The Last Reformation eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 191 pages of information about The Last Reformation.

The Last Reformation eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 191 pages of information about The Last Reformation.

None of these forms of government represent the New Testament church.  The organization and government of that church was based upon the charisma, or divine gifts and callings, of individuals composing the church.  The power and authority of an apostle or of an evangelist, for example, did not rest upon any selection or appointment made by men.  The church did not act in a corporate capacity and confer ecclesiastical power and authority upon any one.  All such power and authority came direct from God through the Holy Spirit, and it was in God’s name and by his authority alone that they acted.  The organization of the church was therefore charismatic.  If, for example, the gifts of an apostle were conferred by the Holy Spirit upon an individual, he possessed apostolic responsibility and authority.  The brethren recognized such gifts when these were evident, and submitted themselves voluntarily to such spiritual leadership and oversight; for at this period there had not been developed that ecclesiastical system by which human election and appointment gave positions and authority to men.  In fact, we shall clearly show later that the true church can not be legally organized.  Every attempt of men to assume the reins of authority and give governmental form and administrative direction to the church has been denominational and sectarian.

[Sidenote:  Ordination]

The true church was the whole family of God directed by his Holy Spirit.  Ministerial appointment, with its authority and responsibility, was therefore divine.  We have seen that through the spiritual operation called the new birth, one became a member of Christ, and hence by divine right belonged to whichever congregation of the church he might be able to associate with; but that in practical experience, such local membership involved recognition on the part of the other members.  So it was with the divine appointment to the ministry.  The only other essential to its practical operation was simply recognition of that call.  Such recognition, in the last analysis, belonged to the whole church (1 Tim. 3:  2-7; Tit. 1:  6-9), but was given formally by the laying on of the hands of the presbytery.

[Sidenote:  Plurality of local elders]

The development of ministers in an apostolic church was a divine, natural process, the inevitable result of the emphasis placed on the gifts and callings of the Spirit.  This free exercise of the Spirit’s gifts working in the members doubtless accounts for the plurality of ruling elders found in those local churches.  See Acts 14:23; 20:17; Phil. 1:1; 1 Tim. 5:16, 17; Tit. 1:5.  It could not be otherwise as long as the churches were Spirit-filled, working congregations and the Spirit of God had his way.  The system that limited local church government to a one-man rule originated in the apostasy, after the gifts of the Spirit had died out.  It is simply one part of that great system of human organization that developed the full-grown papacy.  Of this we shall learn more hereafter.

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The Last Reformation from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.