M
a t t h e w 16 v.13/20
In our
gospel passage Jesus is with His Apostles at Caesarea Phillippi on the North of
the Sea of Galilee. Jesus asked who do people say that I am? They told Him some
people say Jhn the Baptist, Jeremiah, Elijah.
Jesus
then asked them, who do you say that I am? Peter answered you are the Christ,
the Son of the living God. Jesus was pleased with the answer and said, You are
blessed, Simon son of Jonah, because my Father in heaven has revealed this to
you. You did not learn this from any human being. Now I say to you , You are
Peter and upon this rock I will build my Church and the powers of hell will not
conquer it. And I will give you the keys of the Kingdom of heaven. Whatever you
bless on earth will be blessed in heaven. Whatever you forbid on earth will be
forbidden in heaven.
Then
He strictly warned the Apostles not to tell anyone that He was the messiah.
Bitter
debate has been made regarding the statement of Jesus. The Roman Catholic Church has always claimed
it was meant to be that Peter was
the head of the Church and so became the first Pope. The Protestant Churches have largely taken
the view that Jesus meant, He was building the Church on the basis of the answer
by Peter. Certainly Peter was not the leader of the Church, for at the Council
of Jerusalem as stated in Acts 15,James was the leader.
I think
it futile to prolong theological debate on the matter, suffice to say Peter played an important role in the early Church.
Jesus
stated that the gates of hell would not destroy the Church which has been an
encouragement to His followers, although many men have tried to destroy the
Church, and are still trying in to-day’s world. Whilst the Church in the
Western nations has not lived up to the teachings of Jesus, the Churches in
East Africa ,India and Pakistan Far East including China, and in South America have
all been loyal and committed to the Word of God, despite intolerance from those
in non-Christian lands.
Jesus knew the Church would always be attacked,
so was assuring His protection. Such words are to be a comfort in knowing the
Lord will never desert us. The Church has survived over many hard times and
whilst Empires have come and gone, only the Church has survived through the
ages.
If the building of Christ’s Church,is to continue the work has to be carried
out by His followers, and be built on the foundation Jesus laid, that is the
teaching in the New Testament. In every sense of the word, Jesus Christ is the
foundation of the Church. The Bible states, No one can lay any other foundation,than what has been laid, that is Jesus Christ. He is also the head of the body,
the church, with Himself as the cornerstone
This is important to remember because everything the church is and does should
emanate from this truth. Many churches today, have over the years drifted away
from their origins,and are no longer recognizable as being founded upon the
person and work of Jesus Christ. Let us never forget that we exist to exalt
Jesus. Everything we are is about Him.
Whilst the Church in the West is in decline, the Churches in Africa, Asia and
South America are flourishing. This is because they have not been dismantling
the Bible as many are trying to do here.
The Bible states it is the will of God that those who belong to Jesus must
belong to His Church. We may not always worship in the same way, but we should
share the same beliefs. We may have disagreements, but they can be resolved
with good will; Methodism itself came from such a disagreement.
I do see a problem has arisen in modern times, and I have not been telling people of the importance of attending Church. I would not attend an Anglican or Methodist Church, which upholds the decisions of the leaders to allow services which contravene the teaching of the Word of God.
The alternative course, is to adopt the privilege of modern technology and attend in spirit if not in practice, the solid preaching of the Bible by pastors in the notable services in the United States of America. Obviously personal attendance is the more desirable, but I am confident we are being more faithful in turning to listen to the Word of God by faithful preachers,to that of Apostate ones.
The Bible states we should worship in spirit and in truth. In spirit by coming with a sincere desire to please God—glorify Him- and worship Him with reverence and awe.
In truth,can create problems for some people. Jesus said He would build His Church, but it seems as there are those who are replying and we will pull it down. When a builder constructs a building invariably a covenant is placed on it restricting what may be added or altered. Jesus effectively did so with His Church,when He gave His teaching in the New Testament, giving instruction as to what should and should not be taught and believed. The Bible states, if anyone adds to the words of prophecy in this book God will add to him the plagues which are written in this book. And if anyone takes away from the words of this book, God will take away his part from the tree of life and from the holy city, which are written in this book.
The faith and belief of the Church are built on two essential doctrines; salvation by grace through faith, and the authority of Scripture. These may not be important to some, but they are the fundamentals to true and real Christians. Such were the themes of the preaching of Charles and John Wesley.
Remember the words of John Wesley ‘I want to know one thing; the way to heaven,
how to land on that happy shore. God Himself has condescended to teach the way;
He hath written it down in a book. Give me that book; at any price give me that
book’. I fear John and Charles would find a lot of preaching these days not to
their liking.
Truth is not a DIY subject, God has spoken. Those who dispute His Word do so
for their own purposes, often to justify the manner of their living. It is in
effect saying, we reject the authority of the Bible and substitute our own
authority. God has told us clearly what He expects.
Charles Wesley once stated, ‘the manner of living as well as attending Church
was important for a Christian.’ I once held a service to honour Charles Wesley, and the research I made caused me to realise how far we have moved from the
ideals of the founders of Methodism, which at one time had such a profound
effect on this land.
The doctrine of the church has fallen on hard times these days. Paul warned
that people will turn away from truth because it requires admission of human
weakness, the restraint of passions and submission to the authority of God.
They will look for those who will teach them what they want to hear, who share
their preferences and are prepared to re-interpret Scripture accordingly. There
seems to be no shortage of such teachers
.We have sacrificed sound doctrine in favour of cultural trends,and the
consequences have been disastrous. To many, church membership means little or
nothing.
That is why if there was ever a day when Christians need to be certain the
doctrine of the church, and to know what the church exists for, it is
today. Unless we know what we believe,we will not know who we are and how we
should live or why we must live that way
.
When I was ordained I had to affirm that Holy
Scripture contains all that is necessary for salvation, and the pure Word of God
is to be preached. I am sure other denominations have similar requirements. Why
in so many cases has it all not been so?
Sadly, there are those who are trying to change the Church’s teaching so as to
correspond with contemporary thinking. I heard one Vicar state that she didn’t
think the Bible should be taken literally. If a minority cannot accept the
teaching and tradition of the Church, they should for the good of the Church
family have the grace to sacrifice rather than create division. There are so
many living in spiritual darkness that the Church should not be wasting time on
personal ambitions and preferences. When we consider the moral state of the
country, all our energies should be concentrated on bringing the nation back to
God. We have to give faithful witness to the gospel message as it is written.
We all have apart to play in building the Church. This was the message Peter
and Paul took up so often; that Christians have a responsibility to maintain
the faith. Clearly the major task falls on preachers to teach the true gospel, and instruct on the way lives should be lived in accordance with biblical
teaching. But all Christians also have a duty to live worthily of the Lord, and
not be ashamed to confess their faith, but to do all they can to promote the
Church.
With this in mind, from the loneliness of a prison cell in Rome, Paul wrote his
last Letter, sending it to Timothy whom he had chosen to take over ministry
from him. No other passage in Scripture describes more accurately, the day in
which we live. The overwhelming majority is committed to unbelief, and there
seems nothing we can do to stop the downhill slide of our day.
Paul begins, by reminding Timothy that he is ministering in the presence of God
and in the sight of Jesus Christ, the One who will be the judge of all and
before whom every heart is exposed and before whom we will all stand and give
account.
Paul told Timothy in 2 Timothy 4:2 to preach the word. A true church is a
church which preaches the word of God, and this means however unpopular it
appears; we are here to tell people not what they want to hear, but what they
need to hear.
The great Methodist preacher of the last century, W E Sangster once said
‘preaching is in the darkness; the world does not believe it’. Certainly the
modern idea is to keep preaching to the minimum and fill in with drama or
asking questions. Consequently people come to Church without any expectation of
an encounter with God.
People have a right to expect those speaking as Ministers of the Church to
preach the Word of God so unbelievers may come to believe and those in doubt
may be strengthened. When Ministers substitute personal views for other
reasons, they are exceeding their remit.
When you are a true believer it means that you not only agree with the moral
and ethical teaching of Scripture, but also that you live out those teachings
in your life. It is hypocritical to mouth words and then go and act contrary to
what you have condemned.
Each year the Methodist Church holds a Covenant Service in which listening to
the Word in scripture, read and preached is specifically mentioned, and during
the Covenant promise it is stated, ‘in some we may please Christ and please
ourselves; in others we cannot please Christ except by denying ourselves.
Many so called churches have become anything but a New Testament church, and no
longer fulfil their biblically assigned role. Some have turned into places with
a political agenda. Some have become little more than places of entertainment
where you go to feel good. A Vicar once actually told me we should make people
feel happy and not be boring with doctrine. If people need to be happy all the time they should attend a theatre.
I have seen baptism services held when quite a number of strangers attended,
and rather than take the opportunity of speaking about what baptism meant, and
our faith, the speaker waffled about personal memories or held a sort of
question and answer session.
The preaching of gospel of Jesus Christ is what should be central in our
churches. This is what we exist for. Instead we are giving out a confused image
and people naturally feel if we can’t get the message straight between
ourselves, we are not in a position to preach to them.
We are not here to be like a spiritual dispensary giving out soothing
prescriptions, although some of our messages will offer comfort. We are not
merely here for us to gather in a sort of holy huddle, although we receive
inspiration and encouragement. We are here to spread the gospel and expand the
Christ’s Kingdom, and if the Church is to survive in this country, this is a
must.
The Church remains on earth to extend the gospel to the ends of the earth, by
bearing witness to Christ in all places at all times. You and I are called to
advance that work; do not let anyone tell you that your life as a Christian
does not count. It counts tremendously. Take pride in being a Christian and
never be ashamed to confess your faith.
N o t i c e
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I regret that I will not be replying to messages, unless of some important matter This has become necessary, despite having tried to avoid making a closure. So many messages sent to me reveal, the sender has failed to realize, or accept, my purpose has been to be only proclaiming the gospel
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