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Bible Questions with Michael Pearl - Episode 033
[music]
Michael Pearl: All right. If you haven't tuned in before to our Bible questions,
this is Mike Pearl. During the wintertime we sit indoors and answer
your questions. But during the summertime, Jarod's going to have to
chase me around with a camera because I'm going to be out in the
gardens, and out fishing, and different things like that.
So you'll get to see a little bit of what we do here in Tennessee
as we answer your Bible questions. Now, Jarod has been receiving
questions from you from the computer and from the mail. So he's
going to read some of them, and I'm going to answer them. I have no
idea what questions he's going to ask. So Jarod, what have you got
today?
Jarod: Is there any Scriptural support for church membership?
Michael: Yup, there's absolute Scriptural support for church membership. But
what I mean by that answer and what you meant by the question are
two different things. In the Bible, we find in the Book of Acts it
says, "And there was added unto the church daily such as should be
saved." Now who was it that was adding them to the church? It was
the Lord Jesus Christ. And what is the church? That's the question.
Now if by the church you mean an institution like something that's
got a 501(c)(3) designation, and is organized into a business
format or there's property held in common through a board, then
yeah. You join it because you control the property. You're a
property owner.
But if you're talking about by the church, the body of Christ,
which in the Bible is an organism not an organization. What do you
mean by an organism? In other words, it's a living body made up of
fingers, the Bible says, and eyes and ears. He said, "In the body
there's many different members, but there's one body."
In another place He gives an illustration. He said, "We're all one
bread." In other words, each of us is a grain of wheat ground into
one loaf of bread. According to the Scriptures, in each city there
was just one church.
When Paul wrote to the Romans, you'll read in the last chapter of
Romans, he said, "Greet those who are in Pricilla's household."
Then he named a half a dozen different homes there, and they were
meeting in those homes having their church services. Now, God
didn't recognize multiple churches inside of a city. He only
recognized the church in that city.
For instance, to the church which is at Ephesus, to the church
which is at Thyatira -- Revelations Chapter Two and Three--to the
church which is at Smyrna, to the Thessalonicans, to the
Corinthians. In other words, in Thessalonica the city, there was
only one church.
That was Christ's body. It was an organism. It was a living group
of people bound together by the Holy Spirit, baptized by the Spirit
of God into Christ's body becoming a member of his bone and of his
flesh -- Ephesians, Chapter Five. Here in our community where we
live, from a human standpoint you'd say there's a dozen churches.
But from God's standpoint, there's only one church.
Now there's some buildings that I've never been to, and I don't go
there because they wouldn't want me there. I don't go there because
they have a different doctrinal slant on some things, and they
don't come to my church building.
But you know, when I meet those people in work or out in the
community I treat them just as much as a member of my church as
anybody anywhere. I love them as part of the body of Christ, and I
cherish them. If they have a hospital bill, I help them with it, if
I can. If they have a garden needs plowing, I plow their garden.
When I greet them, I greet them warmly as I do any Christian
anywhere because they are members of Christ's body, of his church,
just as I am. So I love those people just as much as I do the
people that I meet with on a daily basis.
So our little group we call The Church at Cane Creek. You notice
the name on that? The Church at Cane Creek? That's because our
little gathering represents the church, which is located at Cane
Creek. Now that's a biblical definition for a church, like the
Church in Memphis, the Church in Nashville.
So according to God, there's only one church in Nashville, one
church in Memphis, but probably divided into 400 or 500 different
denominational groups. Now I'm not for an ecumenical endeavor to
bring all the people together into one group. That would be great,
but the only thing that will cause that to happen is persecution.
If the church is ever persecuted, then we won't care whether
somebody is pre-tribulational, mid-tribulational, or post-
tribulational. We won't care whether they believe in sprinkling or
immersion for a water baptism, or what kind of church headship they
believe in -- whether it's a pastor, elders, a presbytery, or an
apostle, or whatever they want to call it.
We'll all come and function together as one, ministering to each
other and caring for one another as we should be all along. So can
you join the church? If you recognize it as a human institution
that you want to be part of the ownership of the property and have
a say-so in the affairs, yeah. But don't think that's Christ's
church.
Now it's part of his church. His church is there in that
organization, but that's not His church. You joined His church when
you believed on the Lord Jesus Christ and got saved.
So there's a difference between man's church and God's church. A
Baptist church, a Methodist church, the Presbyterian church, the
Lutheran church, the Roman Catholic church, all those are man's
churches. They're man's designations. Even the Church of Christ or
Christ's Church, that's man's church when they give it that name.
But there's one body, one fellowship, one calling, one Lord, one
baptism. And all of us who believe on the Lord Jesus Christ are
part of that by the Spirit of God, not by some name appearing on a
church role.
Jarod: If you would like to ask a Bible question, email us at
Biblequestions@nogreaterjoy.org. Or call at 931-805-4820.
Transcription by CastingWords