Thanks-Living: God’s Church
Romans 12: 1 – 8
Introduction
What do you have to be thankful for?
Hopefully, you were able to enjoy a little time off
from work this week and spend time with your family…and to give thanks to God
for all your blessings. Perhaps you gave
thanks to God for your life—because God not only created us, but also provides
for all our needs. Perhaps you gave
thanks to God for your freedom—because it is only by the Grace of God that we
live in the greatest nation in all the world.
Perhaps you gave thanks to God for the way God loves us—because God’s
love is based on his character as the God of Love and not because we deserve to
be loved by God. But what about your
church? In your list of all the things
you are thankful for, does your church rank high enough to stop and say thanks
to God for your church?
Several years ago—when I was pastor in Mississippi—I
had an interesting conversation with a woman in our church. I had just moderated a church business
meeting, and there was a close vote on what I thought was a fairly
insignificant matter. This woman had
voted against the motion and found herself in the minority. She came to me after the business meeting and
said, “This is MY church. I have been a
member of this church longer than anyone else.
Mr. So-and-So is older than I am, but he served in World War 2 and
wasn’t in this church. Mrs. So-and-So is
older than I am, but she went to college and was away for four years. This is MY church, and I don’t like these new
comers coming in to MY church and telling me what to do in MY church.” (Incidentally, at the time she said this to
me, the new comers had been members of that church for 21 years!)
Perhaps it is a little late for me to ask this
question, since I have been here for over six years… But, who exactly owns THIS church? Does the church belong to the pastor? Does the church belong to the deacons? Does the church belong to one prominent
family? Does the church belong to a
woman who never served in the military and didn’t go off to college?
I think we can find an answer to that question in
the Bible… In Matthew 16, Jesus asked
his disciples what other people were saying about Jesus. They said that some thought Jesus was John
the Baptist, Elijah, Jeremiah, or one of the other Old Testament prophets come
back to life. Then, Jesus asked what the
disciples thought about Jesus. Peter
answered for all the disciples by saying:
Matthew 16: 16 – 18… “16 Simon
Peter answered, ‘You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.’ 17 Jesus
replied, ‘Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you
by man, but by my Father in heaven. 18 And
I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church,
and the gates of Hades will not overcome it.’”
According to Jesus, this church belongs to
Jesus! We each have roles to play and
responsibilities to fulfill. But, only
Jesus can build the church and grow the church.
The best thing we can do is to trust Jesus with the future of this
church and allow Jesus to be the ultimate leader…to follow him prayerfully and
to do the kinds of mission and ministry Jesus modeled for us.
And this is one of the things I am most proud about
this church. We have been involved in
missions for 129 years. We support
missions financially, and we send our church members out as missionaries—short-term
missions as well as career missionaries who have come out of this church. We have planted 12 mission churches in Lufkin
alone and helped to revitalize several struggling churches.
But…Right now, it seems that we are having an
attendance problem. It gets frustrating
for me to stand up here and preach to empty pews. One way to interpret that is to think people
are not happy with the church right now.
After all, that’s the way Baptists let you know they aren’t happy—they
stop coming to church and stop giving.
So, we did some investigating.
First, our giving is not down this year. It is actually up from the previous
years. Tithes and offerings from January
through October 2012 are about $50,000 more than January through October 2011. And, if our tithes and offerings in November
and December 2012 are equal to tithes and offerings in November and December
2011, we will finish the year with a small budget surplus. People are not withholding their offerings.
Second, we counted the number of people who attended
church at least one time in September and October. We discovered that there were over 100 people
who came to church only once or twice during those eight weeks. I think we have four different churches
meeting here at First Baptist Church. We
have the first Sunday church; the second Sunday church; the third Sunday
church; and the fourth Sunday church.
Our biggest problem is that people have stopped
coming to church…At least people have stopped coming more than one Sunday per
month.
Is it enough to come to church one Sunday per
month? I suppose that depends on what
you believe about the church! Let’s look
at one of the places where the Apostle Paul teaches us that the church is the
Body of Christ.
Romans
12: 1 – 8
1 Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God—this is your spiritual act of worship. 2 Do not conform (be conformed) any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.
3 For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you. 4 Just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, 5 so in Christ we who are many form one body, and each member belongs to all the others. 6 We have different gifts, according to the grace given us. If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his (the) faith. 7 If it is serving, let him serve; if it is teaching, let him teach; 8 if it is encouraging, let him encourage; if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him give generously; if it is leadership, let him govern diligently; if it is showing mercy, let him do it cheerfully.
In this short passage, Paul used the word “body” to
refer to two different things.
In Romans 12: 1, Paul
tells his readers to offer their Bodies as living
sacrifices. Notice how Paul uses the
plural form of the word Body.
This plural form tells me that Paul is speaking to a group of people but
he is giving us individual advice. In
other words, Romans 12: 1 – 2 describes something that every man and every
woman must do for himself or herself…Give your life to God daily as a sacrifice. Resist the ways the world tries to conform
you into its mold and image. Instead,
allow God to transform your body and use your body for his purposes
in the world.
Then,
in Romans 12: 4 – 5, Paul switches from the plural Bodies
to the singular Body. I believe he is also switching from individual
instructions to many different individual men and women to corporate
instructions to one church—one Body of believers. He teaches us that just as each of us has one
human Body with many members, in Christ we who are many form one
corporate Body. This corporate Body
is the church, and the church functions just like an individual human Body. When all the parts of the Body are
healthy, the whole Body is healthy.
When all parts of the Body are working together, the Body
will be successful. When one part of the
Body is unhealthy or competing against the other members, the church
cannot be all God intends us to be.
By using the same word in
each of these sections, I think Paul was trying to communicate that Christians
are supposed to have both an INDIVIDUAL life with Christ as well as a CORPORATE
life with Christ’s people. I believe
there is a very simple message in this…Take your BODY and become a part
of the BODY of Christ. In other
words… Take your BODY to church.
This same message shows
up in other places in the Bible as well…
Exodus 20:
8…Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy…
Matthew 18:
20…For where two or three come together in my name, there I am with them…
Hebrews 10:
25…Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but
let us encourage one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching…
Two
Extreme Views of Church
Again…How important is it for people to go to
church? There are two extreme answers to
this question.
On one extreme we find the people who say, I
don’t need the church!
There are some people who say, I don’t need the
church, because I have something better that takes the place of church…Usually,
these people are members of a Bible Study group or some parachurch organization
that they think better serves their spiritual needs than the church is capable
of doing. To these people I would
respond that they need to remember the 4th commandment in Exodus 20:
8, Remember the Sabbath Day by keeping it holy…
There are some who say, I don’t need the church,
because I can worship God better in a deer stand, on a creek bank or on the
golf course…To these people I would respond that they need to take note of
Jesus’ words in Matthew 18: 20, Where two or three are gathered in my name,
there I am with them…Jesus clearly teaches us two things about worship…We
need to worship in a group of more than one…And we need to gather in the name
of Jesus—Deer stand, creek bank and golf course do not fit Jesus’ description…
Then, there are some who say, I don’t need the
church, because I do not believe in organized religion…To these people I
would respond that I have been in ministry since 1991 and served in several
churches as youth minister, college minister and pastor…After 20 years of
experience, I’m not sure I believe in organized religion either…I believe in
disorganized religion!
Seriously, I would remind these people to read
Hebrews 10: 25, Do not give up meeting together…Togetherness is an
important part of church, and you cannot get a feeling of togetherness by
watching church on TV, the Internet or by jumping from one church to the next
church to the next church…
This past week, I visited with three of our
homebound members. These three ladies
are all over 90—actually one is 103—and are no longer physically able to attend
church. All three of them told me the
same thing. “Andy, I just can’t explain
to you how much I miss going to church.”
As far as I know, each of them is able to watch our
video recordings of our worship services and have people from our church call
or visit them nearly every week. But,
for them, it is just not the same thing as attending worship and Sunday School
as a part of the Body of Christ. It’s
not the same as being able to greet other people by shaking hands or hugging
necks as an expression of Christian community.
This is why I still believe church is
important! (Even if the church is not
“organized religion.”) We are better
together than we are separated. We are stronger
in our faith and our mission when everyone is here for worship, Bible Study,
fellowship and community. Then, we can
go out individually to make a difference in our own circles of influence.
On the other extreme we find the people who say, You
cannot go to Heaven if you don’t go to church!
In church history this position was stated most
clearly in the year 249, by Cyprian Bishop of Carthage. (Now, that is Carthage as in North Africa and
not Carthage as in East Texas.) Cyprian
was famous for two things. As Bishop of
Carthage, he claimed to have as much authority as the Bishop of Rome. In other words, he challenged the authority
of the Pope. When he challenged the
Pope, Cyprian claimed to have the same ability to grant salvation as did the
Pope. That led to Cyprian’s famous statement,
There is no salvation outside of the church!
There are still some modern-day Catholics and some
entire Protestant denominations that teach the same thing today. If you are not a member of their church, you
are not saved. And even then, you had
better remain in good standing with their church if you don’t want to lose your
salvation.
To these people I would respond that Romans 12
teaches something entirely different. Romans
12: 1 teaches us that we are saved as individual bodies with no reference
to the church. But Romans 12: 3 – 8 teaches us that the service and ministry God
calls each Christian to perform must take place as part of the church as the
Body of Christ…
Conclusion
The best way I know to describe the proper
relationship between individual Christians and the church is to describe the
church as the Body of Christ and an interdependent relationship. You need the church…And, the church needs
you.
The church is the place where you and I are supposed
to exercise our God-given gifts together in community and fellowship with other
Christians. And, the church cannot function
as the Body of Christ without all our members working together.
Years ago, when that lady in Mississippi told me it
was HER church, I thought it was very selfish for Christian folks to think of
church as MY church. I think I have a
little different perspective today. Now,
I wish we had more people who took such a personal interest in the church. I wish we had more people who thought
Lufkin’s First Baptist Church was MY church.
That’s MY church, and I want to support MY church
with my time, talents and treasure.
That’s MY church, and I want to do everything in my
power to make it a better church.
That’s MY church, and they need me.