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Thanks for watching! In a day full of conflicting
opinions and ideas, the Word of God stands true, and the Bible
is the source for absolute truth. In these days of confusion and
questions, it is so important to know what the Bible says.
In today's study, let's ask the Lord to open our heart and mind
as Scott Pauley leads us into Scripture to help us discover
God's absolute truth. Words matter. So why did the
Lord Jesus Christ choose the word church to represent His
people in this world? Well, the word church itself
literally means a called out assembly. Now there's two wonderful
parts to that. First, we've been called out.
Are you glad you've been called out? Peter writes in 1 Peter
2 and verse 9 and says that we've been called out of darkness into
His marvelous light. I love that. The Lord Jesus,
when He first came, called His disciples that they should be
with Him. So, we're part of that. We've
been called out. But then, it's a called out assembly. It presupposes the idea that
we're not just supposed to belong, we're to be together. That we
would meet, that we would gather, that we would stay connected
to one another, a called out assembly. Now, while every person
on earth that has put their faith and trust in the Lord Jesus Christ
as their personal Savior, belongs to the Lord. That entire group
has never met together at one time, no matter how big the meeting
may be, and it never will meet together at one time until we
all get to glory someday. Won't that be a wonderful assembly?
What a day that's going to be. You've never been in a meeting
like the meeting around the throne of God at the nail-pierced feet
of Jesus. That's going to be a great day. But my point is
this, the overwhelming emphasis in the New Testament regarding
the New Testament Church is that the New Testament Church is a
local assembly. It's a local group of baptized
believers who voluntarily join themselves together to carry
out the Great Commission. It is, if we might say it this
way, a visible manifestation of the body of Christ in every
place. For example, Acts chapter 8 verse number 1. This goes to
really the heart of the church and the early stages of the church.
Acts chapter 8 verse 1 says, And Saul was consenting unto
his death. That was the death of Stephen,
the first martyr of the church. And the Bible says, And at that
time there was a great persecution against the church which was
at Jerusalem. There was a visible group of
believers assembling together at Jerusalem. If you go over
a few pages to Acts chapter 13 verse 1, now there were in the
church that was at Antioch. You hear that? It's a reference
to the geographical location of each assembly. We could go
through the letters of the Apostle Paul. You'd find it again and
again. Galatians 1, verse number 2. 1 Thessalonians 1, verse number
1. How about this one? Philippians
1, 1. Paul and Timotheus, the servants
of Jesus Christ, to all the saints in Christ Jesus which are at
Philippi with the bishops and deacons. So our spiritual place
is in Christ Jesus. We're seated with him in heavenly
places. Praise God for that. But physically speaking, geographically,
circumstantially, we are at Philippi, at Thessalonica, in Galatia,
or wherever your local assembly meets today. So we're dealing
with local New Testament churches. Isn't that a simple principle?
And a part of this simplicity, it's wonderful, is to see the
simple structure of God's amazing work. When the Lord Jesus founded
His church, He established it in such a way that there was
a simplicity to it. There was a simple structure.
Let me give you a few thoughts today. First of all, He established
two ordinances. That's wonderful. What are the
two things He ordered that we do? They are baptism and the
Lord's Supper. Matthew chapter 28, before he
left the disciples, he told them to go into all the world to teach
and then to baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Ghost. So he ordered that we would baptize
new believers and that that baptism would identify those people with
Christ and with his church in this world. So, you've got to
have several things right to have the right baptism. You've
got to have the right authority. That's the local church. You
have to have the right candidate. That's a saved person. They have
to believe in Christ first. You have to have the right mode.
That's immersion. That's what the word baptism
means. It literally means to dip, immerse, or plunge. And
so that's God's way. And then you have to have the
right method, which is to baptize them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, because that's the way
Christ said to do it. He ordered baptism. The second ordinance
that he left the church was what we refer to as the Lord's Supper,
or the Memorial Supper. Paul really expounds on this
in 1 Corinthians chapter 11, and it's powerful, all the teaching
that is there, but it was established with Christ and his disciples.
At that last Passover, he instituted a new supper. It was the first
memorial supper. On his way to the cross, he said,
I want you to do this in remembrance of me. This bread will represent
my body. This fruit of the vine will represent
my blood which was shed for you. It's symbolic. And so it's beautiful
that the two things Christ ordered that every local church do, baptism
and the Lord's Supper, both point us to Jesus. Isn't that great?
Everything points us, not to an institution, but to an individual. It brings us to Christ. It's
a reminder that the church's simple mission in this world
is to point people to the Lord Jesus Christ. to show his death,
to show the resurrection power, to show the fact that he is alive
and is coming again. That's what the two ordinances
are all about. Then, he not only gave two ordinances, he gave
two offices. I just read a moment ago, Philippians
chapter 1, verse number 1, with the bishops and deacons. Right
there we go. That's the two offices. The bishop,
that's the pastor. He has several titles or names
ascribed to him in the New Testament. He's referred to as a pastor.
That's a shepherd of a flock. He's referred to here as a bishop.
That word means to oversee. That emphasizes his function.
He's also referred to in the New Testament as an elder. That
emphasizes his office or his place within the body. And so,
God gives to a local church a pastor, someone to help guide the flock. He is the Lord's under-shepherd.
There's only one good shepherd, but he's the under-shepherd,
and he's helping to guide the flock and feed the flock under
the Lord Jesus Christ. And then alongside those bishops
or pastors, God calls, or commands rather, that the church would
call out deacons. I say it that way because I believe
pastors are called to the Lord, deacons are chosen by the church.
And so while there may be one pastor of a local assembly, there
are many deacons, because the word deacon literally means servants.
These are people who've come alongside to serve. They started
in Acts chapter number six, where the apostles had so much to do
with the ministry of the word and prayer that the widows were
being neglected. So someone had to care for these
things. And I just want to pause and say, praise God for faithful
deacons. And their place in the local
assembly is just what the title means. It is to serve. It is
to serve the Lord, to serve the pastor, to serve the congregation,
to be a blessing and help. So there are two ordinances,
there are two offices, and what do these tell us about the Lord?
They tell us that our God is a God of order. And by the way,
we make things so everlasting complicated, don't we? That's
what sin does, that's what sinners do. But listen to this principle
in 1 Corinthians chapter 14 and verse number 40. It's powerful. The Bible says, let all things
be done decently and in order. May I tell you that God is a
God of order. That's revealed in the Bible
from the very beginning of creation and certainly that's true in
His church. Order is more than organization. It's fulfilling
God's purpose. Organization can be of man. Really
the only way to organize an organism is to dissect it and that kills
it. So it's not mere organization we're after. No, the New Testament
church must follow the divine order, God's simple, plan for
his local New Testament church. And if we'd follow the simple
structure of God's amazing work, friend, we'd see God work. Because
then we're doing God's work, God's way. May the Lord help
all of us to help our churches become everything that Christ
founded them to be. Repeating what other people have
said about the Bible is not enough. We must know the biblical reason
behind what we believe. We hope you will visit us at
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on Enjoying the Journey.
The Simple Structure of God's Amazing Work
| Sermon ID | 31225125383417 |
| Duration | 10:06 |
| Date | |
| Category | Podcast |
| Language | English |
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