Wednesday, November 10, 2021

What works? (James 5:16)

 What in this world "works"? Life in Christ "works". Faith "works". Prayer "works".

They "work out"-----in the final analysis "recommend themselves," "justify themselves." They ARE effective, operative, and promising. Ultimately they ARE what's happening on the plan of reality, what's THERE.
And we are...who? We are the summoned, every day, every moment, to have a part, to participate, play a role in what, alone, in the final analysis, has meaning. This is an indescribable honor. It is Christ Jesus, alone, the Risen One our Redeemer, who has bestowed this honor.
What "works"? What "acts"? Where is there real "use"? What does Holy Scripture say about this?
James 5:16
The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.
The words “effectual fervent” are a single participle in the Greek original: energumenè. What does that mean?
Let's look at the three other passages from the Bible containing this word, then come back to this.
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2 Corinthians 1:6
And whether we be afflicted, it is for your consolation and salvation which is effectual (energumenè) in the enduring of the same sufferings which we also suffer.
Is effectual = works actively in you.
Consolation (encouragement) and salvation (safety, assurance, not "redemption") realize themselves in you, as acting, productive realities, through the endurance of sufferings. In other words, it "works," because in this is found direct connection with what the living God is producing and advancing. This is to unite with the actual, concrete cause of God Himself in the world.
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Galatians 5:6
For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth any thing, nor uncircumcision; but faith which worketh (energumenè) by love.
better, faith working by love.
There is no greater manifestation of faith than love. The supreme manifestation of the faith of Christ Himself was His death on the cross, for this death was the consummation of divine love to us. Faith, in every sense, works, works out, acts, substantiates itself, realizes itself: THROUGH LOVE. There is no surer verification of faith than love. If there's no love there, there's hardly faith there. Acting faith is only loving faith.
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1 Thessalonians 2:13
For this cause also thank we God without ceasing, because, when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh (energumenè) also in you that believe.
In the Greek idiom (their way of formulating a thought), the way this sounds, as Paul wrote it, is something like this (even though it will be very bad English)....
....that, having received the word by hearing from us, God's, you received not the word of people, but as in fact it really is, the word of God that is acting also in you who believe.
The Word of God is an "acting" word.
In other words, Paul is jubilant that the living, active word of God Himself was able to sound and act through simple sounds uttered by his poor human lips. It is a miracle, a miracle that unimaginably transcends the limitations of those human lips. This is the ultimate reality. And Paul's exultation is only intensified by the fact that this miraculously acting word is now manifesting in the Thessalonians' lives (independent of Paul!), as evidence of the burgeoning Kingdom of the risen Christ.
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Now let's go back and look at James 5:16....
The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.
The words “effectual fervent” are this same word, energumenè, in Greek. This prayer is acting, is concretely producing, creating something.
And in what is the "key," the "secret," the "access" to this "acting" prayer? Romans 8:26: "In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for usthrough wordless groans."
Life in Christ, faith and prayer "work" because God is WORKING. Behind everything that happens, only one thing is happening: the story of God's work. And our indescribable honor is to be called into friendship with God, like Abraham, and become vessels of His work, acting as catalysts of His advancing kingdom. There is no greater glory for man than to glorify God in this way
And so, pray, pray by faith, pray by love, pray in trust in the Holy Spirit, and your prayer will be active--it will "work"--and the kingdom of Christ will concretely spread by means of you, in your life and the lives of others.

Saturday, November 6, 2021

If There Had Been No Jesus

 If there had never been a Jesus of Nazareth (and excluding for the moment the utterly titanic "Butterfly Effect" that His Person represents in history, since had He never been it is most probable none of us, at least in "the West," would now exist as we do, as the fate and development of nations would have been radically different; so let's just suppose, fantastically, that Jesus had never been yet somehow the present arrangement of nations--geopolitically as well as genetically, right down to your family tree!--were still as it is now)--so as I was saying, if there had never been a Jesus of Nazareth, what is the likelihood that I would have arbitrarily opted to embrace, out of the potpourri of ancient religions, the ancient Jewish faith in their YHWH? Next to nil, I suppose. There'd be no more reason or impulse for me, intellectually, socioculturally, to "believe" in the Jewish deity (indeed, any deity) any more than I might choose to embrace the ancient gods of the Egyptians or Celts. (But I'm pretty sure I wouldn't have done that, either.)

Had there been no Jesus, billions of Gentiles all over the world and over the past two millenia would not be confessing faith in the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. That's just historical fact. Jesus is the concrete historical reason we've come to "Yahweh." Like nuclear weapons, which can't be un-invented once invented, so it is with this astonishing (it really is astonishing if you take a moment to contemplate it) fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies that some day "the nations" (i.e., the Gentiles) would flock to the God of Israel. Guess what. It happened. Jesus made it happen. Even if one doesn't believe in Jesus, even if one considers it an error, it's happened, and like the nuclear bomb it can't un-happen now.
The question is whether that constitutes an equally titanic "Oops!" on the part of God Himself, to have allowed such a massively false fulfillment of the prophecies to occur, a fulfillment that can never be deleted or "re-fulfilled" the "right" way. Once it's happened, it's happened.
Obviously, this is not a titanic "Oops!"
It is a terribly under-noticed, under-commented, astounding event in history. It was foretold and it happened, in ways no one could ever have anticipated. Once it's happened, it can't re-happen. Fulfillment is fulfillment, like it or not. You can't get the cat back in the bag. From a Jewish perspective that rejects Jesus, it's not like "the real Messiah" can still come and fulfill the prophecies that, oops, have already materialized. Something for our Jewish friends to contemplate deeply.
I do not think it is impious or irreverent of me to say that I'd likely never have opted to believe in the Yahweh of the Jews had there been no Jesus. For one thing, the simple fact is that I never did "opt to believe" in the Yahweh of the Jews without Jesus. So it's hardly irreverent to repeat what's already a fact. For another, God manifestly never intended for me to come to faith in Him without Jesus, and for that reason again my assertion is hardly irreverent. I am actually agreeing 100% with the manifest purpose of God.
And all of this demonstrates further what "Christocentric" really means in God's eternal redemptive purpose.
When I teach my hermeneutics course in Zaporozhye, one of my beginning provocative questions to the class is "Why do we believe in the Bible?" I usually get "theologically correct" responses like "Because it's the Word of God" (which is terribly tautological), and similarly formulated answers. I almost never get the answer I hope to get and so I almost always have to supply it: "Because of Jesus." If it weren't for Jesus, would any of us be here reading the Old Testament? Hardly. Jesus is the Magnet, the One who "will draw all people to Myself," the Door to our embrace of the God of Abraham and our fellowship with Him, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
"No one comes to the Father except through Me," and "No one can come to Me unless the Father draws him." This is the astounding and unapologetic claim of Christ, a claim borne out through the millenia, both experientially and in cold, hard, historical data. No one has brought the nations of the world to Yahweh except Jesus.

Saturday, October 2, 2021

Jonah 2

 Jonah 2


From inside the fish Jonah prayed to the Lord his God.
 He said:

“In my distress I called to the Lord,
    and he answered me.
From deep in the realm of the dead I called for help,
    and you listened to my cry.
You hurled me into the depths,
    into the very heart of the seas,
    and the currents swirled about me;
all your waves and breakers
    swept over me.
I said, ‘I have been banished
    from your sight;
yet I will look again
    toward your holy temple.’
The engulfing waters threatened me,
    the deep surrounded me;
    seaweed was wrapped around my head.
To the roots of the mountains I sank down;
    the earth beneath barred me in forever.
But you, Lord my God,
    brought my life up from the pit.

“When my life was ebbing away,
    I remembered you, Lord,
and my prayer rose to you,
    to your holy temple.

“Those who cling to worthless idols
    turn away from God’s love for them.
But I, with shouts of grateful praise,
    will sacrifice to you.
What I have vowed I will make good.
    I will say, ‘Salvation comes from the Lord.’”

10 And the Lord commanded the fish, and it vomited Jonah onto dry land.



Jonah fled from the presence of Yahveh. And in the fish's belly he cries out to God. 

To flee from God is to deceive oneself. It means that a person considers God as oshibayuschimsa. It's like saying to God, "You usually act correctly but in this instance you have erred. And I know better. And so, I will now run away for some time, and I will return after You have understood that I was right." 

This strategy does not work. 

Compare such an attitude to the words of Christ in Gethsemane, "Not my will but yours be done." 

I see two remarkable things here: Jonah cried out to God at that moment when he was in affliction, i.e., he wound up in what seemed affliction to him. 

For Jonah, it wasn't affliction while he was running from the word of God. Yet really he met his worse affliction precisely by running away. 

It's interesting that Jonah doesn't say, "I cried out to God when I was afraid to obey him." Jonah doesn't say to God, "I believe, help me in my unbelief!" Jonah doesn't say, like Peter, "Lord, though I cannot understand why you tell me this, all the same by your word I will do it." 

No, Jonah didn't say anything. There was no conversation! He simply ran away, like a runner who dashes at the sound of the starting pistol. 

And in all this he did not perceive his flight as an affliction, as spiritual trouble. Instead he perceived his flight as the resolution of a problem. 

In his view, this was the best way for everybody, even for God, which God would understand later. 

But later, Jonah did, finally, cry out to God. Why and when? He cried out when he fell into trouble from which there was no exit. 

And when that moment came, God didn't answer with the words, "Aha, you thought you'd manage everything better without Me, and therefore I will manage everything better without you." 

No. Instead, Jonah says, "I cried out the Lord, and He heard me."

Psalm 103:13-14:
13 As a father has compassion on his children,
    so the Lord has compassion on those who fear him;
14 for he knows how we are formed,
    he remembers that we are dust.


Isaiah 57:16: 
I will not accuse them forever,
    nor will I always be angry,
for then they would faint away because of me—
    the very people I have created.

From where did Jonah cry out? From the "belly of hell," i.e., from within death itself. Of that Jonah was sure. There was no escape, he was as good as dead. There he was deprived of all possibility to deliver himself. He could pay those sailors enough money so that they would let him board their ship. But the fish had no use for money. 

In that fish Jonah was deprived of every possibility to live, though he was living. He experiences, I would say, the closest thing to death itself without dying. And this speaks to us so powerfully about what Christ meant when He said: 

Matthew 12:40: 
For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of a huge fish, so the Son of Man will be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.

There is He Who, though yet living, experienced something even closer to death than what Jonah experienced. Yes, closer to hell itself. This is Christ on the cross. 

Jonah wound up in the belly of the fish by way of unbelief and disobedience. 

Jesus, God's Son, "wound up" on the cross by way of holiness, love, and supreme obedience. 

God in His condescension met Jonah there in the belly of the fish. Truly, the path of restoration for Jonah began as soon as the fish swallowed him. 

Yet for Christ, going through the agony of scourging and beating, and then the agony of crucifixion itself, this was only the beginning of sorrows; the sorrows compounded beyond our understanding right up to that moment when, like Jonah, Jesus also cried out to God, yet with infinitely different words:  "My God, my God, why have you forsaken Me?" 

Do you hear the deep paradox? The disobedient, unfaithful prophet cries out to God from the place of his punishment, and he says, "I cried out and the Lord heard me." But the sinless Lamb of God, whose obedience brought him to the cross, cries out that his God has forsaken him. 

Which demonstrates the magnificence of God in His grace, care, and condescension toward us. 

...For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of a huge fish, so the Son of Man will be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.  

The unbridgeable chasm between what Jonah experienced and what Christ experienced is summed up in that Jonah was saved from death, but Christ saved us BY the death from which His Father refused to save him--at least, refused to save Him until the death itself was realized. Oh yes, the Father did save Christ from death in an incomparable way. God didn't destroy the fish in order to save the pitiful prophet. In fact, the prophet was delivered from the fish not in the most tactful, tasteful way. But to save and justify His Son before the whole universe, the Father destroyed death itself. And this is the true explanation of why Christ's sufferings were incomparably greater than even the suffering of Jonah. Christ was paying what Jonah never had to pay. And that price exceeds all our imagination. 

More about this paradox, for Jonah, death inside that fish would indicate the end of all possibilities. Yet he didn't die in that wretched state; he was delivered by grace. 

But for Christ, the wretched, humiliating death was not forestalled or averted. Christ had to drink from the cup, to the very last dregs. That which only threatened Jonah was actually fully inflicted on Jesus. For that was the only way to create new possibility for us all. New possibility, new life, new hope and anticipation, for me, for you, yes, for poor Jonah! 

'...for he knows how we are formed,
    he remembers that we are dust.'

In conclusion, I will say this: we tend to look at Jonah as a pitiful example of the servants of God. When called, he ran away. Even after he, without any joy or alacrity, carried out what God had told him to do (and with remarkable success!), he pouted and resented God's mercy. And yet--think of this--Jonah was counted worthy to be a foreshadowing of Christ Himself. About how many other prophets, by name, did the Lord say that His own mission and calling was like that of that prophet? I can't remember any other except Jonah. Just imagine the unending joy that belongs particularly to this one reluctant prophet, that our gracious, condescending God made him, Jonah, a foreshadowing of the ultimate redemptive feat, when the Son of God would be in the belly of the earth for three days and then rise in glorious triumph over the greatest enemies of Mankind: sin and death. Such is the magnificent, ineffable, transcendent mercy of our God and Savior. 



Friday, October 1, 2021

Walking Away

Have you ever just "walked away"? Sometimes it's okay. I think of three very strange, even surreal instances in my life where I just walked away.

I was going home from work at the Bible college, back when we were in our old building, and I had to cross the road (a very busy avenue) to get to my bus stop on the other side. I caught the green light in time only to get to the middle of the road before it turned red. So I had to wait there, in that little "island" under the traffic light, for the green again. As I was standing there, funnily enough (you'll see why in a moment), I began whimsically reflecting on how, here in this little safe spot under the traffic light between the lanes of busy traffic running this way and that to the sides of me, it was like I was on an island, my protected little island where none of these hurtling piles of metal could touch me. Yes, it was quite funny, in the odd sense, that I happened to have that thought at just that moment, as it seems someone was intent on proving me wrong. Just as that thought flitted through my consciousness I noticed, in the lane I had just crossed, to my left, a car heading in my direction (of course, as all of them were), but this car didn't seem to know very clearly where the lane markings were. It was dusk, not terribly dark yet, but the cars had their lights on, which always makes it seem darker outside by comparison. Watching the oncoming traffic, in the glare of their headlights, it seemed like night. I fixed on this one car that, "if I didn't know better, I'd say was heading straight for me," as I thought at the moment. But of course that was silly. I wasn't standing in a lane. I was standing right in front of the traffic light and its cement base that came up to about thigh-level. There was nowhere further to go in my "lane" than smack into the base of the traffic light (and smack into me!). So of course my eyes must be playing tricks on me. I kept watching the oncoming car, thinking, "Yeah, a person could almost believe that car was heading straight for me....really, if I didn't know better I'd say he was about to plow right into me...you know, this is actually starting to worry me...waitaminnit, if that guy doesn't correct pronto he's GOING to hit me!" And with perhaps a quarter of a second to spare I leaped like a grasshopper out of the car's path (and into the other lane to my right, which God providentially saw to it had no cars coming along at just that second) and skittered over to the opposite sidewalk. In the process of skittering I heard a huge metallic-cement THUD. When I reached the other sidewalk I looked back and there was the car, smashed into the base of the pillar, right where I'd been standing. The car's interior was full of smoke. I stood, waited, watched. In a moment the driver got out, looking fine if annoyed. He checked the front of his car, then went for his phone. Never so much as blinked an eye in my direction. At which point it occurred to me that the best thing now was to walk away. He's fine, this has nothing to do with me at this point, and I'm fine, too, so...I walked away and got on the bus. Thinking, "Hm, well, well, well..." and "Thank you, God!"
Another time I was in an airport, can't remember which at the moment (ah, all the airports I've loved and left), waiting for the long flight over the Atlantic, returning to Ukraine. In the gate area a really weird disturbance commenced. A man was angry at his (I presume) wife and he was pursuing her around the waiting area, punching her whenever he could. Naturally this got everybody's attention. I noticed they were speaking Russian. So I strategically said, in Russian, "Let's call the police." That worked. The guy glared at me in shock and then ran off into the terminal. As there were no personnel yet at our gate a bunch of us went to the next gate and started telling a young man there what was going on. He prissily spluttered something ridiculous about "Why didn't you come tell us about this before?", to which I said, "It just happened and we're telling you NOW!" At that point the conversation was terminated by a ferocious scream right into the back of my neck. I swung around and it was that guy, with a maniacal rage in his face. Our eyes made an instant, intense contact, his face contorted in terror, he let out a chilling shriek and fell to the floor in convulsions. Yes, yes, I know what some of you are going to say, and perhaps what you'll say I ought to have done. Well, I can't say whether that would have been "the ticket" or not at just that moment. But what I did instead was...walk away. I saw a bunch of other people trying to control this guy, realized there was nothing else for me to do here, and quietly walked away. I did some browsing in the shops. A few minutes later I noticed that supercilious young man from the gate racing through the terminal spluttering, "Ohmygodohmygodohmygod." When I returned to my gate area a man there passed a comment that that guy was suffering mental problems. I replied, "Mental problems or whatever, all I knew was, I don't want THAT on OUR flight over the Atlantic." So, mission accomplished.
The other time I walked away was, in its own way, too, kind of surreal. And it was also in an airport. I was seated at one of those benches not right in the gate area but along the walls of the concourse. This was in Vienna. I had just dropped something, a coin maybe, and was kneeling down to pick it up, probably looking a bit like the absent-minded professor type, when I happened to glance up and instantly made direct eye-contact with a young lady heading my way. That kind of eye contact, you know, that says, "I just saw you seeing me seeing you." It's almost mystical how much info can be transmitted in that fleeting moment. In that contact I registered a gleam of cunningness and triumph, accompanied by a subtle self-satisfied smirk, that seemed to say, "You're my pigeon." The effect was only enhanced by her very cat-like eyes. At which point I inwardly replied, "Got that wrong, girl." Sure enough, she sat down right next to me, on a bench that could only accommodate two, "as if" she were just taking a rest...uncomfortably close to a total stranger when there were plenty of other places to sit. Right. Yeah. Okay, what's the game going to be? She sat and looked away from me, weirdly staring off into the distance, as if looking for somebody. As for me, I was gathering my things. And then she slowly turned her face towards me, as if slowly unveiling a work of art, to reveal a single tear coursing down her cheek. "Ah ha, check. You needed those 30 seconds to work up the tear. Well, I'm not interested in how this plot develops further, young lady." And, undramatically and drily, I got up and walked away.
There are times when you are beholden neither to Man nor God to see something through, when you are free to opt out, when the best thing for you to do is...something other than "this."

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Why Church?

 (This is a very literal translation/transcript of the sermon which can be viewed at the attached YouTube link. At the beginning I say hello, into the camera, to our church members who are at a family camp at the sea.) 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m0Zyb9WZ1sE

Hello to all of you there at the sea, by the sea. We miss you!

 

So. Two weeks ago I preached here. And it’s interesting that, that same evening, I was invited to preach in another church—well, let’s say, not so much to “preach” as much as to “share” informally, on a particular question. And about this question I decided, today, with you, to… “share”, also. 

 

Well, two weeks ago, if you remember, I asked the question, “Why the Ascension of Christ?” And I hope you remember that I meant, not "Why the event, Christ’s return to the Father, itself?” But I meant, “Why exactly the actual physical movement, the visible transit from ‘here’ to ‘there’?” And I hope that you remember what I said about this. And I hope that you considered my observations sufficiently grounded biblically speaking. 

 

Today I will ask another question, and precisely the question on which I was asked to talk in the church on the right bank. The question? “Why church?" So I’ve already asked “Why the ascension?” and here, “Why church?” And as I, two weeks ago, further clarified, narrowed, my question, I will also narrow my question today: I don’t mean “Why does the Church exist at all?” I am speaking in particular, or asking in particular, “Why does the church gather?” as we sometimes say, “I’m going to church,” right? I’m thinking about the church service, I’m thinking about the believers’ meeting. 

 

What’s the church gathering for? What are we coming together and spending time together for, the way we do? To what is it all oriented? 

 

And here there are of course biblical answers. Though they may not be the kind we expected. 

Let’s look right away at some places that offer us a glimpse, that let us peek into God’s design concerning the Church and its gatherings, starting with a very familiar place in the Bible, the Gospel of Matthew 18:20. “For where there are two or three gathered in my name, there am I among them.” 

 

Yes, Christ is always with us, always, as we read in the Great Commission, right, “I am with you to the end of the age,” He’s always with us wherever we are, including when we are alone, or when we are all together. But there is a unique and special dimension of fellowship, fellowship both with each other and with God, when we are all together, when Christ’s ‘nation’ (folk) gathers. Why? Why is there this special, unique dimension of fellowship with God and each other when we’re together? That’s a good question. I will say more about this later. 

 

But first let's look at something else the Lord says about his "folk." Again the Gospel of Matthew 16:18. “And I say to you, you are Peter. And on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell will not prevail against it.” 

 

This assertion does not of course relate in particular to the gatherings of God’s people as much as it relates to the Church’s very existence as a whole; that is, Christ is building His Church always, whether we’re together or not. He is ceaselessly building US, edifying us both individually and in connection with each other. Later I will underline the importance of this, i.e., of how our life as God’s Nation, wherever we are or whenever it is, that life that is not limited to our meetings, it’s that life in Christ that we live out in the world—it must make our gatherings—I’ll repeat: that life that we live out in the world, in Christ, it must make our meetings, when we’re together, all the fuller and richer and more beneficial. In short, if the spiritual condition of the believer depends 100% on the church meeting, he is exposed to deep danger. I’ll say more about that later. 

 

Well, I’ve already raised two or three matters about which "I will say more later." Before looking at them more detailedly, let’s ask today’s key question again: “What does the church gather for? What is the worship service for?” 

 

Someone will likely…one of you sitting here or one of you (watching online)…perhaps also sitting…will answer right away: “Well, brother Ken, this is very simple: to preach and worship! All of us know that already! At the church service we preach God’s Word and we worship. So, that’s it! Why ask such an elementary question?”

 

But in these two answers there are problematic elements, brothers and sisters. The problematic elements of these answers are rooted in assumptions, assumptions, in the first place, that the church gathers just for this (to preach and worship), and that this (to preach and worship) takes place only at the church service. These our problematic elements. In these assumption we observe concrete errors. 

 

To start with let’s talk about “worship,” okay? 

 

“Worship.” It’s the essential dimension, or let’s say aspect, of spiritual of life that cannot be reduced to just what we do in the church building. Worship is a way of life. Be it “in church,” be it at home or at work, wherever we might be. Study the Bible from beginning to end and you will find that “worship” has a very wide sense. Interestingly, in Hebrew, their verb “to worship”… “to worship God”… literally translates as “to work.” Like the way a person works for a company? “To work for God.” To work on His behalf. That is, by your way of life, to glorify Him—this is “worship.” In the wider sense. In essence it means a life glorifying God with its holiness, love, obedience, and faith. 

 

Do we worship God when we gather together as a church, when we pray, when we sing, and preach? Of course! Yes! But take note: we worship not because the church service is the God-appointed time precisely for worship, but rather because worship itself naturally characterizes our gathering just as it should characterize all of our life. We worship Him here, and we worship Him at home and we worship Him at work, we worship Him with our manner of life. So of course we worship Him here too, right? Worship isn’t actualized, so much, at the church service, as much as it permeates a life of worship. Ultimately it means manifesting just how much God means to me. That’s what worship means. It’s…to show…what God means to…us. It’s manifested in character, in words, in actions, in thought, in how we treat each other. That’s what a life of worship means. And such a life isn’t bounded by the church service but the other way around: the church service is part and parcel of such a way of life. The Bible never tells us to meet on Sunday so that there might be a possibility to worship God. But, sooner, what does the Bible tell us about worship? Romans 12:1—“And so I beg you, brothers, by the mercy of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing, to God, as your spiritual service of worship.” That’s a life of worship. 

 

And now, the second part of that answer in which there are problematic elements: “We gather to worship and preach.” A few words concerning “preaching.” I have already, here, in our church, preached about this, so I won’t repeat everything I said then. But I’ll try to convey the essence of it in a few words. It’s interesting that, if you pore through the whole New Testament, you won’t find, anywhere, even a single verse, where it says that we “preach” to believers. It’s not there! There doesn’t exist in the Bible, in God’s Word, a place where it says that we preach…to believers. But what does it say?  Concerning the gathering of believers? What do we engage in there? We teach! There’s the biblical word that is utilized concerning the gathering of believers: we teach.

 

We teach the way of faith, we teach a life of obedience to our Risen Savior, we help, we edify, we exhort, we comfort, we spur on, we affirm, we encourage, in every way we strive to…provoke believers on, ahead, to the fulfillment of their calling in Christ. That’s what we engage in among believers, among the “folk” of Christ. 

 

But in the New Testament the word “preach” has a very narrow meaning. In the Bible, “to preach” means “to proclaim the good news to unbelievers” so that they might hear, believe, and be saved. This is, you might say, the technical meaning, the biblical meaning, of this word. The narrow meaning. And, however surprising it might be, as I’ve already mentioned, you won’t find a place in the New Testament where it says that we do this, precisely this, with relation to other believers, because they’ve already believed—they’re already in Christ. 

 

But, brothers and sisters, you understand that here I’m not…agitating, of course, that we shouldn’t “preach” in church or that we should stop calling our (church) preaching “preaching.” No. It’s unrealistic. Even undesirable. For a few reasons. In the first place, among us are often found unbelievers, aren’t they? So they need to hear the Gospel. For them we, in the purely biblical sense, “preach.” The proclamation of the Gospel inescapably constitutes part of the teaching that resounds from the pulpit at the church service, for the sake of those who haven’t come to faith yet. And in the second place, to call preaching “preaching” is already so deeply imbedded in our tradition that it’s not worth fooling around with it. It’s just words. Let it be. 

 

But, brothers and sisters, nevertheless—assuming that we all want to understand God’s Word the best we can, right?—nevertheless it’s worth correctly understanding what exactly the word “preach” means in the Bible. And what it doesn’t mean. And most of all, to correctly estimate the critical role of TEACHING in the church, among the people of Christ. In point of fact, to teach is the key pastoral function in the church. This function is not bounded by the pulpit, not by the worship service, not even by words. To teach is the essence of the pastoral function in the life of the church. 

 

Let’s quickly look at the very first biblical description of church life after the day of Pentecost, okay? It’s Acts 2:44. And by the way, I am talking about all of this here, not because I assume that all of you don’t understand it. I’m talking about all of this because, in the first place, it’s worth undergirding such biblical facts, and, in the second place, I consider that, as a church, we are moving, praise God, in the right direction, and I’m saying all this in order to…affirm you, onward. 

 

2:44All the believers were together and had everything in common. 45 They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. 46 And every day [What did they do?] every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes [Why does he mention this? Just to show us that the believers of that time ate? Well, that goes without saying, we know perfectly well they ate! But they fellowshipped, in a new way! They became family to each other. Before this they never broke bread together in each other’s homes, they were alien to each other, but now they’ve become “our own” as it were—a new bond, a supernatural bond between them and not only on Sunday] and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, 47 praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.

 

Both here and in the epistles of the apostles we can see that the meeting of the church is, in the first place, appointed for the people of Christ, not for unbelievers. The assembly of believers is an assembly of believers, not unbelievers. I am not saying that unbelievers are not received hospitably and with alacrity into our company on Sunday--they are received, of course. But I am definitely saying that this is unbelievers, as guests, visiting a meeting of believers, and not the other way around: this is not believers, as guests, visiting a meeting of unbelievers. We maintain this principle. This is OUR gathering as believers. You understand the difference. Yes, we joyfully welcome unbelievers into our company, we want them to hear the Gospel—though not only here at the worship service; it’s not limited to that. But in the first place the church, as such, meets, gathers, as a family, as the body of Christ, in order to be edified, to teach, to encourage, to comfort, to counsel, to pray, to strengthen itself in the Lord, to praise God and concentrate together on what transcends and encompasses all other questions of life. That’s what our meeting is for. 

 

Ultimately, the church gathers for one very simple reason: the church is a family. What kind of family never gathers? I ask you. That's why it says in Hebrews 10:25.... 

 

“Let us not forsake the gathering of ourselves together, as is the practice of some. But we will keep exhorting one another, and all the more as you perceive the coming of that day.”

 

This desire to gather witnesses about to Whom we belong. It witnesses about the new life reborn in us by the grace of God through the saving feat of our Lord Jesus Christ.

 

What does a family do—I’m asking you—what does a family do when it gets together? When the relative have come over. What does the family do? Tell me. (Inviting responses. Someone says “they ‘fellowship,’” using a Russian word that broadly refers to being and interacting together; I push the listeners to be more specific:) But what is that ‘fellowship’ made up of? Tell me specifically, what do we do? (Repeating answers from the congregation…) Conversations, we eat, we laugh, do we ever cry? Yes we do. We share our experience. Yes, our problems. We pass on news. We communicate our plans—“You know what I’ve decided to do, you know I’ve decided to move”—“WHAT? Absolutely not!” Sometimes even we argue with each other. But it’s family! And, you see, this all relates to the church. 

 

Another question, a more complex question. That question was simpler, rather elementary, right? But here’s a harder question. More abstract. In what way is a family a family when they’re not together? For example, my parents are in Texas—we’re not together. Are they parents to me, or not? They’re not here, so how are they my parents? What does it mean? Each of us here has somebody in the family who is not here right now. Does that person remain a relative? A loved one? How? Tell me! 

 

(Responding to suggestions from the congregation….) We think about them…pray for them…we phone them, yes!...we worry about them…yes, this connection stays there even when they’re not there. And that’s what “church” means, too.  

The gathering and fellowship of God’s people should be merely the tip of the iceberg, the tip of the iceberg. You know that the tip of an iceberg, no matter how big it might be, is in fact the smallest part of the iceberg. You know that, yes? Under the water is located probably ten times more than we see. Well, the gathering of believers should be only just the tip of the iceberg, the tip of our spiritual lives. If we try to load the worship service with the whole significance and essence and depth and joy and aspiration of Christian life, the iceberg will flip upside-down. It’s just impossible! Moreover, if we make the church service our whole spiritual life, i.e., the whole iceberg, then the iceberg is hollow. It might be huge, but it’s hollow. 

Every member of the Body of Christ must live a life of worship, that is, a life glorifying God, outside of our meetings as well. And that will only enhance our gatherings together. It’s a life of service, a life of testimony in labor and devotion to Christ in the world. When our life in the world is like that, then our meetings, our fellowship and worship together as a church, become all the richer precisely because we bring here, to these meetings, our experience, our questions, our discoveries, our joys and sorrows, our worries and our testimonies about the Lord’s work in our lives. And having come together we share these things to learn from each other, fortify each other, and having been fortified to return to the battlefield. That’s why we gather. 

Yes, war happens to be a relevant metaphor here, doesn't it? "Family" is one good analogy, "war" is another good one. In war, all the soldiers are devoted to one cause. They are sent into battle, and after the battle they again gather to reconnoiter, that is, to find out how everything went, what the current situation is, how to deal with it, they receive new directions, food, medicines, support, and, most importantly, they all know that they are committed to the same goal and that they are pursuing it not only when they are together...not only when they are together. Some of them then go to the one battlefield, others to another, but in their hearts they are always together, striving for the same goal, committed to the same principle, always ready to come to eath other’s assistance. Our church meetings are like that. We gather to reconnoiter, to heal wounds, afford each other support, learn from each other, make plans for the battlefield. All of which presupposes that out there, outside these walls, we really do have a genuine life in Christ under the leading of the Holy Spirit.

I said earlier that I would return to a particular question. Let's read Matthew 18:20 again. “For where there are two or three gathered in my name, there am I among them.” Why? Why is God with us in a special way when we are together—we might even say, as He is not present when we are not together? Well, I’ll tell you my view. It think it’s because none of us can contain the manifold manifestation of the Spirit of God; we need each other so that the “image” of Christ, the manifold countenance of Christ, might be even more fully manifested through us together. We better register the multifaceted, infinite “face” of Christ through one another than when we are isolated. I cannot manifest all the facets of this holy “face” by myself. I see facets of this precious  “face” in you, and in you, and in you, of which I knew nothing before! And for me this is a revelation...a revelation…. We need one another so that the countenance of Christ might fully manifest itself through us together, might manifest itself from one to another, might reveal to us aspects and depths of the infinite beauty of Christ which we could never see in isolation. 

Each of us is finite. Even together we are finite. But at least together, in the Body of Christ, Christ is “with us” in a unique way , among us, that cannot be repeated in isolation from each other. None of us is capable by ourselves to manifest all the facets of the multifaceted grace of God the way they are manifested through the through the Body of Christ.

So, we will not abandon the gathering of the Church, but we will also not turn our gathering into an idol or magical spiritual pill. Coming together should be a desire, not a law; it should be a natural expression of our bond in Christ, not a religious ritual. This should be the tip of the iceberg of our spiritual life. It should be a desired, refreshing opportunity for “reconnaissance” like soldiers and inspiration of one another to go out again to the battlefield. The church's gathering must also be a special opportunity to ask the Lord to speak to us through each other, where we learn and edify each other,  just as I hope we learn from and edify each other during the week. This is what the apostle Paul meant when he wrote: (Ephesians 4:15-16) "...speaking the truth in love, we will grow to become in every respect the mature body of him who is the head, that is, Christ. From him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love, as each part does its work."