conclusions: The figure of the
Priesthood describes the high calling of the
assembly and the privilege.
High, even holy standards are part of the
figure. To please and
proclaim God requires high holy standards.
III. Conclusions:
-
The Assembly of God, the Biblical
Church, is a spiritual organism (priesthood, body, bride, flock, branches)
built by God (temple, house, household, building) to glorify Himself in
the Angelic Conflict (Eph. 3:10, 21).
-
The universal church: an invisible
force fighting an invisible foe.
-
The local church: a visible gathering
of individual believers.
-
The local church is a visible
gathering of Christians for spiritual training (Eph. 4:11-12) and stimulation
to service (Heb. 10:24-25).
-
The local church: a physical and
spiritual gathering, performing physical and spiritual works.
-
Most of the New Testament is addressed
to individual local churches of the universal church.
-
The Christian Church: "A local
assembly spiritually united in Christ, with an autonomous nature." (Radmacher)
-
Local Church = visible = independent
= autonomous.
-
Universal Church = visible = corporate.
-
Radmacher: "The local church is
God's agency in the world transacting God's business.”
A-Z