โA Five-part series of Building Up Every Churchโ
Five terrific men of the pulpit have written a column for a look at the many shades of todayโs church. Each shares his perspective and experience of the church where they currently serve.
Part 2 โBack to the Futureโ Restoring the Church
by Dr. Richard Brown
It wasnโt much to look at sunken to its axles in the mud at the edge of a cornfield north of Tilden, NE. To other people, it was an old junk car waiting to be sent to the crusher. But when you love Pontiacs, especially the mid-60โs Bonneville and Grand Prix, the sight of that dark blue 1965 Grand Prix with white bucket seats, real wood on the dash and console, 8-lug custom wheels and a 4-barrel 389 V8 was a treasure. Even though it had been there for more than two years and hadnโt run for โa long timeโ before that, my son and I saw its potential. We agreed on a price with the owner, he agreed to haul it to our driveway and before long it was sitting on its four flat tires beside our driveway and my wife thought weโd lost our minds.
Iโve been a gearhead since my teen years and have loved having grease under my fingernails. But Iโve loved the Lordโs church even more than old Pontiacs and spent 55 years of my life working to build effective churches for the future but do so by restoring the church to the New Testament model. The challenge is how to be relevant to modern culture and still utilize ancient principles.
When Jesus said, โon this rock, I will build my churchโ (Mt. 16:18), he wasnโt building a church for his generation only. He was building a church that would fit every generation until He comes again to take his church to Heaven to be with him forever.
So how do we restore the church in a way that will make it effective for the future? Our emphasis must be upon principles more than methods. For example, we must preach and practice that the church of Jesus Christ is essentially and constitutionally one. How do we do that in a Christian world that is hopelessly divided into several hundred different denominations? We do that by preaching and practicing that we are not the only Christians, but we are Christians only. That means I do not separate myself from others who wear the name โChristian,โ rather I find fellowship whenever and wherever I encounter people who believe that Jesus Christ is Lord. Years ago I concluded that Jesus had not authorized me to judge who was going to Heaven, nor had he given me the wisdom to discern the motives of the human heart. I remember that Jesus said, โby their fruit, you will recognize themโ (Mt. 7:20). Therefore, if they claim to be a Christian, talk like a Christian and behave like a Christian, Iโm going to enjoy them when I can and let Jesus separate the real ones from the fake ones when he comes.
Hereโs another principle, Jesus is the head of the church, Iโm not. I must be meticulous to always give him the credit for all I do and all I am. I didnโt die for the church, he did. Iโm not coming back from the grave for the saints, He is. Iโm not preparing a home for anyone in Heaven, He is. Jesus must always be the focus of my preaching, he must always be the one for whose glory we labor and he must always be the one people see in me and in us, the church.
Now you might become a bit uncomfortable with the next principle: Iโm going to call Bible things by Bible names. Some examples: Immersion is the method but itโs called โbaptism.โ I know that the word โbaptismโ means different things to different folk, but calling what we do โbaptismโ gives me a wonderful opportunity to explain in a kindly way what the Bible meant when it said โbaptism.โ Hereโs another: church leaders are called by a variety of names in the New Testament, e.g., elder, deacon, pastor (shepherd), evangelist, teacher, bishop, minister. But Iโve searched the Scriptures and never found anyone called โLead Pastorโ which is becoming more common in our churches. It comes from the megachurch movement and not the Bible, and, to my way of thinking, is actually anti-biblical in its meaning.
Hereโs another principle on which to build an effective church for the future: โWhere the scriptures speak, we speak; where the scriptures are silent, we are silent.โ I found when I was preaching that people were often ignorant of scripture and really did want to know what the Bible said. Therefore, immerse yourself in Scripture each week and then slosh over what you learned on the congregation on Sunday. They will love it. There is a real danger with the prevalence of the internet that we preach what we find there and lose contact with the Bible. Your people really do want to know what you know about the Bible rather than what someone elseโs preacher knows.
Finally, restoration is achieved by returning to those principles that energized the New Testament Church. Iโm simple enough to believe that it will energize the contemporary church we are building for the future. Oh, about that Grand Prix, we got it running and it became a school car for my son until we sold it to a Pontiac collector who drooled over it and did a full restoration on it. Pontiac built excitement. . .and we drove it!