The Marks of the True Church
Homer Hoeksema
To gain the proper perspective with respect to our
subject, we must go back in our thoughts to Old Testament days. You will
recall that in the land of the captivity in the days of Darius the Mede
the enemies of Daniel persuaded the king to issue a decree that no one,
for a period of thirty days, should ask anything of any god or man,
except of the king. In that connection we read that when Daniel knew of
the king's decree, he deliberately went to his house and prayed three
times daily with his windows open toward Jerusalem, even as he did
aforetime (Daniel
6:4-10).
What motivated Daniel?
The answer is undoubtedly expressed in the song of
the captives, Psalm
137:5, 6: "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand
forget her cunning. If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to
the roof of my mouth; if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief
joy." That was Daniel's faith. He lived by this faith, so that he
was ready even to die for it, as became evident when he allowed himself
to be cast into the den of lions.
The situation of the child of God in the twentieth
century is indeed different than was Daniel's. It is much more
complicated. Then there was only one place in all the world where God's
people could properly serve Him. Zion in that day was limited to the
land of Canaan and the city of Jerusalem and Mount Zion. Today that is
different. The church of Jesus Christ has broken through its national
boundaries and is established throughout the world. Besides, there is
the complication that there are many who claim to represent that church
and who go by the name of that church and who claim as the church to
proclaim the gospel and to administer the sacraments in the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ. It does not require much insight, therefore, to
discern that the situation is far more complex today.
But while the situation is different, the principle
remains the same.
If things are spiritually right with God's people, if
they live from faith and according to the standard of the Word of God,
then the driving impulse of their life is the same as that of Daniel. It
is faith's urge to seek Zion, the true church. Moreover, as it was with
Daniel, so it will be with God's people today: if that is the driving
urge of their life, then no sacrifice will be so great as to keep them
from following that impulse.
The True And The False Church
In order to understand the meaning and importance of
the marks of the church it is necessary to understand what is
meant by the church which is distinguished and distinguishable by
those marks. And while it is impossible to make a complete and detailed
study of this important Scriptural idea within the limits of this
pamphlet, it is important to note the following points in this
connection:
1) It must be emphasized that it is the will of
Christ that His body, the one, holy, catholic church, shall become
manifest in the midst of the world as the gathering of believers and
their seed. The holy catholic church is not some vague, spiritual
abstraction which has no manifestation here on earth; but it becomes manifest,
and it does so as the gathering of believers and their seed. This
has been true both in the old and in the new dispensations. The church
became manifest in Israel of the old dispensation; and the church became
manifest in the various congregations which were established in
apostolic times and which are addressed in the epistles as "the
church." This truth is confessed by Reformed churches in our Confession
of Faith, Articles 27 and 28.
2) Christ Himself instituted His church on earth and
gave her the ministry of the Word, gave her, in fact, all the offices
and their functions. Thus, for example, Ephesians
4:11 teaches us that Christ "gave some, apostles; and some,
prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers."
The same is true of the offices of elder and deacon in the church. This
work of Christ has as its purpose the perfecting of the saints, the
edifying, upbuilding, of His body. Christ, therefore, has thus
instituted His church in order that His church, from the beginning to
the end of the world, might continue to be gathered out of the whole
human race by His Spirit and Word.
Let us bear in mind that when we speak of the marks
of the church. we refer to the church from this point of view, that is,
to the church as it is instituted by Christ and becomes manifest
as an institution through its offices and through the functions of those
offices in an organized local congregation, a certain local
manifestation of the body of Christ on earth. If we keep this in mind,
it will avoid the confusion and misunderstanding which frequently arises
in connection with the subject of the true and the false church. The
subject under discussion is not the marks of the true believer, the
marks of the Christian. Neither is the claim of the true church in the
world the claim that it is perfect, or the claim that it consists only
of regenerated people of God, only of true believers, or that outside of
a given congregation or denomination there are no elect people of God.
This is not the question. But we confront this question: where is the
church of Jesus Christ in this world from the point of view of its institution?
Where is it that the Lord Jesus Christ, the Head of His church, has instituted
that church? Where are the God-ordained offices and officebearers?
Where does it please Christ as the office-bearer in the house of
God to function and to bless and to gather His church? The church is
manifest here in the world; it can be recognized and found and joined.
And not all churches who claim to be the manifestation of that
church are that church, or are so in purity.
3) Thirdly, there is at the basis of our subject the
truth that it is the sacred duty of everyone to join himself to the true
church. This is stated very succinctly in our Confession of Faith,
Article 28, which we quote:
"We believe, since this holy congregation is
an assembly of those who are saved, and that out of it there is no
salvation, that no person of whatsoever state or condition he may
be, ought to withdraw himself, to live in a separate state from it;
but that all men are in duty bound to join and unite themselves with
it; maintaining the unity of the Church; submitting themselves to
the doctrine and discipline thereof; bowing their necks under the
yoke of Jesus Christ; and as mutual members of the same body,
serving to the edification of the brethren, according to the talents
God has given them. And that this may be the more effectually
observed, it is the duty of all believers, according to the word of
God, to separate themselves from all those who do not belong to the
Church, and to join themselves to this congregation, wheresoever God
hath established it, even though the magistrates and edicts of
princes were against it, yea, though they should suffer death or any
other corporal punishment. Therefore all those who separate
themselves from the same, or do not join themselves to it, act
contrary to the ordinance of God."
Here the calling of the child of God is very clearly
stated. It is the will of Christ that the believer willingly submit
himself to the instruction and oversight and government of that church
of Jesus Christ as instituted in the midst of the world, wheresoever
it may be. That is for his spiritual welfare and well-being and
salvation. The child of God, therefore, certainly will not take his
church membership lightly. He certainly will not be numbered among those
who can change their church membership almost as easily as they can
change their clothes. If he is a serious-minded child of God, he will
not separate himself from that church for any earthly or carnal
considerations, no matter what they may be. This lies in the very nature
of his spiritual life. He is a member of the spiritual body of Christ.
He is not saved as a mere individual, but as a member of Christ's body.
He lives his new life not as an individual in isolation from all other
regenerated children of God, but only as a member of the body. He
possesses and enjoys and lives his life only in the body and thus in
connection with the Head, Christ. Even as the church of Christ is not a
mere mass of members, but a body, so that church lives, and all the
members live, only as a body and members, and, as members in the body in
connection with the Head. With all believers, therefore, the child of
God confesses one Lord; with all believers he partakes of one Spirit;
with all believers he shares a common faith in that one Lord. And for
that reason it is the urge of his regenerated heart, the impulse of his
new life, to seek and to join himself to the true church and to realize
concretely, in as far as that is possible in this present world, the
fellowship of believers. He belongs there. He cannot live alone. His
life is a communal life.
4) There is a factor which complicates the situation
very seriously, however; and that factor is the presence and development
in this present world of the false church. From an historical point of
view, this development is due to the imperfection of the church as long
as it exists in the midst of the world. One element in that imperfection
is the fact that the carnal seed continues in the course of history to
arise from within the church, to arise (just as the spiritual seed
arises) out of the generations of believers. The line of election and
reprobation cuts across the generations of the people of God. A second
element is the fact that believers themselves are not perfect, but have
only a small beginning of the new obedience. They all still have in them
the old man of sin. And in connection with this imperfection, the church
is open to all kinds of evil influences from the world round about it.
From that point of view, you can say in a sense that the position of the
church in this present world is precarious. God wants His church
to exist in the world, but not of the world. And because
the church is itself imperfect, and because it exists squarely in the
midst of the world, the church as it becomes manifest here in the world
in any given congregation is open to influences from that world. It is
open to the influence of the philosophy of this world, of the thinking
of this world, of the striving of this world, open, too, to all kinds of
influences which we may classify under the heading of
"allurements" - allurements to leave its position of spiritual
isolation, to abandon its position as the holy church, and to
make common cause with the wicked world.
As a result, there is throughout history a continual
development. The true church manifests itself in the midst of the world.
But always - because of the imperfection just mentioned - there is at
the same time a development away from the truth, away from the calling
of the church, a development in the direction of the wicked world, in
the direction of vain and humanistic philosophy. Thus arises the false
church, the pseudo-church. Besides, there is movement in history toward
the goal of the end, the end of all things! And as far as the false
church is concerned, this means that there is development toward the
goal of the final, ultimate manifestation of that false church which is
pictured to us in the Book of Revelation under the symbolism of the
great whore, who is allied with the antichristian kingdom. There is
development toward the ultimate realization of the antithesis, toward
the realization of that situation when all of history must needs come to
an end, when the false church has completely served the purpose of the
manifestation of the sinfulness of sin, and when the situation of the
faithful church in the midst of the world has become impossible, so that
it is not able any longer to exist in the world: development toward the
day of the coming of the Lord!
Thus, there is, in principle, an absolute cleavage
between the true and the false church. We may notice, too, that our Confession
of Faith speaks of this cleavage in such "either-or"
terms: the true church and the false church!
Further, there is between those two, the true church
and the false church, a continual movement from the true toward the
false. Churches, as everyone will realize, do not become completely
false all at once. On the contrary, the completely false church, the
church of which it cannot be said at all that Christ is present in it,
is the product of a process. There is a gradual weaning away from
the truth, a gradual increase of the power and influence of the lie and
false doctrine, until finally a certain church becomes completely false.
The practical result of this process of development is the situation in
which the child of God finds in the midst of the world not merely two
churches, a completely true church and a completely false church.
Rather, speaking practically, there are between those two many
gradations, so that it is possible and proper to speak of the purest, of
varying degrees of less pure churches, and of the completely false.
Yet we must be cautioned that in this situation the
child of God must conduct himself in accord with the principle of the absolute
cleavage which we noted earlier. In the light of this principle,
there is always either a movement toward the true church or a moving in
the direction of the false church. The question, therefore, from a
practical, spiritual point of view is, to put it bluntly, not this: can
and may I "get away with" belonging to a church which is less
pure, rather than to the purest manifestation of the body of Christ in
the world? Such a question bespeaks deeply unspiritual attitude toward
the holy, catholic church. But the question is: how and where must and
can the believer seek and join himself to the true church?
As was suggested earlier, this question has become
especially complicated since the time of the Reformation of the
sixteenth century. Not only are there all kinds of churches in the world
which differ from one another in various natural respects: churches
which differ as far as their national origin is concerned, which differ
as to race and color, as to language, as to geographical location.
Things of this kind, after all, do not affect the spiritual nature of
the church. But there are also hundreds and even thousands of churches
which differ as to the essentials: they differ as to doctrine, as to
confession, as to government, as to worship and liturgy, as to the
sacraments, as to discipline. And in that mass of different churches you
find a vast difference of degree. There are those, of course, who openly
repudiate the Scriptures and who have long ago abandoned the Word of God
completely, who deny the very fundamentals of the faith, such as the
Trinity, the incarnation, the atonement, the resurrection Christ, etc.
Practically speaking, such churches present no problem for the believer
and his church membership. The life of regeneration simply cannot exist
there, cannot find fellowship and sustenance there. Why not? Because
Christ is not there!
The problem, however, becomes more complicated when
we confront the many different kinds of churches who claim to hold - and
to a degree do hold - to what are called the fundamentals, but who are
nevertheless divided as to many important doctrines. They are divided,
for example, as to the truth of predestination, divided with respect to
the atonement, divided with respect to the doctrine of the Lord's
return; or they may differ sharply with respect to the sacraments or the
exercise of Christian discipline. Or, to make the problem more specific,
there are the several churches which belong, broadly speaking, to the
Reformed community, but who differ greatly and who are sharply divided.
It is at this point that the question comes into
focus: where is the church? Where is the true church, to which I, as a
believer, am called before God to join myself? And if it is anywhere -
and it is - how can that true church be recognized? How can it be known?
The question, therefore, for any serious-minded child of God, is not
just an abstract, doctrinal question, but a very really practical,
spiritual one. Where is the church? Where must I be joined as a member
of Christ's church on earth?
The Distinguishing Marks
We may mention three commonly given answers to this
question which will lead one inevitably to move toward and to serve in
the cause of the false church.
The first is the answer of the ecumenicist. He
wants to forget about ecclesiastical and denominational differences. The
walls of separation must be broken down, he claims. Churches must unite
on a broad platform. Once you start down that path, of course, there is
no stopping. Nor do those who take this position want to stop! They want
to go right on, until they have achieved the world-church. And remember:
the world-church is the great whore of Revelation
17! It is, of course, impossible for the child of God who takes his
confession seriously to assume this attitude.
The second is the answer of the traditionalist. He
takes the stand that the church in which he was born and baptized, the
church to which his parents belonged, is for him the church. And
frequently his attitude becomes one of "my church, right or
wrong." He holds to that church slavishly, trusts in it, frequently
maintains that it cannot err. He puts his trust in an institution of
men. Or he may simply be personally unconcerned about the course his
church follows, leaving it to the "leaders" to chart that
course, while he ignorantly and rather apathetically follows. This is an
attitude which is fundamentally idolatry. It is both erroneous and
dangerous, and that, too, not only for one's self, but for his children
and children's children. Any particular church in the midst of the world
is able to err, and even to become wholly corrupt! It is able to become
like the church of Laodicea in Revelation
4. Jerusalem can become in the process of history spiritually like
Babylon or like Sodom and Gomorrah. This is precisely what happens, in
fact, when in the process of time the false church develops.
A third answer is that of indifferentism. After
all, the indifferentist says, it does not really make any great
difference what one believes. We all believe in the same God and the
same Christ; and we are all going to the same heaven. And our salvation
does not depend upon what church we belong to; people in all churches
will be saved. And in this day of the social gospel, the indifferentist
likes to stress, besides, that it isn't so much a question of what you
believe, but of how you live! But we should remember, in the first
place, that ultimately our salvation does indeed become involved. You
and I cannot deny the faith and be saved! Our Confession of Faith
stresses this too: outside of the holy congregation which is an assembly
of those who are saved there is no salvation. Secondly, from a
spiritual point of view this attitude of indifferentism (which
frequently manifests itself as bitter intolerance toward those who
desire to be faithful to the Word of God) betrays an altogether wrong
approach. It is not the attitude expressed in the words of Psalm
137 which were quoted at the beginning of this pamphlet, but a
selfish attitude, concerned only about one's individual salvation and
about how little Christianity is necessary for that salvation - not
concerned about the church, about the truth, about the cause of Christ
and the glory of God. In the third place, it is frequently exactly such
neglectful indifference which more than anything else helps in the
direction of the false church. When people do not care, when a church is
not on guard, then the way is open for false prophets to introduce all
kinds of error into the church with impunity, and thus to lead the
church in the wrong direction.
The Reformed and Scriptural answer to this question
is furnished in Article 29 of our Confession of Faith. It is the
bounden duty of the believer to join himself to the true church; and
there are three marks by which that true church is recognizable. Those
marks are described in our Confession as follows:
"The marks by which the true Church is known
are these: if the pure doctrine of the gospel is preached therein;
if she maintains the pure administration of the sacraments as
instituted by Christ; if church discipline is exercised in punishing
of sin: in short, if all things are managed according to the pure
Word of God, all things contrary thereto rejected, and Jesus Christ
acknowledged as the only Head of the Church. Hereby the true Church
may certainly be known, from which no man has a right to separate
himself."
A few explanatory remarks are in order.
In the first place, we should notice that in a sense
all three marks are comprehended in the first mark. The sacraments and
Christian discipline have no meaning without the preaching of the Word.
The sacraments depend on the Word because the sacraments do nothing else
than represent and seal visibly and tangibly that which is set forth in
the Word. And Christian discipline depends on the Word because the very
content and power of Christian discipline is the Word of Christ.
Besides, the preaching of the Word is chief because where the Word is
purely preached, there neither the sacraments nor Christian discipline
will very readily be corrupted. There is instruction; there the will of
Christ is made known; there the truth is proclaimed. And where this is
done, the sacraments are not likely to be profaned, nor Christian
discipline neglected. Principally, therefore, we may reduce these three
marks to the one, all-important mark: of the preaching of the Word. And
we may say that where the Word is preached, there is Christ and His
church. Where the Word is not preached, there the church is not present
and there Christ is not. And where that Word is adulterated in the
preaching, there the church is faced by the alternative of either
repenting or dying!
In the second place, notice how our Confession
describes that first mark, in language which is almost strange in our
day: "If the pure doctrine of the gospel is preached." This
emphasizes that the very structure of the gospel is doctrine, teachings.
The true church is not characterized by the preaching of a
"thumb-nail" gospel. It is not marked by preaching which is in
a broad and loose sense evangelical -- whatever that may mean -- or
evangelistic in the popular "soul-saving" and crusade sense.
It preaches the pure doctrine of the gospel. Lose that, and you
lose the gospel! And lose the gospel of the Scriptures out of the
preaching, and the preaching has lost its fundamental character. We must
not have mere preaching, as to form. We must not only have some
doctrine. We must have the doctrine of the gospel, and that, too,
the pure doctrine of the gospel. Preaching is basically
exposition of the Word of God, proclamation of the whole counsel of God
according to the Scriptures.
In the third place, we can only rightly understand
and apply these marks when we understand that they are fundamentally
antithetical. That is, we must consider them and apply them in the light
of what are the marks of the false church. Of this Article 29 speaks
also:
"As for the false Church, she ascribes more
power and authority to herself and her ordinances than to the Word
of God, and will not submit herself to the yoke of Christ. Neither
does she administer the sacraments as appointed by Christ in his
Word, but adds to and takes from them as she thinks proper; she
relieth more upon men than upon Christ; and persecutes those who
live holily according to the Word of God and rebuke her for her
errors, covetousness, and idolatry."
In other words, the basic, either-or issue is: the
Word of Christ or the word of man!
The reason why these are the marks is connected with
the very nature of the church. The church is built upon the foundation
of the apostles and prophets, of which Jesus Christ is the chief
cornerstone. There simply is no other foundation possible -- not for the
true church! If the church is to be built, it must be built on that
foundation. And whoever proclaims anything else than the pure doctrine
of the gospel is not building upon that foundation; he builds on another
foundation, and he builds a mere human institution. It pleases Christ to
call and to build His church through the preaching of the Word. Men may
raise all kinds of objections against preaching and against sermons --
as they do nowadays. They may devise various glamorous substitutes for
the preaching of the pure doctrine of the gospel. The fact remains that
it pleases Christ to gather His church through the preaching of the
Word! You can never change that! Where the Word is preached, there is
Christ; there is the voice of the Good Shepherd; there the sheep hear
His voice; there they follow Him; there He gives them eternal life!
Don't ever forget that! For remember: the church needs Christ! It
is only in living connection with that Christ that the church is the
church, and that the members possess the life of Christ. And the only
contact which we have with Christ as long as we are in this present
world is through His Word (not man's word), through His sacraments,
and through His government and discipline. Where these are
missing, Christ is missing. Where they are corrupted and to the extent
that they are corrupted, there I am being separated from contact with
Christ my Head! This is the life-and-death seriousness of this entire
question of the marks of the true church!
A Matter Of Easy Discernment
While the believer today faces a complex
ecclesiastical scene, the difference between the true and the false
church is nevertheless a matter of easy discernment. Our Confession
of Faith emphasizes this: "Hereby the true Church may certainly
be known, from which no man has a right to separate himself." And
again: "These two Churches (that is, the true and the false, H.C.H.)
are easily known and distinguished from each other."
Why is this true?
In the first place, it is true because God has given
us a clear and infallible standard by which the true church can be known
and distinguished. That standard is the Word of God. That Word of God is
perspicuous, clear, so that the simplest child of God can understand and
discern the truth of the gospel. In the light of that Word the simplest
child of God can discern the truth from the lie. That Word of God is
unambiguous: it is not capable of two meanings. It does not teach, for
example, that God loves all men and that He does not love all men, or
that Christ died for all men and that He died only for His elect. God's
Word is clear, crystal clear, as to the truth and the lie. This is the
objective reason why it is possible to distinguish when a church begins
to depart in the direction of the false church, and why it is possible
to discern when that primary mark of the preaching of the pure doctrine
of the gospel is corrupted. We have an infallible, objective guide! And
the second, subjective reason is that every believer, as a member of the
body of Christ, has the Spirit, the Spirit of Christ, the Spirit of the
church, the Spirit of truth, the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the
Spirit of discernment. By that Spirit and in the light of His Word he
may view the ecclesiastical scene today and may easily discern the true
from the false church.
Judged in the light of these marks, that
ecclesiastical scene today is, negatively, one of appalling apostasy.
One need not look far afield to notice this. Look at the Reformed scene,
at those who are generally classified as belonging yet to the tradition
of the Reformation. There is tremendous doctrinal apostasy, frequently
under the guise of theological freedom: all kinds of error is
increasingly tolerated and allowed to go unpunished and unrebuked, while
what has always been the faith of our fathers is lightly set aside.
There is apostasy as to the preaching: preaching as proclamation of the
pure doctrine of the gospel, expository preaching, has largely become a
rare article. Topical preaching, moralism, the social gospel are the
replacements. Besides, people become tired of preaching and busy
themselves with devising new and glamorous substitutes for the simple
and pure preaching of the Word of God -- hippy services, dialogues,
dramas, modern, revisionistic liturgicalism, and every new and different
thing imaginable. Then, too, there is the encroachment of the ecumenical
movement, at the expense of true unity and at the expense of the truth
of the gospel. Or there is the modern striving after the so-called
"de-institutionalization" of the church: the cry that the
church must break out of its instituted form, the cry that the church
must "be where the action is," the emphasis on
"doing" rather than "believing." In brief, there are
all kinds of adjustments and adaptations today which have but one goal:
to make the church according to man and pleasing to man.
Along with all this, there is decay and degradation
as to the very standards of Christian living. The keys of the kingdom
are no more employed, or they are totally corrupted. Regardless of the
requirements of faith and repentance, of uprightness in doctrine and
walk, anyone is welcomed into the membership of the churches. The table
of the Lord is opened to all, and thereby profaned. The Sabbath is
desecrated. The church pews become empty. Members of the church seek
their enjoyment elsewhere. They become friends of the world, singing and
dancing and carousing with the world, speaking and acting and looking
like the world. Christian morality and sanctification according to the
precepts of the Lord have become old-fashioned, and the devilishness of
situation-ethics has found its way into the church. Church and world,
believer and unbeliever, light and darkness, Christ and Belial, are made
to walk hand in hand in almost every sphere of human life. For the most
part, that which calls itself church today presents but a sad caricature
of the holy, catholic church of Christ.
All these phenomena have come about gradually, almost
stealthily, though especially in recent years with rapidly increasing
tempo. And they are sad realities today in churches which by name are of
Reformed persuasion!
At the same time, do not forget, the true church is
also present in the world, And it also is easily discerned, discerned by
its distinguishing marks!
Where is it?
We of the Protestant Reformed Churches claim and
testify that we represent that true church, represent the purest
manifestation of the body of Christ on earth. We make that claim in all
humility, without boasting, without a holier-than-thou attitude, in
humble acknowledgment that we are what we are only by the sovereign
grace of our God. But we make this testimony also without hesitation.
You can discern this and test it by the marks of the church. And is it
not a striking thing that whatever opponents have said or still say
about us - and admittedly there have been a good many unflattering
things said - they cannot deny that those marks are present in the
Protestant Reformed Churches. They are not able to say that in the
Protestant Reformed Churches, according to the standard of Scripture and
the creeds, the pure doctrine of the gospel is not preached. Small
though we may be, by the grace of God we preach the pure doctrine of the
gospel, administer the sacraments purely, and exercise Christian
discipline faithfully.
The Calling To Observe The Marks
What is involved in our calling to observe and to
apply the test of these marks? Briefly, we point to the following:
1) The faithful church must not only hold fast that
which it has, but must positively increase in knowledge, must become
stronger in the truth, must grow in the faith, and must thus become more
firmly rooted in Christ. Besides, the church must faithfully instruct
the covenant seed, the future church, in the faith of the gospel, lest
God's people be destroyed for lack of knowledge. Moreover, the faithful
church must always watch and be on guard against the enemy. This is the
calling of the watchmen on the walls of Zion, first of all; but it is
the calling of the entire congregation with them.
2) What is the calling of the departing church? That
calling, at the very first sign of departure and unfaithfulness - not
when that church has already gone a few miles down the road of error,
which historically has always been too late - is in one word: repent!
You have only to read the Lord's letters to the seven churches in Revelation
2 and 3 to confirm this.
3) What is the calling of the faithful church toward
the unfaithful? Of the seven churches in Ask Minor, two were without
rebuke; three were departing in various respects; and two were almost
dead. What must the faithful churches do with respect to those who
depart? They must not give them up; neither must they ignore them;
surely, they must not amalgamate with them and become corrupt like them.
Their calling is, first of all, to remain faithful; and, secondly, no
matter how distasteful this may be to the unfaithful, to call all the
rest to repentance! And if this fails, they must call the faithful
remnant to separate themselves from the apostate church. Is not this
what the Lord Christ Himself does?
4) As far as the individual child of God is
concerned, he may place nothing before his duty to seek and to join
himself to the true church. To this end, the believer must become
spiritually equipped and prepared and thoroughly established in the
knowledge of the truth of the Word of God. And for no reason may
he turn away from this sacred calling to seek the true church. This may
bring on various practical problems. It can be a problem when employment
opportunities open up to you which will be closed to you if you insist
on joining yourself to the true church. Or, for young people it can
create problems at the time of courtship if they insist that the
"church question" has priority. And, in general, insistence
upon seeking the true church frequently involves being reproached and
despised and ostracized by church and world. But remember: there is no
shame in being despised for the sake of faithfulness to the Word of God
and love of His Zion! And: the yoke of Jesus is easy, and His burden is
light! Let your stand be that of Psalm
137: "I prefer Jerusalem above my chief joy!"
5) For the individual child of God when he comes into
contact with corruption in the church, this calling implies that he must
strive for reformation. He must do so either in cooperation with the
institution of his church, or in protest against it. But reformation is
his sacred duty! Moreover, if protest fails, and the carnal element
begins to dominate in a church, and the institute will not listen, his
calling is not to protest endlessly and at the same time to bemoan the
frustrations of protest. In such a case his duty of reformation means,
in obedience to the will of God, that he must separate and institute the
church anew if necessary. This is a very painful and also a very serious
matter, a step which may not be taken for any carnal considerations. But
for Christ's sake, for the truth's sake, for the love of Zion's sake, if
he prefers Jerusalem above his chief joy, he will do it. He will refuse
to promote the false church, and he will seek and join himself to the
true.
Always we are called to be faithful unto death. In
that way we have the sure promise of the Lord: "I will give you a
crown of life."